(continued…)
… I wonder: was the angel of death really sent to kill the first-born male of every Egyptian home? Sorry, but I doubt that. What about Elisha? Some youth teased Elisha because of his baldness. Elisha cursed them in the name of the Lord and two she-bears came out of the woods and mauled 42 youth in retaliation. …
Could have happened. Who is to say God must limit His miracles to Jews and Christians? Life itself, and order itself is a miracle we are a part of every second of our lives.
What amazes me, though, is not that God works through such extraordinary means as the ten plagues, or the multiplying of loaves. Those are wonderful and awesome things. Even more awesome is when the cry of a child, or the beggar on the streets soften the heart of a man to be moved toward God’s will. These sorts of things are what I’ve heard called “ordinary” or “little” miracles - the kind most people would mistake for coincidences or just ordinary events, but which really strike a chord with someone.
…I stayed with a Hindu family in India some years ago and felt that if they didn’t get to ‘heaven’ I probably wouldn’t make it.
I don’t follow. How does their salvation hinge upon yours? Your only job is to let them know the Good News and try to bring them to Christ; it’s their choice to accept or reject it.
…Think of all the killing in the name of God! The Lord must have shed many tears about how he was so grossly misunderstood.
I agree that killing in the name of God is wrong. So does Our Lord, who said that if you brother slaps us on one cheek we ought to turn the other. But I think that the killing that has occurred is because people DO NOT follow the religion they claim to be defending! Christ called us to DIE for others, to Go the Extra Mile for those who persecute us - not to be rebels and defy authority because it is oppressive, but to give authority its due, and show them the glory of God.
THAT is Christianity. Not this diluted, pluralist, relativist thing that’s supposed to please everyone and where nobody gets angry or dies. And also not the highly politicised tool kings and emperors and politicians both past and present have used it for. Religion is not a tool for politicians. It is not supposed to be a grandparent which coddles you, nor a demon which denigrates you. Religion, most especially the Catholic (and dare I say Orthodox) religion is the truth of God, nothing less.
…Protestantism. It seems to preach the love of Christ while avoiding strict doctrine. Their congregations appear to permit and even welcome a diversity of opinion. This diversity exists among Catholics, too, and attempts to squash it will only lead to a further exodus. Modern, educated humankind is going to ‘think and let think’.
Sure. While we must all dogmatically believe that science knows everything about the world. The evolution and quantum physics and the rest of that gobbeldygook is the ONLY way to see the world. Riiiiight.
It exists among some Catholics. But upon some issues, there is no room for diversity. There are absolutes in Catholicism, and deference with these makes one heterodox, or at worst, a heretic (or quite simply, not fully Catholic). If we did not have certain absolutes - such as the authority of Tradition (of which Scripture is a part), the Divinity of Christ Jesus, and the earthly authority of the bishops and of the Pope - why shouldn’t WE also be Protestants?
Indeed, Protestants have their own absolutes. No authority BUT Scripture. No action is needed to be saved, BUT faith. No man need do anything for grace BUT Jesus Christ. One can be as strict or as liberal as you like as a Protestant. For on what authority does Protestantism stand? All stands not on Apostolic teaching, nor the Tradition of God, nor the Church, nor even the consistency of the Christian religion. All stands on the Bible in Protestantism. The rest is optional.
And look where it’s gotten Protestants.
** …insistence that [Catholicism] alone is the one true, apostolic faith is not one of them.** I recall visiting with Egyptian Copts when in Egypt who have their own Pope they trace back to St. Mark. They feel that they and certain other mideastern Christian groups are those who embrace the one true faith. …
You would be surprised how Catholic the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox actually are. They didn’t drop books of the Bible or important dogmas, and they didn’t make up heresies like Nestorianism, Arianism, and Protestantism. But they speak in different terms than Catholics. The Church has already declared that Orthodoxy is truly Christian, and their teachings are not at difference with our own. Their liturgies, clergy, sacraments, and teachings are all valid and Catholic. We even have certain Orthodox churches who acknowledge this agreement that Rome and Constantinople have in their theologies. We call them “Eastern Catholic Churches”.
**
Let us make religion a bridge instead of a barrier**. Pious, arrogant and narrow religious tribalism has caused enormous injustice and outright murder over the centuries.
Agreed; but we must continue to search for the truth, and we must not politicise religion (or science for that matter) or turn it into some tool for feeling good, or putting people into fear.
Theology is a science; it is a search for the truth of God. In it we learn about God. How to please Him. How to love and serve Him. What His plan is for us and the human race. What good Christian wouldn’t want to know these things?