N
Neoplatonist
Guest
I’ve been running this experiment for quite some time, leading a good and virtuous life, embracing the low pay of a worker for the Church, etc., and the results have been a weak faith and a mind/life filled with unfulfilled hope that I might receive help and consolation from God, the saints, the angels.
Perhaps I should reverse the electrical charge and see if that has any better effect—it seems to me from the stories of the saints that it is by being wealthy and living a life of hedonistic indulgence that I am more likely to have God or his angels show up to re-direct me. Either I’m unhappy, as now, but with more money in the bank to cover my retirement and my kid’s college tuition OR I have a moving religious experience (a la St. Paul, St. Francis of Assisi, or any of the many, many others), change my ways, and go on to a life of faith and fulfillment.
Be honest with yourselves: would you rather be St. Francis with the vision of the Seraphim or Mother Teresa of Calcutta wandering in the desert of faith (as described in her memoirs)?
Now, of course, there have been loads of rich jerks that didn’t receive a powerful religious experience to set them on the path of a powerful faith, but the same is true for loads of poor, good-hearted people as well. My attempts to penetrate that argument have been met with “God’s ways are a mystery,” and faith is a free gift from God, so my choice to be rich or poor won’t/can’t change his mind, so to speak, regarding whether or not he reaches out to me. The best shot according to the Bible seems to be “leaving the 99 to go after the 1 stray sheep.”
What do you think?
Perhaps I should reverse the electrical charge and see if that has any better effect—it seems to me from the stories of the saints that it is by being wealthy and living a life of hedonistic indulgence that I am more likely to have God or his angels show up to re-direct me. Either I’m unhappy, as now, but with more money in the bank to cover my retirement and my kid’s college tuition OR I have a moving religious experience (a la St. Paul, St. Francis of Assisi, or any of the many, many others), change my ways, and go on to a life of faith and fulfillment.
Be honest with yourselves: would you rather be St. Francis with the vision of the Seraphim or Mother Teresa of Calcutta wandering in the desert of faith (as described in her memoirs)?
Now, of course, there have been loads of rich jerks that didn’t receive a powerful religious experience to set them on the path of a powerful faith, but the same is true for loads of poor, good-hearted people as well. My attempts to penetrate that argument have been met with “God’s ways are a mystery,” and faith is a free gift from God, so my choice to be rich or poor won’t/can’t change his mind, so to speak, regarding whether or not he reaches out to me. The best shot according to the Bible seems to be “leaving the 99 to go after the 1 stray sheep.”
What do you think?