T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
326.1 | Prayer and comment | CHEFS::PICKERINGB | W/W Services | Wed Oct 02 1991 10:13 | 13 |
| I'm not sure which man is your father, Mike, the minister or the
sufferer. Whichever it is, I pray for his continued strength, and
eventual delivery from pain, and for his wife's continued support and
love.
On the central topic, the Catholic tradition teaches that giving way to
despair is itself a sin because it denies God's power and the supremacy
of His Will.
With love,
Brian.
|
326.2 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Glasnote. | Wed Oct 02 1991 10:29 | 8 |
| Sorry for not making that clear--the man on dialysis is my father.
Thanks, Brian, for your concern.
I am curious about that teaching (that giving in to despair is a sin).
Does the Catholic Church teach that everything "bad" that happens to us
is ultimately God's will?
-- Mike
|
326.3 | Into the free will discussion again. | CHEFS::PICKERINGB | W/W Services | Wed Oct 02 1991 10:48 | 20 |
| Mike,
I certainly don't think that is the way it would be put, because that
would then deny the existence of free will. However, the Church
certainly subscribes to the part which says "Thy Will, not mine, be
done." Eventually, despite the fact that every individual uses his own
free will, and this can often be detrimental to another individual,
there can be Divine intervention, and this is particularly prayed for
in areas where a detriment is not caused by another human being, e.g.,
illness. It is not that God wills the illness, hurt etc., but that we
pray to be delivered from it if that helps the Divine Plan, about which
we know so very little.
I hope that all makes sense, this being a quick lunch time response.
With love,
Brian.
|
326.4 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Glasnote. | Wed Oct 02 1991 11:02 | 22 |
| Yes, Brian, this does get back to the free will discussion again,
doesn't it? :-)
I do realize that the Church is not saying that God wills the
suffering. But if God intervenes to end suffering in some cases, and
not others, then this implies that an omnipotent God is always making
the final decision as to whether or not people will be healed or not.
That means to me that the omnipotent God is in a sense ultimately
responsible for what happens to people when they get sick, even if that
responsibility means nothing more than sitting back and allowing to
happen what he could have prevented. If God decides not to use his
power to intervene, then he has made the ultimate decision that it is
better not to do so, so he has in effect willed the suffering to
continue.
And if prayer can affect God's decision to heal people, does that mean
that a friendless person who no one prays for is less likely to be
healed by God than someone who has lots of Christian acquaintances?
Can God be (in effect) finagled by prayer into intervening in the
world?
-- Mike
|
326.5 | but it's easier to deside about yourself when you are not facing it than for others who are | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Oct 02 1991 12:18 | 31 |
| Great but difficult questions. I've tried without much luck to answer
some of them in the past. I do have a few thoughts but not a lot in
final form.
One general thought is that God sticks His healing hand in (or not)
for various reasons. One reason has to do with what is best in His
eyes. If for example he believes that a dying person alone and without
a friend may come to know God directly or indirectly as a result of
a healing than He may do it. On the other hand if God believes that
a believer dying with a long painful sickness can show God in them
through their continued faith He may not heal them or release them
early. This sounds somewhat unfeeling for the person but relates to
a view that there is a greater good to come from it for others. Also
there is the old saying "Great shall be your reword in heavan." Are
some people given greater rewards in heavan? I don't know but it
sounds reasonable. And we'll spend a whole lot more time there than
here.
I remember when my grandmother was in her last years. She had been
alone after my grandfather had died for a couple of years. Her health
wasn't particularly bad but she was tired and ready to "go home." She
was still willing to leave it up to God though. Perhaps if her health
was worse she might have wanted to rush it. I don't know. I know that
if I was dieing I would be very tempted to rush it if there was no
hope. Especially after a long full life. I would have to decide if there
was more that I believed God had for me to do here. If I believed there
was I'd feel I had to stay. I would probably not be willing to have
doctors use extra ordinary means to keep me alive but normal means
would be ok.
Alfred
|
326.6 | Good Question! | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Oct 02 1991 13:35 | 8 |
| This can be a very important "string"...as the situation in .o can and
is very similar to my own father's health. I have never had a good
answer to "why the suffering". I have been reading the book of Job for
help. I haven't finished the book yet......
Awaiting more replies!
Marc H.
|
326.7 | Despair results from lack of purpose and meaning | SHALOT::LACKEY | Birth...the leading cause of death | Wed Oct 02 1991 17:20 | 41 |
| Mike,
Very interesting topic, and I very much sympathize with your father's
situation. I have known people in similar circumstances and it is not
an easy matter to deal with on the part of anyone involved, but
especially for your father. While I am not inclined to address the
topic specifically, I would like to offer some ideas in relation to the
type of situation your father is facing.
In working with very ill and terminally ill people in the past I have
found that there are ways for them to improve their experience of life,
even in the face of such despairing circumstances. The key is to
restore or enhance the *meaning* in their lives. We can get beyond the
disabilities and add value to life if we can come to see a purpose in
our lives which overshadows and is more important than the pain and
encumberances we experience. If we manage to do this, then we overcome
the adversity. The "problem" doesn't necessarily go away, but it is
overshadowed by something more important, and as a result the despair
vanishes. Despair occurs when we have lost focus of all but our pain.
Regain the focus and the despair disappears.
This is much easier to do if there has been a significant, recognized
purpose in one's life in the past. Then it need only be regained. If
the life has been lived without any recognition of purpose, then the
task is far greater. But this is where loved one's can help those in
need of assistance. The task is to get the person's attention outside
of themselves, whether it be through family, study, service to others,
or anything from which there can be a recognized value; something to
live for.
Your father, for example, has demonstrated that he is not past being
able to latch onto something. He demonstrated this by listening to your
mother and deciding to get counseling from a minister. This tells me
that he is open, if not desirous, for alternatives. It is difficult,
not knowing him, to make specific recommendations, but family should
know him well enough to help guide him into something productive.
Even in the midst of despair we have the choice to seize the day and
give it meaning.
Jeff
|
326.8 | Freedom of Choice is closer to the meaning of Free Will | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Wed Oct 02 1991 21:05 | 62 |
| Re: Basenote
First, I'd like to comment on "Free Will". The Lord says, "I place
before you a choice, life or death"...it says to me that we have free
will to choose, but the questions and issues are determined by God.
Free Will is not, therefore, an "Absolute", but a relative freedom.
Perhaps, the misconception of "free will" being an "absolute" is
responsible for many who also say, "I can do it, understand it, serve
the Lord, MY way", when YOUR way may in effect contradict the Word and
or Spirit of God...an example being Gay people who don't feel that they
need to change that behavior when they come to Christianity. I'm not
judging Gay people, but I believe this. ANY person who desires to be
Christian must do those things that are asked of a Christian by God (If
you love me DO my commandments, says the Lord). So this is not just to
Gay people, but to everyone, regardless of what you are USE to doing
(i.e. lying, stealing, killing, coveting, bearing false witness,
serving other gods, etc), we MUST do as God would have us do if we want
to be a Christian.
Now, on "Despair". In my understanding of scripture, as Paul says,
"The trials and suffering we might have today, are nothing compared to
the glory to be revealed." Along with many other scriptures, regarding
this WORLDLY life/existence, it seems that we are to look to that
better life/existence with a strong faith and "overcome the world."
It gets delicate here, because you've introduced this discussion by
relating to us about your father--and truly it is he deserves all our
prayers. God bless him. I'm not insensitive to people's pains and
sicknesses, but I will not become "co-dependent" or get so caught up in
the present and forget that divine glory to come...it is that very
vision that I hope to instill in the sick when I speak with them, and
it takes time for them to adopt that faith, but I think it's rather
easy for them to realize that such a faith is better than pining away
in the despair of their present condition...think of Job, how he never
cursed God, knowing that God is righteous and good.
If doubt is a sin, then so is despair, because they go
hand-in-hand...SOMETIMES! Doubt doesn't always lead to despair, as
Thomas the Doubter shows us, it lead him to "questions" that when
the answers were revealed he gained greater faith. But, DOUBT is like
a "crossroad" to despair or great faith.
I think your father raises a good point regarding "I'd rather be dead
than preserved in this pain". It makes me realize the merit, in what
Europeans considered a "Fatalistic" attitude common to African Slaves,
African slaves, if prayer or the medicine man couldn't heal you, that's
as far as it went, and they were content to die. In other words, they
wouldn't have gotten on a "dialysis" program in the first place! They
would let "fate" run it's course. In the West, where we TRY to change
"FATE", Africans seemed primitive, not only cultural and scientifically
but intellectually as well...but I submit, that Africans by 1500 A.D.
had known all the material glory or high civilization and technology,
and opted not to pursue material existence like that any
further...there is evidence and testimonies by Africans (eg the Pigmy).
I would ask you this, is prolonging ones life as modern medicine does,
is that ethically "Christian"? What is the benefit of it, will you be
able to prepare yourself for the kingdom or after life, with those few
extra years? Or is because we REALLY don't believe there is a better
life to come?
Playtoe
|
326.9 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Watch your peace & cues | Wed Oct 02 1991 21:59 | 30 |
| While serving as a hospital chaplain, I deliberately spent most of my
time on the oncology floor.
I remember visiting one particular teenaged black woman, still a girl to
someone of my years. She had terminal cancer. She was scared and her eyes
conveyed deep despair. This wasn't her first time in the hospital to deal
with the disease.
After she explained to me what she had been enduring, I held her arm in
silence for a time.
And then I said to her, "It isn't fair, is it?"
"Oh!" she snapped, her voice unsettled. "Don't say that!"
"Why not?" I asked.
She confided to me that she didn't want to challenge God on this. She
didn't want to cause God to become displeased with her; at least, no more
displeased with her than God was already in allowing the cancer to invade
her body.
I whispered her name, my heart clogging up my throat, and I assured her
that God is bigger than that; that it's alright to tell God that she didn't
appreciate her situation one little bit; that it hurts and that it's just
not fair. We then cried awhile and hugged awhile.
God was there in that embrace.
Richard
|
326.10 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Glasnote. | Wed Oct 02 1991 22:50 | 23 |
| Sometimes people are so afraid of being honest to God with their
feelings, lest in so doing they commit some presumed sin, that they end
up hurting themselves. The feelings are there, whether they cover them
up or not. But dishonesty is not the path to spiritual healing, nor
the path to reconciliation with God.
To me, neither despair nor doubt are sins. They are honest feelings,
which come from the heart. In my view, the *real* sin is self-denial,
and the resulting denial of one's feelings before God. I believe that
people should not be so afraid of offending God by their doubts or
feelings of despair. Such an attitude is often self-destructive, and I
suspect that God would much more appreciate heartfelt expression of
concerns and anger from us than the rote recitation of platitudes.
Uncertainty and suffering are a part of our lives, and I think that God
fully understands this.
There is a difference, I believe, between experiencing honest feelings
of anger and depression on the one hand, and dwelling on those feelings
on the other. How we face up to those feelings is the real test of
spiritual strength. But you can't face up to them if you are too busy
hiding from them.
-- Mike
|
326.11 | Looking For A Few Good Saints | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Thu Oct 03 1991 12:18 | 16 |
| I never thought much about despair until one evening at dinner with
my pastor we were discussing the book, "The Imitation of Christ,"
by Thomas Kempis. It turns out that Thomas Kempis was up for
canonization by the Catholic Church. In the investigation into this
great man's life, they came to the point where his body would be
exhumed, to see if his body possibly avoided decay as other saint's
bodies had done. In opening his coffin, they discovered finger nail
marks on the lid of the coffin. Apparently he had been buried alive.
Well, the church denied his canonization, because they feared he
committed the sin of despair when he tried to claw his way out, rather
than trusting himself to God in death.
And you thought the Marines where tough to get into ?
Peace
Jim
|
326.12 | I think some should give it a second thought when talking to God | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Oct 03 1991 13:45 | 26 |
| RE: 10
Mike,
I don't know. I think we must "reverence" God, in our minds, out of
respect. For me and most black people, it's not good to running off at
the mouth, "telling him how you feel", basically, God already knows
"how you feel", it's about "Make your request known (voice it), and
saying your praises, and then shutting up and listen and wait for your
answer.
I mean, a MAN's "honest feelings" are crude and best left unspoken in
the presence of God. I mean imagine yourself in the presence of a
king (on earth), you don't sit and talk with him like you do your next
door neighbor.
The only honest feelings I ever show in the presence of God are sincere
humbleness and reverence and belief, but never "I didn't like this or
that"...man that's crazy! You see, MAN's knowledge is limited, even
his ability to comprehend is limited...so you at best are being
"arrogant" whenever you presume to know better than God...eg I
shouldn't have ended up this way, I shouldn't have been made sick like
this," and these may be your honest feelings, but that's only to say
that you are honestly arrogant!
Playtoe
|
326.13 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Glasnote. | Thu Oct 03 1991 14:32 | 28 |
| Jim, that's an interesting story about Thomas Kempis. It's funny, but
I had never heard of the legend of saints not decaying after they die
until reading "The Brothers Karamazov" (I am more than 90% finished
with the book, by the way, and I expect to finish it any week now :-)).
There was an incident involving the saintly Father Zossima, whose body
began decaying abnormally quickly, within 24 hours after his death.
This caused quite a scandal, since he was viewed by many as a saint,
and it was a source of glee for those who resented the man's authority
and following. This concept was new to me, and I didn't realize that
bodily decay had such theological implications. (Yeah, I know, I keep
talking about this book, but it really deserves its reputation as a
classic.)
I have to admit, I find it interesting that Kempis's final effort at
self-preservation was considered an act of despair. That seems to
suggest that, on the one hand, it is considered sinful despair to keep
trying even in the face of an apparently hopeless situation (rather
than giving in); and yet, it is also despair to give up in the face of
a hopeless situation. I can't help but wonder from that what *isn't*
considered despair. To me, what Kempis did was right. He tried to do
what he could--and what more can be asked of any of us. Many of us are
faced with apparently hopeless situations in our lives, and that can be
asked of us is to try, to do what we can in the face of such odds. To
passively accept whatever our circumstances happen to be is to give up
hope for having any influence on the world, on our lives, and the lives
of others. That, to me, is despair.
-- Mike
|
326.14 | My Body Is Already Decaying-:) | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Thu Oct 03 1991 18:02 | 12 |
| RE:-1
Mike,
one point I should make if I've misled you. Non-Decay of a
persons body is not a prerequisite for canonization. St. Francis
of Assisi's body decayed, and I think he's one of the greatest
Saints that ever lived.
I think we can put Tom Kempis in the saint category despite, the
churches disagreement.
Peace
Jim
|
326.15 | Random thoughts | LJOHUB::NSMITH | rises up with eagle wings | Fri Oct 04 1991 17:16 | 34 |
| Mike,
When I read .0, I didn't wonder whether it was your father's despair or
the minister's -- I wondered whether it was your father's or your own.
>That seems to
>suggest that, on the one hand, it is considered sinful despair to keep
>trying even in the face of an apparently hopeless situation (rather
>than giving in); and yet, it is also despair to give up in the face of
>a hopeless situation. I can't help but wonder from that what *isn't*
>considered despair.
1) Some would say that "to give up in the face of a hopeless situation"
is a matter of trust and acceptance rather than of despair. Maybe
it's all in what you call it.
2) This string could benefit from a definition of despair.
3) Without that definition, though, I'll plunge on and ask: What could
be more despairing than Jesus' cry, "My God, my God, WHY have you
forsaken me?" Certainly that was not a mortal sin (nor, in my
opinion, a sin at all, but rather an honest feeling).
4) In some such painful situations, I feel that taking the
intiative for ending one's own physically-hopeless situation
is an appropriately responsible act. (I'm not suggesting it
for anything other than a pain-wracked terminal situation or a
situation of such diminished ability as to make one's life
unbearable. [Thinking of my mother-in-law here.] I hope that
if I suffer from such ailment in the
future I will be able to remain courageous and continue to find
meaning in my life -- at least in part because I doubt that I
could commit suicide. ;} )
|
326.16 | Oops -- PS to previous! | LJOHUB::NSMITH | rises up with eagle wings | Fri Oct 04 1991 17:20 | 14 |
| >To
>passively accept whatever our circumstances happen to be is to give up
>hope for having any influence on the world, on our lives, and the lives
>of others. That, to me, is despair.
Sorry, I seemed to have overlooked your definition. I don't
think that's always the case. Passive acceptance can, in some cases,
bring a great sense of peace and make you a great witness -- which
doesn't exclude the value of "fighting the good fight," too.
It's a matter of determining what God calls you to do in a specific
situation.
Nancy
|
326.17 | Once past the grieving comes hope | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | The Lion with the Lamb | Fri Oct 04 1991 22:19 | 11 |
| Note 326.12
> "arrogant" whenever you presume to know better than God...eg I
> shouldn't have ended up this way, I shouldn't have been made sick like
> this," and these may be your honest feelings, but that's only to say
> that you are honestly arrogant!
Certainly, to some degree this is true. Somehow when you're 19 years old
and grieving the brevity of your own life, it doesn't seem so arrogant.
Richard
|
326.18 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Get thee to a notes conference. | Mon Oct 07 1991 12:53 | 18 |
| While I was in a bookstore yesterday, I noticed that Robert Pirsig had
written a new book. He was the author of "Zen and the Art of
Motorcycle Maintenance", a book I started to read in college but did
not have time to finish (I have promised myself to read this book
completely some day). I perused the jacket flap, and saw that "Zen and
the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" had been rejected by over 120
publishers before it finally made its way to print. And yet once it
was published it received wide acclaim.
I think that if I had been the author, I would have given up after
100th rejection or so. :-) I think the point is, when do you ever
know that it is time to give up? How can you ever say for sure that a
situation requires acceptance? I don't think it is ever all that
clear. The dissidents in Eastern Europe, in those dark days of the
1970s and 1980s, must have thought from time to time that their efforts
would not come to fruition either. What kept them going?
-- Mike
|
326.19 | sans tongue-in-cheek | CARTUN::BERGGREN | a deeper wave rising | Mon Oct 07 1991 14:14 | 7 |
| Mike,
> What kept them going?
The Force.
Karen
|
326.20 | A not-very-satisfactory response | LJOHUB::NSMITH | rises up with eagle wings | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:00 | 15 |
| Mike,
I'm sure that it is difficult to *know* when to accept and when to
"fight on." I imagine that the verification you get is
internal/subjective/intuitive. Perhaps fighting when we should accept
and accepting when we should fight are each symptoms of despair?
Consider the stages of dying, which include both struggle and
acceptance.
Hard questions; no easy answers -- and no certainty about any of this.
Guess that's the meaning of faith.
Nancy
|