INondenominational Bible Churches and “Christian Fellowships” are cropping up everywhere. I think that falls in line with earlier posts about authority and today’s folks rejecting it. People are just looking for a feel-good religious social club to be a part of.
As a former protestant, I agree with this. It’s too easy to blame VII for the Church’s problems, when the problems that are present are also present in spades in protestant denominations.
The problem is that it simply isn’t noticed as much in the protestant world because it’s really an “everything goes” type of religion(s). There’s no rules about attending church, getting divorced, using birthcontrol, etc. If you attend a church that has made its own rules (Biblically based, of course

) and you disagree with them then you just find a different church that you’re happier with. Splits along liberal/conservative fault lines happen all the time, especially among the more evangelical churches.
Are you a practicing homosexual who believes that Jesus is nothing but love and wants you to be happy with your “life partner”? There’s a church for you. Believe in a “quiverfull” mentality, and that women should be dresses-only? There’s a church for you, too.
One of the most difficult things for me when I became a Catholic was that I lost the “comfort zone” that my protestant church gave me. It really was, in a way, like a little religious social club, where I was with like-minded fellow Christians. As someone who is more conservative and loves classical music
that’s what I looked for whenever I moved to a different location and I needed to find a new church home. If I had been into the blue jean and Christian rock band style of worship, I could have found that, too.
In the Catholic church, we all have to hang together, the wheat
and the chaff… If our priest is an aging 60-something hippy and insists on drums and electric guitars at mass (an issue that is a major thorn in my side at the moment

) we don’t get to fire him or start our own little storefront mass.
Sometimes, being a Catholic isn’t “fun” or easy. I think we’re living in an era where many people think it ought to be both.