Well, in reply to your question, I’ll give two examples of Catholics who received the Sacraments, whom I believe were not Christians at all.
Al Capone was a Catholic all during his lifetime, received baptism, communion, confirmation, wedding vows, and perhaps even last rites by a Priest. I ask you, was Al Capone truly a Christian? Maybe on his death bed, but I know nothing about that.
And what about the Spanish conquistadors and their soldiers who came to the Caribean looting, raping, enslaving and murdering the inhabitants, as in the words of a true Christian, Father Antonio Montesinos, he preached a sermon at Santo Domingo in which he warned the conquistadors they were all in mortal sin because of the cruel way they were oppressing innocent people. He stated:
“Tell me, by what right do you hold these Indians
in such cruel and horrible servitude?
By what authority did you make unprovoked war
on these people, living in peace and quiet on their land,
and with unheard-of savagery
kill and consume so great a number of them?
Why do you keep them worn out and down-trodden,
without feeding them or tending their illnesses,
so that they die-or rather you kill them-
by reason of the heavy labor you lay upon them,
to get gold every day?
What care do you take to have them taught
to know their God and Maker, to be baptized,
to hear Mass and keep their Sundays and holy days?
Are they not men? Have they no soul, no reason?
Are you not required to love them as you love yourselves?
Do you understand this? Do you not feel it?
How can you be sunk so deep in unfeeling sleep?”
In the first century there were Christian Churches in other parts of the world apart from The Christian Church in the Roman Empire. There were no Popes in those days. I believe at least two apostles went to India and perhaps as far as China. Christian Churches sprang up throughout Asia apart from the activities happening in the Roman Empire.
By the time Marco Polo trekked all the way to China, He found Christians and Christian Church’s apart from Catholicism. As it turned out, Christian women in these lands were highly prized as wives. Genghis Khan (perhaps it was his son Kublai Khan) told Marco Polo that Christianity was favored in the land. Marco Polo wanted him to make Christianity the official religion. The Emperor stated that he could not do that because his realm was vast with many different peoples with different religions, and they accepted his rule as long as he did not interfere with their personal traditional beliefs and customs. Then the Emperor informed Marco Polo, to send 200 evangelist to convert all the peoples to Christianity, and that the peoples may be converted to Christianity.
Marco Polo returned to Rome and informed the Pope of the Emperors’ request, the Pope sent 2 missionary priests, one whom died along the way. But the point I’m raising is that there are true Christians apart from the Catholic Church.
And Joe, I am a Christian in accord with Gospel of Jesus Christ, and I equally accept genuine believers of the Catholic Church as my Christian brothers and sisters also. Why divide us?