BrianIs

I think that this is because there are so many people who are smugly certain, and it takes the rest of us a bit of journey to understand that they are not the ones who have faith.Prim wrote:People of faith are not always, or even often, smugly certain. But that seems to be the widespread impression.
I seem to be in trouble for saying "smug" and "certain" in the same sentence, but please note what the sentence says. The phrase "not smugly certain" does not exclude "certain in a way that is not smug." And in the very next sentence I object to the "widespread impression" that people of faith are smug in their certainty.Primula Baggins wrote:People of faith are not always, or even often, smugly certain.
Is doubt a necessary part of free will, then? That does make sense, though I'm not sure if I fully agree.The One Ring wrote:What could free will possibly mean to a person who had suffered no doubts?
I would agree that this is not "extra-rational" although I wonder if ANY faith could be called extra-rational. Or absence of faith, for that matter. Either way, we have to make a leap at some point.Faramond wrote:I think the best way to characterize her doubt is that it came from her despair at losing her connection between faith and happiness. In my judgement is wasn't a doubt that came from the extra-rational nature of faith, which is what people are mostly talking about here.