Status: help 09/01/17: christian existence Crisis

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Pathway2

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Loss faith in faith alone; I even doubt that I have even faith( presuming it as an echo chamber of things to do at time) or that I am a true christian, loss faith in Protestantism and trying to find the truth. certain though that God’s helping me… Any advice of any kind?
 
Take a deep breath. What have you lost faith in exactly? God? Jesus?
Tell me about your prayer life. Are you someone with a Sola Scriptura background?
 
Faith is a grace

When St. Peter confessed that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God, Jesus declared to him that this revelation did not come “from flesh and blood”, but from “my Father who is in heaven”. Faith is a gift of God, a supernatural virtue infused by him. “Before this faith can be exercised, man must have the grace of God to move and assist him; he must have the interior helps of the Holy Spirit, who moves the heart and converts it to God, who opens the eyes of the mind and ‘makes it easy for all to accept and believe the truth.’”

Faith is a human act

Believing is possible only by grace and the interior helps of the Holy Spirit. But it is no less true that believing is an authentically human act. Trusting in God and cleaving to the truths he has revealed is contrary neither to human freedom nor to human reason. Even in human relations it is not contrary to our dignity to believe what other persons tell us about themselves and their intentions, or to trust their promises (for example, when a man and a woman marry) to share a communion of life with one another. If this is so, still less is it contrary to our dignity to “yield by faith the full submission of. . . intellect and will to God who reveals”, and to share in an interior communion with him.

In faith, the human intellect and will cooperate with divine grace: “Believing is an act of the intellect assenting to the divine truth by command of the will moved by God through grace.”

Faith and understanding

What moves us to believe is not the fact that revealed truths appear as true and intelligible in the light of our natural reason: we believe “because of the authority of God himself who reveals them, who can neither deceive nor be deceived”. So “that the submission of our faith might nevertheless be in accordance with reason, God willed that external proofs of his Revelation should be joined to the internal helps of the Holy Spirit.” Thus the miracles of Christ and the saints, prophecies, the Church’s growth and holiness, and her fruitfulness and stability “are the most certain signs of divine Revelation, adapted to the intelligence of all”; they are “motives of credibility” (motiva credibilitatis), which show that the assent of faith is “by no means a blind impulse of the mind”.

Faith is certain. It is more certain than all human knowledge because it is founded on the very word of God who cannot lie. To be sure, revealed truths can seem obscure to human reason and experience, but “the certainty that the divine light gives is greater than that which the light of natural reason gives.” “Ten thousand difficulties do not make one doubt.”
 
  1. Breathe
  2. Sincerely pray to God, tell him you want to know Him, ask Him to help you
  3. Repeat 1 and 2 regularly until situation improves
 
… and there’s a bunch more, but these seemed to capture the essential understanding of faith. Sometimes I find it easier to return to the basics to have an understanding of the words we’re using because, more often than not, we use terms freely and liberally when the term actually specifies something more (or less) than the common definition we presuppose.
 
I think I lost faith in my own faith, you see, I was raised a protestant, specifically an Anglican though my Parents once in a while went to church, I grew up with attendance to a youth group to help people grow in Christianity, indeed I had a Sola scripture Background ; I pray regularly. What happens is that I have a mindset which may be under the influence of stress and sensitivity, I was haunted and still have moments of that I have committed the unpardoned sin. I have not lost faith in Jesus, in fact church life has help me grow in Jesus and the book,“Catechism of the catholic Church” is helping, reading the scriptures has taken me to new waves of God’s Love, his bringing in and it speaks to me and helps me grow, I just feel that my own faith, with the anger and upset with Protestantism, My protest against the catholic church is dying as Sola scripture forgets the importance of the church, the traditions and Protestantism is now weaken with the council of Trent, I felt that my faith was a fraud and that what I stood for was only a small portion of the faith. I still love the Protestants, I just don’t feel like I live Protestantism. I am not losing faith in God but my protest may be nearly over.
 
If you still have faith in Jesus then you sure haven’t committed “the unpardoned sin”. The Bible makes it very clear that those who commit that sin, reject Jesus Christ.

I think your head is playing tricks on you and overcomplicating the situation

See my advice post above
 
I am guessing you are apprehensive? Scared? If you had seriously committed you probably wouldn’t be trying to get help here. Nor would you be trying to be closer to Jesus.
Have you thought about attending an RCIA class?
 
I think fear is trying to trap me into a system and my mind is making paranoid voices in my head.
 
a Deacon gave me this book “Compendium, Catechism of the Catholic Church”
 
Yes, well we have a name for such fears, it is called The Devil At Work.
Some sincere prayer to God will take care of it

“Pray, hope and don’t worry” - Padre Pio
 
I come from a Methodist background. I think I know where you are coming from. Again, have you thought about attending RCIA?
 
no, I ask a deacon if they offer classes, but he gave me a copy of “Comendium” which talks about the Catechism of the Catholic Church. what was it like to you?
 
no, a Catholic deacon, I came to the church in hopes of drawing some of the statues.
 
It may be that they don’t encourage people to attend RCIA unless they definitely state they are interested in joining the Catholic Church. I think the deacon wanted you to read a little more and discern and then maybe get back to him
 
though I had a conversation with a member of the Anglican church (can’t remember his role) about how he liked the idea of the feast of saints. In fact I recall an Anglican who left a positive you tube comment to an Orthodox priest who converted from Evangelicalism.
 
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