Well, the first that spring to mind are sedevacantists, traditionalists, SSPX (I think I’ve spelled that right) liberalists. That’ll do for starters. It seems that everytime I start to progress a little towards the church, someone from one of these factions will crop up and I feel blindsided again. There’s lots of stuff I love about the church, but of the few things that keep me away, this is one.
Hi!
The word “denomination” means that a portion has split off from a whole. That’s where we Catholics see our Protestant brethren. That said, denomination also implies that one ecclesiastical community has substantial differences in the practices of doctrine as compared to another.
The great thing about being Catholic is, despite the
rites (or ecclesiastical communities with local customs in the celebration of our Lord, such as Byzantine Catholics), every Catholic accepts the core doctrines and dogmas of the Magisterium, the teaching body of the Church. No other Christian faith tradition, I think, is as consistent in the fullness of its teaching throughout its entire laity.
That said, yes, you have schismatic groups. These are few and far between, fortunately. You mentioned the most common. They believe that the Church’s teachings are “too modern,” or “not keeping in step with the times,” or some other thing.
Don’t let your interest in Catholic teaching sway you here. These schematic groups are often the result of individualistic goals (failure to accept this teaching or that because it interrupts that person’s
status quo, often enough). There are over 1 billion Catholics in the world–and the scant number of them with clear goals to turn the Church against itself or the unchanging teachings of the Lord are very few.
Remember that Christ selected twelve men to be his central followers and bishops-to-be. One of them rebelled–nastily. The Eleven picked up their pieces, filled the office of the offender when he died and continued on. The Catholic Church’s apostolic authority ensures a unity that no other faith (Christian or otherwise) seems to hold. It’s why Christ created it.
In short, don’t throw the billions of Catholic babies in communion with Rome out with the dirty bathwater of the small schematics. We pray that they soon understand that the laity does not guide the Church–nor does the clergy. *God *does–starting with the clergy and then through the laity.
In non-Catholic circles, schismatic is often synonymous with “yet another Christian church”. That’s been done, statistically, as much as 30,000 times. They can’t all be right, nor have they the fullness of truth. But their teachings have a source, and that’s commonly a group of books codified by the Catholic Church over 1600 years ago.
If you have other groups you care to know about, just ask. We’re glad you’re searching for the fullness of your faith. God pray that you find it, as we have, in the Catholic Church.