Unanswerable prayers: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
"I want patience, and I want it now." | "I want patience, and I want it now." | ||
::: Patience is a [[virtue]]. It can only be gained by actually being patient under stress. Patience, like all the virtues, is a muscle: use it or lose it! | ::: Patience is a [[virtue]]. It can only be gained by actually being patient under stress. Patience, like all the virtues, is a muscle: ''use it or lose it!'' | ||
"My will, not Thine, be done." | "My will, not Thine, be done." |
Latest revision as of 17:35, 1 January 2015
"I want patience, and I want it now."
- Patience is a virtue. It can only be gained by actually being patient under stress. Patience, like all the virtues, is a muscle: use it or lose it!
"My will, not Thine, be done."
- We rarely, if ever, openly acknowledge when our prayers are taking this form. We cover up the true meaning of our prayers with respectable veneers, saying the words the Church has given us without meaning what the Church means by them.