Stubbyfinger writes:
I have never understood faith. People tell me it’s faith to believe that anything is going to happen that has chance of not happening. This is not true, and it confuses faith with trust. Faith is the belief in something despite the evidence. Trust is the belief in something because of the evidence. The level of trust I have that a given action will result in a predictable consequence is directly related to the percentage of times that consequence occurs. I have the maximum trust in that when I hit the letter G that letter will appear on my screen because it has always done so. My level of trust can go down to zero from there.
Stubbyfinger,
Very interesting article...and comments too.
I hope you don't mind my jumping in late...as I've been out of the loop so to speak due to computer problems.
You begin by saying you've never understood faith yet you certainly have definite ideas about it. Your definition of faith is straight forward even though there is quite a distinction to be made if one is talking (supernatural)virtue of faith and or simple faith or trust such as your example of pressing the "G" key and having the "G" appear on the screen as a result.
So, what's the difference between supernatural faith and simple ordinary faith? Well, having ordinary faith in things has its limitations. Using your example with the letter "G", it fails; one won't get the results if the computer is broken or turned off, or messed up in any way. Whereas divine or supernatural faith can never disappoint, or fail, or deceive.
The Catholic Church teaches that the supernatural virtue of faith is a gift of God which enables us to believe without doubting whatever God has revealed. Faith is an act of the intellect based on rational motives of credibility that will stand any test. This faith which is the beginning of man's salvation whereby with the help of GOd's grace, we believe what He reveals not becasue we perceive its intrinsic truth by the natural light of our reason, but on account of the authroity of God who can neither deceive or be deceived.
Nothing supernatural has ever been proven to exist.
There are thousands of stories of people performing miracles throughout history. ....So in light of all this is it more likely that Jesus was the only one of these that was the son of a god, or that none of them were? How you answer that is up to you but if you consider the odds it’s almost as likely the letter P is going to pop up on the screen when I hit the letter G.
Yes, I believe it upon Faith. Faith in Christ whom they believed to be what He claimed to be, "The Truth". I believe Christ to have what He claimed to have, all the power there is in Heaven and on earth. While Catholics accept belief as a matter of faith, it is faith that is in harmony with reason. The Catholic mind which is highly rational places no limits on the power of God who is Infinite in His power to do anything including appearing in the flesh as did Jesus Christ. Hence, upon faith, the supernatural invisible chain that binds us to God, it is reasonable to accept Christ at His word.
The nature of this faith can be considered this way.
The first Christians, the Apostles go into the world to preach what they have seen, heard, and touched in the person of Christ. They do not KNOW that Christ is God, thus they have the choice of belief or unbelief. They believe; others do not. Seeing a man work miracles like bringing Lazurus from the dead does not automatically produce faith. We have to choose. So begins the final stage of the drama of salvation. In turn the Apostles present what God has revealed in the words of a man called Christ, and men either accept or reject it. If they believe they must accept the whole message, becasue there is no argument with messengers sent by God. In this exercise of their freedom, men are choosing their eternal destinies.
If I were to have faith in god I would have to be capable of deluding myself completely and ignoring what logic and the odds tell me and the fact that religion would exist regardless, I have no idea how to do that. I would probably be happier if I could but I can’t. I really don’t want to burn in hell forever so to any of you whom has a personal relationship with god or his son please have him come over and explain things, maybe even a quick tour of heaven, because anything short of that and I’m scewed.
How does one acquire supernatural faith? By first understanding that supernatural faith includes the following principles:
God is our First Beginning and our Last End.
God has supreme dominion over us.
We owe God due service, which we express in religion.
True religion is the true worship of the one true God.
God has told us how He wants to be worshipped.
Man must obey this teaching of God.
Man has no right to practice a religion of his own making against God's will.
God alone can declare to us in what religion consists.
This declaration of God contains the body of revealed truths. The truths which God revealed are found in Sacred Scripture and in Sacred Tradition.
To acquire supernatural faith, we are bound to believe them.
The differences between humans and the four top primates is very small. .......So I trust that evolution is how the species on this planet including humans developed because that’s what the evidence tells me. I don’t have faith in it and it’s not a religion.
Religion and science call for belief by both faith and study. Faith proceeds all study. God's revealed religion begins with divine faith that will not deceive, in fact cannot deceive. whereas science, thus macro-Evolution, begins with human faith that is fallible.
It's utterly impossible to study chemistry, grammar, history, or any scientific subject as well as religion without accepting first principles upon faith, without faith in teachers.
With all due respect, your misunderstand what Faith/trust really is and its basic role in the sphere of science as well as religion. Fiath is not emotional, blind submission to the unknowable. Rather, it's an intellectual assent of the mind to something not seen with the physical eye, the acceptance of a truth upon the authority of some one else. In religion, it's Divine Authority, "taking God at His word." In science, certainly in the case of believing in Evolution Theory, it's faith upon human authority, that may or may not be right.
When faith of science is accepted and not faith of true religion, it is wise to recall the divinely inspired declaration of St. John, "If we accept the testimony of man, the testimony of God is greater."