This is on of the interesting things about Catholicism. As I’ve read the testimonies of many converts to Catholicism one of the main themes is that they have been drawn to the unity of the Church. However, from my research it appears the Catholic Church has a wide variety of belief and practice.
Absolutely. The ancient Church gives us the freedom to believe pretty much as we wish on things that have not been dogmatically defined. Additionally, the multitude of rites within the Catholic Church give believers options on how they wish to experience the liturgy. I, for one, am a huge advocate of the creation of an Anglican rite.
Not all Catholics are Roman Catholic, to be sure. One of my favorite posters on these forums is Byzantine rite.
But we all affirm deposit of faith of the Church and the Church’s authority concerning it.
Imagine my shock when I came up on a website of a monastery that claimed the Catholic Church has been apostate since Vatican II and that we are in the end times because of Vatican II. I was like wow, the Catholics have their own version of Independent Fundamentalist KJV only groups.
Sedevacantists, if that’s what you were looking up, are not part of the Church.
Therefore, if anyone says that it is not by the institution of Christ the Lord himself (that is to say, by divine law) that blessed Peter should have perpetual successors in the primacy over the whole Church; or that the Roman Pontiff is not the successor of blessed Peter in this primacy: let him be anathema." (Vatican I, Session 4, Chapter 2, Paragraph 5)
Even on this board I’ve seen Catholics disagree about Predestination, should Priest be allowed to marry, and should Mary be made “Co-redemptrix”.
And that’s where the authority of the Church comes in. The “Catholic” proponents of predestination and Mary as co-redemptrix have been authoritatively rebuked by Rome. They might continue in the erroneous belief while calling themselves “Catholic”, but it will be in disobedience.
Priestly marriage is a matter of discipline of the Church and can change.
Married priests from Orthodoxy and some Protestant groups can and have come to Catholicism and continued in their role as priests. So we already have them.
I’ve read news stories of Priest giving communion to active homosexuals, parishes being damaged because a new priest comes in who is “Traditional”, and so forth. Plus there are Charismatic Catholics and those who are concerned because there are Charismatic Catholics. There are liberal priest, traditionalist priest and what I would call evangelical priest. The local parish may be any of those depending on who is the current bishop/priest. And that is just in the United States.
That’s semi-fair. As long as we’re a Church made up of real people that administer to real people, there will always be issues coming and going with time.
In Mexico they have Catholics who sacrifice chickens in the church. In Haiti many Catholics still practice voodoo. And in the Philippines they re-enact the Crucifixion every Easter.
Many Catholics have cheated on their spouse. So that makes it a teaching of the Church? :ehh:
The Church has unambiguously rebuked Santeria.
So yes, as a Protestant who is researching Catholicism I’ve found that there are many picket fence doctrines in the Catholic Church. Believing/practicing any of those things may not keep you from being Catholic but those beliefs/practices certainly aren’t shared by everyone.
There is much that is disciplinary that is “picket fence”. There is also very little that is theological that isn’t “brick wall”. You must affirm the Trinity to be a Catholic. Plenty of Protestants don’t.
The comparison here might best be summarized as “dogma is brick wall, discipline is picket fence”.
The difference is when Protestants diverge we split and form new denominations.
No kidding. When Catholics diverge, there is generally a council or Papal address that defines the issue for Christendom and we continue as one Church.
I’m glad you’re looking further into the ancient Church.