B
BornInMarch
Guest
I’ll admit I used to be in the face-slapping group a few years ago, but as I got older I did research and came to understand some of the nuances in The Reformation.As a non-Catholic I have found your comments very interesting. You have raised some very interesting and legitimate concerns within the realm of Protestantism, some of which I have never been familiar with. And I want to state that I appreciate your tone, you have a different approach than so many who want to just slap a Protestant face.
Ultimately I think The Protestant Reformation was good for The Catholic Church and for Christianity as a whole.
It helped The Catholic Church by acting as a wake-up call, prompting The Counter-Reformation and forcing the Church to examine major problems it was previously ignoring. Even the anti-catholic persecutions (such as the Irish Genocide and the wrongful execution of St. Moore and St. Fisher) still provided The Church with fresh martyrs to look up to.
It helped Christianity as a whole because, due to coinciding with The Age of Discovery, The Protestant Reformation caused a missionary-race and resulted in Protestant and Catholic missionaries racing to be the first ones to preach to a new frontier where they otherwise might have been slower to do so.
It certainly tries to and is getting better at it constantly. While a perfect system is impossible for humans to create, an imperfect system is better than none in most cases. Even Police Departments aren’t always able to root out corruption, but few would actually wish for a world without cops.Yes, the Catholic system should be able to weed out the undesirable and corrupt candidates for the priesthood but is that the reality of the situation wIthin the Church?
You have a point; bad people will always find some cracks to slip through. Sometimes bad people are really good at hiding in plane sight, and sometimes someone who started out good ends up losing their way and doing things they shouldn’t (such as stealing funds for personal gain).I believe you had good intentions in your last paragraph however it is this statement that I actually have issues with. I feel a huge problem within Christianity whether in Protestant or Catholic dimension is the assumption that the Church will make us safe. I am afraid that is a subtle untruth that many accept as truth.