Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Eyeglasses still wrong and thoughts on personhood

Never again will I go to a chain optometrist or eye glasses provider. They have done the prescription wrong a second time.

One needs glasses...if one is practically blind without them, like me.

Suffering from God sometimes takes odd shapes. How many people are there in this world who need good prescription glasses and cannot get them? Millions, I am sure.

When one suffers, one loses one's individuality and becomes a statistic, as in women with cancer, or single mums, or those who are homeless. Statistics deny personhood.

But, this is God's Plan, to stripe us of our "self-will" and "self-love" and put us in a position of humility.

If God is not sending you suffering, worry. He allows those He loves and woos to undergo much suffering.

We think we are the persons God wants us to be, but we are not, most likely.

If one accepts suffering graciously, one will cooperate with the graces to become a saint.

Christ suffered. "God shows his love for us in that while we were yet sinners Christ 
died for us" (Romans 5:8).

Can we expect anything less to come to perfect love?


The Syrians are suffering, the Malians are suffering, the Nigerians are suffering and so on.

The CCC states that, in Providence and the scandal of evil:
309 If God the Father almighty, the Creator of the ordered and good world, cares for all his creatures, why does evil exist? To this question, as pressing as it is unavoidable and as painful as it is mysterious, no quick answer will suffice. Only Christian faith as a whole constitutes the answer to this question: the goodness of creation, the drama of sin and the patient love of God who comes to meet man by his covenants, the redemptive Incarnation of his Son, his gift of the Spirit, his gathering of the Church, the power of the sacraments and his call to a blessed life to which free creatures are invited to consent in advance, but from which, by a terrible mystery, they can also turn away in advance. There is not a single aspect of the Christian message that is not in part an answer to the question of evil.
310 But why did God not create a world so perfect that no evil could exist in it? With infinite power God could always create something better.174 But with infinite wisdom and goodness God freely willed to create a world "in a state of journeying" towards its ultimate perfection. In God's plan this process of becoming involves the appearance of certain beings and the disappearance of others, the existence of the more perfect alongside the less perfect, both constructive and destructive forces of nature. With physical good there exists also physical evil as long as creation has not reached perfection.175
311 Angels and men, as intelligent and free creatures, have to journey toward their ultimate destinies by their free choice and preferential love. They can therefore go astray. Indeed, they have sinned. Thus hasmoral evil, incommensurably more harmful than physical evil, entered the world. God is in no way, directly or indirectly, the cause of moral evil.176 He permits it, however, because he respects the freedom of his creatures and, mysteriously, knows how to derive good from it:

For almighty God. . ., because he is supremely good, would never allow any evil whatsoever to exist in his works if he were not so all-powerful and good as to cause good to emerge from evil itself.177

More later from Aquinas on this point....