Actually, the definition you’re going by is your own. Protestants believe in the same Father, Son and Holy Spirit Catholics do. They profess the same Jesus as their Lord and Savior as we Catholics do.
There are definitely areas of disagreement between Catholics and Protestants like whether or not Jesus was speaking literally or metaphorically when He said during the Last Supper that the bread was His Body and the wine was His Blood.
However, to claim that Protestants aren’t Christians because they don’t believe everything the Catholic Church believes and teaches is wrong on so many levels.
What is your definition of a Christian, @Nicky777? Being a Catholic? Being a member of the Catholic Church?
Here is the definition of a Christian.
Christian
adj.
. Professing belief in Jesus as Christ or following the religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus.
2. Relating to or derived from Jesus or Jesus’s teachings.
3. Manifesting the qualities or spirit of Jesus, especially in showing concern for others.
4. Relating to or characteristic of Christianity or its adherents.
n.
1. One who professes belief in Jesus as Christ or follows a religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus.
2. One who lives according to the teachings of Jesus.
You’re not condemning them? Oh, yes, you are! You are condemning and judging Protestants as not being Christians.
Let me tell you, my maternal grandmother was a lifelong Methodist. And she was the most Christian woman I’ve ever known. Read Proverbs 31:10-31. It describes her to a “t.”
Do you know what she would say reading your words? She would say, “Pray for him.” She would never accuse you of not being a Christian because you’re Catholic. She wasn’t that kind of woman. But she might, if pressed, be moved to stress that your attitude wasn’t very Christian. And she would again reiterate that we must pray for you. Because
that was the kind of woman she was.