Hi rc, I have taken the time to go back and read all the posts again. I find that puts answers others give into perspective of what had been formerly presented.
LA first mentioned Trent and I followed on that so yes, I noticed we were talking about Trent!
That is a very important thing to acknowledge is this discussion. I noticed that Trent, specifically, was being questioned. And then, Fr. Don addressed the behaviors and abuses (and their subsequent modern day apologies). So the problem was that Fr. Don was not addressing the relative concern.
I have concerns about the language and the pronounced anathemas of Trent sure, but, my thoughts are coming from much deeper and longer ago. I have trouble explaining it so that it makes sense. It is unsettling to discover that part of who I am today and how I formulate what is truth for me is affected by the reality of the truth of past atrocities done to my own ancestors who were dismissed and martyred as simply heretics.
If you are expecting the Catholic Church to be impeccable, on the grounds that she claims to have the fulness of Truth, then you are not understanding the nature of Church. Catholics commit sins! We fall short of Jesus. There was abuses and corruption that led up to the Protestant Reformation.
But I don’t think it stopped there. I believe it always exists, even today!
What I keep in mind and heart, is the difference between the Deposit of Faith, the Teachings of God, the Fulness of Truth which are confirmed through the Magisterium and the practice and behaviors of all her members.
Trent represents the former. Though the language has an inevitable connection to the Era and generation.
As usual, I tried to ask Fr. Don to acknowledge these things. But he shrinks away from it.
I have embraced many Protestants in my life! Just yesterday, I called a counselor from an Evangelical Free denomination, who I met with a couple months back, to thank him for his ministry and assistance to me. I actually appreciated his advice and approach more than the Catholic counselor and priest I have also been working with. It doesn’t mean I want to become a member of his Church, or receive Communion there. It just means that I believe he was more objective and did not contradict the Catholic faith, such as the Catholic members I worked with.
And even all that doesn’t mean I don’t love and appreciate the ministry of these Catholics.
MichaelP3 mentioned having a lot of respect for Fr. Don. That is truly good! But we should have equal respect for all men, showing no partiality! So I respect you, and I also respect Fr. Don. But he does not care to fellowship with me. I believe a Catholic priest is bound to profess, uphold and defend the Catholic faith, FIRST to his own flock, and then to separated brothers and sisters.