L
ltwin
Guest
It wouldn’t be reverencing Mary that Protestants would have a problem with. It would be undo reverence and the making of a graven image knowing what Catholics believe about Mary.Egg-zactly, ltwin.
Here’s another example of not applying the paradigm equally to Catholics.
If you saw a picture (here I mean a generic “you” not a personal “you”) of a person kissing a statue, your first response would not be, “Maybe he just loves Mary. I don’t know anything about the photo or the person in the photo.”
Rather, it would be, “This person certainly does appear to be worshipping a statue.”
Because, I don’t know what it is. His particular religious denomination might actually be worth knowing if we want to have a better understanding of why he is reverencing the word of God in such a way. Or it could have nothing to do with denomination and is just an example of personal piety (which is not always officially condoned piety).Why is that relevant? If it was a Protestant it would be ok, but if it was a Catholic it wouldn’t?
I don’t understand why you feel it’s important to comment on his potential religious denomination.
I have a non-judgmental approach. I would want to know what religion the people kneeling are (are they Roman or Anglo-Catholics?), what they believe about Mary and why are they praying to her, and why a statue is necessary to effectively pray. If I actually know why they do what they do then I am better informed and can make up my own mind in the light of God’s word.Again, I hope you apply your same non-judgemental paradigm to this photo as you did of the man kissing his Bible.
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