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Would you please tell me why an anti-Catholic might choose to convert to Catholicism? You say it’s not hard to see, but I don’t think I’m seeing the same answer you see.Personal decisions to convert are not that uncommon. Converting to Catholicism is relatively uncommon, but it’s not hard to see why an anti-Catholic might choose to convert.
My answer to that question is that the Holy Spirit leads men and women who trust in Him. That’s why my husband and I converted–we came to know and follow Jesus while were both very young, we learned to recognize and be obedient to the Holy Spirit, and when He called us to Catholicism and told us to trust Him, we obeyed Him.
Again, my answer to this is the Holy Spirit. He will lead men into Truth. There is not need for a “competition” or a human “Napoleon.”I can see why you made the analogy, but Protestantism is nothing like the Soviet Union or the Roman Empire or the Ottoman Empire. It’s not even really like a bloc. The Catholic Church is actually more analogous to any of those things. Protestantism is a lot more like the Non-Aligned Movement, or NATO, or perhaps PACOM. There is not any one man- or even a small group of men- that can dissolve Protestantism/Evangelicalism in whole or even in significant parts. State religion is largely a thing of the past, so you can’t depend on someone like Napoleon to “save you” from “us.” You have to depend on individual decisions to abandon a flexible, competitive, evangelism-oriented coalition of churches in favor of a rigid inflexible one-trick pony that has virtually no lay involvement in evangelism. You can’t depend on this. What you’ve always needed is a means of eliminating the competition, and now you don’t have that. Turns out, European Christianity is not very competitive when people really have other choices.
And there is no need for me or any Catholic to be “saved” from “us” (Protestants). According to our Catechism, Protestant Christians are our brothers and sisters in Christ. We do not need to be saved from our own brothers and sisters who love the Lord and seek to serve Him.
Romans 8: 26. I pray asking the Lord to bring me into harmony with His Will, and I trust that even if my prayers are inadequate or even wrong, that the Holy Spirit will pray for me and ask for the goals that the Lord Jesus has in mind.Jesus did not pray for the elimination of all Christian faith-groups save one. He also did not pray that all would be united in Peter. He prayed that we would be one as He and His Father are one. His prayer is not your goal. You have a different goal, and Jesus’ prayer for unity is a pretext. You shouldn’t use it as a pretext, you should make it the real goal.
You just might live to see the day when less than 50% of Christians in the world are Catholic. I believe you will- and I hope that I live to see the day when Protestants, Evangelicals, and Independents outnumber the Catholic Church by themselves. I also have a prediction for the ongoing discussions between Catholic bishops and Orthodox bishops. In about 25 years, your bishops will begin to wonder why they aren’t making the progress they’d hoped for. And in about 100 years, Catholics will look back on what’s happening now, wonder why it didn’t work, and look for the things that were done right- but mostly, they’ll look for the lessons they can learn as far as what not to do. The Schism will still be a Schism 200 years from now and well beyond that, too. Catholicism needs to drop to less than 30% of Christianity’s market share before Rome will make the concessions that it needs to make.
I’m using “wolves” in the sense that the Lord Jesus used the analogy in Matthew 10: 16. Wolves are those who are evil, and who seek to destroy not only our bodies, but our very souls. Remember Ephesians 6:12–we are not fighting mere flesh and blood, but rulers, powers, forces of darkness and wickedness in the heavenly places. The ones who stray from the flock and try to do battle on their own will be picked off. The apostle Paul tells us to put on the full armor of God, and the first piece of armor that he describes is the Truth.This is not realistic- Catholicism will lose percentage points in the next 50-100 years, not gain them. And wolves, really? You don’t live in Eastern Europe, do you? Wait- unless the wolves are really people, and those people are…non-Catholic Christians who enjoy comparative success in engaging young people with religion, including Catholic children? Is that where you’re going with it?
As I said above, non-Catholic Christians are not “wolves.” They are our own dear brothers and sisters in Christ, and we do not war against them, but stand alongside them in the battle against the enemies described in Ephesians 6:12.
I have never been “forced to redefine those words on Catholic terms.” I have been challenged to study the Bible to learn the meaning of the phrase “born again.”I haven’t read that one yet, but I will look into it. Chuck Colson is also one of the main public figures of the past century that caused the Evangelical meaning of “born again” to be the most ubiquitous one. Have you looked into that at all, or do you just give it a passing glance whenever you’re forced to redefine those words on Catholic terms?
I would not give Chuck Colson credit for making “born again” ubiquitous. The phrase has been in use for two thousand years. That’s one reason he chose the phrase–it was familiar to people.
And I think that there were (and still are) many people who thought that Colson’s “born again experience” was just another prison conversion, done mainly to get out of jail early. He had his full share of critics, and stood firm. I miss him so much–he is one of my heroes, and I’m not sure who will rise up to take his place.