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STLWanderer's avatar

Everything about this article resonates so much of what I've been feeling and thinking for the past 4 years. My tiny brain can't wrap around the fact that we have someone who's supposed to be a loving father insist we suffer for him. Not only are we expected to suffer, we're expected to suffer with a smile on our face and gladness in our heart. I have MS and I can barely walk and my insurance won't cover the treatment I need to get to prevent it from getting worse. I've asked God to be healed or to provide some type of financial windfall to get the medication or to move to a more accessible home. I get nothing. When I tell people this, I get a multitude of stupid answers:

1. I have to make an effort before God can heal me and even then the healing I want is internal not external;

2. I keep trying to be in control. I have to let go and let God take the reigns;

(1 and 2 seem to be contradictory but potayto potatoe)

3. God will never let this suffering go to waste. The amount of grace that God gives is so much more than your suffering. (I can't buy a wheelchair with grace)

4. Be patient. God provides for all of your needs. (If all my needs were being provided for I wouldn't keep asking for the same things over and over again).

After a certain point you get tired of constantly being told "no" to everything you ask for yourself from someone who is so cold and silent. Ultimately, life is a losing battle.

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M.  King's avatar

Wow, another blockbuster! You're stretching and challenging me with well thought out and articulate essays like this

. Maybe because part of my family is Orthodox and I've always loved the Christian East I've had first hand experience of Christian faith unimpacted by Augustine and Anselm. Between the two of them their thinking and theologies have, in my very humble opinion, traumatized western Christians. How many Roman Catholics and Protestants have a Stockhom Syndrome "love" for God? How many live in agony believing that most of their family members and friends (and they themselves) will probably go to hell? How many view life as an obstacle course booby trapped with countless occasions of sin? This is good news?!

I have been led to believe that no one stands alone and no one is self sufficient. We need other people to survive, let alone remain sane. We need air to breath, food to nourish and water to drink. We also need God, who made us to share in His divinity and life. He IS beauty, goodness and love. In Christ God is even "now" drawing all, throughout all time and universes, to Himself. Only those who prefer something to joy will miss out.

Saints Isaac of Syria, Gregory of Nyssa, Macarius, Ambrose and Boniface have been very helpful to me

Thanks Steve for your honesty and willingness to share your struggles with faith. You have a strong intellect and raise excellent questions that are too often left to fester in people's minds..

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