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Testimonies from ex-Roman Catholic Priests
CARM ^
| 1997
| Richard Bennet
Posted on 01/25/2014 11:26:41 AM PST by Gamecock
The following quotes are taken from the book by Richard Bennet, Far from Rome, Near to God: Testimonies of 50 Converted Roman Catholic Priests, Carlisle, PN: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1997. They are quite interesting and valuable since they give an insight to Catholicism from those who were priests in the Catholic Church and then left it to find salvation in Jesus.
Following are excerpts from only a few of the fifty testimonies in the book:
- Henry Gregory Adams. Born in Saskatchewan, Canada. He entered the Basilian Order of monks and adopted the monastic name of "Saint Hilarion the Great." He was ordained as a priest and served five parishes in the Lemont, Alberta area.
- Sacraments. "The monastic life and the sacraments prescribed by the Roman Catholic Church did not help me to come to know Christ personally and find salvation...I realized that the man-made sacraments of my church and my good works were in vain for salvation. They lead to a false security." (p. 3)
- Joseph Tremblay. Born in Quebec, Canada, 1924. He was ordained a priest in Rome, Italy and was sent to Bolivia, Chile where he served for 13 years "as a missionary in the congregation of the Oblate Fathers of Mary Immaculate."
- Salvation by works. "My theology has taught me that salvation is by works and sacrifices....my theology gives me no assurance of salvation; the Bible offers me that assurance....I had been trying to save myself on my works...I was stifled in a setting in which I was pushed to do good works to merit my salvation." (pp. 9, 11-12)
- Bartholomew F. Brewer. He applied to the Discalced Carmelites, a strict monastic order. He received training of "four years of high school seminary, two years in the novitiate, three years of philosophy, and four years of theology (the last after ordination)." He was ordained to the Roman Catholic priesthood at the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception of Mary in Washington, D.C. He eventually served as a diocesan priest in San Diego, California and entered the Navy as a Roman Catholic chaplain.
- Upon questioning Rome's Beliefs, "At first I did not understand, but gradually I observed a wonderful change in mother. Her influence helped me realize the importance of the Bible in determining what we believe. We often discussed subjects such as the primacy of Peter, papal infallibility, the priesthood, infant baptism, confession, the mass, purgatory, the Immaculate Conception of Mary, and the bodily assumption of Mary into heaven. In time I realized that not only are these beliefs not in the Bible, they are actually contrary to the clear teaching of Scripture." (pp. 21-22)
- Relying on works. He left the Roman Catholic Church, got married and through conversations with his wife and other Christians, "I finally understood that I had been relying on my own righteousness and religious efforts and not upon the completed and sufficient sacrifice of Jesus Christ. The Roman Catholic religion had never taught me that our own righteousness is fleshly and not acceptable to God, nor that we need to trust in his righteousness alone...during all those years of monastic life I had relied on the sacraments of Rome to give me grace, to save me." (p. 25)
- Hugh Farrell. Born in Denver, Colorado. Entered the Order of our Lady of Mount Carmel, commonly called the Discalced Carmelite Fathers. Ordained as a priest.
- Priestly power to change elements: "The priest, according to the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, has the power to take ordinary bread and wine, and, by pronouncing the words of the consecration prayer in the sacrifice of the Mass, to change it into the actual body and blood and soul and divinity of Jesus Christ. Hence, since one cannot separate the human nature of Christ from his divinity, the bread and wine, after being changed into the body and blood of Jesus Christ, are entitled to the worship of adoration." (pp. 28)
- Temporal punishment due to sins. "I knew from the teachings of the priests and nuns that I could not hope to go directly to heaven after my death. My Roman Catholic catechism taught me that after death I had to pay for the temporal punishment due to my sins. The Roman Catholic Church teaches that 'the souls of the just which, in a moment of death, are burdened with venial sins or temporal punishment due to sin, enter purgatory.'" (p. 29)
- Penance. Regarding life in the monastery and doing penance. "These penances consist of standing with the arms outstretched to form a cross, kissing the sandaled feet of the monks, receiving a blow upon the face from the monks, and, at the end of the meal, lying prostrate before the entrance to the refectory so that the departing monks must step over one's body. These, and other penances, are supposed to gain one merit in heaven and increase one's 'spiritual bank account.'" (p. 36)
- The Mass and sorcery. "According to the teaching of the Roman Church the priest, no matter how unworthy he may personally be, even if he has just made a pact with the devil for his soul, has the power to change the elements of bread and wine into the actual body and blood, soul and divinity, of Jesus Christ. Provided he pronounces the words of consecration properly and has the intention of consecrating, God must come down on the altar and enter and take over the elements." (p. 39)
- Alexander Carson. Baptized into the Roman Catholic Church as an infant. His priesthood studies were at St. John's seminary, Brighton, Massachusetts. He was ordained by Bishop Lawrence Shehan of Bridgeport, Connecticut in 1955 and was a priest in Alexandria, Louisiana. Also, he was pastor of Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Rayville, Louisiana.
- Bible or Tradition. "...the Holy Spirit led me to judge Roman Catholic theology by the standard of the Bible. Previously, I had always judged the Bible by Roman Catholic doctrine and theology." (p. 53)
- Mass contrary to scripture. "In my letter of resignation from the Roman Catholic Church and Ministry, I stated to the bishop that I was leaving the priesthood because I could no longer offer the Mass, as it was contrary to the Word of God and to my conscience." (pp. 54-55)
- Charles Berry. He entered the Order of Hermits of St. Augustine and became a priest after 17 years. He was given orders to continue studying until he achieved a Ph.D. in chemistry and was then "transferred to the headquarters of the Augustinian order in the United States."
- Superstition. "In the United States the Roman Catholic Church is on its best behavior, putting its best foot forward because of its critics and opponents. In a Roman Catholic country, where it has few opponents or critics, it is a very different matter. Ignorance and superstition and idolatry are everywhere, and little effort, if any, is made to change the situation. Instead of following the Christianity taught in the Bible the people concentrate on the worship of statues and their local patron saints." (p. 59)
- Idols and Statues. "When I met in Cuba a genuine pagan who worshiped idols (a religion transplanted from Africa by his ancestors), I asked how he could believe that a plaster idol could help him. He replied that the idol was not expected to help him; it only represented the power in heaven which could. What horrified me about his reply was that it was almost word for word the explanation Roman Catholics give for rendering honor to the statues of the saints." (p. 59)
- Bob Bush. He went to a Jesuit Seminary and studied for 13 years before being ordained in 1966. He entered a post graduate program in Rome.
- Works: "When I entered the order, the first thing that happened was that I was told I had to keep all the rules and regulations, that to do so would be pleasing to God, and that this was what he wanted for me. We were taught the motto, 'Keep the rule and the rule will keep you.'" (p. 66).
- Salvation is by faith: "It took me many years to realize that I was compromising by staying in the Roman Catholic Church. Throughout all those years I continued to stress that salvation is only in the finished work of Jesus Christ on the cross and not in the infant baptism; that there is only one source of authority which is the Bible, the word of God; and that there is no purgatory but rather that when we die to either go to heaven or hell." (p. 69)
- Salvation by works: "The Roman Catholic Church then goes on to say that in order to be saved you must keep its laws, rules and regulations. And in these laws are violated (for example, laws concerning birth control or fasting or attendance at Mass every Sunday), then you have committed a sin....'individual and integral confession and absolution constitute the only ordinary way by which the faithful person who was aware of serious sin can be reconciled with God, and with the church' (Canon 9609)." (p. 75)
- Works: "The Roman Catholic Church adds works, and that you have to do these specific things [keeping its laws, rule and regulations] ]in order to be saved, whereas the Bible says in Ephesians 2:8-9 that it is by grace that we are saved, not by works." (pp. 75-76)
As you can see, even Roman Catholic Priests can discover the truth found in God's word and escape the error of the Roman Catholic system of works righteousness. To God be the glory.
"For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; 9 not as a result of works, that no one should boast," (Eph. 2:8-9).
TOPICS: General Discusssion; History
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To: af_vet_1981
“The passage shows there are no more apostles but the genuine apostles could ordain/appoint bishops/elders, and those bishops/elders ordain/appoint other bishops/elders, until this day in an unbroken chain of doctrinal unity and truth. That is what I mean by apostolic succession.”
Your statement contains problems.
Elders appointing other elders is not Apostolic succession.
There is not “unbroken chain of doctrinal unity and truth.” You cannot trace Rome’s errors back to the Apostles in unbroken fashion. It’s been requested and failed here on FR many, many time.
121
posted on
01/25/2014 5:03:41 PM PST
by
aMorePerfectUnion
(Truth is hate to those who hate the Truth)
To: aMorePerfectUnion
*Takes a shot for someone bringing up the Bible in its original language(s).*
I do recall going over this passage in the original Greek in my seminary years. BOY, did the original language open my eyes.
122
posted on
01/25/2014 5:06:37 PM PST
by
Luircin
To: aMorePerfectUnion
He was the Apostle, and he was “passing it on.” There is no doubt of his doctrinal unity and fellowship with the true, genuine Christian church/churches. He is instructing Titus to pass it on so that it will fulfill the Great Commission in an unbroken chain of truth.
123
posted on
01/25/2014 5:06:42 PM PST
by
af_vet_1981
(The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began,)
To: af_vet_1981
Sorry, but I’m still not quite understanding what you’re trying to argue, other than that it’s in favor of Rome. Is it the teaching that’s important, or is it the act of appointing? Neither? Both?
124
posted on
01/25/2014 5:09:21 PM PST
by
Luircin
To: af_vet_1981
“He was the Apostle, and he was passing it on. There is no doubt of his doctrinal unity and fellowship with the true, genuine Christian church/churches. He is instructing Titus to pass it on so that it will fulfill the Great Commission in an unbroken chain of truth.”
Yes, back before 100 AD this was true. This wasn’t the current Roman Church. You can’t find Paul teaching any of Rome’s fallible doctrines, let alone passing them along. In that sense, when you claim it is unbroken through today’s Roman church, you are promoting a falsehood.
All you’ve done is demonstrate the foundation of Protestant teaching of truth - going back to the source to keep from drifting from truth.
125
posted on
01/25/2014 5:15:42 PM PST
by
aMorePerfectUnion
(Truth is hate to those who hate the Truth)
To: aMorePerfectUnion
The Apostle Peter called himself an elder (1 Peter 5:1), but the salient point to me is there should be an unbroken chain of passing the authority over the churches and their doctrinal unity from the Apostles to those they appointed to those the next authorized overseers appointed, unto this day. I did not write it had to be Rome. I wrote that if you deny the Roman claim it is incumbent on you to pose an alternative candidate (unless of course you deny apostolic succession, ie., the apostles failed at the Great Commission).
126
posted on
01/25/2014 5:16:29 PM PST
by
af_vet_1981
(The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began,)
To: Luircin
Greek Cheers! I’ll take Carmenere.
127
posted on
01/25/2014 5:16:35 PM PST
by
aMorePerfectUnion
(Truth is hate to those who hate the Truth)
To: af_vet_1981
“unto this day”
That is where you went off the rails when you propose Rome is the terminal of your train.
“I wrote that if you deny the Roman claim it is incumbent on you to pose an alternative candidate”
yes, you wrote this, but it isn’t true. You made a truth claim. You’ve attempted to provide evidence that holds up that truth claim, but sadly failed. It is not incumbent on me to prove or disprove anything. We were discussing your personal claims. Apparently, you have nothing else to try to support your claim...
128
posted on
01/25/2014 5:19:27 PM PST
by
aMorePerfectUnion
(Truth is hate to those who hate the Truth)
To: Salvation
I love to watch The Journey Home.
http://www.marcusgrodi.com/conversion-story/
I am a former Protestant minister. Like so many others who have trodden the path that leads to Rome by way of that country known as Protestantism, I never imagined I would one day convert to Catholicism.
129
posted on
01/25/2014 5:19:44 PM PST
by
NKP_Vet
To: aMorePerfectUnion
I’ve still got my Mountain Dew, but this time frozen! *Cheers*
130
posted on
01/25/2014 5:23:43 PM PST
by
Luircin
To: Luircin
“Ive still got my Mountain Dew, but this time frozen! “
You’re going further and further out on the limb!!!
131
posted on
01/25/2014 5:24:52 PM PST
by
aMorePerfectUnion
(Truth is hate to those who hate the Truth)
To: 98ZJ USMC
Ill wait at the bar.
To: NKP_Vet
“I am a former Protestant minister.”
Didn’t you write earlier that you were not saved, were a drunk, and liked country music?
I’m fine with country music, but what kind of minister were you???
133
posted on
01/25/2014 5:26:25 PM PST
by
aMorePerfectUnion
(Truth is hate to those who hate the Truth)
To: aMorePerfectUnion
Brazil has the world’s largest Catholic population
Roman Catholic 64.6%
Protestants 22.2%
No religion 8.0%
Spiritism 2.0%
As for Europe, socialism has all but killed Christianity, and for this you rejoice?
134
posted on
01/25/2014 5:30:51 PM PST
by
NKP_Vet
To: aMorePerfectUnion
I simply asked for the true church denomination/sub denomination. If not Rome, and not Eastern Orthodox, then who ? I suppose not getting an answer is an answer.
135
posted on
01/25/2014 5:30:55 PM PST
by
af_vet_1981
(The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began,)
To: aMorePerfectUnion
Marcus Grodi. Not me. I was never a minister. I was a heathen.
136
posted on
01/25/2014 5:32:53 PM PST
by
NKP_Vet
To: narses
To: aMorePerfectUnion
138
posted on
01/25/2014 5:35:07 PM PST
by
Luircin
To: NKP_Vet
NKP,
“As for Europe, socialism has all but killed Christianity, and for this you rejoice?”
I don’t rejoice at all, except when someone comes to Christ in faith, apart from works.
Socialism cannot kill Christianity. Churches themselves fail to stand in the gap.
Brazil is bleeding Romans and has been during the ministry years of the pope.
139
posted on
01/25/2014 5:37:09 PM PST
by
aMorePerfectUnion
(Truth is hate to those who hate the Truth)
To: NKP_Vet
“Marcus Grodi. Not me. I was never a minister. I was a heathen.”
I see. You were quoting.
I was a Roman heathen before I came to faith in Christ.
140
posted on
01/25/2014 5:38:05 PM PST
by
aMorePerfectUnion
(Truth is hate to those who hate the Truth)
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