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29247. jexster - 10/14/2008 8:12:15 PM

What does naming your daughter "Faith" do?

Some 17th Century Puritan throwback will probably be wearing the Scarlet Letter in a few years

What do you do?

29248. jexster - 10/14/2008 8:12:43 PM

About as Christian as my socks

29249. Jenerator - 10/16/2008 2:24:38 AM

What does naming your daughter "Faith" do?

Let's see... back in 2004, I wanted to have another baby, but my husband did not. He was pretty adamant about not having any more children, and it made me very sad. I tried to talk with him about it, and our discussions were peaceful, but brief. He simply didn't want any more kids.

I prayed to God that he would take the desire away from me to have more children or that he would give my husband the desire to have more. I just wanted to be in God's will. I prayed and prayed and prayed and fasted and prayed. Eventually I got to the point where I was resigned about not having another baby and was alright with it. I asked for God to give me more faith so that I could trust him more. Three months later, I found out I was pregnant despite using protection! I was scared to tell my husband, afraid that he would think I somehow sabotaged him. Again, I prayed about it.

I then broke the news to him and he was elated!

I decided to name the baby Faith if it was a girl, because she was a gift from God. My husband loves her dearly and is so tender with her. We both feel complete as a family now.

29250. Jenerator - 10/16/2008 2:32:25 AM

I seriously do not understand the rationale behind blessing your medallions (or socks). Do you believe that the Pope imbues those inanimate objects with mystical power?

29251. jexster - 10/16/2008 2:43:15 AM

Consecrates to God

Just like when you named your daughter Faith

(I prefer Charity)

And the Pope doesn't imbue with anything. God does. We get blessings and give them all the time! When Catholics enter/leave a church, we bless ourselves with Holy Water. Protestants, even evangelicals, are called to and give blessings - fishing fleets, very common.

In the liturgy dozens of times. The reason is essentially Incarnational and the understanding that salvation is a corporate act, that the Church is not a collection of individuals nor is it the Pope or other bishops and their priests.

We are Church..not "I"..not "him"

Catholic blessings

"Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly things in Christ. ...


We're just responding to our Call

29252. jexster - 10/16/2008 2:59:08 AM

The second aspect of the quality of the life of the beloved is that we are blessed. It is so important that you and I experience that we are blessed. The word benediction means blessing. Literally, bene means good and diction means saying. To bless someone means to say good things about them. "You are good." We need to know that good things are being said of us. We really have to trust that, otherwise we cannot bless other people. So many people don't feel blessed.

"The Life of the Beloved"
Henri Nouwen


There's no "magic" about it...just magical
Nothing "mysterious"....just Mystery

29253. Jenerator - 10/16/2008 1:16:20 PM

Here's what I don't understand Jexster. What is the purpose of consecrating a cross? Isn't it *already* dedicated to a sacred purpose? Does the act of consecrating/papal blessing make it more 'real' or is it a symbolic gesture?

29254. Jenerator - 10/16/2008 1:17:46 PM

For example, I would not feel the need to consecrate a Bible. I would not consecrate my shirt, etc.

29255. anomie - 10/16/2008 6:49:40 PM

What's the "rationale" for blessing anything or anybody? I don't think of "rational" when considering religious or superstitious rituals.

29256. jexster - 10/16/2008 7:32:47 PM

I thought I'd explained this Jen. No a cross isn't blessed just because it is a cross. A church building isn't consecrated just because it is built

It is consecrated because the Church, the Body of Christ, acts to "set it apart"

29257. jexster - 10/16/2008 7:43:12 PM

Anomie has a good point as well

I remember going to my first Buddhist temple, the Asakusa Kannon Temple. The Temple, the oldest in Tokyo is dedicated interestingly enough to a Buddhist goddess of mercy who miraculously saved some fishermen in the 7th Century. Like Mary Star of the Sea

Anyway, out front of Buddhist temples or at least the non-Zen ones you'll find water for blessing/purification

I was very comfortable approaching this ritual washing just as I would a holy water stoop at a Church narthex...


It's, as I've said, incarnational Jen. An outward and visible expression of our response to the Incarnation.

My Rosary has been blessed. My cat. Me. My crucifix. My Icon of the Crucifixion. When I was 10 and went to a General Audience with Pope John XXIII, I remember holding up about 30 medals and crucifixes for the Papal blessing to give to my Roman Catholic relatives...they knew what they were getting and even then I knew what I was giving, not in a rational way, in a faith way.

Not quite sure why this is such a difficult concept at least to understand if not to believe in.

29258. anomie - 10/16/2008 8:09:34 PM

I understand. I was just curious about Jen's idea of "rationale" since she seems to imply some rationality to the blessing of some things but not others.

29259. anomie - 10/16/2008 8:16:09 PM

Some protestant sects bless whole houses and other structures, so I wonder if it follows that all the shoes and objects inside are included. Is that the rationale Jen is following? But then people inside the structure would be excepted since they require a separate blessing of their very own, in which case it would seem rationale to me that their clothes and wristwatches and wallets would be included. Food? What if the blessed persona hadn't said grace over his meals that day? Is it rational to assume the food is blessed along with building? Or does it need a separate one. If you are eating in church, do you have to bless the food since you already blessed the whole building?

I just thought Jen could sort out all the rationale so we know what does and not benefit from being blessed.

29260. jexster - 10/17/2008 1:47:49 AM

A fundamental criticism of fundamentalist, evangelical protestantism which I have leveled repeatedly.




The Wobbly Poltical Theology of Sarah Palin


For the mainstream Protestant, Palin is engaging in what Reinhold Niebuhr calls “the idolatry of America.” As Niebuhr would have it, an American Christian may be patriotic and love his country, but he must also remember that his true home rests outside of these bounds fixed by geography and time and in an eternal community with Jesus Christ. ... The perspective of Religious Right figures like Palin that elevates America—as their political blinders conceive her—to some sort of sacred object is therefore little short of an act of idolatry. Jesus Christ, as Charles Marsh reminds us, “comes to us from a country far from our own” and requires that believers lay their “values, traditions, and habits at the foot of the cross.” Or, as John Calvin says, “the heart is a factory of idols,” and a primitive noncritical form of patriotism can be a particularly troubling and entrenched idol.

29261. Jenerator - 10/18/2008 3:38:39 PM

Anomie (and Jex),

To me, 'blessing' somthing or asking for something to be blessed, means that the action or person or whatever will be used toward meeting God's will. And that blessing is done repeatedly as a reminder that we must constantly seek God's will. I do not ask for blessing one time and assume I am covered for all time. Also, I do not think that inanimate objects retain some sort of power.


To me, blessing a crucifix seems redundant. And I do not see how a medallion blessed by the Pope is different than the same medallion not blessed by the Pope.

29262. judithathome - 10/18/2008 6:47:00 PM

It will go for more on eBay!

29263. TheWizardOfWhimsy - 10/18/2008 8:06:30 PM




29264. TheWizardOfWhimsy - 10/20/2008 10:05:49 PM

Here is a sensational example of a so-called Christian who openly (and unconsciously) exhibits her hatred and intolerance for all to see--and yet thinks she is being true to Jesus Christ.

It's jaw-dropping and I know there are millions of this kind of ignorant, pretend Christian throughout America. They have't the slightest awareness of the evil in their own hearts as they project it on to others.



29265. Jenerator - 10/20/2008 10:12:13 PM

Why don't you find someone mainstream?

29266. jexster - 10/20/2008 10:15:00 PM

Jen is a CINO

Christian in name only


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