Mountaineer wrote:
moda0306 wrote:
Mountaineer,
I didn't really think you were hearing "voices," but I can see how my posts maybe make it sound like that. I figured it had to be some sort of surging presence inside you that revealed "The Truth." Not just words from a book, but an actual experience. A "feeling," in a sense. And by feeling I don't mean this to imply that it isn't a correct interpretation of reality. If I had the Holy Spirit surging through me, I'm sure I would be "feeling" something. However, my natural state must be to question whether my senses (including those involved with interpreting the reality of God) are accurately interpreting reality.
Don't we need some sign, either via personal revelation or empirical evidence that The Gospel is actually the Word of God, and not just someone else's hallucination. Just reading scripture to you, I'm sure, was not enough. There actually had to be a FEELING of the Holy Spirit surging through you (or something like this) as God's Word was read. There has to be something else, does there not? Obtaining "knowledge" through someone's stories is not knowledge unless those stories are actually true, correct?
Addressing your questions:
Do we need some sign? Yes, that is why Jesus did all those "miraculous" things and why they are recorded for us.
Was there some feeling of the HS surging through you? Not that I'm aware of.
There has to be something else, does there not? There is but it is hidden for now. It is called faith.
Obtaining knowledge through someone's stories? Do you believe George Washington was the first President, that Julius Caesar conquered the Gauls, that Homer wrote the Illiad, that the Egyptians built the pyramids, that man really landed on the moon? - how do you know? How do you know those stories are true?
When you and I are confronted by the ancient mysteries of the Christian faith, our good old-fashioned American pragmatism runs up against a brick wall. We ask, "What use can I make of this idea?" But that question doesn't apply. For Christianity is not an idea. It is the one Reality by which all other reality is measured. Christianity is not a way of life; it is life itself. We ask whether the holy mysteries of the faith are fiction. But there's nothing more real in all the world. It's just that these are hidden realities. The realities of our sin, suffering, and pain and the realities of His forgiveness, comfort, and healing. Life and death. These are the two realities in which we live as baptized children of God. One day, when God brings down the curtain on the entire drama, these hidden realities will be evident to all. But that is not now. For now we live by faith. True, these things are hidden truths, but they are real just the same.
... Mountaineer
Mountaineer,
I believe most of those historical assertions are true.
So you are asserting that there is adequate empirical historical evidence to believe that Jesus was the son of God? Why don't we hear that more often. If there's plenty of evidence of that, why even talk about faith? If people want empirical evidence, and you have it, why not just provide it, rather than talking about your own subjective interpretation of "reality."
If your assertion that Holy mysteries are the most real thing in the world is true, then you are using your own senses of reality to come to that conclusion, and putting ultimate faith in your own ability to interpret reality. If there are all these truths that are hidden to the rest of us and billions of non-Christians, but obvious to you, then you are simply stating that you ultimately trust YOUR subjective interpretation of reality. And perhaps you are right! But it is putting a TON of faith in yourself. Much more than I would ever put in myself.
God may exist.
We might be in the Matrix.
Jesus might be the son of God.
One of the multitude of sub-sects of Christianity MAY have gotten it all just right.
But I'm putting a TON of faith in my own subjective interpretation of reality if I think I know the details of all of this stuff with certainty. Perhaps a spiritual experience is one where I WOULD be inclined to put my faith in a bunch of religious reality, but I certainly can't make the assertion that I'm not putting a TON of faith in my own ability to interpret reality.
Perhaps Desert can do a better job of explaining the position... not that I'm trying to push you out of the discussion or anything. I just find that your discussion of your faith is too self-referential to the Bible & gospel. You seem to just want to restate what you think "reality" is rather than give a more objective statement of WHY you believe it to be the case with such certainty that doesn't simply sound like it's begging the question (assuming your conclusion).
To me, there are only two possibilities... You either 1) believe what you do because of adequate empirical evidence (even if its others' "revelations" in the presence of Christ), or 2) believe what you do because of a FEELING of faith in something... that God is somehow connected to you in some way that gives you insight to certain Truths about who he is, what he wants, etc.
One demands faith in historical record (and your interpretation of the physical world), and the other involves your interpretation of reality in terms of God's relationship to your soul.
I really don't see a third option. Perhaps a combination of the two, but then both have to be fleshed out. Both demand faith in yourself. Regarding empirical evidence, it's a faith similar to that atheists have in their ability to assess scientific facts. With the latter (God's connection to you), it requires faith in your ability to interpret the reality of God correctly. It's really that simple.
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine