When a soul move farther from God, its Guardian Angel does everything it can to get them back on the right track. Our individual movements are easily tracked by a Vanity-o-Meter, a spiritual radar, somewhere in the sky. It’s a spiritual version of a NORAD command center that keeps track of airplanes. The direction our souls are taking are as visible in Heaven as roadside bombers shown in infrared camera videos taken from drones over Afghanistan.
Help is available if our souls start to stray. If we start thinking too much of ourselves, for instance, powerful forces combine to put us in our place. As we go farther into Catholic Fundamentalism, we are driven to conclude that one such group of angels may be known in Heaven as The Humiliators. Those who reach that conclusion keep a large piece of humble pie nearby. When they realize they’ve thought, said, or done something that might cause The Humiliators to be sent, they’ll quickly avail themselves of humble pie’s curative powers in the hope that they may be spared a painful visit.
How to best keep The Humiliators away? We should be worshipful, obedient, and grateful to He Who lovingly programmed us out of nothing, wrapping our aging bodies around immortal souls. Otherwise, we end up like Elliot Spitzer.
Catholic Fundamentalism Helps Keep The Humiliators From Dropping By
There are times when Guardian Angels want the souls for whom they’re responsible to consider the idea that “God has the power to program energies and particles. He compiled them into systems and beings to let us free will programs (human beings) freely conclude either that He did or did not do so.”
The Catholic Fundamentalism view that The Unprogrammed Programmer wrote and downloaded Creation Program makes the teachings and beliefs of The Church appear uncontradictable, if not reasonable. Catholic Fundamentalism encourages us to think of God as being vastly more powerful than the human programmers whose works we see every day.
Catholic Fundamentalism tends to keep us so God-fearing that wisdom can begin to work within our own, individual program.