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How I Led Catholics Out Of the Church (And into Apostasy)
Catholic Education ^ | Steve Wood

Posted on 12/28/2011 5:47:17 PM PST by rzman21

How I led Catholics Out of the Church STEVE WOOD I was a Protestant for twenty years before I became a Catholic. I led many people out of the Catholic Church. My formula for getting Catholics to leave the Church usually consisted of three steps.

Step 1: Get Catholics to have a conversion experience in a Protestant setting. Most Fundamentalist, Evangelical, and charismatic Protestant churches have dynamic youth programs, vibrant Wednesday and Sunday evening services, and friendly small-group bible studies. In addition, they host special crusades, seminars and concerts. At the invitation of a Protestant friend, a Catholic may begin attending one or more of these events while still going to Sunday Mass at his local parish. Most Protestant services proclaim a simple gospel: repent from sin and follow Christ in faith. They stress the importance of a personal relationship with Jesus and the reward of eternal life. Most of the Catholics who attend these services are not accustomed to hearing such direct challenges to abandon sin and follow Christ. As a result, many Catholics experience a genuine conversion.

Protestants should be commended for their zeal in promoting conversions. Catholic leaders need to multiply the opportunities for their people to have such conversions in Catholic settings. The reason is simple. About five out of ten people adopt the beliefs of the denomination where they have their conversion. This percentage is even higher for those who had profound conversions or charismatic experiences that were provided by Protestants. (Believe me, I know; I was a graduate of an Assembly of God college and a youth minister in two charismatic churches.)

Protestant pastors, evangelists, youth leaders, and lay ministers are acutely aware that conversion experiences in Protestant settings often lead to a Protestant faith and church membership. Why do so many Catholic leaders fail to see this? Why are they so nonchalant about a process that has pulled hundreds of thousands of Catholics out of the Church?

Step 2: Give their conversion a Protestant interpretation.

A genuine conversion is one of life's most precious experiences, comparable to marriage or the birth of a child. Conversion awakens a deep hunger for God. Effective Protestant ministries train workers to follow up on this spiritual longing.

Before a stadium crusade, I would give follow-up workers a six-week training course. I showed them how to present a Protestant interpretation of the conversion experience with a selective use of bible verses. The scripture of choice was of course John 3:3, the "born-again" verse: "Jesus declared, 'I tell you the truth, no one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again.'

I used the "touch and go" scripture technique, similar to that used by pilots training for landings and takeoffs. We would briefly touch down on John 3:3 to show that being born again was necessary for eternal life. Then I would describe conversion in terms of being born again. We would make a hasty takeoff before reading John 3:5 which stresses the necessity of being "born of water and spirit." I never mentioned that for 20 centuries the Orthodox and Catholic Churches, echoing the unanimous teaching of the Church fathers, understood this passage as referring to the Sacrament of Baptism! And I certainly never brought up Titus 3:5 ("He saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit") as a parallel reference to John 3:5.

In my experience as a Protestant, all the Catholics who had a conversion in a Protestant setting lacked a firm grasp of their Catholic faith.

In twenty years of Protestant ministry, I never met a Catholic who knew that John 3:3-8 describes the sacrament of Baptism. It wasn't hard to convince them to disregard the sacraments along with the Church that emphasized the sacraments.

Proverbs says: "He who states his case first seems right, until the other comes and examines him" (18:17). Catholics without a scriptural foundation for their Catholic beliefs never hear "the rest of the story." My selective use of scripture made the Protestant perspective seem so absolutely sure. Over time, this one-sided approach to scripture caused Catholics to reject their Catholic faith.

Step 3: Accuse the Catholic church of denying salvation by grace.

Catholics often consider Protestants who proselytize to be bigoted, narrow-minded, or prejudiced. This is unfair and inaccurate; a profound charity energizes their misguided zeal.

There was only one reason I led Catholics out of the Church: I thought they were on their way to hell. I mistakenly thought the Catholic Church denied that salvation was by grace; I knew that anyone who believed this wasn't going to heaven. Out of love for their immortal souls, I worked tirelessly to convert them.

I used Ephesians 2:8-9 to convince Catholics that it was imperative for them to leave the Church:

For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith — and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God — not by works, so that no one can boast. First I would say, "The Bible says that salvation is by grace and not by works. Right?" Their answer was always yes. Then I would say, "The Catholic Church teaches that salvation is by works. Right?" (I never met a Catholic who did not say yes. Every Catholic I met during my twenty years of ministry confirmed my misconception that Catholicism taught salvation is by works instead of grace.) Finally, I would declare, "The Catholic Church is leading people to hell by denying salvation is by grace. You'd better join a church that teaches the true way to heaven."

Because I would also do a "touch and go" in Ephesians, I rarely quoted verse 10 which says, "For we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do." Listen carefully to stadium evangelists, televangelists, and radio preachers. Nine times out of ten they will quote Ephesians 2:8-9 with great emphasis and never mention verse 10.

We are not slaves futilely trying to earn salvation by doing "works of the law" (Eph. 2:8-9). Yet as sons of God we are inspired and energized by the Holy Spirit to do "good works" as we cooperate with our heavenly father in extending the Kingdom of God (Eph. 2:10). Catholicism believes and teaches the full message of Ephesians 2:8-10, without equivocating or abbreviating the truth.

For twenty centuries the Catholic Church has faithfully taught that salvation is by grace. Peter the first pope said, "We believe it is through the grace of our Lord Jesus that we are saved" (Acts 15:11). The Catechism of the Catholic Church, fully endorsed by Pope John Paul II, says, "Our justification comes from the grace of God" (section 1996).

Protestantism started when Martin Luther declared that we are justified (made righteous) by faith alone. At the time I was leading Catholics out of the Church, I wasn't aware that Martin Luther had added the word alone to his translation of Romans 3:28 in order to prove his doctrine. (The word alone is not found in any contemporary Protestant English translation of Romans 3:28.) I didn't realize that the only place the bible mentions "faith alone" in the context of salvation is in James 2:24, where the idea of faith alone is explicitly refuted: "You see that a person is justified by what he does and not by faith alone." This verse was troubling, but I either ignored it, or twisted it to mean something other that what the verse and its context clearly taught.

Should Catholics participate in Protestant events?

I have no objection to Catholics participating in Protestant-oriented events and worthwhile ecumenical activities provided that:

they have a firm grasp of their Catholic faith. they know their faith well enough to articulate it to a non-Catholic, using scripture and the Church fathers. they have the maturity to realize that the most profound presence of Christ isn't necessarily found in the midst of loud noise and high emotion, but in quiet moments like Eucharistic adoration (see 1 Kings 19:11-12). Unfortunately, the majority of Catholic men born after WWII don't meet the above conditions. For them, attending Protestant functions may be opening a door that will lead them right out of the Catholic Church.

There are now thousands of Catholic men on the brink of leaving the one Church Christ died to establish. I recently heard of a group of Catholic men who decided not to consult the Catechism of the Catholic Church in their small-group bible study. They believed that all they needed was scripture alone. Three of these men claimed that they no longer believe in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. I can tell you from experience where this group is headed: straight out of the Catholic Church.

Over the past three decades, thousands of Catholics have left the Church for Protestant pastures. The largest church in America is the Catholic Church; the second largest group of Christians in America is former-Catholics. The Catholic men's movement has a solemn obligation to help men discover the biblical and historical roots of their Catholic faith. Then, rather than leaving, they will become instruments to help others discover the treasures of Catholicism.

Remember that a man who leaves the Church will often take his family with him — for generations. It took my family four hundred years — 10 generations — to come back to the Church after a generation of my ancestors in Norway, England, Germany and Scotland decided to leave the Catholic Church.

As one whose family has made the round-trip back to Catholicism, let me extend a personal plea to Catholic men, especially the leaders of various Catholic men's groups: don't put untrained Catholics in a Protestant setting. They might gain a short-term religious experience, but they take the long-term risk of losing their faith. It would be highly irresponsible to expose them to Protestantism before they are fully exposed to Catholicism.

At my dad's funeral twenty-nine years ago, I tearfully sang his favorite hymn, Faith of Our Fathers. Little did my dad, a minister's son, or I realize that the true faith of our forefathers was Roman Catholicism. Every day I thank God for bringing me back to the ancient Church of my ancestors. Every year God gives me breath on this earth I will keep proclaiming to both my Protestant brethren and to cradle Catholics the glorious faith of our fathers.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Wood, Steve. "How I led Catholics Out of the Church." St. Joseph's Covenant Newsletter 4 no. 2 (March/April 1998).

Reprinted with permission St. Joseph's Covenant Newsletter.

THE AUTHOR

Steve Wood is the founder of St. Joseph's Covenant Keepers (SJCK), a dynamic apostolate for Catholic men, and runs the web site dads.org.

Copyright © 1998 St. Joseph's Covenant Newsletter


TOPICS: Catholic; Evangelical Christian; Theology
KEYWORDS: conversion
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To: Past Your Eyes

Bingo.


21 posted on 12/28/2011 6:25:24 PM PST by BipolarBob (Of all the taglines in all the posts in all the world and she read mine.)
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To: BipolarBob

It is short on theology or any meaningful dialogue and long on emotion.
>>Since when have the Evangelical Freepers been interested in having a meaningful dialogue of theology?

Mainline Protestant Freepers such as the conservative LCMS-type Lutherans are a different story. You can actually have an interesting, reasoned discussion with them.

But the Evangelical Freepers simply like saying:”You are Catholic, and you are going to Hell!” And then dismiss what you have to say out of hand without discussion.

How can you dialogue with a side that isn’t interested in dialog?


22 posted on 12/28/2011 6:27:16 PM PST by rzman21
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To: BipolarBob

It is short on theology or any meaningful dialogue and long on emotion.
>>Since when have the Evangelical Freepers been interested in having a meaningful dialogue of theology?

Mainline Protestant Freepers such as the conservative LCMS-type Lutherans are a different story. You can actually have an interesting, reasoned discussion with them.

But the Evangelical Freepers simply like saying:”You are Catholic, and you are going to Hell!” And then dismiss what you have to say out of hand without discussion.

How can you dialog with a side that isn’t interested in dialog?


23 posted on 12/28/2011 6:27:30 PM PST by rzman21
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To: stfassisi

Amen, This trip in life and knowledge is never complete and no man will ever know everything. Continued challenge and learning are essentials to spiritual building. Keep it up, Great info and I am feeding.


24 posted on 12/28/2011 6:33:09 PM PST by jafojeffsurf (Return to the Constitution)
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To: rzman21; All
I find nearly all of the faith threads to be of little use and overwhelmingly whining apologetics for a sectarian view. Catholic, Baptist, Mormon, whatever. If I knew any of you personally, instead of as composed bits on the web, I would care about only one thing - your relationship to Christ. When people speak to me about their 'church' or 'the church' I almost always find their daily living faith is justified in the institutions, not the living Christ. As a believer, I rest assured that all who follow Christ worship him in spirit and in truth; inward conditions that find outward expression. In that, I find kinship with all the Bible Patriarchs and Christ who sought to free men from sin as well as their religious addictions and give them redemption, freedom and an eternity with our Creator. May God bless you all this year and lead you into faith that knows no man or building save Christ - the solid rock.
25 posted on 12/28/2011 6:33:21 PM PST by WorkingClassFilth (Soon to be a man without a country.)
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To: rzman21

That is it in a nutshell. To summarize the method you used, find the uneducated in the faith and confuse them.

The grace thing is the biggest one. One must first understand grace to understand salvation by grace. From Luther onward the meaning of Grace was obfuscated intentionally.


26 posted on 12/28/2011 6:33:49 PM PST by wonkowasright (Wonko from outside the asylum)
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To: rzman21

I believe in Jesus, what religion am I?


27 posted on 12/28/2011 6:34:04 PM PST by MrPiper
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To: rzman21

There are few here interested in dialogue on religion. They pretend to just to get something going and then launch into attack mode with MY Church believes this and you can’t prove that. I give verse and scripture and the result is “I don’t believe in Sola Scriptura” or something to that effect. Look at MarkBsnr s tagline for heavens sake. If that doesn’t tell you where this guy gets his Koolaid® from, nothing does. I tried to have a dialogue with OFOLOB and he is untruthful in saying I haven’t given him verses from the NT. He then accuses me repeatedly of looking at things with “Ellen White glasses” when I do not quote the woman, I don’t follow the woman and give her no more weight than the pope and repeatedly tell him so. He is intellectually dishonest.


28 posted on 12/28/2011 6:37:19 PM PST by BipolarBob (Of all the taglines in all the posts in all the world and she read mine.)
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To: MrPiper

You could be a Christian. Do you follow His example?


29 posted on 12/28/2011 6:38:24 PM PST by BipolarBob (Of all the taglines in all the posts in all the world and she read mine.)
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To: BipolarBob

I believe in Jesus, what religion am I?


30 posted on 12/28/2011 6:38:48 PM PST by MrPiper
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To: wonkowasright

The grace thing is the biggest one. One must first understand grace to understand salvation by grace. From Luther onward the meaning of Grace was obfuscated intentionally.

>>The Protestant concept of grace actually has very little to do with the Bible. Read this thread.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-religion/2826044/posts


31 posted on 12/28/2011 6:38:57 PM PST by rzman21
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To: cripplecreek
I’m a proud protestant and have no use for Catholic bashing or Protestant bashing.

As a Protestant I would agree with the above sentiment (sans the "proud"). I was raised in a conservative denomination which, while not militantly "anti-Catholic", considered Catholics to be misled regarding some fundamental doctrines, notably "sola fida," "sola gratia," and "sola scriptura." I had the opportunity to do graduate study in Theology at a Jesuit-affiliated University. It was an eye-opening experience, and I gained a real appreciation for the Catholic Church. I no longer consider Catholics to be "misled" Christians.

My view is that so long as a person accepts the basic tenets of Christianity, i.e., accepting Jesus Christ as their Savior and worshipping him as the Divine Son of God, and trusting Him for salvation, then I will consider him/her to be a Christian brother or sister.

I do not wish to downplay the importance of having "right doctrine," but I believe that as long as the "fundamentals" are sound, that Christians should act with charity and a spirit of unity towards those with whom they disagree.

As hostility towards Christianity grows, it is increasingly vital that Christians not engage in "circular firing squads" towards each other, but rather support each other in common cause.

32 posted on 12/28/2011 6:39:12 PM PST by tjd1454
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To: tjd1454

I believe in Jesus, what religion am I?


33 posted on 12/28/2011 6:43:25 PM PST by MrPiper
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To: WorkingClassFilth

Thank you for that posting. I go to the religion threads for information and curiosity and I really shouldn’t be doing that at all. I need to stick to the Bible and leave others to whatever they wish to believe in, whether it’s the Flying Spaghetti Monster or something else.


34 posted on 12/28/2011 6:43:25 PM PST by BipolarBob (Of all the taglines in all the posts in all the world and she read mine.)
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To: rzman21

My father hated the Catholic church because it was corrupt and tyrannical and intolerant. We’ve come a long ways since those days when he said that. People like you would set us back and turn us against each other all over again. I won’t have any part of it.
You should be more concerned about the latent corruption in your own church instead of bemoaning that turning protestant is apostasy.


35 posted on 12/28/2011 6:43:39 PM PST by Past Your Eyes (I'm not cut out to suffer fools like this.)
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To: MarkBsnr
Those who leave the Faith do so for personal reasons. Those who join the Faith do so for theological ones.

So Martin Luther, Zwingli, John Calvin and a host of others left because of their personal reasons and not for a host of theological reasons? I guess the 95 theses were actually a book on self-fulfillment instead of treatises on the theological reasons that Catholicism was in grave error.
36 posted on 12/28/2011 6:45:58 PM PST by wbarmy (I chose to be a sheepdog once I saw what happens to the sheep.)
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To: rzman21

I am an evangelical Freeper and I have never said or thought any such thing. What other untruths do you believe?


37 posted on 12/28/2011 6:47:08 PM PST by Past Your Eyes (I'm not cut out to suffer fools like this.)
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To: tjd1454

As hostility towards Christianity grows, it is increasingly vital that Christians not engage in “circular firing squads” towards each other, but rather support each other in common cause.

>>I agree as long as we are intellectually honest and agree to disagree agreeably.

My late friend, Paul Weyrich, lived this.

We can’t engage in a 1960s-vintage kumbayah routine. It has abjectly failed to the Catholic Church’s detriment.

Evangelicals have played nice with Catholics over the past 40 years over the culture wars, while stealing sheep from the Catholic Church at the same time.

They can’t say “peace, peace” on one side while waging war on Catholicism in the other.

The daily anti-Mormon diatribes on FR are another good example. Mormonism has some really kooky doctrines, but the Mormon Church has been a fighter for family values for all Americans against gay rights, abortion, etc.


38 posted on 12/28/2011 6:47:16 PM PST by rzman21
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To: rzman21

Thats a complex article for this hour of the evening....

But yes you and I are in agreement on your statement of the new concept of grace having little to do with scripture.


39 posted on 12/28/2011 6:47:38 PM PST by wonkowasright (Wonko from outside the asylum)
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To: Past Your Eyes

Perhaps you personally haven’t, but there are quite a few on these boards who do.

If you don’t fit the description I gave, then what I wrote wasn’t directed at you.


40 posted on 12/28/2011 6:50:46 PM PST by rzman21
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