[Faith-talk] Refutation and preeminent repudiation totheZionistsubjection.
Jenny Keller
jlperdue3 at gmail.com
Sat Jul 26 01:58:49 UTC 2014
Hi again,
No I'm late on this subject. But the Catholic Church I know because I was one. Has an issue with that. So do a lot of other churches that show things on the screen that we can't do it.
The Catholic seven Oakrill him panel. They have no desire sometimes to even get away for someone who's disabled to the choir loft.
It's sad because we are people of faith all face.
Sorry I'm dictating this. Having to catch up on a lot. But, what I meant to say was there is no braille hymnals. Anyway, it's all churches. Not just the Catholic Church. However, I have found. And I'm not to jilted Catholic. That they're the worst. Are one of the worst.
I guess my point is. That all of us have to face persecution or people that don't want to help us. No matter what church we go to. So, it's make the best of things :-)
Jenny
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jul 20, 2014, at 9:36 AM, debby phillips via Faith-talk <faith-talk at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> Hey Ashley, I think your topic is right on. How does blindness affect our faith? And how does blindness affect how we deal with others of differing religions? Now, that may sound strange, so read me out. First of all, I'll deal with my second question. There are various cultures and faiths that view blindness very negatively. How do people overcome those obstacles? As a dog user how do I deal with a cab driver who refuses to allow my dog in his cab because he is Muslim and believes that dogs are unclean? how do we deal with issues that affect our rights and someone's freedom of religion? For instance, if a law requires that I do something that I find reprehensible because of my faith, how do I deal with that?
>
> Then my first question, how does blindness affect my faith? Well, in one way it does not. What I believe is in my heart, and I try to live out my faith every day, showing the love of Jesus to others. And I want to be of service to others. But what happens when people say, You can't do this or that because of your blindness. As a Catholic, I wanted to enter a particular community of nuns. (This was years ago and now I am married). But they did not want to have "anyone with handicaps" in their community. Good luck with that, when members get older and have disabilities. Churches in the United States are not required to follow the rules of the ADA. So what recourse does a person have? These are topics that I think are blindness-related, and certainly NFB related. Thanks for reading. Blessings, Debby
>
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