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amal95
Guest
Well, I’m in NJ, too.…I have to wonder why people on this board consistently identify Protestants as a whole with extreme fundamentalists. I grew up around fundamentalists, so I certainly know they exist and are a significant part of the religious landscape. But they aren’t a majority of Protestants (not the kind who use the KJV and think Catholics aren’t Christians–“fundamentalists” as the media defines them may possibly be, or at least close to half). Furthermore, most Catholics live in parts of the country where fundamentalists are not numerous. I grew up in a very fundamentalist region (East Tennessee), but there were hardly any Catholics there. Now I live in a region where there are lots of Catholics (New Jersey), but there are hardly any fundamentalists. These are not populations that generally live in large numbers side by side. So why do most Catholics on this board identify Protestants overwhelmingly with fundamentalists?..
In Christ,
Edwin
In NJ, though I’m sure the number of fundamentalist vs. other protestants isn’t high, they are still significant, enough so that myself and other catholics know many who’ve converted to those. They wouldn’t be of the type of extreme fundamentalist that I think you’re referring to, though. The fact is the large non-denom type churches are really evangelistic, to their credit, but also in an anticatholic way, not to their credit, in that they make a point of converting fallen-awy catholics who do not know their faith and are led away by the Fundamentalist errors of Catholic teachings.