Who will God let go to heaven? A nun who has been ascetic for a lifetime or a teenage mother?

Deja 2021-12-18 08:01:14

Who has lived the way God hoped? Is it a nun who has been abstinent, praying, and reading the Bible for a lifetime, or is it a low-level British woman who gives birth to children out of wedlock, accepts punishment through labor, and who is not even informed about their children being sent to a foreign country? If it's just such a simple question, many people think that nuns will go to heaven. The miserable or ordinary life encountered by this girl who tasted the forbidden fruit is God's punishment for her.

Fortunately, there is a former BBC reporter who graduated from Cambridge who can help this retired female nurse who is at the bottom of the society and only knows the simplicity and reason, and puts her story together in a shrewd manner. The monastery takes in unmarried mothers, the children are born, and the mothers work in the monastery to repay the monastery’s good deeds. Some adoptive families from the United States can buy the children for 1,000 pounds. In this way, the girl who stumbled would also like to thank the monastery for taking in, and thank the child for a different and even better life. All the trouble in girls' lives is that they try sex, something that seems to be a source of sin in the eyes of the nuns, and they are favored by God because they guard themselves like jade. This is enough for God to love them, don’t worry about them selling their children for a big price, don’t worry about them concealing the truth from the mother and son who are looking for each other decades later, don’t worry about their indifference to human relationships, they have a strong backing , Their god, their purity, with these, they can cover up the crimes committed by money temptation, which can cover up to nearly 50 years.

The child was bought at the age of three. 47 years later, the mother crossed the Pacific Ocean to find her son. She looked at the photos and recalled the short three years of coexistence. The mother was not surprised that her accomplished and handsome son was gay. "I know he is. He has been a sensitive child since he was a child. I knew he was gay by looking at the photo of him wearing overalls." Only the mother knows what qualifications the church has to judge in the name of God. Don’t use God to exercise your personal will. You have not understood many of God’s principles. When you wield a guillotine, think of the burned Copernicus. God sent a genius for hundreds of years, but was faked by ordinary people. His name was murdered. At this time, think of Jesus Christ who died on the cross for the general public. The most common interpretation is that God made his son die for our sins. Maybe God is still reminding us that these naked wombs, my son died like this. When you kill people in my name, look at your unbearable exclusion of dissent. History, don't let tragedies happen again and again, and bleed until my son.

In "The Creation of Adam", Michelangelo comprehended God's good intentions and fixed a distance between Adam and God's two fingers close to each other forever. This distance will be shortened by the generations of Adam and Adam's descendants who just woke up from their dreams. The day that we can touch is the day when we as a whole human beings understand God's goodwill, and the day when this beautiful blue planet is heaven. The painter himself is also gay, is it a coincidence?

I am an ordinary person, I am really anxious, I guess there is a certain number of principles I can understand in my life, and I am really jealous of those extremely smart people. Ordinary people can have your own God, even if you are not a nun in that monastery.

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Extended Reading
  • Elmo 2022-03-29 09:01:03

    Apart from "Nebraska" and "Wall Street" that I haven't seen yet, this should be my favorite one of the nominated films this year. There is no big hero here, just a little old lady in the village who swears. Rumble step by step to live out a real life powerhouse. Every line of dialogue here and every "burden" is serving the plot and characters. From this point of view, the antonym of this film is probablyspan

  • Eino 2022-04-23 07:02:28

    For atheists, how I wish Grandma Judi Dench would scold that evil nun at the end! These two women are like the pros and cons of religion, which can teach people to be good, but also cause people to distort; the film's brilliance is in its extremely restrained attitude, but in the end, it releases emotions extremely well, but it does not degrade Criticism; should there be faith? Whatever the answer is, it has nothing to do with TM's religion.

Philomena quotes

  • Martin Sixsmith: [frustrated] I asked a question.

    Sister Claire: You're a journalist.

    Martin Sixsmith: Yes. Well, I used to be.

    Philomena: He's a Roman Catholic.

    Martin Sixsmith: Yes. Well, I used to be.

  • Martin Sixsmith: [about Philomena] She told four people today that they're one in a million. What are the chances of that?