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Guest
I never said that Saints know everything … they can and do pray with us and for us … why would you doubt that … even the Rich Man condemned communicated with Abraham and Lazarus, requesting first help for himself and then help for his brothers … Asking for prayers does not mean you believe that Saints have become Omniscient, Omnipresent, etc …That they pray for me and all teh people of the earth fine I can understand that. They are alive, they know stuff. But why should I believe that they Know EVERYTHING? Why should I believe theat Mary and hear the individual prayers of every single human on earth should they so choose to pray to her all at once? How do you conclude that my believf that God probably doesnt make all saints all-knowing upon thier arrival in heavvven equal to me beliving that God is limited? God sets limits on His creation. he always has. Why would he Change that?
Not all knowing but united with us in prayer …I pray for others all the time. As I said before it ahs nothing to do with not praying with a community but the idea that any particular members of the community are all-knowing.
Why worry who, what or how many prayers the Saints in heaven can hear at once … what if their prayer simply is to pray “with those who request my prayer” … Again, we are unitied in prayer with them … All of our faith comes down to Divine Mysteries that we try to explain in human terms to satisfy human concerns … How is the Trinity - One? … How does Jesus become His Flesh and Blood in simple bread and wine to nourish us … How do we rise to Everlasting Life? … We are a Communion of Saints … we know from Scripture that Saints already long dead are recognizable by those who never laid eyes on them in this life … We know from Scripture that they have concern for us and themselves … We know from Scriptures that they are already in Heven and that their numbers are not complete and that vindication will come … We do not know the "How or the Why " of these things … FaithBelieving that an all powerful God did not necessarily make one particular group (Saints already in heaven) able to hear everyone at once, is not a limit on God but a limit from God. There is a big difference.
And you should look to the historical use of the word … even within the Protestant era … Pray means to ask … that you have imposed some modern day limitations upon the meaning does not mean that each and every use of the word pray has to have an amount of worship attached to it … Even my very protestant mother would sarcastically say to me in my youth when I made some outlandish comment “Pray, tell…” … Court documents, even to this very day, are referred to as “pleadings” … And when you ask another protestant to “pray” for you … are you really asking [praying] them to “worship you” … or are you asking them to ask [pray] God for some petition on your behalf?While Catholics always say to pray means simply to ask, Protestants do not use the word the same way. Most every Protestant also attaches an amount of worship to the word “pray” so that it really is meant more of a “To ask with adoring faith and worship.” I can accept the Catholic definition as what the Catholics mean and thus you wont see me leaping to asking why you worsip Saints and such things, But you also should realize that the word ahs a different meaning to a protestant.
Scripture tells us to pray for one another - to build up the Body of Christ. Scripture tells we are the Bride of Christ … it does not instruct to only pray for those still living … Scripture does not say that those who die are no longer the Body or the Bride … The first Christians had great concern for those who died. Believing that Jesus would return within their lifetimes; they wanted to know that those who died were heirs to the promises of Christ. They are heirs because - we are One Holy Universal Communion of Saints in Christ Jesus.Of Course He can! The questions is DID He will for all Saints in Heaven to know everything at once or not? You say Yes I say no. What does Scripture say? it just doesnt say.
What did the earliest Christians believe - 1st and 2nd century … we know that they asked for prayers - even on their grave markers … We know that they made appeal to the Saints … so you say no … but Scripture, the early Christian practice and witness and 2000 years of Faith and even the first Protestant Reformers say “YES”
They won’t, their lives are sign posts on the road to heaven … pointing the way to JesusI’m not really sure what set that off, but I never said that they would lead us away from God.