Posted on 10/13/2007 7:02:02 AM PDT by NYer
A conversion is never an old story... just the beginning of many. We are all growing, learning to love the Lord and strengthening our faith. This story was on the work of the holy spirit... and we know, it never comes back empty.
Someone has read this, dropped to their knees and finally asked the Lord to show them... if he’s there. I don’t have to see it, I know.
Do the scriptures mean the same to you as when you were a child?
When you see a lady take care of her huge, end stage Alzheimer’s husband... alone, for years... does it grow your faith? Do you ask if you would be able to have that strength if tested? If you see a kid praying as he’s taken out of his house by the social worker because of drunkeness and fighting of his parents... does it talk to your soul? Do you silently pray for the family as well then?
When you see the homeless ask for change, do you invite them to eat at your home... or spend the night?
Have you seen a butcher or grocer that gives food to a hungry family, knowing they couldn’t get the money to pay them back? And they’re not religious at all? Would you ask how he could survive doing that or offer the family money?
All of these grow your faith, at least are opportunities to practice it; These are also conversions. Not just realizing God has blessed you and why some suffer more than others... our Lord suffered himself, but why we don’t do more.
And my comment was addressed to another poster.
Duh!
I wasn't complaining about the posting of old news.
Someone else was.
My point was that this is a widespread practice. Especially among those now complaining about it.
Strange that the gentlemen in the story was converted(?) to Catholicism form reading a book of Desert Fathers writings and not by a personal testimony of a current Serious Catholic.
>Given the ignorance of your post, I would strongly suggest you join Salvation’s ping list to the daily Mass readings. They conver the entire bible (Old and New Testaments) in the span of 3 years. You might actually learn something.
Given the ignorance of the article I would strongly suggest reading some of the sermons of John Piper, John MacArthur, R.C. Sproul, James White, Al Mohler or any other Calvinist. This self named ex-pharisee does not present his old faith honestly, or he did not understand it.
As for reading RCC, I had enough of that when I was one. Funny, the priest never spoke of the Gospel, and I had to hear it from a Lutheran pastor. Oh, I heard plenty of Mary and the saints, but naught of the Gospel. My Grandmother, a life-long Catholic, said she never knew the Gospel, and thankfully was given it in the last days of her life, when she accepted Jesus Christ as her savior. Until then she was unsure that she was saved. She was taught by the nuns and priests that assurance was arrogance.
As for reading the Bible, how can you suggest this? Has it been infallibly interpreted yet? If not, do you not risk interpreting something wrong, and wander off the reservation? It used to be something which was not recommended without the guidance of a priest. Has that changed?
I myself, read the bible constantly, thanks. Currently in Judges for personal study, being preached James in church, and Exodus in church bible study, as well as whatever chapter Biblegateway.com is using for its verse of the day to start the day.
I AM a Calvinist. The Scripture is the center and authority of our spiritual lives. I understand that I am no better than any other sinner, and no matter what I do cannot make myself less offensive to God, but only God can do this within me.
The only thing I can boast about is Christ and His Resurrection. In challenging Roman traditions I am defending the Gospel, as written in the Scriptures, not attempting to put myself above anyone else, no matter what you think.
Well you're certainly putting yourself above the Catholic Church.
You've just spent several paragraphs trashing it.
Preaching "Christ and His Resurrection" need not even mention the Catholic Church. It should be a stand alone issue, I believe. If you want to preach the Gospel, then preach it. There's no need for that to include a negative message about other churches.
The above post makes you sound very little like an evangelist and more like a man who just wants to vent.
>Well you’re certainly putting yourself above the Catholic Church.
No, I am putting the Roman Church down to my level, as a fallible as I am, and refuse to be cowed by its propaganda.
>Preaching “Christ and His Resurrection” need not even mention the Catholic Church. It should be a stand alone issue, I believe. If you want to preach the Gospel, then preach it. There’s no need for that to include a negative message about other churches.
If Jesus walked into Benny Hinn’s crusade, do you think He would just say “Whatever...” and walk out? Does Peter and Paul say we must not say anything to those that preach a false gospel? Do you not feel righteous anger when Madonna straps herself on a cross? When someone claims your church is not a real church and just a ecumenical community? How about when someone that claims to have been of your faith misrepresents it like this clown in the article did so he can get accolades from his new faith?
>The above post makes you sound very little like an evangelist and more like a man who just wants to vent.
To me your post makes you sound like someone that cannot accept criticism to something which is so sacred to you it cannot be questioned, only meekly followed. If you cannot stand to criticism, your faith is weak. Stand or wilt, it is your choice. I refuse to let people slander the Christ, or His Gospel.
If that offends, I just need to remind you that the Gospel IS offensive. Paul did not get marshmallows thrown at him.
As for me, I am a fool. Do not look to me for infallibility. Look to the Scripture, and the guidance of the Spirit. Anyone else that says they are the infallible source is selling something.
Not quite correct. If you have left the Catholic Church for another then you have indicated a preference. You have placed the Catholic Church and its teachings on salvation, Scripture etc., below your own personal interpretations, not on a par.
Spin it any way you want but at the heart of that decision is pride.
Does Peter and Paul say we must not say anything to those that preach a false gospel?
In the case of the Catholic Church, you'd be better served by taking the "Gamaliel option", as described in Acts. The Sanhedrin was debating what to do about the preaching of the apostles and Gamaliel told them (and I'm paraphrasing here); don't mess with the apostles. If they're not doing God's work it will all come to nothing. If, on the other hand, it is God's work that they're doing, you'll end up fighting a battle you can't win.
Pride likewise convinces people to believe that they're somehow unique in salvation history in being the only ones to ever have taken up cudgels againts the Catholic Church. It's all been tried before to no lasting effect. From Nero and Diocletian to Calvin and Jack Chick.
Learn a lesson from history. The Church is Divine.
The reading from the Gospel occurs at every mass and is the culmination of the liturgy of the word, the first half of the service. This was true as much before the Vatican II reform as after, and indeed back to apostolic times. To say that you never heard the Gospel in a Catholic Church is just an out and out lie, unless you stopped up your ears with wax.
Irving's Law has just been invoked. Ottofire wins the round by default.
Default may be the only way.
“....when I was one”
That explains everything.
So what is drawing you toward the Catholic faith that you are resisting?
Every action requires a reaction. You wouldn’t resist something so fiercely if it wasn’t acting on you in some way.
It’s never too late to come back, Ottofire. If you truly trust the Lord Jesus Christ, open your heart and ask Him for a sign. There’s no shame in coming home.
Well, as dated as the post (via news here on FR) may be, it’s still another conversion. Until and unless this person “reconverts” to another faith, it’s a conversion, yes?
It’s interesting how so many on this thread want to disparage the convert, rather than listen to the conversion message. Oh well, it’s nothing new; they did it with Beckwith too.
That was the point of my post #32.
In my long experience, I have learned that when a person converts to Catholicism, they almost never disparage what they came from and very frequently honor the beginnings of their Christian life in another profession of faith—as I have done myself.
But when one leaves the Catholic church, they so frequently turn on it fiercely.
There has to be be an explanation for that kind of animosity, which, as a general rule, isn’t manifested in the Protestant who has become Catholic. Such a person may want to explain why they have made their choice to become Catholic, but rarely make it a point of battle and a mission to disparage their Protestant beginnings.
There has to be be an explanation for that kind of animosity, which, as a general rule, isnt manifested in the Protestant who has become Catholic.
They see it for what it is.
So—animosity is grace-filled?
Good to see you back among the jacked in :D
Thanks!
I’m connecting through a cell phone. It’s not DSL, but a heck of a lot faster than dial-up.
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