E
Everyman
Guest
My wife and I and two of our friends are currently inquirers into the Catholic Church. We were all raised as Christians in various non-Catholic or even anti-Catholic traditions and are now attending RCIA.
One reservation I have that I see as the key to determining if I will become Catholic or not is the issue of Sacred Tradition because once I accept that, I can by default accept what that tradition teaches. However, the one issue that prevents me from accepting it already is that of appearant contradictions throughout the Church’s history.
For instance, if the Church claimed that salvation does not come outside of the Church, how does it then accept non-Catholic Christians as seperated brethren that are truly saved? When Luther faced this question he asked, “What about the Eastern Fathers?”
And I ask, “What about the Protestants who were considered anathema by the church? Did the Church suddenly decide that that particular point was innacurate, and now we are merely seperated brethren?”
These are issues that go beyond mere changes in practice in the little “t” tradition. This is definitely big “T” stuff, what with the handling of salvation, heresy, anathema, and such.
I want to be Catholic, but these questions need answered.
One reservation I have that I see as the key to determining if I will become Catholic or not is the issue of Sacred Tradition because once I accept that, I can by default accept what that tradition teaches. However, the one issue that prevents me from accepting it already is that of appearant contradictions throughout the Church’s history.
For instance, if the Church claimed that salvation does not come outside of the Church, how does it then accept non-Catholic Christians as seperated brethren that are truly saved? When Luther faced this question he asked, “What about the Eastern Fathers?”
And I ask, “What about the Protestants who were considered anathema by the church? Did the Church suddenly decide that that particular point was innacurate, and now we are merely seperated brethren?”
These are issues that go beyond mere changes in practice in the little “t” tradition. This is definitely big “T” stuff, what with the handling of salvation, heresy, anathema, and such.
I want to be Catholic, but these questions need answered.