anonymous wrote:
right i haven't been online for a while therefore the late comments.
anyway, i think that faith is a very mysterious phenomenon that happens while you are still unaware of it. as in, sometimes letting it come naturally is so much easier than to force something out of nothing. you get what i mean?
i have experienced faith before, though not spiritually. i guess i can identify with the story, about how people can be so full of faith in others to trust them with everything they have. it is an awesome feeling. but the sad thing is, i feel that faith when not maintained and preserved properly will diminish and i doubt the same faith will be found again.
perceptions to me make all the difference. i mean everyone just makes of the world what they want to perceive of it. no one thing is the same to any two people, no one thing means the same either. it's a matter of the interaction of people, time, space, and situations. and in the same way, faith is unique to each individual. the vague idea ans emptions may be the same, but the true force and underlying meanings will be different.
but i agree. one must not fear losing the faith and hence not believing. faith, i believe, is a powerful concept everyone should yearn to experience.
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i won't try to define the boundaries of faith to you, because i cannot agree with you more that faith is a very personal thing. i say 'thing' for lack of a better term in my vocabulary. it is neither a concept nor an experience. maybe you can find a better way to describe it, but then again, if it's so personal our definitions should differ. to you, it may be like a gentle breeze that blows upon your back, and to me, a general lightness of being.
i agree that perception makes a huge difference. however, it's important to note that our perceptions are formed purely from our experiences. no one is born pro-life or afraid of homosexuals. through instruction or personal experience we build up our beliefs and values. my friend told me yesterday that personality is what we are born with and character is what we develop. i believe that biological processes at pre-birth and birth affect our personalities more than hereditary factors do. that's what i believe for now.
i must make the distinction between faith and trust. when i say that i trust you, i am acknowledging your reliability and dependability. when i say that i have great faith in you, i am acknowledging the magnanimity and promise of good things that lie in your (and possibly our, as a result of your actions) future.
when you take something on faith, what you receive (if there is anything to receive) is dependant on the generosity and benevolence of the other party. when you trust, it is out of the strength of the relationship between you and the other party that they act. though trust is based on experience with the other party, faith is not. thus, i agree that we cannot force faith. we can, however, set the foundations for faith so that we may see it when it does come by.
the possibilities in life are endless because we are offered so many choices in almost every aspect of it. we cannot experience everything in one lifetime. maybe not even in a million lifetimes. faith is taking a leap forward and trusting in the unknown. look back and see that before you listened to your parents when they told you not to touch fire, you took it on faith and didn't. realise also, that no matter how much they told you about what fire or hot things can do to you, you have, sometime or other in your life, burnt or scalded yourself. faith is like refined gold. only when tempered with adversity does the product purely glitter. faith presents you with a path to elysian fields, but before that, you must make your way through forests.
my stand is this: do not think about faith. do not be afraid of it. it is inherently something that you cannot touch, but can feel. it may not be a feeling so pervasive as to tingle all your senses, but faith has a way of letting you know that it has arrived. keep seeking and you'll be able to discern one day. seek earnestly.
keep the joy of faith away from the joy of loving a person. that's my advice to anyone who will listen. they tend to blur the lines of one another, and cause you to mix up their questions and answers without you realising it.
on subjects of which we know nothing, we both believe and disbelieve a hundred times an hour, which keeps believing nimble, said emily dickinson, who ironically prided herself as a pagan.
if everything is what we perceive it to be, then it must be possible to train ourselves to overcome adversity with renewed perception of our troubles. literally seeing every setback as an opportunity for us to do something else can work wonders in our lives.
the lovely thing about faith is that when it glows so warmly in another person's life, like fireflies, we are attracted to it. and just like those same fireflies, we too, learn to make our own light.