Father and Joe E444: Believing Without Seeing—Freedom, Evidence, and Faith
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“Unless I see…” Thomas speaks for us. Joe Rockey and Father Boniface Hicks explore how to believe without seeing in a world that demands proof. We contrast signs and certainties, why God preserves our freedom to trust, and how personal histories shape our “tests” for belief. Practical takeaways: name your criteria honestly, notice the subtle ways God already speaks, and choose trust that leads to action. We hold the three lenses: integrity with ourselves, charity toward others, under a living relationship with God.
Key Ideas
Faith needs freedom: God gives reasons to believe but stops short of coercion; no proof or disproof removes our choice.
Signs vs. the Sign: visible wonders can help, but relationship with Christ requires trust that goes beyond optics.
Personal filters: temperament, wounds, and stakes change our verification bar—be honest about the tests you set.
Learn His voice: like Joseph or Samuel, once you recognize how God speaks to you, cooperation becomes fruitful and steady.
Reason serves faith: philosophy can point (Descartes, Hume, Gödel), but revelation invites a response only trust can make.
Links & References
Scripture named (no links):
Thomas and “Blessed are those who have not seen” (John 20:24–29).
Healing the paralytic to manifest authority to forgive sins (cf. Mark 2:1–12; Matthew 9:1–8; Luke 5:17–26).
The Lord speaking to Samuel (1 Samuel 3).
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Tags
Father and Joe, Joe Rockey, Father Boniface Hicks, believing without seeing, St. Thomas, doubt and faith, signs and wonders, freedom and trust, criteria for belief, skepticism, Descartes, Hume, Gödel’s incompleteness, reason and revelation, conscience, hearing God’s voice, St. Joseph, Samuel, Eucharist and faith, healing of the paralytic, forgiveness of sins, relationship with God, relationship with self, relationship with others, Benedictine spirituality, Catholic podcast, practical spirituality