Lost souls and Catholic Fundamentalism.

For much of our lives, most of us were consumed by earthly concerns. Our interests were primarily on the people and things of the world. We had no idea that God could program particles, three-dimensional pixels, and compile an entire universe out of them. As this thought was explored, belief became more reasonable and was accompanied by increasing awareness that God was real, had immense power, and could help us find Him.

When we consider that our soul will live forever, and must spend eternity either with God or without Him, many are brought closer to Him by realizing that since He can program particles, compile them into systems and beings, and that the most complicated of those beings were programmed to have free will, we should take seriously the Operating Instructions that The Programmer has provided.

Many souls are not convinced. Our job is to help. After familiarizing ourselves with the basics of Catholic Fundamentalism, we may consider sharing them with some others. It’s a simple approach, and one that is uniquely suited to a generation that realizes how quickly powerful programs can get things done.

Author's Notes:

Related:

The Visitation: Mary Brings Christ to Elizabeth

Mary's visit to Elizabeth reveals Christ's presence and fulfills prophecy. The unborn John leaps for joy, recognizing the...
Rendering of DNA strands

What is the most important “little…

Are Our Souls the Brightest Part of Us? In the vast complexity of human existence, one element stands...

The Holy Spirit’s cure for “Confusion…

Catholics understand: Over 13 trillion light-years ago, The Loving Programmer began to Download His Creation Program. The universe...

Curing “Confusion Headaches” by seeing…

The more we ask God for Obedient Faith in Him, the more gifts He gives us. A great...

Catholics realize this is One Amazing Sentence in…

St. Paul gives believers eight new definitions of God in One Amazing Sentence that encompasses all of time...

Was St. Paul the first Catholic Cardinal-Bishop…

When St. Paul called the Catholic priests, then known as “Presbyters”, from Miletus to Ephesus, they either spent...