Posted on 06/20/2013 2:39:32 PM PDT by NYer
“You cannot pray with enemies in your heart,” he said June 20. “With (both) brothers and enemies in your heart, you cannot pray.”
“They must go to hell, right? I will have nothing to do with them!” the Bishop of Rome said sarcastically.
The Pope told how Jesus noted, “if we do not forgive others, neither will the Father forgive us our sins.”
“It’s so hard to forgive others, it is really difficult because we always have that regret inside,” he said.
“We think ‘you did this to me, you wait … I’ll repay him the favor.'”
Pope Francis gave his homily based on the day’s Gospel, which tells how Jesus taught his disciples to pray the ‘Our Father.”
“We have a father very close to us, who embraces us,” the Roman pontiff said.
“All these worries, concerns that we have, let's leave them to the Father; he knows what we need.”
“But Father, what? My father?”
“No, our Father!” he exclaimed. “Because I am not an only child, none of us are, and if I cannot be a brother, I can hardly become a child of the Father, because he is a father to all.”
Pope Francis underscored that if we are not “at peace with my brothers, I cannot say ‘Father’ to him.”
Saying “Father, I have sinned” is “the key of every prayer, to feel loved by a father,” he reflected.
“Jesus immediately gives us a piece of advice in prayer: ‘in praying, do not babble,’ do not make worldly noises, vain noises.”
Pope Francis explained that Jesus teaches us not to turn to God with “so many words” because “he knows everything.”
“And he warned that prayer is not a magical thing – there is no magic with prayer.”
The Bishop of Rome noted “someone once told me that when he went to a witch doctor they said a lot of words to heal him, but that is pagan.”
“You must pray to him who generated you, who gave you life,” Pope Francis said.
“Not to everyone – everyone is too anonymous.”
“To whom do I pray, to a cosmic God?” he asked.
Praying to a 'cosmic God' is a polytheistic model that comes from “a rather light culture,” and is too impersonal.
“To whom do I pray, to the almighty God? He is too far off, ah, I can’t hear him. Neither did Jesus.”
“You must pray to the Father,” Pope Francis affirmed.
“The first” word is Father and it is “the key” to prayer.
He stressed that “without saying, without feeling that word, you cannot pray.”
“Jesus has promised us the Holy Spirit, it is he who teaches us from within, from the heart, how to say ‘Father’ and how to say ‘our.'”
First, let's understand that this is an old Catholic cleche' you are dishing out and I know it's supposed to be a game stopper...
When coming at this argument from a different angle, the Catholic answer to end all is that there couldn't have been any books since the people of that age were illiterate and slow...
It required millions of monks from the Catholic religion to churn out the copies and put binding on them...
But now, with this argument, there were hundreds of copies of books floating around the known world...Just another tactic...
Since all of these documents are not in the Bible, who decided which letters and books would be included? How was it decided? By what authority did these individuals make their decision.
I already answered that, twice...God decided...And he accomplished it...And I think God has the authority to make that decision...We're not talking about pagan books which were written by men alone...
God said that he created the heavens and the earth...Do you believe that??? God also said he would preserve his words...You don't believe that???
What about the Gospel of Thomas or the Gospel of Philip, two of the many books in circulation. Who decided that these two books should not be included?
Again, God did...
Could be that those two books were authentically written by the apostles (but unlikely)...Regardless, God obviously didn't want them in the scriptures...
No.....I’m not a fool but a realist!
Yeah! Go ahead and live by that credo and see how far it get’s you.
We have already tried that on immigration and see what rewards you have enjoyed from it.
Christ asked us to pray for our enemies.
While I appreciate your Faith, my response was in truth facetious. I guess I,m not that devout because I have to ask.
So you are saying it’s not okay to pray for our enemies to go to hell?
How? Through what means? Who are the men that sat down and examined each and every writing to determine if it was inspired? The book did not compile itself.
This is pycho-babble. It is not what the scriptures teaches nor what our Lord Jesus stated. But it sure sounds good.
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