Tag Archives: religion

Mustard Seeds (Part 1)

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I’ve recently realised that it is possible to believe in God without trusting him.

Faith is the complete relinquishing of your worldly knowledge in regards to certain factors (namely probability and human ability) in the replacement of a sometimes unjustifiable assurance.

Most of the time I think our faith is half hearted. We pray prayers that give normality as much of a chance as God to rectify our issues.

This mistake resides in fine lines, and isn’t necessarily malicious; which is why it is often overlooked.

I see it as similar to thanking the 5 year old that handed you a plaster for healing you; you don’t believe in your heart that he healed you, but you want to please him with your thanks.

We thank God and tweet about how good he is, but do we really believe that he is the sole reason for our progress?

Like…really?

I mean YOU did revise until your eyes were red, YOU did fill in every application form, YOU did smash that interview…

Success came.
You expected it.

Rightly so?

Was this faith or an acknowledgement of your human ability and the probability of a positive outcome as a result of that ability?

Blurrrrrrrrrrred liiiiiiiiiiiinnnnnesss!

I realised that prior to this week I was on either side of the spectrum. It’s quite an awkward place to be; it may or may not be the right place. But I believe that attributing an event in your life to God knowing that you could just as easily attribute it to the social norms of this world is a bit patronising.

When you see success do you see a miracle or a result?

I believe that in all things, we must give thanks, but the issue with a norm sensitive “Thank-you” is that it will affect your faith driven “Please”.

Lets take exams for example…

Person A

Takes an exam – Feels great about it – Gets an amazing grade – Thanks God.

Person B

Takes an exam – Feels it went very badly – Gets amazing grades – Thanks God.

Cool.

I’ve been both person A and person B.

The prayers and thanks offered in both scenarios were not the same. At all.

This is reality.

I prayed harder for God when I was person B.

I thanked God more when I was person B.

Why?

Because success came.
And I didn’t expect it.

Rightly so?

This, seemingly, is perfectly reasonable as it seems that society will view the power of God to be shown greater to person B.

Our reaction to both Person A and Person B’s results are worlds apart because of the power we have given to perception.

Both scenarios where identical apart from what was felt after the exam.

…so why has Person B received a bigger miracle?

If our perception of events effects our prayers and ultimately our acknowledgement of Gods involvement then, wether we like it or not, this perception has become our assurance.

Not our faith.

Passing an exam that you felt good about MUST be as miraculous as passing an exam that you felt bad about.

Your reliance must be constant.

I’ve been reading Romans lately
(bible discussion and philosophy page coming soon!) and was struck by the distinction made between the “letter of the law” and the “spirit of the law”. Many of us practice the letter of the law; in this sense, through ritualistic appreciation without the understanding of the spirit behind being appreciative.

(Me included yo, I no holy pass)

Let me throw a spanner in the works…

What if you didn’t revise?

What if you fail?

How do you reconcile realism with God?

Yeah…
this is where it gets hard.

Join me for Part 2 next week ;)

LETS DISCUSS:

I want to hear other people’s opinions and grow in knowledge on the subject. If you have any comments write them below or email me at mellowdic@outlook.com

See you next week.

Beauty x Benches

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If beauty exists, and there’s no one to see it…is it really even there?

Lately i’ve been blessed enough to come across so many amazing and talented individuals. Individuals who either harbour talents that they don’t accept, or talents that they don’t believe others will.

Fear of opinion and fear of failure are essentially the main components of stagnancy. Fear is like a weird prison. The walls are as wide as you want them to be – the cell doors are always open…but the bed is so comfortable.

I genuinely believe everyone has a passion or gift or atleast something they would do for free. I don’t know, maybe I’m wrong, but I do genuinely believe in the utility of pleasing your soul, independent of worldly attainment or daily schedules.

No-one lines up pre-conception and asks God for a particular passion. Passions are distributed in alignment with our purposes in life. No one’s saying it must be your 24/7; but blessings should be nurtured.

I don’t know where I’m going with this because as I write, all I hear is contradictions. I know there are holes in this argument. Not all passions will feed you and sometimes in life we need to be practical. But avoidance is deception.

I watched a video yesterday. The video was taken by a millionaire, in this video he was showing the world his watches/money and generally just promoting his own wealth. I was really struck by this.
This constant attainment of wealth is so futile if you aren’t fulfilled. This man casually pulled out a million dollars out of his bag, but still felt the need to justify himself, essentially glorying only in the awe of others. It’s all void. Black cards and red hearts – they’re not necessary linked.

Don’t get me wrong. Attain and elevate through grace, but let there be some substance to your climb. Feed your gifts/talents and passions. Feed and fear them. Fear the feeling of being unfulfilled.

If you write, (with wisdom) take some time out and write; same for if you draw, produce, dance, sing etc.
Create something that you can sit back and smile at.

So back to the question.
If beauty exists and there’s no one to appreciate it, is it really there?

I would say beauty is innate. Needing a person to see it implies beauty needs an opinion to be validated. If beauty exists, it exists; as is the case with our passions.

Thus if you are passionate about something, whether or not YOU recognise it…it can’t be ignored.
And if passions exist independent of opinion – not much can link our passion to fear.

So benches are unnecessary but there’s no harm in grabbing a mirror.

 

Road Blocks v. Mind Blocks

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Road Blocks v. Mind Blocks

This week has taught me a lot about the difference between these two concepts…

If I drove my car into a road that was blocked, this is a road block. If I turn the car around and forget that I have the ability to get out of the car and walk past the sign, that’s an issue with my mind. I think mind blocks are the most dangerous.

Road blocks are everywhere, problem is you only see them when you try to make progress. This process of progress takes strength in itself, so any form of roadblock has the power to deplete your motivation. They also give you an “opt-out” – a justification to stop moving.

I guess a couple times this week i’ve felt like this. But i’ve recently just realised that the strength needed to break through needs to be unjustified, especially when your aspiration is statistically improbable. The people at the peak of mountains look like they’re chilling, but really they’re just resting they’re feet.

Jumping over blocks ain’t easy. I think that’s the essence of success – no sleep but the best dreams. Road blocks don’t stop you from sleeping on the road.

…Get out the car.