D
David123
Guest
In my experience, it seems that many Protestants who convert to Catholicism are, as I was, disillusioned with the endless divisions within Protestantism due, at least in part, to *sola scriptura *and the principle of private interpretation. The ecclesiatical authority of the Catholic Church appears to cure this problem.
Yet it is also my own experience that, since becoming Catholic, there is a lot of division in the Catholic Church as well. Now, somebody might respond, “But all Catholics believe in the same essential doctrines.” But that is exactly the answer I was given by a Protestant minister regarding Protestantism, i.e., that all Protestants agree on the essentials of Christianity. Yet, whether I ask a Protestant or a Catholic to define “the essentials”, I get a different answer. And pointing to the Catechism hasn’t solved my dilemna either because it seems that different Catholics have different takes on what the CCC says or what it means (the same applies to the Documents of Vatican II, which, finally, I am in the process of reading for myself).
So, my question is this: Can Catholics really appeal to the authority of the Church as a solution to division when there seems to be so much division among Catholics themselves? Nothing is more frustrating, for me, than trying to get a straight answer about the Faith. Everyone has his/her own answer, can quote the relevant Church document to support it, and yet give so many contradictory answers. How is this any different from Protestantism? Are Catholics doing with Tradition what Protestants do with scripture, that is, making themselves the final interpretive authority?
This sub-forum seems to be the place where the most inter-Catholic bickering goes on, so that’s why I’m posting here.
I ask this question in all sincerity, not trying to start another verbal fight. I’d like to solve this dilemna that I’ve been dwelling on for some time.
Yet it is also my own experience that, since becoming Catholic, there is a lot of division in the Catholic Church as well. Now, somebody might respond, “But all Catholics believe in the same essential doctrines.” But that is exactly the answer I was given by a Protestant minister regarding Protestantism, i.e., that all Protestants agree on the essentials of Christianity. Yet, whether I ask a Protestant or a Catholic to define “the essentials”, I get a different answer. And pointing to the Catechism hasn’t solved my dilemna either because it seems that different Catholics have different takes on what the CCC says or what it means (the same applies to the Documents of Vatican II, which, finally, I am in the process of reading for myself).
So, my question is this: Can Catholics really appeal to the authority of the Church as a solution to division when there seems to be so much division among Catholics themselves? Nothing is more frustrating, for me, than trying to get a straight answer about the Faith. Everyone has his/her own answer, can quote the relevant Church document to support it, and yet give so many contradictory answers. How is this any different from Protestantism? Are Catholics doing with Tradition what Protestants do with scripture, that is, making themselves the final interpretive authority?
This sub-forum seems to be the place where the most inter-Catholic bickering goes on, so that’s why I’m posting here.
I ask this question in all sincerity, not trying to start another verbal fight. I’d like to solve this dilemna that I’ve been dwelling on for some time.