S
ShynSup
Guest
No againt doctors, they are just the perfect example.Is your qualm mainly directed at doctors?
Anyways, at the end of the day, we don’t save souls, the Holy Spirit does. I’m reminded of Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta. Mother Teresa was definitely interested in the temporal welfare of many people… caring for the sick, and nursing them back to health. But, she was also intensely interested in their spiritual salvation as well. And, many people converted because of her. However, that doesn’t represent a majority of the people she treated.
The vast majority of the people she treated weren’t Christians, and probably didn’t become Christians. But, she planted seeds. In some people, those seeds were watered and grew by the Holy Spirit, in most cases they did not grow (look at 1 Corinthians 3:6 for example).
We are charged to fulfill the Great Commission, and to convert all peoples and all nations. But, we don’t do the converting, God does. And, it sounds wrong of you to say definitively that doctors aren’t already striving to do this in their work.
I’ve heard a lot of stories about people coming to Christ on their death bed, or in a hospital, and they later recovered.
**Again, just because it is the job of a doctor to save someone’s physical body, doesn’t mean they don’t actively participate in fulfilling the Great Commission.
**
Stop making assumptions.
I’m sure you’ve heard that little pun about what happens when you make assumptions?
Well, don’t do it.
Focus on converting people yourself.
What’s wrong with the world? Is it doctors who don’t save people’s souls?
I am.
I am wrong with the world. That’s what G.K. Chesterton said, and I feel that you, me, and everyone on this thread can benefit from reflecting on that.
But againt everyone that does a saving of a life.
“Life”
A saving of an earthly “life”
Honestly, how would you feel if you knew that the man you saved a year ago, the man that was about to drown on the sea, is now in hell.
I would fell as if that saving was for nothing. Woulnt you?
I am not making assumptions, I am talking generally.
Of course God and the Holy Spirit, make the conversion. Only God can change the heart. Never said otherwise.
What I mean is that people seem to be much more conserned dor the body health than the spiritual health. And thus people tend to prioritize the first one, instead of the soul, which is by far more important, as the soul is eternal and the body is temporary.
I repeat myself. I do not understand how someone can feel like he has done something good after saving a temporary life and not even trying to save an eternal life.
Just as rehab takes time. Doctors should consantly check on their patients, so see how they are doing, in fact they do. So they shoul start caring about the soul a little bit more, establishing this doctor patient relation, praying for them, talking to them about the bible, encoureging them to go to mass, etc.