V
vern_humphrey
Guest
It is perfectly true that the more you study history, the more Catholic you become.I completely agree with you. However, I’ve found that arguing Scripture with most Protestants is at most times futile, we end up arguing interpretations. They claim that the Catholic Church is un-Scriptural. The more I read of Scripture, the Magisterium, History, and the Church Fathers, I find that this is not true. The fact is, they disagree with the Church’s interpretation of Scripture, not that the Church is un-Scriptural. They are so bound up in the fabricated doctrines that came after the 15th century (the two primary, of course, sola Scriptura/Fide), that they can’t or won’t see anything outside that.
I’ve just recently started talking to converts to try to understand how they overcame these hurdles, unfortunately I know very few at this time, but I am still looking.
On the other hand, there are Protestants who have gone through the wrtings of the Fathers looking for “proof texts” and placed interpretations on snippets taken out of context, and stitched all this together into a plausible fabric. So it takes a real student of history to see through that and come to Catholicism.