A
Ary_girl
Guest
I grew up in a Protestant tradition. I always thought that what I had been taught was right–the catholic church had apostatized, taking on human traditions and adding onto the teaching of Christ. Martin Luther had come and brought to light the real teachings of Jesus and the Bible. The thing was, as I looked more and more at Christianity in general, people held so many different beliefs, and as far as I knew, they were all based on the Bible. I became extremely confused because I had always thought that we were supposed to teach the truth of Jesus. Yet, certainly it could not be true that communion was both only symbolic and at the same time the body and blood of Christ. Yet both sides could support these opinions from the Bible. Some believed that one was justified by faith alone and another believed that faith and works were necessary. I started to wonder whether or not we should be looking at just the Bible. To shorten the story, I came across the concept of Tradition and to take that along with the Bible and the Magesterium in order to come to a conclusion about beliefs.
Trying to sort all this stuff out has really bewildered me. The thing is, I don’t think that I could go back to being Protestant because I really don’t believe that we should look at the Bible alone and come up with the right interpretations for important doctrines such as Baptism and communion. I could believe that the Holy Spirit lead people to understand the Scriptures, except that a lot of people claim that, yet they all come up with different ideas. Plus it was, if I am not mistaken, the Catholic Church that said that the Scriptures were infallible, so if one was to say that the scriptures were right, but the church wrong, then they would have to give some reason as to why the Bible should be considered infallible, but the church not so much.
I guess the thing that is really keeping me from the Catholic Church is (besides a large amount of fear) progressive revelation. I am just really having a hard time wrapping my head around it and then there is the pope’s role throughout the history of the church. As I understand it, it was during the first Vatican Council that the concept of “ex cathedra” came into being. I was just wondering how people viewed the role of the pope before that time. Which of the pope’s statement’s were considered infallible before the First Vatican Council? Also, I keep reading that the Catholic Church never contradicts herself, yet how would one know for sure, are there books about Catholic doctrine through the ages or something? I’m also confused why it would be a sin not to attend a holy day of obligation in the US, when in Canada the holy days of obligation are on the Sundays closest to it. Also before Vatican II eating meat on Fridays was a sin, but afterwards it was not. How can this be? Sin is not subjective.
Sorry, this post is probably jumping all over the place, and perhaps I just should have posted these questions one at a time and I may in the future, but thank you to anyone who responds to this.
Trying to sort all this stuff out has really bewildered me. The thing is, I don’t think that I could go back to being Protestant because I really don’t believe that we should look at the Bible alone and come up with the right interpretations for important doctrines such as Baptism and communion. I could believe that the Holy Spirit lead people to understand the Scriptures, except that a lot of people claim that, yet they all come up with different ideas. Plus it was, if I am not mistaken, the Catholic Church that said that the Scriptures were infallible, so if one was to say that the scriptures were right, but the church wrong, then they would have to give some reason as to why the Bible should be considered infallible, but the church not so much.
I guess the thing that is really keeping me from the Catholic Church is (besides a large amount of fear) progressive revelation. I am just really having a hard time wrapping my head around it and then there is the pope’s role throughout the history of the church. As I understand it, it was during the first Vatican Council that the concept of “ex cathedra” came into being. I was just wondering how people viewed the role of the pope before that time. Which of the pope’s statement’s were considered infallible before the First Vatican Council? Also, I keep reading that the Catholic Church never contradicts herself, yet how would one know for sure, are there books about Catholic doctrine through the ages or something? I’m also confused why it would be a sin not to attend a holy day of obligation in the US, when in Canada the holy days of obligation are on the Sundays closest to it. Also before Vatican II eating meat on Fridays was a sin, but afterwards it was not. How can this be? Sin is not subjective.
Sorry, this post is probably jumping all over the place, and perhaps I just should have posted these questions one at a time and I may in the future, but thank you to anyone who responds to this.