tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post5911270110374773468..comments2024-03-05T14:07:28.062-08:00Comments on Ask Sister Mary Martha: God is LoveSister Mary Marthahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00580244097177195453noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post-57371122973952853482012-02-24T08:12:43.038-08:002012-02-24T08:12:43.038-08:00I'm going to echo what Judith said, about call...I'm going to echo what Judith said, about calling or writing the academic theologian you most respect and asking for advice. Professional academics are surprisingly accessible. I read where Dr. Isaac Asimov (may God have mercy on his soul) related the story of a phone call he got at home while he was a professor of chemistry at Boston University. A high school student asked him how far above the surface of the Earth was the point where the Earth and Moon orbited each other, and Dr. Asimov answered him from memory (it turns out to be quite a ways <i>below</i> the Earth's surface).<br /><br />Sadly, Joseph Ratzinger has not been a practicing academic theologian since his days running the CDF. But professors at the Franciscan University of Steubenville, Belmont Abbey College, and Ave Maria University should all be orthodox and available.Arkanabarhttp://arkanabar.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post-36945843262576894672012-02-23T07:57:12.021-08:002012-02-23T07:57:12.021-08:00To Anonymous who wants to be a theologian, from an...To Anonymous who wants to be a theologian, from another who pursued midlife PhD studies in theology: There is no problem about married women being theologians, but few parish priests have the time to discern and encourage such a vocation. Getting into graduate programs is not that difficult. If admissions committees think you are not qualified, you need to find out why and address the issues. Paying for years of grad school is a bigger problem - it costs a lot and financial aid is fairly scarce. Your future career would be teaching high school or, if you are very successful, college, where tenure-track positions are being replaced by short-term or part-time jobs (the latter without benefits). Please be sure to choose your program with great care. I was too ignorant to do so and ended up in a department so liberal it was practically Protestant - and fairly typical of academic theology today. And please be ready for years of hard, lonely work (study, study, and more study) as you prepare yourself to enter the great Catholic theological tradition. You will need philosophical training if you don't already have it. Your encouragement must come from God, your professors, and your fellow students - few others know anything about theology. Except nuns. There are a lot of theologically educated sisters, but a lot of them are devoted to liberal feminist theology so you need to find the right ones. My suggestion would be to find a practicing academic theologian whom you respect and write to seek his or her advice. Cling to Christ and may your studies and your family be blessed!Judithhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05870392601117433160noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post-68603249276358162792012-02-21T17:16:26.786-08:002012-02-21T17:16:26.786-08:00oh, and STGM: Remind your friend that the Egyptia...oh, and STGM: Remind your friend that the Egyptian gods and the civilization they fostered is long, long gone ... and the Jews they enslaved and attempted to destroy are still around, as are we Catholics, their spiritual descendants.Arkanabarhttp://arkanabar.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post-3119895811966449802012-02-21T17:14:09.963-08:002012-02-21T17:14:09.963-08:00@Steph -- you might suggest to your friend that he...@Steph -- you might suggest to your friend that he attempt a little experiment. <br /><br />In the silent vaults of his mind, he should harbor this thought: "God, if you exist and you love me, I want you to prove it."<br /><br />If that's what he really wants, God will be very happy to demonstrate it to him.Arkanabarhttp://arkanabar.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post-26129020827645588922012-02-21T11:32:06.709-08:002012-02-21T11:32:06.709-08:00Thanks Sister. I tried the "prove He doesn...Thanks Sister. I tried the "prove He doesn't exist" argument and got "you can't prove a negative dumbo" in response. This post definitely gives me a better idea of what to say next time.mphnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post-76737976124403186882012-02-21T07:21:41.780-08:002012-02-21T07:21:41.780-08:00Dear Sister Mary Martha—
I am in my early 30s, ma...Dear Sister Mary Martha—<br /><br />I am in my early 30s, married with a child, and in a bit of a vocational crisis. While, on the one hand, I have been moderately successful in the career I've pursued since college, I have felt called for the last few years to a more religious vocation, namely theology. While I have recently graduated with an MA in Theology with the hopes of going on to further school to study theology and gain some pastoral skills so as to do that, it seems that both within my church and within academic circles, I am not wanted.<br /><br />I feel called, but it seems that practically speaking every possible disappointment, obstacle, and practical difficulty comes by way in terms of pursuing this vocation that many around me —such as my spouse, friends, professors and spiritual directors (I've had two, one moved away)— have also discerned with me.<br /><br />But it seems when it comes to people who have the ability to help me pursue this vocation —such as a parish priest, an admissions committee, or a professor whose help and understanding I need— they cannot or will not help me.<br /><br />I have prayed to St. John Vianney, but I feel like I need to approach this in a double- or triple-barreled intercessory approach. Heck, I'll take a whole battery of saints if you have them.<br /><br />-Married In Search of SaintsAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post-6708730640018600632012-02-20T12:04:24.309-08:002012-02-20T12:04:24.309-08:00Thank you for this post! I have a cousin who clai...Thank you for this post! I have a cousin who claims her religion is "Ancient Egyptian" and constantly laughs at anyone who believes in God. However, she is obsessed with ghosts. She spends vacations ghost hunting. I'll have to give the Einstein argument a try!Sic Transit Gloria Mundihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01680011135555390760noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30512717.post-56609096291030887652012-02-20T12:04:02.775-08:002012-02-20T12:04:02.775-08:00An interesting post! But I have a question:
A fri...An interesting post! But I have a question:<br /><br />A friend of mine has recently lost his faith. He read a book by Christopher Hitchens, which has completely destroyed what he believed. He is very, very confused and angry. What would you say to him?Stephnoreply@blogger.com