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The hidden exodus: Catholics becoming Protestants
NCR ^ | Apr. 18, 2011 | Thomas Reese

Posted on 05/17/2012 5:40:57 PM PDT by Gamecock

Any other institution that lost one-third of its members would want to know why.....

The number of people who have left the Catholic church is huge.

We all have heard stories about why people leave. Parents share stories about their children. Academics talk about their students. Everyone has a friend who has left.

While personal experience can be helpful, social science research forces us to look beyond our circle of acquaintances to see what is going on in the whole church.

The U.S. Religious Landscape Survey by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life has put hard numbers on the anecdotal evidence: One out of every 10 Americans is an ex-Catholic. If they were a separate denomination, they would be the third-largest denomination in the United States, after Catholics and Baptists. One of three people who were raised Catholic no longer identifies as Catholic.

Any other institution that lost one-third of its members would want to know why. But the U.S. bishops have never devoted any time at their national meetings to discussing the exodus. Nor have they spent a dime trying to find out why it is happening.

Thankfully, although the U.S. bishops have not supported research on people who have left the church, the Pew Center has.

Pew’s data shows that those leaving the church are not homogenous. They can be divided into two major groups: those who become unaffiliated and those who become Protestant. Almost half of those leaving the church become unaffiliated and almost half become Protestant. Only about 10 percent of ex-Catholics join non-Christian religions. This article will focus on Catholics who have become Protestant. I am not saying that those who become unaffiliated are not important; I am leaving that discussion to another time.

Why do people leave the Catholic church to become Protestant? Liberal Catholics will tell you that Catholics are leaving because they disagree with the church’s teaching on birth control, women priests, divorce, the bishops’ interference in American politics, etc. Conservatives blame Vatican II, liberal priests and nuns, a permissive culture and the church’s social justice agenda.

One of the reasons there is such disagreement is that we tend to think that everyone leaves for the same reason our friends, relatives and acquaintances have left. We fail to recognize that different people leave for different reasons. People who leave to join Protestant churches do so for different reasons than those who become unaffiliated. People who become evangelicals are different from Catholics who become members of mainline churches.

Spiritual needs

The principal reasons given by people who leave the church to become Protestant are that their “spiritual needs were not being met” in the Catholic church (71 percent) and they “found a religion they like more” (70 percent). Eighty-one percent of respondents say they joined their new church because they enjoy the religious service and style of worship of their new faith.

In other words, the Catholic church has failed to deliver what people consider fundamental products of religion: spiritual sustenance and a good worship service. And before conservatives blame the new liturgy, only 11 percent of those leaving complained that Catholicism had drifted too far from traditional practices such as the Latin Mass.

Dissatisfaction with how the church deals with spiritual needs and worship services dwarfs any disagreements over specific doctrines. While half of those who became Protestants say they left because they stopped believing in Catholic teaching, specific questions get much lower responses. Only 23 percent said they left because of the church’s teaching on abortion and homosexuality; only 23 percent because of the church’s teaching on divorce; only 21 percent because of the rule that priests cannot marry; only 16 percent because of the church’s teaching on birth control; only 16 percent because of the way the church treats women; only 11 percent because they were unhappy with the teachings on poverty, war and the death penalty.

The data shows that disagreement over specific doctrines is not the main reason Catholics become Protestants. We also have lots of survey data showing that many Catholics who stay disagree with specific church teachings. Despite what theologians and bishops think, doctrine is not that important either to those who become Protestant or to those who stay Catholic.

People are not becoming Protestants because they disagree with specific Catholic teachings; people are leaving because the church does not meet their spiritual needs and they find Protestant worship service better.

Nor are the people becoming Protestants lazy or lax Christians. In fact, they attend worship services at a higher rate than those who remain Catholic. While 42 percent of Catholics who stay attend services weekly, 63 percent of Catholics who become Protestants go to church every week. That is a 21 percentage-point difference.

Catholics who became Protestant also claim to have a stronger faith now than when they were children or teenagers. Seventy-one percent say their faith is “very strong,” while only 35 percent and 22 percent reported that their faith was very strong when they were children and teenagers, respectively. On the other hand, only 46 percent of those who are still Catholic report their faith as “very strong” today as an adult.

Thus, both as believers and as worshipers, Catholics who become Protestants are statistically better Christians than those who stay Catholic. We are losing the best, not the worst.

Some of the common explanations of why people leave do not pan out in the data. For example, only 21 percent of those becoming Protestant mention the sex abuse scandal as a reason for leaving. Only 3 percent say they left because they became separated or divorced.

Becoming Protestant

If you believed liberals, most Catholics who leave the church would be joining mainline churches, like the Episcopal church. In fact, almost two-thirds of former Catholics who join a Protestant church join an evangelical church. Catholics who become evangelicals and Catholics who join mainline churches are two very distinct groups. We need to take a closer look at why each leaves the church.

Fifty-four percent of both groups say that they just gradually drifted away from Catholicism. Both groups also had almost equal numbers (82 percent evangelicals, 80 percent mainline) saying they joined their new church because they enjoyed the worship service. But compared to those who became mainline Protestants, a higher percentage of those becoming evangelicals said they left because their spiritual needs were not being met (78 percent versus 57 percent) and that they had stopped believing in Catholic teaching (62 percent versus 20 percent). They also cited the church’s teaching on the Bible (55 percent versus 16 percent) more frequently as a reason for leaving. Forty-six percent of these new evangelicals felt the Catholic church did not view the Bible literally enough. Thus, for those leaving to become evangelicals, spiritual sustenance, worship services and the Bible were key. Only 11 percent were unhappy with the church’s teachings on poverty, war, and the death penalty Ñ the same percentage as said they were unhappy with the church’s treatment of women. Contrary to what conservatives say, ex-Catholics are not flocking to the evangelicals because they think the Catholic church is politically too liberal. They are leaving to get spiritual nourishment from worship services and the Bible.

Looking at the responses of those who join mainline churches also provides some surprising results. For example, few (20 percent) say they left because they stopped believing in Catholic teachings. However, when specific issues were mentioned in the questionnaire, more of those joining mainline churches agreed that these issues influenced their decision to leave the Catholic church. Thirty-one percent cited unhappiness with the church’s teaching on abortion and homosexuality, women, and divorce and remarriage, and 26 percent mentioned birth control as a reason for leaving. Although these numbers are higher than for Catholics who become evangelicals, they are still dwarfed by the number (57 percent) who said their spiritual needs were not met in the Catholic church.

Thus, those becoming evangelicals were more generically unhappy than specifically unhappy with church teaching, while those who became mainline Protestant tended to be more specifically unhappy than generically unhappy with church teaching. The unhappiness with the church’s teaching on poverty, war and the death penalty was equally low for both groups (11 percent for evangelicals; 10 percent for mainline).

What stands out in the data on Catholics who join mainline churches is that they tend to cite personal or familiar reasons for leaving more frequently than do those who become evangelicals. Forty-four percent of the Catholics who join mainline churches say that they married someone of the faith they joined, a number that trumps all doctrinal issues. Only 22 percent of those who join the evangelicals cite this reason.

Perhaps after marrying a mainline Christian and attending his or her church’s services, the Catholic found the mainline services more fulfilling than the Catholic service. And even if they were equally attractive, perhaps the exclusion of the Protestant spouse from Catholic Communion makes the more welcoming mainline church attractive to an ecumenical couple.

Those joining mainline communities also were more likely to cite dissatisfaction of the Catholic clergy (39 percent) than were those who became evangelical (23 percent). Those who join mainline churches are looking for a less clerically dominated church.

Lessons from the data

There are many lessons that we can learn from the Pew data, but I will focus on only three.

First, those who are leaving the church for Protestant churches are more interested in spiritual nourishment than doctrinal issues. Tinkering with the wording of the creed at Mass is not going to help. No one except the Vatican and the bishops cares whether Jesus is “one in being” with the Father or “consubstantial” with the Father. That the hierarchy thinks this is important shows how out of it they are.

While the hierarchy worries about literal translations of the Latin text, people are longing for liturgies that touch the heart and emotions. More creativity with the liturgy is needed, and that means more flexibility must be allowed. If you build it, they will come; if you do not, they will find it elsewhere. The changes that will go into effect this Advent will make matters worse, not better.

Second, thanks to Pope Pius XII, Catholic scripture scholars have had decades to produce the best thinking on scripture in the world. That Catholics are leaving to join evangelical churches because of the church teaching on the Bible is a disgrace. Too few homilists explain the scriptures to their people. Few Catholics read the Bible.

The church needs a massive Bible education program. The church needs to acknowledge that understanding the Bible is more important than memorizing the catechism. If we could get Catholics to read the Sunday scripture readings each week before they come to Mass, it would be revolutionary. If you do not read and pray the scriptures, you are not an adult Christian. Catholics who become evangelicals understand this.

Finally, the Pew data shows that two-thirds of Catholics who become Protestants do so before they reach the age of 24. The church must make a preferential option for teenagers and young adults or it will continue to bleed. Programs and liturgies that cater to their needs must take precedence over the complaints of fuddy-duddies and rubrical purists.

Current religious education programs and teen groups appear to have little effect on keeping these folks Catholic, according to the Pew data, although those who attend a Catholic high school do appear to stay at a higher rate. More research is needed to find out what works and what does not.

The Catholic church is hemorrhaging members. It needs to acknowledge this and do more to understand why. Only if we acknowledge the exodus and understand it will we be in a position to do something about it.


TOPICS: Catholic; Evangelical Christian; General Discusssion; Mainline Protestant
KEYWORDS: agendadrivenfreeper; bleedingmembers; catholic
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To: stpio
Believe in them if you want...I'm not convinced. I'll stick with what Holy Scripture says.

I do think it is humorous that you say these supposed "Protestant" prophets are "gently" pointing people to join the Catholic religion. Yet, I seriously doubt you would believe in them if they said the opposite. Something like, "The only way to be saved is through faith in Jesus Christ. No church can save you."?

1,001 posted on 06/01/2012 11:33:15 PM PDT by boatbums (God is ready to assume full responsibility for the life wholly yielded to Him.)
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To: count-your-change
I don't believe in “universal salvation”. No one can go to heaven unless they believe in and trust Jesus Christ to save them. That is how we receive the gift of everlasting life - through faith. What I was trying to explain is simply that it is faith that saves us and not ANY of the works we do. It is by grace and grace means unmerited, undeserved. If we are saved by God's grace through faith, then nothing we do can UNDO what God has given to us by His grace. It is not in any way saying someone has a license to sin, just that not sinning isn't what saves us. Once a person comes to saving faith in Christ, the Holy Spirit indwells and a new, spirit nature is born within us. This nature is empowered by the Spirit to live a holy life that glorifies God. Living a holy life is evidence of a genuine faith, but it is NOT living a holy life that saves us. Any clearer? Have a good night. I'm signing off.
1,002 posted on 06/01/2012 11:41:28 PM PDT by boatbums (God is ready to assume full responsibility for the life wholly yielded to Him.)
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To: boatbums

G’nite.


1,003 posted on 06/01/2012 11:47:39 PM PDT by count-your-change (You don't have to be brilliant, not being stupid is enough.)
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To: boatbums

“Believe in them if you want...I’m not convinced. I’ll stick with what Holy Scripture says.

I do think it is humorous that you say these supposed “Protestant” prophets are “gently” pointing people to join the Catholic religion. Yet, I seriously doubt you would believe in them if they said the opposite. Something like, “The only way to be saved is through faith in Jesus Christ. No church can save you.”?

~ ~ ~

Thanks for your kind reply. Oops, no personal, so I’ll say if only a Catholic could convince a brother in Christ. Been
reading the messages from Heaven, Protestant and Catholic
almost 14 years.

Absolutely, the divine events prophesied are closer. MO, I think the number 13 is important. Next year maybe.

It’s interesting, Our Lord is more direct in the Catholic messages because the Remnant is Roman Catholic and He can spell it out but it’s so sweet, He speaks more using Scripture type words to our non-Catholic brothers and sisters, as example, “My Bride” because of your draw to the Bible. Don’t get me wrong, there is much Scripture reference in the Catholic messages.

Remember Catholic things, the pinnacle, the Holy Eucharist, Mary will help you if you ask her in prayer and Confession to priest, just think about those three things.


1,004 posted on 06/02/2012 12:06:37 AM PDT by stpio
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To: stpio
Instead, read the quotes of the first Christians, some of them knew the Apostles. Did they believe in the Real Presence. Yes.

Unlikely any of your church fathers knew any of the Apostles except for Polycarp...

And since Polycarp never spoke of anything Catholic, we can call him our church father...

Besides, Paul warned us of deceptors and perverters of scripture in his midst while he was preaching and teaching...

John 6:54-55 Then Jesus said to them: Amen, amen I say unto you: Except you eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, you shall not have life in you. [55] He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath everlasting life: and I will raise him up in the last day.

Joh 6:56 He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him.

Well I'm good to go then...Because I eat Jesus flesh and drink his blood, spiritually...But tell me, how do you get into Jesus by eating his flesh???

1,005 posted on 06/02/2012 1:05:38 AM PDT by Iscool (You mess with me, you mess with the WHOLE trailerpark...)
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To: stpio
Wow!! A saint on earth.

Now you're gettin' it...

Rom 15:25 But now I go unto Jerusalem to minister unto the saints.
Rom 15:26 For it hath pleased them of Macedonia and Achaia to make a certain contribution for the poor saints which are at Jerusalem.

Even a little bit of bible study will clear up years of Catholic misinformation...

1,006 posted on 06/02/2012 1:19:14 AM PDT by Iscool (You mess with me, you mess with the WHOLE trailerpark...)
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To: stpio
IF any Protestants read the Protestant excerpts and messages I’ve posted they would read Jesus speaking of unity of oneness of belief and of the “full Truth.” He is that loving. Our Lord is actually preparing the world to accept the true faith.

So it s WIDE gate that the massive Catholic religion is looking for to enter thru to its final destination...

1,007 posted on 06/02/2012 1:34:47 AM PDT by Iscool (You mess with me, you mess with the WHOLE trailerpark...)
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To: boatbums

“Yea, blame everything on Luther! Lutherans believe in “consubstantiation” which reflects the views of Irenaeus or Justin Martyr.”

~ ~ ~

The non- Catholic FR folks replying here keep referring to Martin Luther’s heresy of Faith Alone, that’s why, but, there are other “revolters.”

Thanks for mentioning two of the very first Catholics. Doesn’t help sell Protestantism boatbums.

Lutheran “consubstantiation” amounts to zip. Lutherans
have no power to confect the Holy Eucharist. It remains
bread and wine so it doesn’t matter if they declare
something else takes place...their new term.

I checked the source for the long writing. The author
is William Webster, a fallen away Catholic who converted to
Evangelicalism. It didn’t read like true history. Catholic
names and early councils but the in between is Protestant.

Since Protestants don’t believe OUR LORD’S words, they don’t have to try to distance the time of belief in the Real Presence. Paul, the Apostle believed, read 1 Corinthians 11:27.


1,008 posted on 06/02/2012 3:20:34 AM PDT by stpio
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To: Iscool

IF any Protestants read the Protestant excerpts and messages I’ve posted they would read Jesus speaking of unity of oneness of belief and of the “full Truth.” He is that loving. Our Lord is actually preparing the world to accept the true faith.

“So it s WIDE gate that the massive Catholic religion is looking for to enter thru to its final destination”...

~ ~ ~

The numbers of Roman Catholics are “massive” because it
is the true faith but the “narrow gate” is reference to
the teachings of Roman Catholicism, the same as passed down from the Apostles.

I pray the faith will be everyone’s “destination” after
they experience the Great Warning. God can change hearts
and minds.


1,009 posted on 06/02/2012 3:35:49 AM PDT by stpio
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To: Religion Moderator

Read the exchange again. It was not another freeper that I said lied. If you follow the thread back the comment I said was a lie was made by some “seer” the poster was quoting and in fact posted a link to what the “seer” had said. Please don’t accuse me of doing something I didn’t do.


1,010 posted on 06/02/2012 3:48:47 AM PDT by CynicalBear
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To: stpio
>>A famous quote, “To be deep in history is to cease to be Protestant.” John Henry Newman<<

Well, let’s look at history from the perspective of a well renowned Catholic historian. He claims the whole Pope thing is based on forgeries. The guy was Catholic and taught Catholic history for something like 47 years.

In the middle of the ninth century—about 845—there arose the huge fabrication of the Isidorian decretals...About a hundred pretended decrees of the earliest Popes, together with certain spurious writings of other Church dignitaries and acts of Synods, were then fabricated in the west of Gaul, and eagerly seized upon Pope Nicholas I at Rome, to be used as genuine documents in support of the new claims put forward by himself and his successors. That the pseudo–Isidorian principles eventually revolutionized the whole constitution of the Church, and introduced a new system in place of the old—on that point there can be no controversy among candid historians. The most potent instrument of the new Papal system was Gratian’s Decretum, which issued about the middle of the twelfth century from the first school of Law in Europe, the juristic teacher of the whole of Western Christendom, Bologna. In this work the Isidorian forgeries were combined with those of the other Gregorian (Gregory VII) writers...and with Gratia’s own additions. His work displaced all the older collections of canon law, and became the manual and repertory, not for canonists only, but for the scholastic theologians, who, for the most part, derived all their knowledge of Fathers and Councils from it. No book has ever come near it in its influence in the Church, although there is scarcely another so chokeful of gross errors, both intentional and unintentional (Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger, The Pope and the Council (Boston: Roberts, 1870), pp. 76-77, 79, 115-116).

Do a study on the Pseudo Isidorian Decretals and you will find that it’s pretty much common knowledge that they were based on forgeries. Here’s another segment from Donllinger.

In theology, from the beginning of the fourteenth century, the spurious passages of St. Cyril and forged canons of Councils maintained their ground, being guaranteed against all suspicion by the authority of St. Thomas. Since the work of Trionfo in 1320, up to 1450, it is remarkable that no single new work appeared in the interests of the Papal system. But then the contest between the Council of Basle and Pope Eugenius IV evoked the work of Cardinal Torquemada, besides some others of less importance. Torquemada’s argument, which was held up to the time of Bellarmine to be the most conslusive apology of the Papal system, rests entirely on fabrications later than the pseudo-Isidore, and chiefly on the spurious passages of St. Cyril. To ignore the authority of St. Thomas is, according to the Cardinal, bad enough, but to slight the testimony of St. Cyril is intolerable. The Pope is infallible; all authority of other bishops is borrowed or derived frorn his. Decisions of Councils without his assent are null and void. These fundamental principles of Torquemada are proved by spurious passages of Anacletus, Clement, the Council of Chalcedon, St. Cyril, and a mass of forged or adulterated testimonies. In the times of Leo X and Clement III, the Cardinals Thomas of Vio, or Cajetan, and Jacobazzi, followed closely in his footsteps. Melchior Canus built firmly on the authority of Cyril, attested by St. Thomas, and so did Bellarmine and the Jesuits who followed him. Those who wish to get a bird’s–eye view of the extent to which the genuine tradition of Church authority was still overlaid and obliterated by the rubbish of later inventions and forgeries about 1563, when the Loci of Canus appeared, must read the fifth book of his work. It is indeed still worse fifty years later in this part of Bellarmine’s work. The difference is that Canus was honest in his belief, which cannot be said of Bellarmine.

The Dominicans, Nicolai, Le Quien, Quetif, and Echard, were the first to avow openly that their master St. Thomas, had been deceived by an imposter, and had in turn misled the whole tribe of theologians and canonists who followed him. On the one hand, the Jesuits, including even such a scholar as Labbe, while giving up the pseudo–Isidorian decretals, manifested their resolve to still cling to St. Cyril. In Italy, as late as 1713, Professor Andruzzi of Bologna cited the most important of the interpolations of St. Cyril as a conclusive argument in his controversial treatise against the patriarch Dositheus (Johann Joseph Ignaz von Dollinger, The Pope and the Council (Boston: Roberts, 1870), pp. 233-234).

Read also writings by Dr. Aristeides Papadakis who is a Professor of Byzantine history at the University of Maryland and an Orthodox historian. For those who are interested in truth it doesn’t take long to know that the entire concept of a pope is unscriptural and based on forgeries and as Dollinger put it, “gross errors”.

>>Peter is buried under the high altar at St. Peter’s Basilica.<<

• There is actually very little proof that Peter was even in Rome. Read Paul’s letter to the Romans in Romans 16: 1-15. He mentions everyone of note but nothing about or to Peter. Not only that but in Romans Paul is giving instructions in the faith if Peter was already the Bishop of Rome. If Catholics are right Peter would have been Paul’s superior. Yet Paul never mentions him in his letter to the church at Rome and gives them instructions in the faith. If Peter had been in Rome as it’s Bishop there certainly would have been mention and there would have been no need to “go over his bosses head” and give instruction in the faith.

There is no record in the Bible or elsewhere, of Peter issuing instructions to the diocese of Rome. What an amazing oversight by a supposedly infallible commander-in-chief! In addition to that, Paul wrote to Timothy from Rome.

2 Timothy 4:9-12 - "Do thy diligence to come shortly unto me: For Demas hath forsaken me, having loved this present world, and is departed unto Thessalonica; Crescens to Galatia, Titus unto Dalmatia. Only Luke is with me. Take Mark, and bring him with thee: for he is profitable to me for the ministry. And Tychicus have I sent to Ephesus."

Where was Peter the supposed Bishop of Rome? Again in 2 Timothy Paul is giving instructions to Timothy. If Peter was the Supreme Pontiff of Rome why is Paul writing from Rome with no mention of Peter?

Then there is Irenaeus.

Irenaeus: "The blessed apostles, then, having founded and built up the Church, committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate. Of this Linus, Paul makes mention in the Epistles to Timothy. To him succeeded Anacletus; and after him, in the third place from the apostles, Clement was allotted the bishopric. . . . . To this Clement there succeeded Evaristus. Alexander followed Evaristus; then, sixth from the apostles, Sixtus, was appointed; after him, Telephorus, who was gloriously martyred; then Hyginus; after him, Pius; then after him, Anicetus. Sorer having succeeded Anicetus, Eleutherius does now, in the twelfth place from the apostles, hold the inheritance of the episcopate. In this order, and by this succession, the ecclesiastical tradition from the apostles, and the preaching of the truth, have come down to us. And this is most abundant proof that there is one and the same vivifying faith, which has been preserved in the Church from the apostles until now, and handed down in truth (SOURCE: Iraeneus Against Heresies, Volume I, Book III, Para 3)

Did you notice that it was Paul who made mention of Linus, not Peter? With no indication of Peter ever being in Rome, nor any indication that Peter in fact was the head of the Apostles there can be no legitimate claim that Peter was the first Pope or that the RC was built on Peter.

And then one more embarrassment for the RCC. In the 1950s Roman Catholic archaeologists discovered a tomb in Jerusalem containing an ossuary—a bone box used in first-century Jewish burials—that bore the engraved name “Simon Bar Jona” (a name by which the apostle Peter is known in the Gospels).

The truth is that even the Catholic Church can’t prove that Peter was ever in Rome other than when he was taken their as a prisoner and their whole premise of the pope in the first place is based on forgeries.

If you want to go "deep in history" we could have a long conversation. Starting with scripture. The Papacy is founded on fallacy, forgeries, and error.

1,011 posted on 06/02/2012 4:58:24 AM PDT by CynicalBear
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To: stpio; Iscool
Here’s another quote from Jesus.

Matthew 15:17 Do not ye yet understand, that whatsoever entereth in at the mouth goeth into the belly, and is cast out into the draught?

1,012 posted on 06/02/2012 5:03:29 AM PDT by CynicalBear
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To: stpio
Must be why you guys are preaching Jesus did all by His death on the Cross, He covered all your sins, you are justified because you’re sinless. Wow!! A saint on earth.

Yes, a saint on earth. True believers are called saints.

The Catholic church has corrupted the meaning of the term as it is used in Scripture. *Saint* does not mean *sinless one*; it means *holy one*.

*Holy* doesn't mean sinless either, it means to be set apart or consecrated for God's use.And no, not pride either. I am continually amazed at the Catholics attitude about people taking God at His word.. They constantly accuse others of pride for simply believing what God has said about those who believe in Him and trust in His promises. That's only what faith is; believing the promises of God and the spiritual reality that God says exists.

So when God says we are forgiven, it is exercising faith to accept that as true and act on it.

When God says we are sealed until the day of redemption with the Holy Spirit and seated with Him in the heavenly places, it's not pride to accept that as true, it's faith - simply accepting and acknowledging that God is not a liar and this is the reality that exists that we can't see but He tells us about.

If we refuse to accept what He's told us about under the pretense of it being pride, it's really only false humility and puts one in the position of saying that he knows better than God what's really going on and calling God a liar.

1,013 posted on 06/02/2012 5:32:42 AM PDT by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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To: daniel1212
It is indeed comprehensive “all Scripture is given by inspiration of God,”...

How do you morph comprehensive "source" to comprehensive "application?" No credible mean that I know of.

Further, "most" is not "all" as in your parenthetical remark, and even that is not a credible claim.

Had the exact content of Scripture not been so murky, the Church would not have made such efforts to stamp out the heretical variants.

In summation, your "interpretation" makes the unjustifiable leap of conflating "profitable," and "thouroughly furnished," with "exclusionary."

Had Paul intended this verse to mean "exclusive," he would have said so, for surely there can be no more important message than what you claim if it were indeed the truth.

No, it is Scriptural, unless you hold to the view that only what is expressly set down in Scripture or formally defined is admissible, excluding what may “by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from Scripture” by precept and principle.

That is exactly what I am saying: for Protestants! Moreover, the multiplicity of Protestant factions makes the "necessity" of deductions as credible as "religious tolorance" behind the Iron Curtain. I.e. an utter farce.

The truth of what I've written here makes answering the rest of your paean a moot point.

1,014 posted on 06/02/2012 5:38:21 AM PDT by papertyger ("And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if..."))
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To: CynicalBear
Protestants? Legalistic? That accusation coming from a Catholic? Seriously?

If the method Protestants use Scripture to contrive accusations against Catholics is not legalistic, I don't know what is...as apparently you don't, given your list of Catholic practices.

We formally recognize the error of "scrupulosity." Do you?

1,015 posted on 06/02/2012 5:49:39 AM PDT by papertyger ("And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if..."))
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To: stpio; boatbums

Why on earth do you keep dragging Luther into it?

Can Catholics not get it through their minds that non-Catholics do NOT follow men as they have been conditioned to? Just because two people agree on something, does NOT mean that one is following the other. It simply means that two people have considered the passage and come to the same conclusions from it.

The theology of faith alone is not something Luther dreamed up anyway. It’s clearly and plainly stated in Scripture in Ephesians 2 and many other places. Even Jesus stated that believing was what was necessary and told people that their faith saved them.


1,016 posted on 06/02/2012 5:56:01 AM PDT by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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To: stpio; boatbums

Why on earth do you keep dragging Luther into it?

Can Catholics not get it through their minds that non-Catholics do NOT follow men as they have been conditioned to? Just because two people agree on something, does NOT mean that one is following the other. It simply means that two people have considered the passage and come to the same conclusions from it.

The theology of faith alone is not something Luther dreamed up anyway. It’s clearly and plainly stated in Scripture in Ephesians 2 and many other places. Even Jesus stated that believing was what was necessary and told people that their faith saved them.


1,017 posted on 06/02/2012 5:56:21 AM PDT by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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To: CynicalBear
Looks to me as if Catholics do indeed make Mary equal to Christ in many things.

So now that you've been called on your claim, you're going to start qualifying your statements....

1,018 posted on 06/02/2012 5:56:43 AM PDT by papertyger ("And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if..."))
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To: stpio
John 6:51-52 I am the living bread which came down from heaven. [52] If any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever; and the bread that I will give, is my FLESH, for the life of the world.

Then to take that literally, must mean that Jesus said that He is made out of bread dough, a living, breathing man shaped batch of dough.

1,019 posted on 06/02/2012 5:58:57 AM PDT by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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To: boatbums

Disputing a statement is not refuting a statement.

We will stop bringing up the variation of Protestant interpretations when it stops being true.

One can hardly entertain the charge of “intellectual dishonesty” for stating irrefutable facts, and not making allowance for the portion of the soup that happens to be “fly.”


1,020 posted on 06/02/2012 6:12:19 AM PDT by papertyger ("And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if..."))
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