Anonymous wrote:This: Doubt is a requirement of faith. The opposite of faith is certainty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Catholic process of preparing for the sacrament of Confirmation (usually around 8th or 9th grade), is all about examining your faith and beliefs and choosing for yourself what your parents and Godparents chose for you at Baptism. I remember we had to keep a year long journal to explore and record our thoughts, and were often given prompts to write about. I remember writing an essay in it "Does God Exist?" which the priest at my final pre-Confirmaiton interview discussed with me at some length. Unsurprisingly, I ended up majoring in philosophy in college.
The pre-Cana preparation for marriage has you explore your faith again, as you are preparing to take a vow that includes a promise to raise your children in the faith, so it is important to explore what that vow means to you as a couple before you make it.
Also the Catholic Intellectual Tradition call for constant exploration of faith and reason. Boston College describes it in part here:
"The CIT is forged by a deep partnership between faith and reason, as if two sides of the same coin. It reflects the conviction that rational people need to understand their faith for it to be credible. Likewise, in-depth reasoning leads to questions of ultimacy that encourage a faith response. However, for any of us in the everyday of life, this faith/reason partnership of CIT coalesces most intensely around momentous questions about ourselves like “Where do we come from?”; “Who or what are we?”; and “Where are we going?” Responding to such ultimate issues calls for faith and reason working together, and at times, perhaps in fruitful tension."
https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/centers/church21/programs/catholic-intellectual-tradition.html
The leaders of the Catholic church are not stupid. They understand that they are hemorrhaging church goers and supporters. Of course they are doing their best to survive and adjust to modern times.
Of course they are focusing on the broad "where do we come from" type questions. It's one of the most fundamental questions, and often one that children ask as one of their first thoughtful ones. However, trying to understand how we are here is still not evidence for belief in an abrahamic god, or any particular god. That's the false correlation I typically witness from believers.
Also, I love having confirmation take place when people are early teenagers. What a way to lock them in before their brain is fully developed, especially the part involved in reason and judgement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Catholic process of preparing for the sacrament of Confirmation (usually around 8th or 9th grade), is all about examining your faith and beliefs and choosing for yourself what your parents and Godparents chose for you at Baptism. I remember we had to keep a year long journal to explore and record our thoughts, and were often given prompts to write about. I remember writing an essay in it "Does God Exist?" which the priest at my final pre-Confirmaiton interview discussed with me at some length. Unsurprisingly, I ended up majoring in philosophy in college.
The pre-Cana preparation for marriage has you explore your faith again, as you are preparing to take a vow that includes a promise to raise your children in the faith, so it is important to explore what that vow means to you as a couple before you make it.
Also the Catholic Intellectual Tradition call for constant exploration of faith and reason. Boston College describes it in part here:
"The CIT is forged by a deep partnership between faith and reason, as if two sides of the same coin. It reflects the conviction that rational people need to understand their faith for it to be credible. Likewise, in-depth reasoning leads to questions of ultimacy that encourage a faith response. However, for any of us in the everyday of life, this faith/reason partnership of CIT coalesces most intensely around momentous questions about ourselves like “Where do we come from?”; “Who or what are we?”; and “Where are we going?” Responding to such ultimate issues calls for faith and reason working together, and at times, perhaps in fruitful tension."
https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/centers/church21/programs/catholic-intellectual-tradition.html
The leaders of the Catholic church are not stupid. They understand that they are hemorrhaging church goers and supporters. Of course they are doing their best to survive and adjust to modern times.
Of course they are focusing on the broad "where do we come from" type questions. It's one of the most fundamental questions, and often one that children ask as one of their first thoughtful ones. However, trying to understand how we are here is still not evidence for belief in an abrahamic god, or any particular god. That's the false correlation I typically witness from believers.
Also, I love having confirmation take place when people are early teenagers. What a way to lock them in before their brain is fully developed, especially the part involved in reason and judgement.
Anonymous wrote:I was also taught that questioning and examining your faith was good (Presbyterian).
Anonymous wrote:The Catholic process of preparing for the sacrament of Confirmation (usually around 8th or 9th grade), is all about examining your faith and beliefs and choosing for yourself what your parents and Godparents chose for you at Baptism. I remember we had to keep a year long journal to explore and record our thoughts, and were often given prompts to write about. I remember writing an essay in it "Does God Exist?" which the priest at my final pre-Confirmaiton interview discussed with me at some length. Unsurprisingly, I ended up majoring in philosophy in college.
The pre-Cana preparation for marriage has you explore your faith again, as you are preparing to take a vow that includes a promise to raise your children in the faith, so it is important to explore what that vow means to you as a couple before you make it.
Also the Catholic Intellectual Tradition call for constant exploration of faith and reason. Boston College describes it in part here:
"The CIT is forged by a deep partnership between faith and reason, as if two sides of the same coin. It reflects the conviction that rational people need to understand their faith for it to be credible. Likewise, in-depth reasoning leads to questions of ultimacy that encourage a faith response. However, for any of us in the everyday of life, this faith/reason partnership of CIT coalesces most intensely around momentous questions about ourselves like “Where do we come from?”; “Who or what are we?”; and “Where are we going?” Responding to such ultimate issues calls for faith and reason working together, and at times, perhaps in fruitful tension."
https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/centers/church21/programs/catholic-intellectual-tradition.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Catholic process of preparing for the sacrament of Confirmation (usually around 8th or 9th grade), is all about examining your faith and beliefs and choosing for yourself what your parents and Godparents chose for you at Baptism. I remember we had to keep a year long journal to explore and record our thoughts, and were often given prompts to write about. I remember writing an essay in it "Does God Exist?" which the priest at my final pre-Confirmaiton interview discussed with me at some length. Unsurprisingly, I ended up majoring in philosophy in college.
The pre-Cana preparation for marriage has you explore your faith again, as you are preparing to take a vow that includes a promise to raise your children in the faith, so it is important to explore what that vow means to you as a couple before you make it.
Also the Catholic Intellectual Tradition call for constant exploration of faith and reason. Boston College describes it in part here:
"The CIT is forged by a deep partnership between faith and reason, as if two sides of the same coin. It reflects the conviction that rational people need to understand their faith for it to be credible. Likewise, in-depth reasoning leads to questions of ultimacy that encourage a faith response. However, for any of us in the everyday of life, this faith/reason partnership of CIT coalesces most intensely around momentous questions about ourselves like “Where do we come from?”; “Who or what are we?”; and “Where are we going?” Responding to such ultimate issues calls for faith and reason working together, and at times, perhaps in fruitful tension."
https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/centers/church21/programs/catholic-intellectual-tradition.html
All the above helps intelligent Catholics feel good about remaining Catholic.
Anonymous wrote:The Catholic process of preparing for the sacrament of Confirmation (usually around 8th or 9th grade), is all about examining your faith and beliefs and choosing for yourself what your parents and Godparents chose for you at Baptism. I remember we had to keep a year long journal to explore and record our thoughts, and were often given prompts to write about. I remember writing an essay in it "Does God Exist?" which the priest at my final pre-Confirmaiton interview discussed with me at some length. Unsurprisingly, I ended up majoring in philosophy in college.
The pre-Cana preparation for marriage has you explore your faith again, as you are preparing to take a vow that includes a promise to raise your children in the faith, so it is important to explore what that vow means to you as a couple before you make it.
Also the Catholic Intellectual Tradition call for constant exploration of faith and reason. Boston College describes it in part here:
"The CIT is forged by a deep partnership between faith and reason, as if two sides of the same coin. It reflects the conviction that rational people need to understand their faith for it to be credible. Likewise, in-depth reasoning leads to questions of ultimacy that encourage a faith response. However, for any of us in the everyday of life, this faith/reason partnership of CIT coalesces most intensely around momentous questions about ourselves like “Where do we come from?”; “Who or what are we?”; and “Where are we going?” Responding to such ultimate issues calls for faith and reason working together, and at times, perhaps in fruitful tension."
https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/centers/church21/programs/catholic-intellectual-tradition.html