Judgemental Protestants

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Not sure where you are posting from but in the south (USA) there is anti Catholicism. It is pride or ignorance that motivates protestants so try not to take it personally. Remember you have Truth on your side so do your best to proclaim that Truth as best you can.
Dh grew up in a Baptist church but practices no religion now, though he does attend Christmas Mass with me. We grew up in the Midwest and he can’t recall ever hearing Catholic bashing, though his mom sounded displeased when I told her we were having our marriage convalidated in the Catholic Church. I always had a feeling she was opposed to Catholicism but she never said anything.
 
Welcome home! Dive into your faith and you will never once be tempted to leave again. I made the conscious decision to defend the faith onYouTube. I am now “officially” going to hell, demon-possessed, pagan, and even worse: I follow “Man-made traditions.” The non-denominational groups are the most judgmental and hate-filled. You do not see this from mainline denominations.

We know who our true brothers and sisters are, when they maintain their professed love of us, no matter our choice.
I used to go to Celebrate Recovery meetings at a non- denominational church where all the group members were Protestants of some kind or another. With the exception of a couple VERY mild snarky comments from a former Catholic woman who now goes to that church, I heard nothing derogatory. And in her case it finally came out that she was upset because she was divorced, remarried and not allowed to receive Communion.
 
My decision to return to Catholicism has been met with such hateful judgement that literally has left me feeling sick.
I
That sucks.

If I may, I offer you (as a protestant) my happiness and joy that you are continuing your journey in faith toward Christ and Him crucified.

May God bless you, and may God keep you.
 
So, I’ve recently made the decision to return to Catholicism after 15 years of being away. I’ve spent the last 11 years in a non-denominational church. My decision to return to Catholicism has been met with such hateful judgement that literally has left me feeling sick.
I can’t believe a church would be so adamantly hateful towards brothers and sisters inChrist.
Has anyone else encountered such opposition?
I feel such peace since I decided to return but am so sick of the people who are against me.
While I acknowledge this exists it is not because they are Protestants or non-denominational but because they are human beings. I might also point out that this same hateful attitude also exists in reverse as is evidenced by some of our Catholic posters on this site. Should not Christ and His love be more than sufficient to to bind us together so that we can at least get along and show respect for each other and our beliefs.

“In essentials, unity; in non-essentials, liberty; in all things, charity.”― Augustine of Hippo
 
I respectfully disagree. My husband and his family are non-denoms and they are very kind and loving and acceptant of my faith. They don’t want to become catholic, but they don’t put me down for it.

Now the Baptists (in my experience) are a whole nother issue. :o
Same thing here… Me and my family are non-denominational and have no issue with my wife and in-laws being Catholic and vice versa.

I never saw Catholics as anyone but other fellow Christians. Only once I started going to Mass with my wife did I realize that the feeling (for some Catholics) isn’t mutual. I’ve run into some Catholics that have the same beliefs about non-Catholics that the “judgmental Protestants” in your OP have, that all non-Catholics are basically hell bound and not brothers and sisters.
 
I live in the South and my cousins go to a small Baptist church where they have been taught the worst misinformation about the Catholic Church. They do not believe I am Christian, they think I am going to hell and they think the Pope is the anti-Christ, etc.

When I told them my mother had been baptized they were thrilled until I added it was in the Catholic Church. Yeah, their enthusiasm dropped off then.

My biggest problem with my cousins is they are always trying to convert me by showing me recordings of their mission trips to the Dominican Republic where they go to convince Catholics their faith is evil.

When my mother died last year two of my cousins said they couldn’t get off work to come to her funeral and the two who said they would come showed up an hour late and claimed they were confused on the time of the Mass. I have tried to give them the benefit of the doubt about that and I have resolved to have no hard feelings about it but I was so disappointed they were not there for two reasons: One, I really wanted to have some blood relatives with me at my mother’s funeral, but because they were late I did not; and two, I was hoping if they saw a Mass they would realize it is not the abomination they think it is.

My mother has now been dead for a year and a half and I have not seen my cousins since her death. They have scheduled dinner with me four times but every time something “came up” at the last minute and they canceled. I figured I would not likely see them again. They are not comfortable in my house because it is decorated in a nice Catholic style. The last time I had them over (for my mother’s last Christmas) one of them would not eat my food.

They are the only relatives I have near by and it hurts that they are so rejecting of me because of my faith.
 
Idk about that. With all respect and I do know your posts so I dont mean you in this matter. But I again feel in this forum Protestants are numerous times accused of being heretics and rejecting the one true faith and even one quoted to me a Church father saying we are not going to heaven (maybe not his words, but he quoted it none the less). So honestly my whole family in law are Catholic and I never got that idea from them. I prefer not to believe this is the case but posters in this forum makes it hard for me. Just a thought, maybe real world is different but on this forum there are more subjective Protestant bashing then anything else (yea we see it). But then again it’s a Catholic forum 🙂
Ditto, I basically ran into the same thing. I didn’t need a quote from a church Father though, I basically had one tell me such.
 
So, I’ve recently made the decision to return to Catholicism after 15 years of being away. I’ve spent the last 11 years in a non-denominational church. My decision to return to Catholicism has been met with such hateful judgement that literally has left me feeling sick.
I can’t believe a church would be so adamantly hateful towards brothers and sisters inChrist.
Has anyone else encountered such opposition?
I feel such peace since I decided to return but am so sick of the people who are against me.
This works both ways Protestant-Catholic.

The thing is, this current culture at large cannot stand truth. I’m not talking about any specific truth, but even the concept that truth exists.
Whether or not a convert is objectively right about something, if you take a stand that makes a truth claim, it becomes an occasion for hatred somehow.

It seems the most offensive thing a person can do in this age of indifference and relativism is, take a firm stand. A conversion experience like you have is taking a stand.

Many people are stuck in indifference, even if they are churchgoers. Conversion scares them, unless someone is converting to their religion.
 
So, I’ve recently made the decision to return to Catholicism after 15 years of being away. I’ve spent the last 11 years in a non-denominational church. My decision to return to Catholicism has been met with such hateful judgement that literally has left me feeling sick.
I can’t believe a church would be so adamantly hateful towards brothers and sisters inChrist.
Has anyone else encountered such opposition?
I feel such peace since I decided to return but am so sick of the people who are against me.
I would have to imagine that the root problem is a misapplication of the idea of “exercising tough love”, “loving the sinner but hating the sin”, etc.
 
??? I do not understand these blanket statement:
What to you think it is like for an Italian America , living in an Italian neighborhood, with grandparents still alive, and with relatives in the Priesthood, to leave the Catholic faith?
I can only speak for myself, of course, and no other poster; but the statement you quoted seems pretty fair to me: “Just tends to be worse with the protestant fundamentalists” – note, that doesn’t say Protestants in general, but specifically fundamentalists.
 
??? I do not understand these blanket statement:
What to you think it is like for an Italian America , living in an Italian neighborhood, with grandparents still alive, and with relatives in the Priesthood, to leave the Catholic faith?
I understand this totally being from a large Italian family! Family members become very worried about another leaving the Church. The Church is very important to my family and the concern would be out of love.
 
I would have to imagine that the root problem is a misapplication of the idea of “exercising tough love”, “loving the sinner but hating the sin”, etc.
I honestly do not think many people all over know the difference with “loving the sinner but hating the sin”.
 
I honestly do not think many people all over know the difference with “loving the sinner but hating the sin”.
I agree it’s a problem. I hate to say, but I think the older I get the more I learn that it can be a problem for Catholics as well as Protestants.
 
So, I’ve recently made the decision to return to Catholicism after 15 years of being away. I’ve spent the last 11 years in a non-denominational church. My decision to return to Catholicism has been met with such hateful judgement that literally has left me feeling sick.
I can’t believe a church would be so adamantly hateful towards brothers and sisters inChrist.
Has anyone else encountered such opposition?
I feel such peace since I decided to return but am so sick of the people who are against me.
Welcome home to the house of sinners redeemed in Christ, who fall daily and who live among the saints and holy when we get back up, dust ourselves off and persist in the journey of Love in Christ.

I have lost some dear and close friendships to the non-denominational church’s. Upon attending some of their services, at the invitation of my close childhood friends. I was alarmed how such anti-Catholic rhetoric was preached from the pulpit.

To make a long story short, My friends explained to me, that they were informed by their non-denominational Pastor, to refrain from associating with me about Catholicism and biblical subjects. One explained to me, that he could still be my friend, but he will not engage with me on religious subjects.

I am of the opinion and experience, that it isn’t the people who attend non-denominational church’s who are anti-Catholic. The anti-Catholic (root) rhetoric is preached and taught to them from their leadership, that trickles down, one sided view, and convincing to the hearer and audiences who attend these non-denominational bible study church’s.

I reflected about this many times, and never once heard any anti-Protestant or anti-non-Catholic rhetoric in a Catholic Liturgy. I always wondered why, non-Catholics spend so much time preaching and teaching anti-Catholic subjects to their members, instead of preaching and teaching on the mysteries of Christ?

Peace be with you
 
Welcome home to the house of sinners redeemed in Christ, who fall daily and who live among the saints and holy when we get back up, dust ourselves off and persist in the journey of Love in Christ.

I have lost some dear and close friendships to the non-denominational church’s. Upon attending some of their services, at the invitation of my close childhood friends. I was alarmed how such anti-Catholic rhetoric was preached from the pulpit.

To make a long story short, My friends explained to me, that they were informed by their non-denominational Pastor, to refrain from associating with me about Catholicism and biblical subjects. One explained to me, that he could still be my friend, but he will not engage with me on religious subjects.

I am of the opinion and experience, that it isn’t the people who attend non-denominational church’s who are anti-Catholic. The anti-Catholic (root) rhetoric is preached and taught to them from their leadership, that trickles down, one sided view, and convincing to the hearer and audiences who attend these non-denominational bible study church’s.

I reflected about this many times, and never once heard any anti-Protestant or anti-non-Catholic rhetoric in a Catholic Liturgy. I always wondered why, non-Catholics spend so much time preaching and teaching anti-Catholic subjects to their members, instead of preaching and teaching on the mysteries of Christ?

Peace be with you
That is a pretty broad brush that you’re painting all non-denominational with. I must be the lucky one who has never stepped foot into a non-denominational church that has been anti Catholic at all.

I grew up learning that Catholics were part of the same family as me. I didn’t even realize that there were some Catholics that believed I was “un-saved” since, even though a Christian, I’m not Catholic. That kind of blew me away.
 
That is a pretty broad brush that you’re painting all non-denominational with. I must be the lucky one who has never stepped foot into a non-denominational church that has been anti Catholic at all.

I grew up learning that Catholics were part of the same family as me. I didn’t even realize that there were some Catholics that believed I was “un-saved” since, even though a Christian, I’m not Catholic. That kind of blew me away.
You must be that lucky one. I always hear in those churches
 
You must be that lucky one. I always hear in those churches
Ya, weird. My wife enjoys going to my church the couple times a year we go back home. I don’t think she’d like it if it were anti-Catholic. 🤷
 
that is a pretty broad brush that you’re painting all non-denominational with. I must be the lucky one who has never stepped foot into a non-denominational church that has been anti catholic at all.

I grew up learning that catholics were part of the same family as me. I didn’t even realize that there were some catholics that believed i was “un-saved” since, even though a christian, i’m not catholic. That kind of blew me away.
Your answer here echoes my experience completely. And to be informed that since I am not a Catholic I am not saved is an uneffective method of winning me over since I know in my heart that is completely false. It makes me wonder what all else might be false.
 
Your answer here echoes my experience completely. And to be informed that since I am not a Catholic I am not saved is an uneffective method of winning me over since I know in my heart that is completely false. It makes me wonder what all else might be false.
Yeah, i wonder about that with Protestants too. How much else is false?
 
That is a pretty broad brush that you’re painting all non-denominational with. I must be the lucky one who has never stepped foot into a non-denominational church that has been anti Catholic at all.
I think it largely is a matter of what counts as anti-Catholic. If you discuss that question with two people, one a traditionalist Catholic and one a Protestant (whatever denomination) you’ll get very different responses.
 
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