S
Snerticus
Guest
I’m sorry Linna, but where in my post does it say fear, specifically, and where do you infer fear from my post? I re-read it and I didn’t see any fear at all in there… perhaps when you were brought up you were very afraid of your parents. Maybe they were punishing or something. I pray for you in that case. Or else maybe you and those of your faith see fear when there is none.I disagree with you. There are many passages in the Bible that talk about the joy of the Lord. Jesus did not suffer on the cross to make anyone feel guilty. That’s strictly a Catholic teaching since any truly repentent Christian can ask God for forgiveness and receive it. Catholics have to go through man to get to God and be forgiven. Christians do not.
It didn’t surprise me that as a Catholic you were able to point out passages that threaten the fear of God rather than God’s love for his children. Catholics don’t look for love from God, they fear Him and hope they don’t die in sin so God can zap them right into hell. Did Jesus die for our sins or didn’t He? If he did then, why do Catholics seem to have such a hard time being forgiven? I suspect it has something to do with the bondage of the Catholic Church.
Also where in my post does it say the Catholic Church says we must feel guilty? There’s no doctrine that states it that I’m aware of. That’s our own prerogative and most of us are realists who understand we have hurt God. What hurts God should hurt us and we know that we are the cause of His hurt. If I hurt my parents and then go off and ignore it, then I’m fairly certain I’m going to illustrate to them I really don’t care, even if I do. And even though God knows I care, I’m sorry but I’m not one of those people who just shrug it off because Jesus died for my sins. I don’t know about you, but usually when I realize I hurt God, I feel very sorry. I guess I shouldn’t, according to you. Jesus died so we didn’t have to be sorry for our sins. Rejoice!
Now I’d like you to specifically answer 2 things. 1)where does it state in the NT that Jesus died for our happiness right here on earth? Show me a passage. I don’t want a passage that points to Jesus’ joy. Jesus could have jumped off bridges but that doesn’t mean he died so we could too. Granted, if a protestant believes we are already saved, that would explain your view. Catholics, of course won’t know until we see God face to face. Maybe that’s where you need to look for your answer. Since we don’t view ourselves as saved, maybe we need to try harder, thus the guilt.
2) Do you ignore your sins? Do you derive joy from ignoring your sins? And if you ever do think about a sin you committed, what do you feel at that time? I’m asking for feelings, not rationalizations, please. IE “I feel that Christ died for me to not have to worry about it”. That’s not a feeling that’s a rationalization. What do you actually feel after committing a deliberate sin? I assume yo do repent, so what do you feel that brings about the repentance?
Thanks