G
GodMadeMe
Guest
By what objective standard do you call a thing truly bizarre? Or are you describing your personal taste?And according to you, that will make them suffer less before they died. Utterly bizarre…
By what objective standard do you call a thing truly bizarre? Or are you describing your personal taste?And according to you, that will make them suffer less before they died. Utterly bizarre…
You don’t think that someone believing that prayer will make someone feel better after they are dead is bizarre? Tony refuses to suggest how this could work. Maybe you could explain this:By what objective standard do you call a thing truly bizarre? Or are you describing your personal taste?
That remark of yours comes as no surprise because according to you all prayer is bizarre. I find far more bizarre your faith in the blind Goddess who doesn’t even know what she’s doing but succeeds in giving birth to great saints, artists, scientists and philosophers. According to Jacques Monod, her lover was Necessity but in spite of his Nobel Prize he had his doubts. He obviously didn’t like the thought of his prodigious intellect being derived from their undignified primeval soup… Can you blame him?And according to you, that will make them suffer less before they died. Utterly bizarre…
You hope Catholics don’t pray for their deceased relatives?No wonder you’re unsure about the teaching of the Church!Not only is it bizarre, it sounds like tony is making this up as he goes along. Thankfully his ideas on this do not represent official Catholic teaching (I hope).
So let’s assume for the purpose of this discussion that prayer works. You remember being in pain after recovering from an illness. According to you, prayer after you have recovered will lessen the pain that you have already experienced. What do you remember, Tony?That remark of yours comes as no surprise because according to you all prayer is bizarre.
Did he really say that? What do you mean by dead?You don’t think that someone believing that prayer will make someone feel better after they are dead is bizarre?.
This is Alice Through the Looking Glass on acid.What do you mean by dead?
Thank God Doc and Marty McFly aren’t intercessors of prayer for all of us, is what I am saying!You hope Catholics don’t pray for their deceased relatives?No wonder you’re unsure about the teaching of the Church!![]()
I have no idea who they are but the fact remains that Catholics pray for their relatives who have died - which implies that the efficacy of prayer is not restricted to the present and the future. God’s power and love is not so parochial: it embraces the whole of Creation from start to finish. There is a very good book by J B Philips online: helodermatous.netfast.org/your-god-is-too-small-pdf-epub/You hope Catholics don’t pray for their deceased relatives?No wonder you’re unsure about the teaching of the Church!
God’s power is not speculative!Did he really say that? What do you mean by dead?
What do you mean by bizarre? Out of the ordinary spectrum of human experience?
God is outside of time and so it is not hard to imagine in that context how a prayer after the fact might actually influence events before the fact. But this is speculative.
Oh no you don’t. You don’t slide out of this that easily. ‘Catholics pray for their dead relatives – therefore it must affect the past’. Bulldust.…the fact remains that Catholics pray for their relatives who have died - which implies that the efficacy of prayer is not restricted to the present and the future.
I remember being in pain and I have no way of knowing whether it could have been less severe if some one had prayed for me but I don’t rule out the possibility on principle. A loving God would surely not ignore our requests and I don’t see why He would be powerless as far as the past is concerned.That remark of yours comes as no surprise because according to you all prayer is bizarre.
The context is all-important, Brad. How can we have a credible opinion on the efficacy or futility of prayer if we have no idea of what we are and why we are here?And please, no comments about materialism and senseless molecules and such. Just answer the question if you could.
When we pray, we are united with all the angels and saints, who within the Beatific Vision are in direct communion with God.. . . Catholics pray for their relatives who have died - which implies that the efficacy of prayer is not restricted to the present and the future. God’s power and love is not so parochial: it embraces the whole of Creation from start to finish. . .
Bradski-Oh no you don’t. You don’t slide out of this that easily. ‘Catholics pray for their dead relatives – therefore it must affect the past’. Bulldust.
You have explicitly stated that prayer has an effect on people who were ill in the past. You need to explain how this happens or retract it. Answer the question that has been asked at least twice in the last few posts, please.
As you have yourself stated, there is no past for God. All time is being brought into existence from the One Centre of all time.. . . A loving God would surely not ignore our requests and I don’t see why He would be powerless as far as the past is concerned. . .
I think we both know that he has erred. I think we both know that he knows that as well. I do try to correct my mistakes, or at least admit them. Good for the soul, I guess.Bradski-
Let’s assume for a moment that Tonyrey misspoke or simply erred when he wrote that. Okay, fine. It happens. He learns and moves on.
The take-home for you is that prayer is efficacious for the dead IN PURGATORY.
I feel the same about you.I think we both know that he has erred. I think we both know that he knows that as well. I do try to correct my mistakes, or at least admit them. Good for the soul, I guess.
I’d like Tony to do the same. He has a track record of avoiding doing so. It would be nice to see a change of heart.
I assume that you mean convincing arguments that I haven’t heard many times before and have already rejected? You might want to know that my position is not one arrived at overnight and it started with a Christian upbringing. I am no recent convert to the New Atheism.I feel the same about you.
If I’m able to show you some convincing arguments in favor of theism, Christianity or Catholicism along the way, you will let me know, won’t you?![]()