I have to say, my jaw hit my desk when I read that. I mean I get his sentiment, but to hear a bishop basically tell people who might not be the best Catholics if they were to join to leave seems wrong. Shouldn’t a shepherd of the church want as many as possible to join the flock, even if they’re not perfect?
As for his assertion that there’s already enough bad or lukewarm Catholics, I’d posit that’s because the Catholic Church doesn’t let anyone leave. Many if not most of the “bad Catholics” are born into the faith and never had a say on whether they even wanted to be Catholic. If he wants bad Catholics out of the church so badly, work to let those that had no choice in becoming Catholic, to leave officially. That’ll get those “bad Catholics” off your books Your Excellency.
It seems to me rather unkind of you to say that about the Catholic Church but you are not a Catholic, I think it is understandable. Probably there is no love lost there.
I am not surprised for a Catholic Bishop to say what he said. This is not to say that people should not become Catholics, especially sinners. Ain’t we all are. I can assure you the good Bishop certainly knew that.
But that’s not what he meant if I understand correctly when a Catholic Bishop speaks like this. He meant if you want to become Catholic, you must be sure about it and what it entails.
You see, this is the difference between Catholic and Protestant. In Catholicism, there is no “alter call”, there is no such thing after hearing a Biblical verse, a person who has never heard about Jesus accepts Him and become Christian on the spot. There is no walk in interview in Catholicism.
You have to be taught it, no less than a full liturgical calendar year, something like a year. And at the end of it, you are supposed to know enough to make an informed decision and decide whether to proceed with Baptism or not.
If the Catholic Church does not get many converts, it is perhaps of this difficulty in becoming one. People would just walk in an Evangelical church and become Christian instantly. Not in the Catholic Church.
The idea why it takes so long to become Catholic, is because the seriousness of it. It is a life changing decision and the person at least has given himself a fair chance to know what he is into.
Thus the mentioned good Bishop was quite right. If you want to become Catholic, you have to be sure that you really want to.