JonNC;11882069]
Just a couple of comments.
From a Lutheran perspective, there is probably as much Lutheran writings âprotestingâ the Reformed and other non-Lutheran protestants as there is protests against Catholics. ** That said, I think it is self-defeating to base oneâs beliefs on what they oppose, instead of what they believe. **
Hello Jon, I agree with your last statement. Many a Evangelicalâs gained much popularity that grew into mega community churchâs based on what you stated. Somehow it proved to be a success, that many self proclaimed Evangelicals followed the program, that did not grow the unity of an Evangelical Church body, but divided them into independent communities.
I wonder how many generations of families have experienced the conversion of so many including ignorant Catholics, were told by non-Catholics what Catholics believe and were hooked line and sinker, without any defense of the Catholic faith. Catholic apologists have a lot of ground to make up in this atmosphere.
From the pulpit, I have rarely heard anything anti-anyone else. Yes, anecdotal for sure, but Iâve been around for a while. From a personal experience, I canât recall my dad, a Lutheran pastor, ever say anything anti-Catholic, but I sure can remember hearing him rail against the âsacramentariansâ!
We are all guilty when it comes to personal experiences in this particular subject. What I detest is when any one religion or religious voices his/her(now a days) opinion by bashing another faith from the pulpit when Jesus is the whole subject matter.
I have no problem with a debate exchange in such forums as here, or how one perceives another faith here, so long as the other side is listening and given the opportunity to respond.
It should be unacceptable to have to hear ones personal attacks against another faith while speaking from a Church platform, when Jesus is the subject matter.
Maybe, it is due to such non-Catholic Christians who are without a Liturgy, were or are able to include time for such bashing from the pulpit?
Ok, but what does change is the hearer. For example, I regularly receive Tee Coming Home Network newsletter. If the article is a testimony of a Baptist, Calvinist/Reformed, or American evangelical, the testimony means little, because the beliefs they present are completely foreign to me. If it is a Lutheran, OTOH, or even a rather high church Anglican, Iâm tuned in because they present a belief structure I adhere to, and how Catholic teaching spoke to that.
One would be very surprised to find that many do not attend the Catholic church because so and so said this, or Pastor so and so said this about the Catholic faith. So âyesâ in retrospect, I agree with you that âwhat does change is the hearerâ.
As a general rule, a speaking or writing needs to focus his/her message to the expected audience. Gabriel, if you write an apology in favor of infant baptism, youâll get an amen from the Lutheran corner. If you criticize adult only baptism as **the **protestant teaching, the Lutheran responds with,

, ânot in these here partsâ.
Agreed, but I sense a little innocent stereotyping of me criticizing, from you

, because a True Catholic would never discount or reject adult baptism. Those holding to adult baptism âonlyâ oppose the Catholic Churchâs practice for infant baptism. The Catholic Church has never rejected âadult baptismâ, this example points to the direction of my whole discourse here.
When Catholic apologists are disproving false teachings about Catholicism and false presumptions about Catholicism to any and all who are willing to hear Truth.
What is sad, in my own experience, I have been told by Christians that they would never set foot in a Catholic Church, when they never been in a Catholic Church to have such reservations or draw such a personal conclusion.
I think the use of the term âprotestâ is overstated. Most protestant laity in the pews couldnât care less what you guys teach. Youâre just another church down the street that mom and dad werenât members of, so neither are they.
That may be so, in some scenarios, yet those in the pews who really love seeking God and His Truth, generally have their thirst quenched forever in the Catholic Church.
Good to hear from you
Praise be Jesus Christ