My Dh actually began the process our family leaving the church. He was the one that said to me. “I’m never going back.” He means it.
I’m sorry I sounded “flippant”. It was a really sad time for me.
We all walk the same path at different times, and age and experience don’t always have much to do with it, but more often circumstances do.
As much as I think the CC is the most authoritive path in our communion with God, all paths lead to God. Meaning, despite what religion we profess, to include Mulsims, Jews, JW, Mormons, Atheist, Agnostics, Baptists, Hindu…I think God will read each of our hearts as an individual and weigh that with whatever the full Truth actually turns out to be.
I hold out the possibility that the Catholic Church could be wrong in some of it’s positions with respect to who/how/why someone earns eternal punishment because I think the Grace of Jesus encompasses more than our limitations close them.
I don’t know for sure, but I no longer have the fear of it becasue it isn’t up to me. Only I am up to me, and that is difficult enough to manage. There may be small truths of the Truth in many faiths, but if I had to choose what entity on Earth holds more of that Truth, I’d be hard pressed to convince myself that it was Martin Luther, Muhammed, John Smith, or someone/thing other than the Catholic Chrurch.
I understand many of the Church scandals have hurt the faithfull and faithless, but I also understand that those scandals were not precipitated by the Spirit of the Church, but rather for the very many human reasons we all fail to sometimes; fear, greed, lust, and power to name a few.
I tried, but couldn’t throw the baby out with the bathwater. Sometimes the water needs refreshing. Luther was a change of water the refreshed the Church, but also washed some out of the tub.
I think we have a duty to be wary and question what seems wrong to us in our Church so real evil cannot enter, but I also think we have a responsibility to do so without leaving the building.