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We 
know God exists...
"The state of the world and your country can be summed up in a few simple words. Man loves the creature more than the Creator." - Our Lady of the Roses, September 28, 1974
The following is taken from "Tell us about God, Who is He?" by the Catholic Information Service, Imprimatur Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Archbishop of St. Louis:
There are 
two kinds of arguments for God’s existence.  The first affirms His existence 
from the use of reason; and the second grows out of the historical existence of 
Jesus.
     The arguments from reason begin with the premise that this world does not 
contain its own explanation. As we know our world, it is a planet revolving 
about the sun, ninety-three million miles away.  The sun itself is not the 
center of the universe.
     At the same time there are man-made satellites revolving about the sun.  If 
we ask we put them there and how did they get there, the answer is that 
scientists put them there using rocket-stages to get them into orbit.  If 
another satellite went into orbit again we would ask how it got there.  We would 
remain unsatisfied until we discovered that the agents were the Russians or the 
Americans or the British.
     The same mental instinct which demands to know who has put a rocket into 
orbit around the earth, also demands to know who has put the earth into orbit 
around the sun.  To answer that the earth is just there and so is the sun leaves 
us dissatisfied because it offers no explanation. 
     This is another way of stating that there is no effect without a cause.
     Common sense is always looking for causes to explain events.  Police find a 
dead man on the road. How did it happen: was it a hit-and-run driver? Did the 
man fall out of the car? Who is he? Who did it?
     We know when we are causing something. I drive a golf ball from the first 
tee.  Something happens because I make it happen.  Nothing happens without a 
cause.  A plane crashes and there is an investigation called because common 
sense assures us that nothing happens without a cause. The cause is there, even 
if we cannot discover it.
     What or who caused the earth? Whatever, whoever brought this vast immense 
universe into being cannot be less than its effect.  A man with strength to lift 
only half a ton cannot lift a whole ton. If he lifts a ton he must have that 
much muscular strength.
     We are then dealing with a Power of some sort of immensity to explain the 
immensity of that universe we observe.  What sort of Power can it be? Day 
follows night with regularity; season follows season; trees, flowers, animals 
all follow a certain and predictable course of behavior. What happens is so 
well-defined that we can say they happen according to laws in nature. The Power 
is a law-giver, a law-maker Who gives testimony of intelligence.
     This immense Power of terrifying Intelligence (we are still making fresh 
discoveries of design in nature) is subject to the same question. Who caused it 
or Him? If it or He is the effect of another Cause, there must be behind Him 
another Cause, of which He is the effect; or He must be without a Cause because 
He IS of Himself and not of another.  Ultimately there must be a Being That Is, 
a Supreme Cause Who depends upon no other for His existence. 
The Reflection of God in the world
     We 
are not content with the statement that God made the universe. We ask further 
what is His relation to it? How is He present in the universe He has made? There 
are some who think that He is infinitely removed from it; and others who say 
that He is so much in it as to be identified with it. The first set of thinkers 
are so impressed by the absolute perfections of God that they think He would be 
diminished in some way, unless he were cut off from it. He is the architect but 
once the building has been made He leaves it to stand by itself.  The second 
group are so impressed by the world as an expression of the Divine Artistry that 
they think God is in the universe as the singer is in the song. The order they 
see in the universe is God in the universe, which, as it evolves, expresses the 
growth of God in perfection.
     Group one assumes that the Supreme Cause is not interested in His effects. 
Group two assumes that the Supreme Cause is not supreme, and in identifying Him 
with His creation asserts that He is not perfection, but is growing thereto.
     Midway between these two extremes is the view that God is the Supreme Cause 
from Whom all things ultimately proceed to their separate existence. God is thus 
the ground of all beings but remains the Separate One. In this view God is so 
perfect that He needs nothing outside Himself; yet, nevertheless, He has, out of 
love, produced a finite and limited world in a vast universe. 
     This world is, then, an expression of the Divine Artist and, by a 
consideration of the things that He has made, it is possible to see a little of 
the Divine Imprint; in the same way we examine a portrait and determine its 
authorship by some great painter.
     Of all things we can ask a three-fold question. We ask—on what plan was 
this conceived? Some material thing, such as a flower or a dog, contains within 
it an idea, a blueprint, a form. We say to ourselves that the blueprint of the 
flower is to ensure the continuance of a plant species by the formation of 
seeds.
     Then we ask—why was it made in the first instance? What is its ultimate 
purpose? And lastly we ask—who made it?
     Consider these aspects at work in an artist.  He is, shall we say, a 
sculptor.  Before he chisels his stone he must have an idea of what he wants to 
do. Secondly he must have a purpose, an intention to carry out his plan; and 
lastly he must put his plan into effect. Omit any of these and no statue will be 
made. The final work will embody the artist—his idea, his purpose, his skill in 
execution. 
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Wisdom
     
God is embodied in His universe as the Wisdom who conceived it, as the Will Who 
carried out the cosmic project and as the Power Who sustains it. As Wisdom 
God is in the butterfly and the bird.  They are both composed of living matter, 
but they belong to different orders of animal creation. What makes the living 
matter of the one a butterfly and the living matter of the other a bird, is the 
different conception of animal that each enshrines. The idea or the form is a 
reflection in matter of the idea that exists in the mind of the Divine Artist. 
Every tree and every flower embodies an idea in the Divine Mind and speaks of 
God as a poem speaks of its author.
     The wisdom of God in creation is in its last analysis the reason why we 
know. When we learn, it is because we discover the forms or idea hidden in the 
material composition of what we study.  Unlike animals we have the X-ray power 
to penetrate material things and find what is in them. What is printed on this 
page is so many letters strung into words—material things made out of pulp and 
print. You the reader, take the meaning out of them. Dr. Alexis Carrell in his
Reflections on Life put it this way: “all (scientific) research begins 
with an act of faith in the rational ordering of nature.” Unless nature made 
sense, it could not be studied. When we study it we learn a little of the divine 
ideas. 
Goodness
     
God is in things secondly by His goodness.  To things He has given a purpose. 
Plants are green because they contain a pigment, and the pigment has the power 
of absorbing energy from light and using that power to bond together inorganic 
materials in the atmosphere and make of them sugars and starches. In this way 
natural food granaries are formed and upon them feed animals, and upon them we 
ourselves feed and maintain ourselves in existence. The plant which makes starch 
and the animals which feed upon it follow blindly a purpose they do not 
understand. 
     The urge by which a plant or an animal follows the law of its nature is 
what we mean, then, by purpose. Man must discover his own purpose by using his 
reason.  That purpose, the urge of a rational nature, is to discover the truth 
and goodness of God.
     We discover goodness in things when we experience love for them. A man 
loves his automobile because it serves him, gets him around, is a delight to 
drive. A man loves his wife because of the goodness he finds in her.  In 
courting days he was discovering that goodness and feeling more and more 
attraction to it. At the same time he was finding out more about her—what sort 
of common interests they shared and so on. Eventually he decided that he wanted 
to unite with her in marriage. Love teaches us how good things and people are, 
and the more we love the more we want to be united with what we love, to possess 
and be possessed.  In this sense our purpose in life is to know and love God—to 
seek His truth and His goodness.
    Without God there is no explanation for “the rational ordering of nature”—no 
satisfactory explanation of our own existence. Without God there is no 
explanation of what we mean. We are like satellites coasting in orbit and no one 
fired us, like arrows speeding through the air and no bowman or archer to 
explain them. Where did we come from, where do we go—in a meaningless orbit, 
from nothingness and into nothingness without explanation? 
Power
     
God is in things by His power. To Moses He said, “I am who am.”  All of us have 
existence, but of God it can be said simply that He exists. Our existence is 
partial, from moment to moment.  He possesses the whole of His existence at 
once.  Our existence is limited—our bodies die, we are chained to space and 
time, controlled to some extent by pleasure and pain.
     If nothingness ever were, then nothing would ever be.  How can something 
come from nothing?  Only if there is a Being Whose Being demands existence can 
there come from nothingness the universe that we know. All the things that are 
owe their being to God in the same way as the rays of the sun come from the sun.
     God then is in His world by His knowledge, by His love and by His power.  
This triple action comes from a Supreme Being Who is a Spirit.  For God is not 
tangible and He is not visible and in Him there is nothing of material 
composition.  For material things can suffer change because they are composed of 
parts and can be taken apart.  To suffer change is itself an imperfection.  And 
God is perfect, otherwise He is not God. He is the Supreme Spirit Who is 
changeless, one and entire in His wholeness for He is not made of parts, 
possessing all of His Being all at once. He is greatness without limit; He is 
all that without beginning and without end; all that He does is likewise without 
beginning and without end. None of His loving and none of His knowing have 
vanished into the past, nor have more knowledge and more love yet to come. Past 
and future belong only to creatures who receive their being from moment to 
moment. God lives, God knows, God loves, God is in one eternal now without 
effort and without limit.  
"There are only two forces now in the world, good and evil. There is no middle road to follow. The choice is given to mankind: who will be your leader: satan, Lucifer, or the Eternal Father, your Creator?" - Jesus, February 10, 1978
Directives from Heaven... https://www.tldm.org/directives/directives.htm
D68 - The Eternal Father (Part 1)
D69 - The Eternal Father (Part 2)
D70 - The Trinity
D87 - Divinity of Jesus Christ
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