T
tonyrey
Guest
I think there is more than subjective meaning in the Stations of the Cross. We are confronted with the reality of suffering, death, love and life in the most direct, down-to-earth way imaginable. Not only our emotions but our conscience is involved. We know good and evil are not just man-made ideas. We know we can choose which side we prefer to be on - that of Jesus or His enemies. If we abandon the Church we don’t necessarily abandon Him but by ourselves it is harder to be a Christian - especially when we are a small minority in a secular society (like the UK). We also help to keep the Church alive at a time when churches are being pulled down or “converted” for other uses. It is only when we lose what we have we realise how much it means to us…I agree exactly with your Pascal quote at the end; he makes my point, which is that the lived experience of religious faith (and other things) provides a kind of subjective, personal truth, very different than the kind of truth dealt with by objectivity and reason and logic. To try to apply logic to religious faith (or art, or love, etc) is to miss the point entirely of what faith is. To answer all your questions at the top of your post is missing that point. Suffice it to say, though, that when I really *think * about the world I don’t come away with any convincing conclusion that a good loving God exists or that we have souls or free will or whatever; usually, I can’t come to a conclusion or my conclusion is the opposite of these things. However, when I live this faith, attending a stations of the cross service on a Friday nite during Lent, say, I can feel a certain inkling of a subjective meaning in these acts and the belief contained therein.
There are two points I want to make here. There is no need for everyone to go too deeply into the reasons for believing in God and being a Christian. How we live is more important than what we profess to believe. Yet it is absurd to believe something just for the sake of believing. If we can’t understand why, for example, we have to suffer it is important to clarify our ideas on the subject. Obviously we cannot hope to understand everything but we can put things in perspective by asking ourselves what is more important than anything else.You sort of made my point in a post you made in the Night topic. You said something along the line of if there was incontrovertible evidence of God in the world, then there would be no need for faith. Correct. In the end, again, we either take the leap of faith or we do not. To get bogged down in a lot of thinking is to miss the point of living (or believing).
Would it be better for us not to exist or to exist with the evils in the world? In other words is it worth being alive?