So, you are trying to tell me, that you are making no judgment here? You don’t think that conservative Catholics who vote for the GOP “constitute seperation from the True Body of the Faithful,” you are just stating a hypothesis? Riiiiiiiiight. Whatever makes you feel better, SoCal.
Actually, I’m stating facts. Multiple prominent figures, with regular access to the GOP leadership and the White House have written, expressly, that Catholcism is not a Christian faith (Hagee, Jones, etc.)
They note, as I have, that the US was overwhelming founded as a Protestant nation. Protestants reject the primacy of the Church and the Pope. Protestants do not recognize our Sacrament of Holy Orders and have a different understanding of the meaning of Baptism. Further, most ‘flavors’ of Protestantism accept divorce, which we do not. We consider it an assult on the family.
The original post indicated that ‘atheists’ are attacking Christianity. In that light, it seemed reasonable to ask, who does aligning oneself politically with a group that, overwhelmingly, rejects central tenants of our faith - and even our legitimacy as a branch of Christianity?
In other words, if your goal is to protected the faith why align yourself with people who reject and attack it?
The question is quite sincere. Remember, I grew up without plumbing primarily because my father would not lie about being Catholic. That does not make these people my enemy, but it does make me question the wisdom of joining them in their theocratic ambitions.
I’m pretty sure that anybody reading your posts has a pretty good idea of where you stand.
Actually, I’ve repeated pointed out that most conservatives here don’t even bother reading my posts before claiming to know exactly where I stand. In fact, they boast about not reading.
This is a form of logic and thinking that is extremely alien to me. But it is not my place to judge its merits. I have merely had the audacity to suggest that, if someone wants to believe things absolutely, on faith alone, Catholics should consider getting any rigid pre-conceptions from Rome, not Evangelicals.
To the Protestant mind, this would seem judgemental. But to a Catholic, it is an obligation. We believe that there is no salvation without the Church and, as Christians, we are obligated to help others.