u/ToughPair7664

Online doctors are WAY less embarrassing than you think

I just did a telehealth visit for phimosis to get a prescription for steroid cream, honestly I wish I did it sooner

It was only $50, I got an appointment the next day and the whole thing was insanely quick. The whole thing was about 2-3 min. I did not have to show my actual private area

I was ready to be questioned abt the most embarrassing stuff but

No exaggeration, he only asked me 3 questions:
“Are you here for the cream?” — I said yes
“What’s your pharmacy?”
“What’s your address?”

Then he just goes “Alright, apply it once a night,” and that was it. The doc wasn’t even looking at my camera most of time just typing and looking at his computer

Honestly such a relief. If anyone’s stressing about getting help for this, it’s really not as bad or awkward as it seems

reddit.com
u/ToughPair7664 — 3 days ago

What happens to someone who is unlucky enough to die in the middle of their journey in finding God? Does god account for “trying”?

Or

let’s say there’s someone who genuinely wants to believe in Christianity. They’re open minded, they’ve looked into it seriously, and they even wish they could believe but it just never clicks for them. They can’t force themselves to truly believe, no matter how much they try.

It’s almost like they’re a “spiritual tragedy,” like they got unlucky in the spiritual lottery and is subjected to something out of their control, bc no one’s just able to force a belief

So how is that understood in Christianity?

what happens to someone like that? Is it seen as:

something within their control (like they could have believed if they tried differently) are they at fault for not believing fast enough? If yes, how is that fair? if no, why?

Is “trying” something God takes into account when judging them? If yes, would that mean salvation thru Jesus isn’t necessary almost like a loophole or are they still doomed to eternal punishment for something out of their control

reddit.com
u/ToughPair7664 — 23 days ago