You also ask very good questions, Strawberry Jam.
Excaliber,
I just thought of something now. What if all christians in some way or another are wrong, in different degrees yet only God knows why each of them individually and as a group are?
Hrm. How to explain? I think many Christians have doubt at one point in their life. When I asked my very dear uncle to be my confirmation sponsor he finally revealed to me (he knows I had been away from the church for nearly 20 years) that he too, at some points in his life, had doubts.
And this is a devout Catholic man who was a Knight of Columbus! And! He prays the rosary every night! And! Periodically (since I was with out a father in my life) he’d have me come over to his small house with his 6 other children to pray a novena for 9 days straight!
So doubt is a very human traight. Remember, we’re human beings. We’re imperfect. We’re called to seek God because he wants us with him.
I am going to send you a PM on this too.
And, what if God knows that anyone who was born in a state where christianity was not an option for them, and they lived the best way they could in spite of that and did the very best they could under the circumstances, wouldn’t they still be Reflecting God in some way? Mind you, I do not know what God is. Or know him. But, I am tossing this around in my mind.
This is a question that pretty much almost everyone has. “What about the remote farmer in some third world country who lives a good life, takes care of his family, yet never gets to hear about Jesus???” There is such a thing that the Catholic church teaches regarding “Invincible Ignorance.” There is “vincible” and “invincible” ignorance. This article can explain it better than me:
I’m guessing its really possible that God will simply just read each person’s soul/being/heart/person on a case by case basis. And if he is just, he would consider the reasons why the person ended up in places they never asked to be in, but were. Or other things that led to their choices they really had no better way of discerning.
The thing about God is that He already knows us. I don’t know exactly where this is found, but there is a quote about God, “I knew you before I formed you” or “I knew you before you were in the womb.” Something like that. (Someone help me here please!

) This means that God already knows us. He knows the circumstances people were born into.
I have an atheist? agnostic? not sure which, friend. I think he said atheist. He grew up in the mountains in Oregon. He said that he never, in his whole life, encountered religion where he lived until sometime in high school. He’d hear about people going to church although he never went. He says he never feels any sort of thing or being or wonderment about God. But, he does admit that his exposure late in high school did leave him wondering about
life. He ended up being a philosophy major. Why? To make sense of life. That to me is a call. It is a wonderment of trying to make sense of things. It is but a spark. Sometimes all people have is a small spark, but it
is there. Some fan the spark and it flourishes into a faith that is strong, and large, and beautiful. Some simply let it wither away and die.
The fact that you, Strawberry Jam, are on these forums, and you do ask very pointed and good questions that appear to be sincere. Same thing. It’s a call. When someone is called but they don’t know why, they just have questions they need or want answered, the way I view it is it is God calling us. it is said that we have God written into our hearts to seek him. The wonderment, the questioning, why is life? That’s it.
Did you see The Matrix? I absolutely love that movie. Infact, I have a tattoo inspired by it, but has a spiritual meaning to it.

Anyway, you know how Neo just … knew? He was … searching? That’s it. That’s the call for The Truth. It is within us all. Some either ignore it, some are oblivious to it, some don’t believe it.
This is how we choose to follow God. When we search and seek out The Truth.
But, I do not understand God myself. I think I am talking here out loud to find out what you think about these possibilities. You ask good questions.
I don’t think anyone fully
knows God. When you have a… being, I guess you can use that word, that has no beginning or end, it’s mind blowing. I used to think about the Trinitarian as a kid. I’d try to imagine God’s eternity - his non-Beginning, non-Ending, and always Is. Maybe that is why I was such a quiet child. My mind got into knots and twists! hehe…
Read the link I posted above. That can help with some questions that all people have, even devout Catholics.
