Fabiano on Nostr: If I may jump in this conversation, there are a few things worthy of note when ...
If I may jump in this conversation, there are a few things worthy of note when shouting-out to Christians, , regarding our take on material goods.
On what a Catholic (christian par excellence) economic model should be like, I always suggest Chesterton's take on distributism:
https://www.chesterton.org/category/discover-chesterton/chestertons-selected-works/the-distributist/
james (npub1nf9…xa3x) who is already in it
1) Understand that it is fundamental to understand that Our Lord Jesus Christ was born in a manger, carried a heavy cross while suffering to purge our sufferings meanwhile showing us the way to follow Him. Until offering Himself in His greatest moment what allowed us to break free from death itself. His crucifixion is our reminder we die to beat death thanks to Our Lord Jesus Christ.
2) We shall remember Christianity has a tradition before the Bible itself, to which it is the compilation of revelations to be kept and followed since early ages bu Catholics and not to be tempered with. So we have 73 books of the Bible to take into consideration besides the tradition it is held by, which is safeguarded by our magisterium.
3) Any take you expect to have from certain groups supporting greed and hoarding of material goods will be confirmation bias to how greedy people live their lives. Those takes do exist and they are fruits from the theology of prosperity, which includes the infamous predestination as seen mainly amongst the calvinists, but at large by a great number of sects.
There is no problem with being rich. But there is with being a hoarder.
Usury is a sin. So-called christians who center they lives in hoarding material goods are usurers.
Be rich and use that as much as you can to support those in need. Not to exploit them.
That being said, Bitcoin is a tool. It is not an end in itself. We must use that tool to allow us to live like Our Lord Jesus Christ has deemed us to: love God in the person of thy neighbor.
The banking system as it is penalyzes people offering donations.
If we can not use Bitcoin to help those in need at any given time without being sued or overtaxed by the government, it is useless.
Everything we are meant to do with a tool must be seen under the light of accomplishing the works of mercy.
For the sake of the conversation, I would like to tag (some of which have already seen this):
kevingregg (npub1em5…4kul)
pipe (npub1qfk…j6kq)
buttercat1791 (npub1wqf…qsyn)
TheSameCat (npub1wtu…e7js)
finrod (npub1ecd…s735)
And because he was interested on Chesterton and some of his theories, I would like to invite Propaganda Daily (npub1uns…8r2y) in case he may find anything that interests him here.
On what a Catholic (christian par excellence) economic model should be like, I always suggest Chesterton's take on distributism:
https://www.chesterton.org/category/discover-chesterton/chestertons-selected-works/the-distributist/
quoting nevent1q…ua00jmb (npub14f0…7k3l) hey
How are you? Would you be available to connect this month on a nostr nest? I’d be interested to talk to Christians who use bitcoin.
james (npub1nf9…xa3x) who is already in it
1) Understand that it is fundamental to understand that Our Lord Jesus Christ was born in a manger, carried a heavy cross while suffering to purge our sufferings meanwhile showing us the way to follow Him. Until offering Himself in His greatest moment what allowed us to break free from death itself. His crucifixion is our reminder we die to beat death thanks to Our Lord Jesus Christ.
2) We shall remember Christianity has a tradition before the Bible itself, to which it is the compilation of revelations to be kept and followed since early ages bu Catholics and not to be tempered with. So we have 73 books of the Bible to take into consideration besides the tradition it is held by, which is safeguarded by our magisterium.
3) Any take you expect to have from certain groups supporting greed and hoarding of material goods will be confirmation bias to how greedy people live their lives. Those takes do exist and they are fruits from the theology of prosperity, which includes the infamous predestination as seen mainly amongst the calvinists, but at large by a great number of sects.
There is no problem with being rich. But there is with being a hoarder.
Usury is a sin. So-called christians who center they lives in hoarding material goods are usurers.
Be rich and use that as much as you can to support those in need. Not to exploit them.
That being said, Bitcoin is a tool. It is not an end in itself. We must use that tool to allow us to live like Our Lord Jesus Christ has deemed us to: love God in the person of thy neighbor.
The banking system as it is penalyzes people offering donations.
If we can not use Bitcoin to help those in need at any given time without being sued or overtaxed by the government, it is useless.
Everything we are meant to do with a tool must be seen under the light of accomplishing the works of mercy.
For the sake of the conversation, I would like to tag (some of which have already seen this):
kevingregg (npub1em5…4kul)
pipe (npub1qfk…j6kq)
buttercat1791 (npub1wqf…qsyn)
TheSameCat (npub1wtu…e7js)
finrod (npub1ecd…s735)
And because he was interested on Chesterton and some of his theories, I would like to invite Propaganda Daily (npub1uns…8r2y) in case he may find anything that interests him here.