What is the meaning of Faith to Catholicism?

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What is faith as recalled by the scriptures? what is the relationship between just belief and Faith. how should we approach the scriptural term?
 
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What it is is in the CCC.

It is not just a mere belief in something. For instance, you believe that Jesus is son of God but don’t believe in the Eucharist. That would not be considered much on the scale of faith.
 
so faith is more closer to trust where belief is treated like it was more of a fact?
 
so faith is more closer to trust where belief is treated like it was more of a fact?
Yes. Faith is trust. Also “faith without works is dead”. If you trust God you will want to obey Him and do His will.
 
grace is in the sacraments.

faith is a grace, but not the only grace.
 
Faith is believing what God has revealed based on the authority alone of God the revealer. We have no way of knowing that we will receive eternal life if we obey the Commandments, but for the promise of God. We have know way of knowing Christ is present in the Eucharist, but for the promise of God, etc., etc., etc.

From the First Vatican Council:
  1. Since human beings are totally dependent on God as their creator and lord, and created reason is completely subject to uncreated truth, we are obliged to yield to God the revealer full submission of intellect and will by faith.
  2. This faith, which is the beginning of human salvation, the Catholic Church professes to be a supernatural virtue, by means of which, with the grace of God inspiring and assisting us, we believe to be true what He has revealed, not because we perceive its intrinsic truth by the natural light of reason, but because of the authority of God himself, who makes the revelation and can neither deceive nor be deceived.
  3. Faith, declares the Apostle, is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen [17].
 
Yes…while I believe intellectually that Catholicism is correct and that the supernatural exists…I still struggle with putting my trust in giving my will to God (faith).

Both are technically faith, but true faith is when you put your will into it, when you start to do certain things based on that faith. Just my thoughts.
 
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I disagree that we have no way of knowing Christ is present in the Eucharist.
 
While Catholics commonly use the term “faith” to mean trust, reliance, etc, technically faith, as one of the three theological virtues which include hope and love, means to give “intellectual assent” to the truth claims presented to us by revelation. So we believe that God exists, that Jesus is his only begotten Son, that He was crucified and resurrected, etc. Hope, OTOH, means to actually have a confidence or trust in those truths, a trust in God. And this is why St James can say that even demons believe.
 
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Just a minor correction, believing that God exists is not faith. We must believe that He exists first, before we receive His revelation with faith. From the CCC:
36 "Our holy mother, the Church, holds and teaches that God, the first principle and last end of all things, can be known with certainty from the created world by the natural light of human reason."11 Without this capacity, man would not be able to welcome God’s revelation. Man has this capacity because he is created “in the image of God”.12
 
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If they are miracles, then by definition they are from God. So, that is reason to know.
 
misstherese
Yes…while I believe intellectually that Catholicism is correct and that the supernatural exists…I still struggle with putting my trust in giving my will to God (faith).
So do we all. 😣
misstherese
Both are technically faith, but true faith is when you put your will into it, when you start to do certain things based on that faith. Just my thoughts.
Yes. True faith is when you can act on it, because faith is trust.
 
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