T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
903.1 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Mon Apr 18 1994 18:22 | 22 |
| Faithfulness is something that most of us desire in our relationships.
One who is unfaithful causes excruciating pain to his/her mate.
God has often expressed how important faithfulness is not only in
marriage, but in our spiritual life as well, our relationship with Him.
While he has mentioned that there are other gods, he has also mentioned
that "Thou shalt put no other God before me", this can also be implied
equal to him. For he also says, "Use not the Lord thy God's name in
vain." Vanity doesn't always mean swearing. It can also mean using
Christ's name as equal to others.
Philippians 2:10 That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow,
of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth;
The name of Jesus is sacred, it is Holy and will be revered if not on
this earth in our human lives, whether in heaven or hell it shall be
declared as a name above all other names.
In His Love,
Nancy
|
903.2 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Mon Apr 18 1994 18:34 | 8 |
| Faithful
1. Supportive, Loyal
2. Worthy of trust or belief
3. Consistent with fact
Syns: Constant, fast, firm, loyal, resolute, staunch, steadfast,
steady, true
|
903.3 | A very powerful word...Faith. | DPDMAI::DAWSON | I've seen better times | Mon Apr 18 1994 22:48 | 16 |
|
The faith in Jesus Christ has been something of a "calling
card" for most Christians. It is this word that excites us the most and
yet is the least seen among us. Even Peter, upon whose faith Jesus
said he would build his Church, denyed him three times before the cock
crowed on the day of his lords death. It was Thomas who said" My
lord, my god" after being shown his nail scared hands. And it was Mary
whose lifetime of faith caused Jesus to appear to her first after he
arose. David, the man after Gods own heart, failed God in so many ways
but because his faith cause him to bring all matters to God, God
blessed him mightly. And Ruth, beautiful Ruth, full of love....
Ok..ok...I'll stop. :-} Feel another sermon coming on. :-)
Dave
|
903.4 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Apr 19 1994 01:41 | 26 |
| Faith is a strong word, it defies gravity and common sense. :-)
But being found faithful is also very powerful. God promises a
special crown for the faithful, or if you will, the unwaivering.
We are to be faithful to God or risk causing hurt in his heart as deep
as a wounded mate. God loves us so deeply that when his people stray
from the Truth, he longs for us to return. Like the father of the
prodigal son... ready to kill the fatted calf.
When I think of the Love of Christ and of what he did on the cross, my
love cannot be divided amongst other gods. There is no greater love
then that of one who would lay down his life for a friend.
I love my God... and I know He loves me... and His love is PURE... so
PURE that it softens my hard heart, that it heals my broken heart and
that it purges my unclean heart...
God's word is so powerful that it is quick and sharp as a two-edged
sword, it cuts to the chase... gets to the root problems and yanks
those puppies right out... all I need to do is stay clothed in the
armor of God, protecting my head, my heart, my loins and my feet.
Steadfast, loyal, true...
|
903.5 | Singing in the darkness | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Most Dangerous Child | Tue Apr 19 1994 13:47 | 9 |
| "Faith is the bird that sings while it is dark because it feels
the light even before it arrives."
This is a paraphrase of a saying I heard by a Jewish rabbi. It
stuck with me. Maybe I'm an orno-theologist! ;-}
Shalom,
Richard
|
903.6 | | NITTY::DIERCKS | Not every celebration is a party! | Tue Apr 19 1994 13:54 | 10 |
|
Maybe just a bird-brain, Richard....
Har, har, har
Greg -- back from a 3-day weekend -- and over 300 miles
on the bicycle (I've got a serious case of bike
butt and serious sunburn on my ever larger
forehead)
|
903.7 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Tue Apr 19 1994 14:03 | 4 |
| Faith is cruising a bicycle down a quiet street,
feeling the spirituality and sensuality of the cool breeze all around
the endorphins turned up high,
A feeling that God's in his heaven and all's right with the world.
|
903.8 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Apr 19 1994 14:13 | 1 |
| You've now defined faith, can you tell me what faithful means to you?
|
903.9 | faithful | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Tue Apr 19 1994 14:19 | 11 |
| >Faith
>Faith is cruising a bicycle down a quiet street,
>feeling the spirituality and sensuality of the cool breeze all around
>the endorphins turned up high,
>A feeling that God's in his heaven and all's right with the world.
Faithful
Carrying and living that feeling of God's presence 24 hours a day.
|
903.10 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Apr 19 1994 18:06 | 1 |
| Can you be faithful when the feeling is gone?
|
903.11 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Tue Apr 19 1994 18:16 | 4 |
| Unless you are habitually aware of God's presence, I don't believe you
can be faithful. Awareness of God's presence is a feeling.
Patricia
|
903.12 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Apr 19 1994 18:52 | 6 |
| -1
>Awareness of God's presence is a feeling.
Can you explain this one just a little bit more for me? What kind of
feeling?
|
903.13 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Most Dangerous Child | Tue Apr 19 1994 22:44 | 6 |
| Faithful, besides meaning full of faith, means maintaining a relationship
of integrity; to not "cheat."
Shalom,
Richard
|
903.14 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Wed Apr 20 1994 10:18 | 20 |
| Richard,Nancy,
I like the definition of faithful as maintianing a relationship of
integrity. I don't like the negatively expressed version "to not
cheat".
The positive does get at the "feeling" of living in the presence of
God. The question I ask myself is what does it feel like to live a
relationship of integrity. How do I feel when I am living out of a
sense of integrity. I tend to know when I am living with integrity
based on my feelings.
My being an "INFP" on the Myers Brigs scale influences my answer. The "F"
means,I tend to make decisions for myself based upon how things feel.
The opposite on that scale is "t" which means to make decisions based
on thoughts.
The "I" (introversion) means I tend to process things including feelings
Inwardly. It is very important for me to understand my feelings and to
think about them.
|
903.15 | | AIMHI::JMARTIN | | Wed Apr 20 1994 12:30 | 10 |
| I admired Jobs faithfulness particularly. To anyone, if we survive a
nuclear war and life is completely miserable, will you still have this
feeling, or will you lose hope?
The great example of faith to me is Acts 16 where Paul and Silas are
in jail. Their circumstances were miserable and they suffered for the
cause of Christ. We see how God freed them as a testimony to the
jailer and he and his house got saved that very day!
-Jack
|
903.16 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Apr 20 1994 13:07 | 56 |
| Patricia,
Thanks for the answer. I understand exactly what you mean. I am an
ENFP and live much of my life with my feelings right out in front of
me.. I also have a very strong sense of discernment, which I think you
probably do too. How the E differs from I probably is mostly in
expression... I think.
Anyway back to topic. I'm often told that living by your feelings
causes much unhappiness because our feelings are very transient. For
women that becomes particularly hazardous due to our hormonal fluxes
throughout each month. I am constantly reminded that what I feel may
not actually be accurate during those times.
Being faithful is a discipline, decision or an attitude if you will
that transcends our emotions or feelings. Being faithful is a reaction
in many folks who are married. When someone of the opposite sex who is
attractive comes on to them, their automatic reaction is to remember
their spouse and shun the flirtatiousness of another. Most who have
someone of the opposite sex turn them on would encourage and possibly
follow through with an affair. 75% of all marriages in this country
experience unfaithfulness. But what stops the faithful from going this
far? Character? Yeah, but what in that character? The discipline,
decision to be faithful the bite your teeth and zip your zipper kind of
action that overrules the stimulation is what helps one to be faithful.
I think of Joseph, sold into slavery by his brothers, thrown into
prison, released to Potifer as a servant, temptation from Potifer's
wife and being faithful to Potifer gets thrown into prison again
through the lies of Potifer's wife... In prison again, he is chained,
beaten and left to die when the Butcher and the Baker of the King is
imprisoned with him... Then Joseph interprets the dreams and the Baker
is released from prison and promises to remember Joseph to the King.
But he doesn't and time passes when the King needs his dream
interpreted. Then the baker remembers Joseph and the King gives
audience to Joseph. Joseph not only interprets the dream, but the King
declares him the wisest man in his kingdom and appoints Joseph head of
his kingdom under himself.
A famine hits the homeland of Joseph and his brothers come to the king
for grain. They don't recognize their now older brother and of course
they surely didn't think he'd be in the position of the King's right
hand man. And Joseph gives liberally to his brothers. He also gets to
meet the brother that was born after he was enslaved.
Joseph loved his brothers inspite of their wrong.. he remained faithful
to God through his trials, he remained faithful to his brothers and
father through his trials. He could have retaliated... but he didn't.
Joseph certainly after having been sold into slavery, beaten, falsely
accused, and imprisoned for near all of his life, surely must not have
FELT like being faithful or kind... but he was... He didn't let his
circumstances dictate to his spirit.
Being Faithful to God though certainly leaves one feeling whole and
comforted is a discipline, a decision, an attitude a way of living.
|
903.17 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Wed Apr 20 1994 13:37 | 49 |
| Nancy,
I think the wonderful thing about Bible stories is that each one of us
takes something a little different from each story. The Bible is a
treasury of stories and our own minds and spirits(with Divine
assistance perhaps) allow us to find that which comforts us and
inspires us when we need it.
I have spent much of the last four years getting very much in touch
with my feelings. Getting in touch with one's feeling is a discipline.
That does not mean that I always act on my feelings but it means that I
try from moment to moment to have my feelings and know what they are
about.
One of my most valued feelings during this period is my feeling of
being in relationship with Goddess/God. I do learn to relate with God
based on my human relationships. If I think about my role models that
encourage me to be the best person I can be, and inspire me to get in
touch with the best powers within me, that helps point me to my
relationship with the Divine.
I relate to Cindy's term "Christ" Conscious in that regard. "Christ"
is the power of God, the Word of God, the Wisdom of God, incarnate in
the flesh. I can feel it, when I am in relationship with a person
acting from this kind of personally intergrity. And when I relate to
such a person, or to any person "living in Christ" I too am inspired to
get in touch with the best inside of me.
A spiritual community could be defined as a community in which the
"Christ" in each person meets and interacts with the "Christ" in every
other person. Christ in that sense is the Wisdom of God incarnate.
It implies for me more than a community of people who accept certain
doctrines and beliefs about the history and person of Jesus.
I can feel it when I am in community. All true community for me is a
holy community. It implies the embodiment of the most important
commandment to love God with all one's heart, mind, and soul and to
love others as oneself.
Theologically, these beliefs are very much in line with Paul's theology
as expressed in Corinthians, and elsewhere.
Faithfulness and holiness for me are very much a feeling-a mystic
feeling. they are also a commitment for my actions to follow from my
feelings.
It is not easy to put it all in words.
Patricia
|
903.18 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Apr 20 1994 14:28 | 4 |
| How does your feeling react to times of trial?
BTW, I enjoyed your note very much and believe though we may word
things differently we really do think alike in some areas.
|
903.19 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Most Dangerous Child | Wed Apr 20 1994 14:56 | 9 |
| Times of trial are psychically more bearable when the decision to
accept the suffering is a choice. Suffering is still suffering,
pain is still pain, of course. However, the soul that willingly
chooses the cross, instead of beating beat over the head with it,
will be the stronger and more resilient one.
Shalom,
Richard
|
903.20 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:29 | 7 |
| That is also the power that I have learned from Paul's message. That
we can endure in suffering. That we can make one decision after
another from a sense of integrity. That we can have hope and faith
that we will make the right decisions. As Richard says that we make a
decision to accept the suffering.
Patricia
|
903.21 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Most Dangerous Child | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:32 | 7 |
| Is being faithful to one the renouncing of all others? Am I, as a
married man, never to exchange ideas and feelings with another woman
besides my spouse? What a ridicules notion!
Shalom,
Richard
|
903.22 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:37 | 16 |
| Richard,
Being faithful in any relationship means living up to the commitment in
the relationship. The covenant so to speak. Either implicitly or
explicitly we establish covenants in all our relationships.
Marriage in Western Civilization implies a covenant to have sexual
relations only within the marriage. Faithlessness for me is not
defined by having sex or not having sex but by living up to the
covenant.
I believe that each partnered couple have differing covenants with each
other that cover a whole lot of things other than sex. Faithfulness is
living up to all the terms of the covenant. IMHO
Patricia
|
903.23 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Apr 20 1994 18:01 | 22 |
| .22
Absolutely Patricia.
.21
Forsaking all others is a part of most western wedding vows. So I
guess I don't think it's all that ridiculous.
The question comes to mind as I think of what you have written just what
does faithfulness mean in a relationship, the synonym loyal comes to
mind.
Conversation with another does not equal lack of loyalty. This is where
the emotion that Patricia was talking about comes into play, it's a
sense of responsibility and commitment with love. When the emotional
aspect of love or sensuality [not equating the two] comes into view with
someone other then your mate, then the potential if not actuality of
unfaithfulness occurs.
|
903.24 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Most Dangerous Child | Wed Apr 20 1994 19:47 | 10 |
| The phrase "forsaking all others" was not in our wedding vows,
however, even if it had been, I do not construe that faithfulness
in marriage means to neglect or ignore or to be incommunicado with
all others.
If you do, then so be it.
Shalom,
Richard
|
903.25 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Apr 20 1994 20:00 | 18 |
|
Richard,
how could you come to the conclusion you did based on this?
From my .23
Conversation with another does not equal lack of loyalty. This is where
the emotion that Patricia was talking about comes into play, it's a
sense of responsibility and commitment with love. When the
emotional aspect of love or sensuality [not equating the two] comes into
view with someone other then your mate, then the potential if not actuality
of unfaithfulness occurs.
|
903.26 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Most Dangerous Child | Wed Apr 20 1994 20:18 | 2 |
| .25 I didn't reach a conclusion in .24.
|
903.27 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Apr 20 1994 20:25 | 4 |
| Okay... I concede.
Fight with yourself Richard. My time, my heart has too much to offer
to someone who wishes to just take stabs at me.
|
903.28 | | SNOC02::LINCOLNR | No Pain, No Gain... | Wed Apr 20 1994 23:45 | 15 |
| Both:
903.16 (Nancy) and
903.17 (Patricia)
were very beautiful notes.
I after reading 903.17 I was thinking the same thing that Nancy said in
903.18 which was: If you can get past the "language" and the "style of
wording" or "terminology used" and get down to how people feel and the
concepts they are trying to convey, we are a lot more similar than we
may sometimes think!
Thanks you two...
Rob
|
903.29 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Thu Apr 21 1994 09:35 | 37 |
| Nancy,
>When the emotional aspect of love or sensuality [not equating the two]
>come into view with someone other then your mate, then the potential if
>not actuality of unfaithfulness occurs.
This is an area that I have thought a lot about particularly since I
very much enjoy my friendships with a number of men both single and
married.
Jesus' love ethic is central to my beliefs. My goal is to have the most
honest, loving, intimate relationships possible with the people who are
important to me. To experience love in the fullest sense of that word
with the exception that I do honor and value the commitments to sexual
fidelity which are central to committed partnership relationships.
I also am committed to being in touch with and having my own feelings
including my sexual feelings. This is where I am committed to having
my actions follow my commitments and not always my feelings. Perhaps
it is the recognition of a hierarchy of feelings with some more
transient than others.
If as I stated I believe that all of our relationships our covenant
relationships and faithfulness is living up to the terms of the
covenant, then there is always temptation to not live up to the terms
of the covenant. We are human and we experience temptation constantly.
Faithfulness is in all of our actions being in integrity with our
commitments. To God, to ourselves, to our partners, to our friends, to
all humanity, to all creation.
I don't view sexual temptation or sexual sin as any different than
other temptations or other sin.
Patricia
|
903.30 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Apr 21 1994 19:38 | 56 |
| > This is an area that I have thought a lot about particularly since I
> very much enjoy my friendships with a number of men both single and
> married.
Patricia, let me re-emphasize no-one is suggesting that this is wrong.
> Jesus' love ethic is central to my beliefs. My goal is to have the most
> honest, loving, intimate relationships possible with the people who are
> important to me.
I agree with your here.. but Jesus also teaches us to love our
enemies... how do you feel about that?
>To experience love in the fullest sense of that word
> with the exception that I do honor and value the commitments to sexual
> fidelity which are central to committed partnership relationships.
We agree.
> I also am committed to being in touch with and having my own feelings
> including my sexual feelings. This is where I am committed to having
Amen to that! An *nfp typically is very good at this... oftimes
expressing those needs to a mate can be difficult, once they are known
to the individual themselves.
> my actions follow my commitments and not always my feelings. Perhaps
> it is the recognition of a hierarchy of feelings with some more
> transient than others.
That sounds interesting and thought provoking. It's also good to hear
this. When making a spiritual commitment, can your personal circum-
stances sway your emotional connection?
>If as I stated I believe that all of our relationships our covenant
>relationships and faithfulness is living up to the terms of the
>covenant, then there is always temptation to not live up to the terms
>of the covenant. We are human and we experience temptation constantly.
>Faithfulness is in all of our actions being in integrity with our
>commitments. To God, to ourselves, to our partners, to our friends, to
>all humanity, to all creation.
Amen to that! We are in complete agreement!
> I don't view sexual temptation or sexual sin as any different than
> other temptations or other sin.
Well we diverse a little here... I believe that God views it
differently as far as relationships are concerned, but not as far as
judgement is concerned.
Another question, how do you decide to whom Spiritually you will be
faithful?
|
903.31 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Fri Apr 22 1994 11:16 | 20 |
| Nancy,
It is good to see that we have so much agreement.
Yes I believe we should love our enemies. In fact we should not have
enemies. There are different kinds of love though and different kinds
of commitments and relationships.
Regarding choosing the source of my spiritual relationship, that is no
issue. I like you believe that there is only one God and I
believe that you and I and everyone else in here worship that same one
God. We just have some differences in the nature of that God and in
how we experience God and how we experience God's revelation to us.
I believe God is real. Therefore the reality of God transcends all
personal images of God. Even if I do not know God fully, God still is
fully who God is. That is why I love the statement. "I am who I am".
For me it says it all.
Patricia
|
903.32 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Jul 26 1994 17:29 | 11 |
| The Jezebel topic made me revisit this string... "Faithful",
contemplating the term "faithful"... what does it mean spiritually?
God says we are to put no other gods before us... But he gives us
that choice.
A spiritual whore is not much different than a marital whore.
|
903.33 | | AIMHI::JMARTIN | | Tue Jul 26 1994 17:34 | 7 |
| Jezebel was a created being, made in God's image. Jezebel's conduct
holds no more merit than Hitler's or anybody elses for that matter.
Jezebel was faithless to her creator. There is nothing noble about
that.
-Jack
|
903.34 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Jul 26 1994 17:53 | 8 |
| Jezebel certainly wasn't faithful to Yahweh. But she wasn't a follower of
Yahweh, so why should she be considered faithless to him? She was a
Pheonician who worshipped (her specific) baal.
It's like accusing a Hindu of being wicked and faithless to his creator
because he doesn't worship the Christian God.
-- Bob
|
903.35 | | AIMHI::JMARTIN | | Tue Jul 26 1994 18:07 | 7 |
| Bob:
Our natural tendency is to be wicked. This is the human condition.
Jezebel was a wicked individual. She wasn't unfaithful but she was
faithless.
-Jack
|