J
jinminn
Guest
But the point is that he can create us such. Again, returning to natural vs. supernatural, what makes more sense: a) Mary was just like all other humans and the Church decided to figure out a doctrine that made sense of how she was to be the virgin mother of god or b) she was the only human in all of existence specifically created without concupiscence and it will never happen again.Well, we weren’t all created to be the Mother of God. I think Catholic Theology still requires Mary to have been saved by Christ.
Funny, all other religions say the same about their church. It’s odd that this is so ‘built-in’ to religions, isn’t it?I believe that there is some truth in all religions but that the fullness of truth is in the Church.
I would have said I had that experience, however in examining the evidence, I’m willing to submit my previous subjective evidence in light of the overwhelming objective realities about. The problem of evil is one such reality. Biblical issues are another. Diminishing tangible interactions between god and man are another. And so on…The proof of God is in the experience of God. If you haven’t experienced God yet, perhaps you will one day.
You contradict yourself a lot here. The Bible has many instances of Jesus foretelling that he was about to do miracles so that people would believe. You would need to argue that no more people would believe because of miracles compared to no miracles. I believe this would not be a good argument, and that even if some persisted in unbelief, many (like myself) would believe given good evidence.I don’t know that people would come to belief as a result of a bunch of magic. The Gospels record that many people who saw Jesus’ miracles, nevertheless, did not believe in Him. Besides, I don’t know that mere belief (in the sense that “I think there is a God”) is quite what God is looking for. So what if I think there is a God? The demons believe in God.
I still go to mass and pray and have no such experiences. Many bystanders did not ‘experience a miracle’ but truly did ‘observe a miracle.’ Not even that… they were simply ‘told of a miracle.’ These reports are drastically reduced compared to the olden days. God does not speak out loud to us. Prophecies made today are concerning odd vagueties and are not specific by any stretch of the imagination. Prayer to Jesus does not fulfill his promise to give anything to those asking (and I really do mean deep, needed, things like healing, not money or a mansion).Not just an observed miracle. An experienced miracle. Every moment in prayer and every Sunday at Mass. If you haven’t had the same experience, that doesn’t invalidate my experience.
Lastly, if your faith is rooted in ‘your experience’… fine. But at that point you invalidate any objective claims that you could possibly ever make about the world with respect to me. I have been a believer for about 7 years. I did ministry work, prayed over people, prayed about my house, wife, whether to have a child or not. I lived Christianity.
Now I doubt and am fairly convinced that it was not true. Part of the reason I followed my questioning is that I did not want to be in the situation you just put yourself in, namely one of subjective grounds for evangelization. I want to point to the world as all humans experience and see it and provide an answer to that picture that has predictable, repeatable power to explain it. I do not want to resort to ‘you’re not looking hard enough’ or ‘you just don’t see it as I do’ or ‘these are miracles even though you don’t experience’ them or anything else in these areas.
I have found that natural explanations for the problem of evil and all other issues I’ve had do an unbelievably superior job of explaining our world when compared to souls, miracles, a man in the sky, experiencing love as the answer to sickness and death, etc.