Intrigued by Catholicism, but just can't convert for many reasons

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Ok youre right, we need to be more organized. Let’s do that. What points should we discuss about authority?
Perhaps figuring out exactly, in terms of church authority, which church, out of so many, was entrusted in the 1st century, on Pentecost, with the God-given authority via divine charism, to teach as the the 1st century church leaders did? 🤷 Is that a reasonable starting point? If so then feel free to opine…🙂
 
First let’s look at the definition of authority:
  1. the power to determine, adjudicate, or otherwise settle issues or disputes; jurisdiction; the right to control, command, or determine.
  2. a power or right delegated or given; authorization Who has the authority to grant permission?
  3. a person or body of persons in whom authority is vested, as a governmental agency.
What I will (hopefully ;)) show you is that each of these three definitions is fulfilled in the Catholic Church.

The first point we agree on, I believe, the Jesus Christ, as the Son of God, 1. is all-good, 2. is all-knowing; and 3. has all authority over us. Do you see that Christ’s authority is God’s authority, and that God’s authority comes from being the Creator of us all? Even more than as parents have authority over their children, God has all authority over us, and each of us, even tho many do not acknowledge His authority.

Christ has this authority, and He has an additional claim upon us, because He redeemed us. Because He redeemed us of us, we owe Him our allegiance, just as we would owe something to someone who saved our life.

Now, how does this relate to the Church? We see that Christ was incarnate and lived on earth, and that He had disciples whom He taught. He and His disciples travelled around Israel and taught others as well.

There came a time when this happened: Matthew 16: 18 And I say to thee: That thou art Peter; and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. [19] And I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose upon earth, it shall be loosed also in heaven.

Wow, what a lot He said in just those few words!

He re-names Peter. Re-naming is always very significant in the Bible, but this name change does not come through in English all that well. Simon’s new name was literally Rock in Hebrew.

Then Christ said that upon this Rock, He would build His Church. Rock would be the foundation of Christ’s church on earth.

And this church which would be built on the foundation Rock would be protected by Christ’s promise in such a way that “the gates of Hell would not prevail against it.” What does this mean? That Christ promised that His Church would not lose to the powers of Hell, that Christ would never abandon His Church.

Now Christ returns to Rock, and tells him He will give him the keys to His kingdom. In the Old Testament, we see that the giving of the keys of the kingdom signified that someone was being made a vicar of that kingdom, that he was to rule for at least a time in the king’s place.

Note too that Rock alone (notice Christ uses the second person singular thou) is given a special power of binding and loosing: whatsoever thou shalt bind *on earth *shall be bound in Heaven…

So you can see that Christ invested Rock with great power, authority, over His Church. Rock was to be the vicar, ruling for the King, Christ, in His absence.

And you can see that Christ promised that the domain of the Prince of Lies would not prevail over the Church, so the teachings of the Church, which come directly from what Christ taught the Apostles, would be protected.
Nice post. :thumbsup:That was pretty much how I began to see it as a former protestant. Scripture tells us, essentially: to trust in Jesus’ church is to trust in Him, ultimately. I thought long ago: Find that one church (Jesus only established one church) in the world today, and I will have found doctrinal truth in spite of the chaff mixed in with the wheat; something that Jesus tells us is inevitable and unavoidable.
 
for my clarification:
New Living Translation :
“And I will give you the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven. Whatever you forbid on earth will be forbidden in heaven, and whatever you permit on earth will be permitted in heaven.”

This helped me to understand better. Thanks for this method of helping CaliLobo. And I am sure others, too. (Me).
👍
A lot of non-catholics believe that this ratification is some sort of human judgement/disernment (in terms of forbidding and permitting) not realizing that God is the source of this ineffable guidance. As a former protestant, once it occured to me that God was the One guiding and preserving truth within His Church, all that remained was identifying His church in a world with so many self-governing churches, all claiming to be adherents to a practice (sola scriptura) that would have been absolutely foreign to the apostles.
 
Nice post. :thumbsup:That was pretty much how I began to see it as a former protestant. Scripture tells us, essentially: to trust in Jesus’ church is to trust in Him, ultimately. I thought long ago: Find that one church (Jesus only established one church) in the world today, and I will have found doctrinal truth in spite of the chaff mixed in with the wheat; something that Jesus tells us is inevitable and unavoidable.
This is yet another step closer in my understanding. Now if I could just get that deacon to call…time’s a wastin’…🙂
 
for my clarification:
New Living Translation :
“And I will give you the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven. Whatever you forbid on earth will be forbidden in heaven, and whatever you permit on earth will be permitted in heaven.”

This helped me to understand better. Thanks for this method of helping CaliLobo. And I am sure others, too. (Me).
Yes, they put the binding and loosing in more mordern language, but… it is not just a matter of permitting and forbidding. It is also related to confession; binding and loosing refers to absolving sin and also to indulgences and penances.

And the current ambiguity in English between the second person singular and plural means that in modern translations it is unclear that this granting of the keys is particular to Peter. This is one of the reasons I prefer older translations.

On this last point, I will admit that my children think I am completely nuts for having picked up “you all,” (not y’all!) and insisting that we need a plural form in English.

Thanks; I’m glad my explanations help you 🙂
 
👍
A lot of non-catholics believe that this ratification is some sort of human judgement/disernment (in terms of forbidding and permitting) not realizing that God is the source of this ineffable guidance. As a former protestant, once it occured to me that God was the One guiding and preserving truth within His Church, all that remained was identifying His church in a world with so many self-governing churches, all claiming to be adherents to a practice (sola scriptura) that would have been absolutely foreign to the apostles.
as a current non conformist and not wanting to be, I knew this early on. Why and how, I cannot fathom…But then, I never took the Eucharist to be symbolic, even though I had no idea what transubstantiation was. I must have been a smart kid…😃
 
Yes, they put the binding and loosing in more mordern language, but… it is not just a matter of permitting and forbidding. It is also related to confession; binding and loosing refers to absolving sin and also to indulgences and penances.

And the current ambiguity in English between the second person singular and plural means that in modern translations it is unclear that this granting of the keys is particular to Peter. This is one of the reasons I prefer older translations.

On this last point, I will admit that my children think I am completely nuts for having picked up “you all,” (not y’all!) and insisting that we need a plural form in English.
Understood and thank you. And since you mentioned it, I am having trouble understanding indulgences. (I can’t get to a bookstore to get “Catholicism for Dummies”, which has been recommended. Easier for me to read from a book than online…
 
as a current non conformist and not wanting to be, I knew this early on. Why and how, I cannot fathom…But then, I never took the Eucharist to be symbolic, even though I had no idea what transubstantiation was. I must have been a smart kid…😃
:D:) The only way truth is knowable, in terms of doctrine, is to step outside the pages of scripture alone via private interpretation, and locate the church established by Jesus and guided by Jesus. Jesus’ church is the conduit through which Jesus transmits doctrinal truth, IMHO.
 
David danced, and many psalms are songs. If you’re a Christian you’ve been set free from sin and you are to repent. Isn’t it natural to be loud and celebrate? That’s why Protestant services are lively and joyful.
Yes, it is natural to be joyful and to celebrate our freedom in Christ. However, not all Protestant services are loud. These types of services are desgned to apply to the emotions, not to the Spirit. I am not saying both cannot happen, but solemnity is designed to nurture the Spirit primarily. Quakers, for example, sit in a very austere building in silence for most of the service. You will not find them dancing or loud, yet when you talk to them you will find that they are full of joy. They encounter Christ in the silence, as do contempletives.
What’s so wrong about clapping, raising hands, dancing, and rock and hip hop??
There is nothing inherently wrong with any of these activities. They just are not suited to the liturgy.
Why is the liturgy so immutable?
Because everything that comes to us from Jesus is immutable. We are just not at liberty to alter the Holy Traditions as they were passed down to us from the Apostles. We are to preserve them JUST AS WE RECEIVED them.

1 Cor 11:2

I commend you because you remember me in everything and maintain the traditions just as I handed them on to you.
Tradition never saved anyone. Isn’t it unchanging because the CC says so?
It is the Word of God, infallibly preserved in the Sacred Tradition by the Holy Spirit that saves. No, it is unchanging because God is unchanging. The CC just bears witness to this Truth.
Someone posted that the Bible is a church based document. Are we then to just follow the Church, whatever the heck it says, just because Jesus started it? Can’t that be dangerous?
Yes.

Is there some reason you would NOT want to follow the footsteps that Jesus created?

Of all the dangers that exist in the world, I think following the Church founded by Christ the most palatable. Yes, it can be dangerous, and it looks as though it will get even more so as our culture continues to slide headlong into death. The Church is again coming under persecution, and the freedom of religion is not at risk in the United States. Very dangerous days ahead.
To quote my missionary friend, the CC offers a system of saints, traditions, and dogmatic rituals. But where is the personal relationship with Christ that the Protestant church offers (a major reason Catholics convert)?
The saints are not a “system” but part of the Body of Christ that have gone on before us in the faith. The Church promotes a personal relationship with them because they are examples for us:

Phil 3:17

17 Brothers and sisters, join in imitating me, and observe those who live according to the example you have in us.

If you think that it is not possible to have a personal relationship with Christ in the presence of traditions and rituals, you are mistaken.

The major reasons that Catholics abandon their faith is they are 1) poorly catechized and do not know what they are leaving 2) They reject the moral teachings of the Church and want to engage in behaviors forbidden by the faith 3) they are seeking emotional enrichment that they have not yet learned to find in the Eucharist.

None of it has to do with a personal relationship with Christ.
It’s almost as if the CC hinders direct access to God because of its confession and saints system.
Such a statement is based upon a misunderstanding. Sin separates us from God, and the only way to return to communion with Him is through confession.

A hot coal will cool much faster if it is alone. If a coal is next to other burning coals it will burn hot. When we are in close fellowship with other souls that burn hot for Jesus, we will maintain our heat and be on fire for the Lord. This principle is also found in Protestant circles, but they just do not consciously include those who have gone before us in the faith.
 
I’m smart; why can’t I find for myself what God is revealing to me through my relationship with Him, and use the Bible to confirm I’m not crazy?? Why do I need the Catholic system?
A just question. If being smart were suffiient, then many would find their way to heaven with this method. But the Gospel of Christ is not just for those who are smart and want to find their own way. The Gospel is God’s revelation of Himself to mankind. He is not going to reveal something to one “smart” person that contradicts what He has already revealed to His One Body, the Church. Jesus created the Church to get us to heaven, because

Luke 13:23-25
He said to them, 24 "Strive to enter through the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will try to enter and will not be able.

Why not follow others who already have been through that door? Why risk not being able?

Matt 7:13-14
"Enter through the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the road is easy that leads to destruction, and there are many who take it. 14 For the gate is narrow and the road is hard that leads to life, and there are few who find it.

How can you know if you are on the wide and easy road? Is it not more prudent to follow behind those who have already travelled the hard and narrow road? We know that they have found life.

And re: abortion, to clarify, when women are polled in secret, away from the presence of their partners, they overwhelmingly support abortion because they know they have to bear the brunt of raising the unwanted child.

There was a time in my life when I thought this way also. However, it is always and everywhere wrong to take an innocent life to avoid “bearing the brunt” of anything. God gives us more than enough grace to bear all pains and suffering. “No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” John 15:13-14

God will richly bless anyone who lays down their life for another, and most especially the helpless infant.
And the foster system is filled with problems. I just don’t see Christ telling women they have to suffer for this.
Yes, the foster system is filled with problems. I would recommend adoption better. However, Christ calls us to bear whatever suffering comes to us, and to offer it up for the purification of souls. This is what it means to pick up our cross, and carry it. Suffering is not part of God’s plan for us, but is a consequence of sin. The grace to bear suffering is what comes from Christ.
Not only that, the Vaticam opposes condoms although most Catholics ignore this (example of lacking fruit)! Let’s not fool ourselves to think we can deny our sexual urges.
Actually, the opposite is true. It is foolish to think that we cannot control our sexual urges. We don’t need to “deny” them, we can acknowledge they exist, and choose not to be controlled by them. The false notion that we must be subject to any fleshly urge is one of the pinnacles of the culture of death in which we live.

I agree with you. Catholics who ignore the Teaching of the Church are lacking in fruit.
Combined with the social benefits of abortion (reduced crime, reduced drain on natural and government resources), the Vatican position lacks modern wisdom.
Ahhh, the infiltration of modernism. I used to think this was silly, but now I realize it is not. Abortion does not “reduce crime”. One cannot reduce crime by committing the most heinous crime of murdering the innocent. Abortion uses more government resources by far than proper prenatal care. If you study the $ that planned parenthood makes on abortions, you will see a veritable floodgate of government resouces pouring down the drain with the blood.

I do think that population affects natural resources, but I also think that we are killing some of the people God sent us to address those problems.
 
There is also nothing in the Bible which says that SSM should be illegal.

All the Bible says is that arsenokoitai will not inherit the kingdom of heaven. Putting aside arguments over whether arsenokoitai actually means homosexuals in modern sense, all that means is just that: they will not inherit kingdom of heaven.

The debate over the legality of SSM is basically this: can you use civil law to force heaven upon homosexuals, if they are not interested in it?

SSM, i.e. consesual homosexuality, is fundamentally different from, say, murder or theft. The reason murder or theft are illegal is not that murderers or thieves will be condemned, but rather, that murder or theft involve victim, which is deprived of something (life or property). In other words, the law is there to protect the potential victim from the potential perpetrator, not potential perpetrator’s salvation. Perpetrator’s salvation is a business between himself and God.

Also, if you believe that civil law should be used to guide homosexuals to heaven by force, then by the same logic, the civil law should be used to force everyone to convert to Catholicism and force weekly Mass attendance.
The civil law, however, should be reasonable and moral.

To pass a law declaring that all pine trees should now legally be rose bushes would be possible, but would none the less be an offense against reason. One can make arguments based in emotion all day long, but that doesn’t make what is argued for either true, or false. One can make arguments based in false equivalence (same sex marriage), or false dichotomy (anti-miscegenation laws), but even more clearly such laws are not reasonable.

The Catholic Church is a religion of faith and reason, in equal measure and appropriate relationship. Thus, since what the Church teaches is both true and righteous, and unless you are positing that it would be good for laws to be based on falsehoods or wishful thinking, then the civil law should be based on the truths taught by the Catholic Church.

The intent is not to force salvation on any one. The intent in making laws reasonable is to protect a very important pillar of our culture and society: Reason. And rightfully so, as a democracy can not long survive when its people replace reason with emotion or the illogical.

Have you read the multiplicity of arguments against same sex marriage? Have you considered the meaning implicit in the very term? If we need a different label for it, then we are admitting in our very speech that SSM and M are not equivalent.

Equality is not a moral principle. Equality is a tool of logic and reason, no more, no less.

Furthermore, you don’t vote on the truth, and democracy is not a tool of philosophy. You may vote on which policy prescription, both of which are reasonable, that you may believe has the best chance of achieving a goal. But when a law is advanced that attempts to enshrine a falsehood, it must be fought, and it is invalid on its face.
 
Rather than subscribing to the Catholic system of Magisterium, Tradition, Confession, and devotion to saints, which has not saved a thing (by the way, the only person who can change anyone’s life is Jesus), I use my personal relationship with Jesus. He reveals things to me, and I double check with the Bible to know I’m not deceiving myself.
Then you are indeed deceiving yourself. The Bible is nothing more than a collection of words, and words have no meaning. Meaning is what you bring TO words, not take from them. To know what meaning you should bring to a word, you must be taught that by an authoritative teacher. That authoritative teacher is the Magisterium and Tradition.

There: the falsification of sola scriptura in one paragraph! 😃

I tried Protestantism, too. Are you familiar with the five Solae that are its foundation?
Like I said in post #287, couldn’t it be DANGEROUS to just subscribe to whatever a church says? Isn’t there individual responsiblity and accountability? So what if there are 30000 Protestant denominations, what’s so wrong with that? If a church does wrong, it is the responsible thing to do to walk away and move on.
Not only dangerous, absolutely against Catholic teaching. The Church has explicitly stated that Fideism is antithetical to its teaching. Note that there is a difference between Fideism and faith, just in case you are not familiar with the nuances.
Isn’t a personal relationship with God (which Protestants emphasize) more important than the Catholic system?
False dichotomy. Holy Mother Church also stresses a personal relationship with God (consider the implications of taking into your body the eucharist), but just as importantly, that that relationship be based in the truth. True love requires just that: the truth.
Only 2% of the US has openly come out as gay. But there are many, many more that haven’t come out. And many, many people have experimented with the same sex, though they may not consider themselves gay.
Not that many more. The total number of people in your average human population that are truly homosexual are between 2.5 and 3%. The truth of Holy Mother Church is that engaging in a sin does not mean you become that sin, so to engage in the sin of homosexual activity is NOT to BECOME a homosexual.
Sexuality is a continuum between partially gay and partially straight. Add to that bi, asexual, queer, and so on. Sexuality is not black and white; it’s complicated.
Fundamentally false. What is called the “continuum” is simply the over-sexualization of relationships; the false equivalence between “love” and “sex”. You should study the types of love that have nothing to do with sex.

All to often, a person who loves another of the same sex gets told by this society that they might be a homosexual. This confuses them. In reality, you can love without needing to drag sex into the equation. See: Agape.

When this confusion is reinforced repeatedly, and when the person is never taught about the love of friends, the love of family and the love of God, it leaves them without the tools to develop a mature understanding of what love is.

I have two same-sex friend that I love. I am not homosexual. Yet when I tell them I love them, it makes both them and me very mildly uncomfortable, because of this societal over-sexualization.
But the very idea of denying gays the equal right to marry IS discrimination per se.
Good! Discrimination is a GOOD thing. There can be no reason without it!

Hint: discrimination means the ability to discriminate between two things that are different. It is not a moral principle either, just as equality is not a moral principle. a FALSE DICHOTOMY is an offense against reason, however, and that may very well be coincident with a moral offense.

Enough for one reply. You are repeating and repeating your points as if repetition will make them true. It won’t, and Thank God for THAT! 🙂
 
Thank you! Still has to wait; too little money, nowhere to live yet. :winter:Keep me in your prayers; I’d really appreciate it.

Blessings
Just as an aside–I don’t want to derail the thread–you cod get the book through interlibrary loan if they don’t have it at your liibrary. If you ask about indulgences on a different thread, maybe in apologetics, you’ll probably get some good answers there. I’ll try and answer it there 🙂
 
I just get the sense that the Catholic faith is so personal, but why can’t Catholics get involved with the lives of others, form small groups, and talk about faith with each other? I get the sense that there’s a disconnect between priests and nuns and laypeople, because they live a life of cloistered study. .
I could go on and on about your post, but a lot of people have already, and I don’t want to be tedious. But I did want to address this part.

I think it would be a big mistake to suppose that there is a disconnect between priests and nuns and laypeople. Yes, there are cloistered priests and cloistered nuns, but a lot of the orders are anything but distant.

Two summers ago, our family July 4th festivities were graced with the presence of two nuns from an order that spends their time going into horrific neighborhoods helping and counseling people. They were quite vivacious and engaging. Both of them tried out a semi-automatic rifle in target shooting. Both ran (habits and all) with the little kids with sparklers to toss them up into a big hickory tree that (by family tradition) they like to light up like a Christmas tree. Their particular vocation takes them into the very heart of human misery and despair, largely in the South Bronx. They both told me their habits attract the lonely and the confused like a magnet. They talk to those people, but mostly listen. They allow unwed mothers to live in their convent with them and try to find them jobs after their babies are delivered. Do I need them as much as those people do? No. Am I a bit envious of those with whom they spend their time? Well, maybe a little, but I understand.

There is another order that’s cloistered. They do not meet with the public at all, except one nun is appointed to sit and listen to anybody who wants to come there and unburden themselves of their fears and their troubles. And a lot of people do. She doesn’t offer advice. She doesn’t preach. She listens, attentively, patiently and sympathetically. If the visitor asks for prayers, the whole convent will pray for them. I once obtained a card from them stating they were offering prayers for a man who was then dying of cirrhosis. Dying of cirrhosis is a long, lonely business because if you have it and if it’s due to alcoholism, you have thrown away a lot of relationships getting there. It brought tears to his eyes when I gave it to him in the hospital. I gave one to another man, a Baptist, who was undergoing treatment for cancer. He was just stunned and thanked me profusely. I told him, of course, not to thank me, but to thank God for the existence of the nuns.

Socializing isn’t everything. Do we really need it from our Church when it’s so readily available anywhere? I could go down to the donut shop and socialize with people all day long, every day. Maybe the company and aid of our co-religionists matters more when it’s most needed and most lacking in other ways.

I’ll agree that most Catholics are quiet in their worship, quiet in reflection, quiet in prayer. I don’t socialize with a single member of my parish. But I know for a fact that if I needed something, they would be there to help. I have seen it too many times done for others to doubt it at all.
 
Rather than subscribing to the Catholic system of Magisterium, Tradition, Confession, and devotion to saints, which has not saved a thing (by the way, the only person who can change anyone’s life is Jesus), I use my personal relationship with Jesus.
You seem to be laboring under the misunderstanding that a personal relationship with Jesus is not at the center of the Magesterium, Tradition, confession and communion of saints. I wonder how that happened?
He reveals things to me, and I double check with the Bible to know I’m not deceiving myself.
And how would you know that?
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 Like I said in post #287, couldn't it be DANGEROUS to just subscribe to whatever a church says?
Yes, very dangerous, especially in these times. In the early days of the Church, there were many martrys for the faith. We may come to see that again.

This is what Jesus said about listening to the Church:

Luke 10:16

16 “Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me rejects the one who sent me.”

So I guess it boils down to to whether you trust Jesus.

**
Isn’t there individual responsiblity and accountability?
Yes. You will be held accountable and responsible for each and every instruction of the Church you defy and deny.
So what if there are 30000 Protestant denominations, what’s so wrong with that? If a church does wrong, it is the responsible
thing to do to walk away and move on.

This is not what Jesus taught. He taught that there is One Church, and that no one is to leave her. Walking away from her is the same as walking away from Christ.
Isn’t a personal relationship with God (which Protestants emphasize) more important than the Catholic system?
The two are not exclusive of one another. We have a personal relationship, and all these other Gifts of God that come with it. If Jesus did not think these things were important, He would not have given them to us.
Sexuality is … complicated.
Yes, this is true, but the commandments of God around it are very simple and straightforward (no pun intended).😃
But the very idea of denying gays the equal right to marry IS discrimination per se.
Ok, so if I deny the right of a man to carry a child (be pregnant) I am discriminating against him? If I deny the right of a woman to father a child I have discriminated? I think you can see that these functions are not “rights” but natural expressions of one’s gender.

Marriage is the union of one man, and one woman. This is the state which God created. It is a gift, much more than a “right”. It is not appropriate for any person to interfere with others entering this state, so long as they do so of their own free will (that is why it was wrong to prevent slaves from marriage, or persons of color wanting to marry those not of color).
Code:
**Because Jesus never did anything politically against Rome in the Bible.**
It was Jesus’ teachings that caused the Roman Empire to eventually fall. It was built and maintained on the institution of slavery, and could not exist without it.

I agree with you, though, the motive is moral, not political. Jesus taught the dignity of all human persons. It had profound political and economic implications.
Because the Bible says NOTHING on point that we have to politically
oppose these things.

On the contrary, this is EXACTLY what it means to be light and salt on earth. We are to promote morality at all times, and in all places.

Matt 5:13-16
"You are the salt of the earth; but if salt has lost its taste, how can its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything, but is thrown out and trampled under foot.

14 "You are the light of the world. A city built on a hill cannot be hid. 15 No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house. 16 In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven.
There used to be laws against fornication and divorce. Why doesn’t the CC support them now? How about laws against pornography and prostitution? Should we continue to support the losing war on drugs?
There is no doubt that the culture is going to hell in a handcart. :eek:
When I see women suffering from pregnancies and bad marriages, it’s clear how foolish laws banning abortion and divorce would be.
When you see this, you see an opportunity being lost for people to be sanctified. No suffering should be wasted, but offered for our purification, and that of others. However, the Church does not encourage suffering and wrongdoing. We are to alleviate suffering whenever possible. Woman who are having troubling pregnancies should be supported and provided for so that they can bring their child to term. This is the whole purpose of Right to Life.

No one is encouraged to stay in an unsafe or violent relationship, either.
When I see my coworkers, just as bright and brilliant as anyone else, why would I advocate that they can’t have the same benefits and privileges of life? The gays have suffered enough.
Who are you to decide how much suffering is “enough”? Only our Maker can decide such a thing. You don’t know what people’s souls need in order to be purified.**
 
We cannot legislate morality. All the time and effort Catholics spend politicking, they could instead spend it by preaching the Gospel.
For us, it is one and the same. Preaching and living the Gospel means being light and salt, and promoting morality in culture. No, we cannot legislate morality, but we can mitigate evil by legislating against immoral behavior.
Getting people to convert. Because politics and laws don’t change human behavior; only belief in Jesus does. And if Magisterium and Tradition hinder belief in Jesus, we need an upgrade.
I agree!

Fortunately the Magesterium and tradition are what brings people to conversion, since it is preaching the Word that brings converts, and in these reside the Word of God that transforms lives.

Jesus established these institutions, so there is no way to “upgrade” on what Christ has provided.

However you, and I, and others might need an “upgrade” of our attitudes, though.😉
The Protestants have figured that out and that is why they flourish, and the CC shrinks.
I understand why it seems that way to you now.
How is the divisiveness of politics a type of good spiritual fruit??
The spiritual fruit is what we bring to politics. You are right, whenever good encounters evil, divisivness occurs.
You guys keep talking about Catholic charities and hospitals run by the clergy, but where is the participation of Catholic laypeople in the Great Commission?
These charities and hospitals are run by laypeople. Clergy are much too busy for such things.
Isn’t the Great Commission for everyone?
Absolutely. 👍
I’m sorry if I mocked the Real Presence. But I wanted to point out that it’s the fruit of Galatians 5 that indicates Jesus’ presence, and not the Eucharist.
It is very spiritually dangerous to mock the Eucharist.

The Spiritual fruit in Gal. 5 is consistent with Eucharist, which causes these fruits to grow in us. It is not a matter of “this and not that”. It is “both/and”.
We are judged by our fruit, right? Can we really delegate the Great Commission to just the clergy?
Indeed we are, and indeed we should not!
Kal2012 mentioned if I have an underlying issue. My only issue is that Christians will be relegated as an irrelevant hate group. My only issue is being persecuted by my gay coworkers for an unnecessary reason.
You do have a lot of issues.

I did not know you were being persecuted by your coworkers.
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P.S. I'm male.
This is a surprise! All that emotional and black and white thinking seems to suggest coming from a different perspective. I guess people of any gender can reason emotionally.
 
First let’s look at the definition of authority:
  1. the power to determine, adjudicate, or otherwise settle issues or disputes; jurisdiction; the right to control, command, or determine.
  2. a power or right delegated or given; authorization Who has the authority to grant permission?
  3. a person or body of persons in whom authority is vested, as a governmental agency.
What I will (hopefully ;)) show you is that each of these three definitions is fulfilled in the Catholic Church.
Oh boy, I thought we were focusing on authority but now I get replies for everything else…

Regarding authority, I get the claim that the CC is the original that Jesus founded. I am mindful of where Catholics are getting their authority from.

But Protestants also see teaching authority in their churches, in their pastors, teachers, and leaders. There is quite an internal selection process to become a leader, and therefore, undermining their authority is the fastest way to alienate yourself from a Protestant church, trust me.

In the same way that a Protestant feels the calling from the Holy Spirit to be a pastor, doesn’t a Catholic get that his vocation is to be a priest?

Now, how does a Protestant pastor get his authority and how do I get the authority to preach my interpretation? The Holy Spirit. And in Protestantism, we are all saints, and we are all priests.

Universal priesthood is found in 1 Peter 2:1-5 and 9, in which Peter is addressing exiled believers:
"So put away all malice and all deceit and hypocrisy and envy and all slander. Like newborn infants, long for the pure spiritual milk, that by it you may grow up into salvation—if indeed you have tasted that the Lord is good.
"As you come to him, a living stone rejected by men but in the sight of God chosen and precious, you yourselves like living stones are being built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ…
“But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.”
And Fr. Serpa agrees we are all saints here:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=9593
**
Notice in 1 Peter 2, no distinction between the lay and the consecrated is indicated.**

Many of you pointed out there is no mutual exclusivity between the Catholic system and a relationship with God. But can you then answer, what is the **necessity **of the Catholic system, if it’s possible that we are all a royal priesthood?

Isn’t it the historical errors of the Catholic Church that necessitated Protestantism?

Furthermore, didn’t Jesus eliminate any further need for Jewish high priests and animal sacrifices (the “system” of Judaism)? Why are we replacing the Jewish “system” of priests and rituals with the Catholic “system” of priests and rituals? I thought Jesus was supposed to eliminate all that.

Speaking of why we may need to eliminate all that:
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guanophore:
Fortunately the Magesterium and tradition are what brings people to conversion, since it is preaching the Word that brings converts, and in these reside the Word of God that transforms lives.
Not if you ask converts, especially those who converted from the CC.

When the discussion gets back to evangelization, I can show you some dire statistics about the state of Catholicism in the West, even in heavily Catholic countries.

I can tell you that American Protestant churches operate with the idea that only FOUR PERCENT of people 30 and under in the USA attend church regularly.

Let me also show you a statistic about a supposedly heavily Catholic country, Poland:
joshuaproject.net/countries.php?rog3=PL
According to that table, only 0.25% of Poles are Evangelical. That is the statistic that the Joshua Project is operating on. In addition, I can point you stats that show only 30% of Polish Catholics attend Mass. Among that, how many are true practicing believers? I’ve studied abroad there and I can tell you that young Polish people want Poland to be as secular as Germany, France, and Britain.

**Protestant missionaries to Poland will tell you that Polish people are jaded with religion because of the dogmatic, ritualistic nature of the Catholic Church.

Therefore, how is the Magisterium and tradition effective in converting people and bringing them to relationships with Jesus?

The stats don’t show it, and that’s why I believe we need the “upgrade” I mentioned earlier. And it’s an upgrade which can also claim to have authority coming from Jesus.**

P.S. Speaking of narrow path, any Protestant around the world, especially in Europe, and increasingly in America, feels he is on the narrow path.
 
calilobo,

you have many beliefs that surpass your understanding. everyone does.

you really need to spend some time thinking about why a person who is able on a daily basis able to communicate with the Real Presence of Christ would ever choose to believe that he or she is just participating in some symbolic ritual. realize that both those who communicate with the Real Presence of Christ in the Holy Eucharist and those who participate in the symbolic last supper (protestants) are expressing a Belief.

everyone is free to choose what they will and will not believe. to believe that Jesus meant what He said when He told His apostles at the Last Supper that “This is My Body” does not seem at all farfetched to me.

to believe that Jesus meant those words to create a symbolic ritual without clarifying that and considering that the questioning of the Real Presence did not in the RCC until the
16th century raises a real question about the motives of those who dispute the Real Presence.

of course since the beginning of the Church there have been people who disagreed with the teachings of the Apostles. that is why many of the early ecumenical councils were convened. however, that seems a very shallow understanding and argument on which to decide the RCC was not founded by Christ.

if you are waiting until you UNDERSTAND everything that the RCC teaches before you convert, you will never convert because faith precedes knowledge and understanding.
 
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