MormonMendacity wrote:Gazelam wrote:What faith do you have? You believe in nothing?
Of course I believe in many things but I do not think faith is a useful thing.
Can you give me a reason to have faith and a practical application of it that I can agree with?
As to the question on the use of faith, faith allows you to take the next step in your life. Everyone uses faith every day, especially intellectuals (e.g. scientists, historians, engineers, etc.). You have to have faith to spend research dollars provided by your bread-and-butter financial sources on that next step in your research, hoping you will be fruitful and not disappoint the people with the deep pockets. When does anyone ever know that they have all of the truth on any given subject at any given time. On a more common level, didn't it take faith to get married to that person, or is this a pandora's box that I should not open? ;-)
In terms of christianity, "faith," by itself, is not enough. "Faith in Jesus Christ" is what is required. Whether or not there is an afterlife, faith in Jesus Christ empowers the individual to build a life modeled on ideal human attributes. If your desire is to have such attributes, then there should be no disappointment at the moment of death when you feel you have achieved this. Sinically, this can be considered to be the ultimate way of lying to yourself; but if you die happy, who cares. Maybe the answer to your question on the usefulness of faith in Jesus Christ is that it can help you lead a happy life.
On this note, I do believe that many (both those who are still members and those who are not) have lost their way AND ARE NOT HAPPY. There is some thinking that has crept into Church discussion through our layspeakership in sacrament meetings that faith, as a fruit of the Spirit, is demonstrated by worldly success, spiritual experiences, or position in the Church. It is not. This is a false teaching. I believe the first step to loss of belief is the loss/lack of a sense of joy. The causes of such loss/lack could be many. On this note, the message I am hearing from the conferences is not "How do you feel?" but "How do you feel when you serve?" I know I am happiest when I am doing something for someone else with altruistic intent. One could argue that he who dies with a long list of good deeds and many friends wins. If God exists, you are resurrected, and gain eternal life, that is just icing on the cake of a well-lived life.
Beyond this "guidance" from the leadership (i.e. find joy in service), everything else just makes sense (e.g. stay out of debt, live within your means, get a good education). Even people who pay tithe (or donate to a charity) have been shown statistically to become financially better-off as life proceeds.