TomS wrote:What would you need to change in your EXTERNAL life for salvation? Salvation is there for the asking. It's initially internal; then your outward actions should reflect your salvation.
Wow. This is the fundamentalist Protestant view on salvation and works, from how some of them have explained it to me. It's one thing to get mixed up on Mary or the saints, relics, icons, etc., but salvation? If one didn't/doesn't understand this, how (and not why, but how) could one leave Protestantism for the Church?
"God helps those who help themselves" You cannot JUST pray for something and expect it to happen. You have to back it up with action. And those actions along with your faith CAN help change things.
So when I prayed for my father to be healed of cancer, what could I have done to heal him that would've backed up my prayer?
Many times, we must cooperate with God, praying for AND working toward what we desire, but other times one can only pray. Genuine laziness is one thing, but you can't simply discount prayer when it's on its own.
But if it God's plan that you die of a heart attack tonight in your sleep, no amount of praying to wake up every morning will change that.
When we were learning about the immutability of God, I heard and pondered enough to make me think along the same lines as you. If God is as immutable as some make it seem, then there is no reason to pray, go to church, light candles, venerate relics, live the commandments, etc., etc., etc. I concluded that either A) I didn't fully understand the immutability of God or B) God, while being immutable in one sense, allows Himself to be influenced by us, as a father allows himself to be swayed by his children. In the end, it doesn't matter whether or not you understand immutability, IMO...are you a son (cf. Gal. 4.4-7)? That is the question.