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Posted on 08/09/2020 7:46:24 AM PDT by MurphsLaw
We should stop trying to evangelize Protestants, some Catholics say. Lets get our own house clean first, before we invite our fellow Christians in, someone commented on a recent article of mine that presented a Catholic rejoinder to a prominent Baptist theologian. Another reader argued that, rather than trying to persuade Protestants to become Catholic, we should help each other spread Gods love in this world that seems to be falling to pieces before our eyes. As a convert from Protestantism, actively engaged in ecumenical dialogue, Ive heard this kind of thinking quite frequently. And its dead wrong.
One common argument in favor of scrapping Catholic evangelism towards Protestants is that the Catholic Church, mired in sex-abuse and corruption scandals, liturgical abuses, heretical movements, and uneven catechesis, is such a mess that it is not, at least for the moment, a place suitable for welcoming other Christians.
There are many problems with this. For starters, when has the Church not been plagued by internal crises? In the fourth century, a majority of bishops were deceived by the Arian heresy. The medieval Church suffered under the weight of simony and a lax priesthood, as well as the Avignon Papacy and the Western Schism, culminating in three men claiming, simultaneously, to be pope. The Counter-Reformation, for all its catechetical, missionary and aesthetic glories, was still marred by corruption and heresies (Jansenism). Catholicism has never been able to escape such trials. That didnt stop St. Martin of Tours, St. Boniface, St. Francis de Sales, St. Ignatius Loyola, or St. Teresa of Calcutta from their missionary efforts.
The Catholics clean house argument also undermines our own theology. Is the Eucharist the source and summit of the Christian life, as Lumen Gentium preaches, or not? If it is, how could we in good conscience not direct other Christians to its salvific power? Jesus Himself declared: Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. (John 6:53) Was our Lord misrepresenting the Eucharist?
Or what of the fact that most Protestant churches allow contraception, a mortal sin? Or that Protestants have no recourse to the sacraments of penance or last rites? To claim Protestants arent in need of these essential parts of the Catholic faith is to implicitly suggest we dont need them either.
* Moreover, in the generations since the Reformation, Rome has been able to win many Protestants back to the fold who have made incalculable contributions to the Church. St. John Henry Newmans conversion ushered in a Catholic revival in England, and gave us a robust articulation of the concept of doctrinal development. The conversion of French Lutheran pastor Louis Bouyer influenced the teachings of Vatican II. Biblical scholar Scott Hahns conversion in the 1980s revitalized lay study of Holy Scripture.
Another popular argument in favor of limiting evangelization of Protestants involves the culture war. Catholics and theologically conservative Protestants, some claim, share significant common ground on various issues: abortion, homosexuality, transgenderism, euthanasia, religious freedom, etc. Secularism, the sexual revolution, and anti-religious progressives represent an existential threat to the survival of both Catholics and Protestants, and thus we must work together, not debate one another. Lets hold back any criticism of them, a person commenting on my article wrote. Believe me, in the times that we are in, we need to all hang together, or we will definitely hang separately on gallows outside our own churches.
This line of thought certainly has rhetorical force: we dont have the luxury of debating with Protestants when the progressivists are planning our imminent demise! Ecumenical debate is a distraction from self-preservation. One problem with this argument is that it reduces our Christian witness to a zero-sum game we have to focus all our efforts on fighting secular progressivism, or well fail. Yet the Church has many missions in the public square that Catholics invest great energy in the pro-life movement doesnt mean we shouldnt also focus our efforts on other important matters: health-care, education, ensuring religious freedom, or fighting poverty and environmental degradation. All of these, in different ways, are a part of human flourishing. Even if we consider some questions more urgent than others, none of them should be ignored.
Besides, there is a vast difference between mere polemics and charitable, fruitful discussions aimed at resolving disagreements. The former can certainly cause bad blood. The latter, however, can actually foster unity and clarity regarding our purposes. Consider how much more fruitful our fight against the devastation of the sexual revolution would be if we persuaded Protestants that they need to reject things like contraception and the more permissive stance towards divorce that they have allowed to seep into their churches. Consider how non-Christians could learn from charitable ecumenical conversations that dont devolve into name-calling and vilification.
Finally, abandoning or minimizing the evangelizing of Protestants is to fail to recognize how their theological and philosophical premises have contributed to the very problems we now confront. As Brad Gregorys book The Unintended Reformation demonstrates, the very nature of Protestantism has contributed to the individualism, secularism, and moral relativism of our age. A crucial component to our Catholic witness, then, is helping Protestants to recognize this, since even when they have the best intentions, their very paradigm undermines their contributions to collaborating with us in the culture war.
I for one am very grateful that Catholics many of them former Protestants persuaded me to see the problems inherent to Protestantism, and the indisputable truths of Catholicism. My salvation was at stake. I also found and married a devout Catholic woman, and am raising Catholic children. The Catholic tradition taught me how to pray, worship, and think in an entirely different way. It pains me to think what my life would be like if I hadnt converted to Catholicism.
Why bother to evangelize devout Protestants? Because they are people like me.
My GOD had no mother; just someone who supplied some flesh for Him to wear.
14 For it is evident that our Lord was descended from Judah, and in connection with that tribe Moses said nothing about priests.
15 This becomes even more evident when another priest arises in the likeness of Melchizedek, 16 who has become a priest, not on the basis of a legal requirement concerning bodily descent, but by the power of an indestructible life. 17 For it is witnessed of him,
You are a priest forever,
after the order of Melchizedek.
Or corruption of facts ...
You damn well BETTER worship her!!
26. "Gens quæ non servierit illi, peribit; gentes destitutæ tantæ Matris auxilio, destituuntur auxilio Filii et totius curi coelestis." De Laud. B. M. I. 4.
Cardinal Hugo http://fatima.org/crusader/cr38/cr38pg3.asp
Translation: "that those who do not serve Mary will not be saved; for those who are deprived of the help of this great Mother are also deprived of that of Her Son and of the whole court of heaven."
Well, how about me? 😁🤗🤑 I was a little embarrassed by most of the Catholic doctrines. Maybe that is why I had no problems leaving the church. What embarrassed me the most, was the concept of holy water. Even as a Catholic, I thought holy water, was the hokiest thing I ever heard of. I was really embarrassed by it. Purgatory and Limbo embarrassed me too.
Pfffhahahaha.
Have an Internet cookie.
Amazing; it’s like false religions are all the same!
Ooops....
But that wont convince them either.
They will just double down on the Catholic deception.
Honestly, Jesus having a sinless mother would detract from Jesus, not add to him.
“For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin.”
And that includes the temptations that rise from having a sinful mother.
Pretty good flesh, though. Jesus kept it after coming back from the dead after all and took it with him when he ascended into Heaven.
It says something special about God’s love for us that God the Son chooses to become one of us and live into eternity.
Just... that it was God that made it holy, not Mary, Catholic-Mary or otherwise.
Honestly, Jesus having a sinless mother would detract from Jesus, not add to him.
Its about exalting Mary into a demigoddess
Being sinless gives her top rank in the Roman Pantheon of Demigods and Demigodesses.
True, but raising Mary into a goddess is an insult to Christ on two levels, and I was pointing out the second level.
What really shows His great love for us? The only scars in the perfection of Heaven are borne by the only truly perfect One. Scars He gladly received for our benefit. Think about that for a while.
Oh, I have! But it’s certainly worth contemplating again.
And for all eternity. If that doesnt make you fall on your face in humility and adoration nothing will.... What an unsearchable God we serve.
There is pride in being a Catholics to some degree, but more so in their church, and I think the cultic devotion so often seen by propagandists is due to their self-proclaimed one true church being the source of their spiritual security, and thus they manifest compelled assertions of refuted Catholic teaching, as if that parroting made it true, and or the often desperate attempts to actually defend them. For the RCC is almost like God to many, and thus they cannot stand to see its authority threatened,and thus blithely repeat Catholic beliefs in order comfort themselves, and or desperately contrive arguments to defend her.
May God peradventure grant them "repentance to the acknowledging of the truth" (2 Timothy 2:25)for salvation.
True that
Ah, typical Catholic response.
“YOU’RE A LIAR!”
With no refuting evidence.
LAME; you didn’t even call me the devil this time!
Exactly. Just my opinion, but I think we will be spending eternity, getting to know God better. After a trillion trillion eons have passed, we will still be barely scratching the surface. 😁🤣🤑
Can a woman forget her nursing child, or lack compassion for the son of her womb? Though she may forget, I will not forget you! Behold, I have engraved you on the palms of My hands; your walls are ever before Me. (Isaiah 49:15,16)
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