Aww, you sound like such a nice person and good friend. |
You sound judgemental, in my opinion. I am not OP btw. |
Understanding there are things one cannot control. Trying to control things leads to suffering anyway. |
The Walk for Peace monks got cursed, rocks thrown at them, harassed in the early days before police protection and social media virality. They did not argue, did not engage. They saw the aggressor as a suffering person. They wished them a peaceful day and walked on. They are not believers in the God you refer to, if you don't know. |
| On dcum? You don’t. |
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The irony is that meekness, indeed a virtue, is the one virtue above all that allows us to remain ourselves in the midst of adversity. It allows us to maintain self-possession when adversity strikes, rather than be possessed by the adversity itself.
Meekness is more synonymous with empowerment than it is with weakness because, as St. Thomas Aquinas wrote, meekness makes a man self-possessed. Dionysius has told us that Moses, surely no milquetoast, was deemed worthy of the divine apparition on account of his great meekness. According to St. Hilary, Christ dwells in us by our meekness of soul. When we are overcome by anger, we lose that sense of ourselves that allows God to dwell within us. Anger excludes God; meekness invites His presence. ^^^ I found this online re meekness as a virtue and understand it intellectually. But I’m so curious HOW those monks and others can remember and practice in the heat of the moment and not want to lash back |
Well you got me there. I don’t ever get to talk about this in person because no one cares or asks—but yes, I am proud to be a Christian, and very happy to be co-operating with God in the daily work to grow in virtue and holiness. I’ll have to answer for that on judgment day! |
[code]o I’mDP. No, they sounded like they know that they are still working on a lot of things. Be kind previous person. |
TO me, they sounded proud |
Please consider that you're just a good person - God or no God - and that there is no judgement day. |
No -- The aggressor sees no difference, irrespective of whether or not the aggressor believes in God. |
Don't worry about it, there is no Judgement Day. When you die, you're just dead. |
| I was sick and almost died so that really humbled me |
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A true understanding of the Gospel.
If you more of a sinner than you’d ever believe but more and yet more loved and accepted in Jesus Christ than you’d ever dared hoped — Then you cannot feel morally superior to anyone. So when someone else is not being the best version of themselves — you can say, there have been plenty of times I have not been the best version of myself either. All fall short of the glory of God. I absolutely use this in all areas of my life and have found myself more forgiving, humbler, less prone to anger, more compassionate. And when you believe the second half of the equation — it gives you great confidence. You already have the love of Jesus — what more do you need? The Gospel has the power to give you great humility and great confidence at the very same time — nothing else can. |
She never even said that she was a “good” person. Being a Christian is not being “good” — it’s not based on “trying really hard” or achievement or success. It is about being honest with yourself about your many flaws and recognizing that you are loved in the most profound way anyway. |