J
Jimbo
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Your post made me laugh (in a good way). Thanks for that, especially the end. And I wish you and yours a very merry Christmas as well. 
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Should I find answers to my question in Catholic theology or scripture. I am having trouble with the differences.
Your post is good in noting that Jesus does refer to his followers as friends. He also calls his followers his mother and brothers (Luke 8:21, Matthew 12:49). To give a little cultural background here, as someone who grew up during the 70s and 80s in the post-Vatican II era, Catholic kids in religious education then were constantly reminded that Jesus loves us and is our brother and friend. I think my very first first-grade religion “textbook” (basically a picture book with bad primitive illustrations of a beardless, tan Jesus, which I pretty much dismissed immediately as fluff even at age 6) was called “Jesus, Our Brother.” This was totally different than how Catholics from previous generations had been taught to regard Jesus, which was with great reverence and always remembering they weren’t worthy to even be in His presence.Respectfully - it’s always been a head scratcher for me why the words “personal relationship” make you guys uncomfortable.
Hey there Marp! Welcome to the Forum!my concern is the scripture is John 14:16.
Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. With Jesus telling us that. Why as Catholic do we pray or ask the diseased to help us. When it states no one goes to the father except through me?
Cannot agree with this more. As an ex-protestant and one who spent years in the ND churches, I found just what you describe. True there are those who deeply love the Lord in non-Catholic groups and walk very close to Him, but a lot of what I found was superficial.Don’t let appearances fool you. I mean this with all charity, and as a former non-denominational myself, but Protestants must rely on emotion because they do not have Christ in the Eucharist. For me, it’s like comparing teenagers dating to a long married couple. Yes, the two teenagers are very affectionate, with lots of kissing and handholding, calling each other pet names with dopey expressions on their faces. Each thinks the other is perfect. That kind of emotion is cute and has its purpose, but is ultimately unsubstanable and unhealthy for a relationship…
…while it might seem that Protestants have a deeper relationship with Jesus because their worship services are more dynamic, it’s based on superficial emotions of how it makes you feel. Which isn’t the point of worship anyway. You don’t go to Mass to be entertained. You go to Mass to worship God and unite yourself with the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross. No fog machine, no light show, no rock band or preacher with a relevant message will ever be able to match the intimacy of receiving Christ in the Eucharist. That you will only get in the Catholic Church.
Whenever I hear the phrase “personal relationship” I think of the old song “Me and Jesus,” “we got our own thing going, we don’t need anybody to tell us what it’s all about”.Respectfully - it’s always been a head scratcher for me why the words “personal relationship” make you guys uncomfortable. Please allow me to use a verse that supports the idea of a “personal relationship…