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Rhetorical Questions to myself and other Catholic Apologists here

Posted on 11/26/2001 2:49:05 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM

Rhetorical Questions to myself and other Catholic Apologists here:

After reading numerous threads of what I term the "Freeper Wars," I'm going to state an assumption (which might well be terribly wrong) then ask a few rhetorical questions.

If a "Freeper Wars" thread (you know the type, starts out as a thread of interest to Catholic freepers, then turns into the standard anti-Catholic posts with attempts to defend the faith by the regular Catholic Apologists here) is several days old and several hundred posts long, the "undecided" will be few.

Your apologetics are not intended to convert those whose hearts and minds are closed (although, by the Grace of God it does indeed happen). They are intended to illuminate the intellect and soul of those still open to Truth, and still willing to learn. I doubt that many of those make it to that point in threads here, i.e., when threads are 200 to 300 posts or longer, several days old, etc.

Therefore, your time is being spent only on those you are directly responding to, when they do their own self search.

Is that an effective use of your time and talent? Or would prayer, not words, be more effective at this point? Are we trying to win souls, or points of debate?

Just a few thoughts I ask myself constantly on these types of threads, i.e., where is my time better spent, reading to my kids and spending time with my spouse, or trying to convert those late on a thread whose minds and hearts are hardened? Are there enough lurkers late in a thread to make it worth the amount of time and intense effort to defend the faith that these threads usually entail late in their usual progression?


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: catholiclist; religion
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1 posted on 11/26/2001 2:49:05 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: patent; *Catholic_list
Any input?
2 posted on 11/26/2001 2:50:06 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: proud2bRC
I occassionally try one quiet and logical answer, and if I get the standard ignorant anti catholic line, quit the thread. If someone is ignorant, they will accept the answer and not agree. If someone is predjudiced, they will twist your words or ignore them, and have no interest in what is really believed, only trying to persuade you that what you are supposed to believe in (not what is actually believed) is wrong. The Jack Chick types are pathetic.
3 posted on 11/26/2001 3:09:44 AM PST by LadyDoc
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To: proud2bRC
I do not argue or discuss my religion here except as it applies to current events. IMHO, humans are not capable of knowing enough about the nature of reality to ascertain the one eternal truth abnout God and His creation. However, all are not humble enough to realize that their perceptions are that alone.

Belief in God is a matter of FAITH. Some have it and some don't. You can not imbue another with FAITH, he must find it on his own...or not, as his ego dictates.

4 posted on 11/26/2001 3:21:23 AM PST by copycat
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To: copycat
I do not argue or discuss my religion here except as it applies to current events

I do not argue or discuss current events here except as it applies to my religion.

All politics, all apologetics, all charitable works, i.e., everything a committed Christian does, is aimed at the bottom line, the salvation of men's souls.

However, all are not humble enough to realize that their perceptions are that alone.

Some do not comprehend the true nature of humility.

5 posted on 11/26/2001 3:26:37 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: proud2bRC
All politics, all apologetics, all charitable works, i.e., everything a committed Christian does, is aimed at the bottom line, the salvation of men's souls.

I have all I can do to worry about the salvation of MY soul.

FReegards...

6 posted on 11/26/2001 3:32:40 AM PST by copycat
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To: proud2bRC
Unfortunately, I don't think that people can have their eyes opened to Catholicism through a few posts here on F.R. My favorite thing to do for people I meet who are open to Catholicism is to recommend Scott Hahn books/tapes. He was one of the most virulently anti-Catholic ministers who, after attempting to debunk Cathlicism through lots of study, saw the Truth and converted.

For people who are strong in their non-Catholic Chrisitan faiths, they have probably been strongly indocrinated into the "Catholics are evil" way of thinking (and I don't mean "evil" literally). In order for that to change, openess to Catholicism, followed by the reading of many books, talking to people, and a great deal of time thinking, is needed.

Pointing out how Catholicism, particularly the Mass, is entirely rooted in the Bible (which is not what non-Catholics are told); pointing out the passages which stress Sacred Tradition, in contradiction to Sola Scriptura; attempting to explain the role of the Blessed Virgin in our lives; etc. will probably not change anyone's minds. There is such a huge putdown of Catholics by Protestant ministers (which I've witnessed first hand on several occasions) that's it tough to overcome that.

Then again, it may well be the start down that path; one never knows. I'm not saying don't try to explain/defend - just don't expect any immediate miracles.

7 posted on 11/26/2001 3:34:48 AM PST by GreatOne
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To: GreatOne
>>For people who are strong in their non-Catholic Chrisitan faiths, they have probably been strongly indocrinated into the "Catholics are evil" way of thinking (and I don't mean "evil" literally).<<

Actually, I think this is false.

I was raised in a Reformed church, and we honestly never discussed Roman Catholicism in church school.

If I wasn't married to a Catholic, I wouldn't give it a second thought.

I was very surprised to learn, through my wife, that many Catholics are laboring under the misapprehension that Protestants are constantly, obsessively thinking and talking about the Roman Church.

With the exception of supposed "former Catholics" (who are obsessed with Roman Catholicism), nothing could be further from the truth.

If anything, we don't think about it enough. The Protestant walk with Jesus is fairly self-contained.

8 posted on 11/26/2001 3:46:57 AM PST by Jim Noble
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To: GreatOne
Unfortunately, I don't think that people can have their eyes opened to Catholicism through a few posts here on F.R.

I thought that too, till I started receiving Freepmail that proved otherwise. Two facts emerged from my private correspondences here (mainly as a result of one thread I posted) as well as many posts on Freeper War threads.

1) Freeper apologetics WORK. 2)Vicious Anti-Catholic remarks are driving folks to home to Rome, not away from it. Decent folks recognize the uncharitable spirit of these comments, and the ultimate source of such uncharity, despite the fact that scriptural proof texts are used. To use scripture to spread deceit is the ultimate act of uncharity.

9 posted on 11/26/2001 3:50:13 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: proud2bRC
Is that an effective use of your time and talent? Or would prayer, not words, be more effective at this point? Are we trying to win souls, or points of debate?

I am not a Catholic; consequently you haven't seen me often, if ever, on the type of threads you refer to here, although I have "dipped into" most of them just to see if there's anything different going on. Generally speaking, there isn't.

I am a Protestant, in fact, an "old-line" Protestant, and one who respects and admires the work of such Biblical scholars as Raymond E. Brown, S.S.; Joseph A. Fitzmyer, S.J.; and Roland E. Murphy, O.Carm., who together edited The New Jerome Biblical Commentary, which has a place in my "at hand" library next to my computer.

I would offer a couple of points for you to consider while you ponder the efficacy of your recent work here at FR:

One is the point of view held by the late Presbyterian evangelical (back when evangelical meant evangelical) Billy Sunday, who once said, "Once you know Jesus Christ as your personal Savior, all other theology is gravy; you've already got the biscuit." In my view, this is a quote that deserves more than a little serious thought by Catholics and Protestants alike.

The other point was one held and put in practice by two prominent Protestants, one an Anglican, the other a Presbyterian, who believed that in this post-modern age it was no longer possible to talk to the "average man" in Biblical or theological terms. They believed this because they recognized the fact that so few are being raised today with any religious background that to "talk Bible" to them is to speak in a foreign tongue. They advocated finding common ground with the other fellow, and speaking to him in his language. They both believed that if put into practice faithfully, their methodology would eventually lead the other fellow to ask for some Scriptural backup.

These two men were C.S. Lewis and Francis A. Schaeffer, whose works may be fairly judged by their achievements. I highly recommend the study of their methods to every faithful Christian, regardless of polity or ecclesiology.

10 posted on 11/26/2001 3:54:16 AM PST by logos
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To: proud2bRC; copycat; GreatOne
Ex-catholic weighing in here:

Does anyone have conversion statistics?

How many convert to catholicism, and from what religion?

How many repent of catholicism, and to which faith do they go?

Your apologetics are not intended to convert those whose hearts and minds are closed (although, by the Grace of God it does indeed happen).

Also gotta ask yourselves; How many people do you drive AWAY from the catholic church with your apologetics? How many solidify their views (against catholicism) based on what they read in the FReeper war posts?

I've read through 500+ posts if the topic is of interest, and I'm learning.

11 posted on 11/26/2001 3:58:18 AM PST by packrat01
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To: GreatOne
There is such a huge putdown of Catholics by Protestant ministers (which I've witnessed first hand on several occasions) that's it tough to overcome that.

It took me a long time to find a church "home" because of sutff like that. Whenever I heard the minister start into a diatribe about nearly anything - dancing, drinking, any other church - I quit going, because I cannot conceive of a God that isn't satisfied with a person who lives his life true to his faith.

I remember walking out of one Baptist service because the fundamental minister was in the middle of a three-hour roll about a petition that was drawn up to allow liquor by-the-drink to be served in the little town I then lived in.

I eventually became an Anglican Catholic (Episcopal, the "daughter" of the Church of England), and have yet to regret the decision.

12 posted on 11/26/2001 3:59:03 AM PST by Marauder
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To: Jim Noble
many Catholics are laboring under the misapprehension that Protestants are constantly, obsessively thinking and talking about the Roman Church

Few Catholics are laboring under such misapprehension. Few Catholics care what other denominations think of our faith.

However, those of us engaged in Catholic apologetics do care. But even we are not under such misapprehension. We realize that it is a small subset of protestantism that is obsessed with the Church of Rome. Entire ministries are committed to trying to steal folks away from Catholicism, and in some churches there is no positive preaching of their own Gospel but merely a preaching of how evil the doctrines of Rome are (I've been to them.)

So, just as few protestants care to think about Catholicism, few Catholics worry about what protestants think. Those that do are generally engaged in apologetics with anti-Catholics. There is a wide gulf between the non-Catholic protestant and the anti-Catholic protestant. If we can convert an "anti-"Catholic into a simply "non-"Catholic Christian, we have won a major battle.

13 posted on 11/26/2001 4:02:40 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: packrat01
I don't have stats, but Andrew Sulivan has cited research that shows that fallen away Catholics, unlike those of any other faith, go nowhere. They choose to belong to no organized religion in much greater numbers and percentages than those who have left any other formal religion. These practices are limited in the studt to the U.S. There is also evidence cited that fallen Catholics have a greater rate of return.
14 posted on 11/26/2001 4:09:01 AM PST by xkaydet65
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To: packrat01
How many people do you drive AWAY from the catholic church with your apologetics

That is a silly question. The Catholics almost always write calmly and with reason.
Some Protestants write thus also but many write as if they are snarling and pounding their fists upon the table. Catholics here
almost never accuse others of conspiracy and Evil. Many Protestants do just that. If one is attracted to unreasoning fanatics
then Catholic reasonableness may, indeed, drive them away.

15 posted on 11/26/2001 4:15:29 AM PST by arthurus
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To: packrat01
Also gotta ask yourselves

No, I don't.

We're not called to be successful, we're called to be faithful.

How many repent of catholicism

Catholicism, namely the belief in Our Savior Jesus Christ, the Trinity, the Virgin Birth, the crucifixion, death, and resurrection, the Second Coming and final Judgement, and all the other "fundamentals" of the fundamentalists is not something of which to repent but something, once found, of which to rejoice.

That said, I did not begin this thread to engage in apologetics with anti-Catholics/ex-Catholics, but to discuss among ourselves methods and outcomes. Therefore I will not engage in further dialogue with you on this thread, for that is not this thread's purpose.

Thank you for your comments, and may God Bless you abundantly.

16 posted on 11/26/2001 4:16:56 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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Comment #17 Removed by Moderator

To: arthurus
Catholics here almost never accuse others of conspiracy and Evil

Well...I've made some fairly sharp comments here on FR of late, which could be interpreted by their targets as "accusing others of conspiracy and Evil," but only when Catholicism itself was being accused of conspiracy and Evil.

18 posted on 11/26/2001 4:21:42 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: proud2bRC
See #15. Underline almost.
19 posted on 11/26/2001 4:26:42 AM PST by arthurus
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To: OkieGrit2
During my years in the Pro-life movement only the RCC was consistently there time and again putting people and money on the line while many of the other demonimations were simply giving lip service.

Many of the protestant ministers who have become Catholic in the last 15 years (several hundred was the count in the early 90's) converted because of their Pro-Life, Pro-Family committment, and their frustration at their own denomination's lack of committment and even hostility towards the Pro-Life movement.

The Pro-Life cause has done more for true ecumenism than any other factor in the last 500 years, as your post illustrates. God brings good even out of evil.

20 posted on 11/26/2001 4:29:11 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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