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SteveVH
Guest
No, not in the post to which I was originally responding. He said nothing of the sort. He has since explained himself which makes his point, well, pointless. None of us know how long we will be in purgatory and I am fairly certain that there will be some Catholics who will spend more time there than many Protestants.until the Church is reunited, he said.
Agreed, if the truth in question is truth that is basically constitutive of the Faith.
When the Catholic Church holds, as the source and summit of its faith, belief in the true presence of Christ in the Eucharist, it would seem that any rejection of this, alone, would place one outside of the Church. That is, if we are talking “essentials”.I suppose my basic difficulty with Catholicism is that I still believe in that much derided Protestant doctrine of “essentials.” I see the difficulties with it, and that’s why I have belabored my brains and conscience to get myself to agree that transubstantiation and the Marian dogmas and so on are really essential for unity. But I don’t see it. (This is not to say that I reject those doctrines–at worst I’m agnostic about them.) At the end of the day I think the Lambeth Quadrilateral is more or less right about what is required for reunion. And this is in part because I don’t see experiential evidence that Catholics have the “fullness of the Faith” in a practical sense, to the degree that would be required to justify making all the Catholic distinctives necessary for union.
I’ve gone back and forth on this, and may yet do so. I see the force of the other side as well. I see the beauty of saying "no, there’s this incredibly rich full Faith and if we water down one little bit we have abandoned the trust Christ gave us. . . . " but as I said, the reality of the Catholic Church doesn’t seem to support such a grandiose claim. The Trinity and the Incarnation seem to be enough to support a vibrant, rich, full, authentically Christian faith and life, even if Catholicism represents a fuller understanding of the implications of these dogmas.
Yes, out of nothing more than charity; we don’t want anyone to eat or drink unworthily. Not believing that Christ is truly present would be eating or drinking unworthily, as Paul tells us.First of all, a purely “invisible church” isn’t the historic Protestant position at all. And in the second place, even people who believe in a purely invisible church often believe that belief in certain doctrines is necessary in order to belong to it.
Obviously it matters what you believe. If you don’t believe Jesus rose from the dead, for instance, you’re not recognizably a Christian.
But if you don’t believe in the Real Presence in the Catholic sense of the term, you are still recognizably a Christian. You just fail to see some of the implications of what you believe.
Bottom line: can Catholics justify separating baptism and Eucharist, denying Eucharist to Christians in good faith whose baptism Catholics recognize.
Continued…