Do you mean that Protestant denominations are individual denominations, or that the people within them are individuals and not part of a greater body?
I simply mean that
protestants are individuals. It is not the same thing as Protestantism. One is a piece of the other.
Catholics are not the Church, but pieces of the Church. Protestants have
a certain Communion with the Catholic Church, namely
belief and Baptism. They also have the Scriptures, though they interpret and practice different (and even oppositionally) within themselves.
Individuals and the whole are not the same thing, but share the same principles. One individual may be following Jesus “dimly”, while another “vibrantly”. Still, the vibrant follower lacks what Protestantism cannot offer.
I would of course agree that the RCC offers the fullness of faith, but it is up to the individual to full partake in that. It’s not guaranteed.
Right! Partaking doesn’t guarantee fully following. Partaking as a member of the Catholic Church is not necessarily personally following everything the Church Teaches.
I was raised non-denominational. I saw a genuine unity within the Catholic faith. I saw Scripture and Jesus fulfilled in the Mass. I heard the Father’s call to His Son’s Body and Blood. But I struggle to receive “worthily”. Now that term should be properly understood! I understand “worthily”, in this context, as both knowing it is by Grace we receive,
and by cooperation with His Grace (or obedience, pureness, Godliness, Charity, faithfulness). We should not receive His sacrifice unless we have turned away from what caused Him to be sacrificed.