D
Della
Guest
When I was in the TEC I styled myself an “Anglo-Catholic”, and I meant it at the time. It’s like being a stepmom and wanting to think oneself the birth mom. But, no amount of wanting to be something without actually being it will suffice.
Catholic means universal. Catholics belong to the universal Church headed by the pope, founded by Christ in 33 AD. The Orthodox do not call themselves Catholics because they do not acknowledge the pope as the supreme bishop and although they believe most of what Catholics believe, they are not Catholics. They are in schism from the Catholic Church since the 11th century, but not are not “protest-ants” of the Reformation type.
We have to call things what the are or we are not being helpful. When I was reconciled to the Catholic Church I was then free to rightly call myself Catholic–I wasn’t before that. I don’t write this to be “mean” to anyone, but only because it’s true. A good doctor doesn’t tell a patient that he’s fine if he has a medical need–how would that be helpful to him? Indeed, keeping the truth from him could be fatal. What things actually are is important, as is calling things what they actually are–whether we want to think so or not.
Catholic means universal. Catholics belong to the universal Church headed by the pope, founded by Christ in 33 AD. The Orthodox do not call themselves Catholics because they do not acknowledge the pope as the supreme bishop and although they believe most of what Catholics believe, they are not Catholics. They are in schism from the Catholic Church since the 11th century, but not are not “protest-ants” of the Reformation type.
We have to call things what the are or we are not being helpful. When I was reconciled to the Catholic Church I was then free to rightly call myself Catholic–I wasn’t before that. I don’t write this to be “mean” to anyone, but only because it’s true. A good doctor doesn’t tell a patient that he’s fine if he has a medical need–how would that be helpful to him? Indeed, keeping the truth from him could be fatal. What things actually are is important, as is calling things what they actually are–whether we want to think so or not.