Lutheran Question

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NorthTexan88

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I just recently started dating/talking to this girl who is a member of tue Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. She knows I’m Catholic and go to church every Sunday, she goes occasionally. We havnt really had that many religios conversation. But I just wanted to know what the WELS position is on the Catholic Church? I know her family is pretty hardcore and just didn’t know what to expect.
 
I just recently started dating/talking to this girl who is a member of tue Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. She knows I’m Catholic and go to church every Sunday, she goes occasionally. We havnt really had that many religios conversation. But I just wanted to know what the WELS position is on the Catholic Church? I know her family is pretty hardcore and just didn’t know what to expect.
WELS Lutherans believe the papacy to be the Antichrist.

I would move along if I were in your place. Faith might not be an issue now, but conflict could arise later, with children in the picture.
 
WELS are very strict, they do teach seriously anti-Catholic things. And, they do not even recognize other Lutheran communions-- you cannot receive communion in the WELS church if you are ELCA or Missouri Synod.

I suggest you find a Catholic girl who will share your beliefs and want to raise Catholic children.

A lapsed WELS might seem OK right now, but when it comes time for marriage and family she will likely re-evaluate her faith situation.
 
As one who has endured many pains and hardships in an interfaith marraige (she is protestant) I would concure with everyone who has said that it is best to find someone of the same faith that you are. It is THE central part of a good Catholic’s life, not like one’s favorite sports team or whether one prefers the color blue over green,
 
My brother switched to Luthern when he got married , but because they had to bring my Mom to church and then go to their church (I lived in another stare) she my SIL decided to switch to Catholic . No big deal to her or my brother.

I see no problem, but I’m a minority here.🙂
 
Hindsight being 20/20 and if I had dating to do “all over again,” the first topics I’d bring up in conversation would be Christ and the practice of my religion.
 
WELS are very strict, they do teach seriously anti-Catholic things. And, they do not even recognize other Lutheran communions-- you cannot receive communion in the WELS church if you are ELCA or Missouri Synod.

I suggest you find a Catholic girl who will share your beliefs and want to raise Catholic children.

A lapsed WELS might seem OK right now, but when it comes time for marriage and family she will likely re-evaluate her faith situation.
Yes, they are against drinking alcoholic beverages,
 
Yes, they are against drinking alcoholic beverages,
That’s news to me. One of the WELS pastors I’ve dealt with has discussed Christianity with a Jewish guy over wine repeatedly. A friend of mine took most, if not all, of their RCIA program and never mentioned such a doctrine.
 
Originally Posted by KenChute
Yes, they are against drinking alcoholic beverages,
That’s news to me. One of the WELS pastors I’ve dealt with has discussed Christianity with a Jewish guy over wine repeatedly. A friend of mine took most, if not all, of their RCIA program and never mentioned such a doctrine.
News to me, too. Here’s what the WELS site says
An appropriate starting place is to allow Scripture to determine whether drinking alcoholic beverages is a sin or if it is something neither commanded nor forbidden, that is, a matter of Christian freedom.
This particular point is not difficult to determine. There is no prohibition in the Bible that declares drinking a sin in and of itself. It would be spiritual arrogance and rank legalism to declare something sinful when the Bible has not done so. And there are quite a few passages that speak of a proper and pleasing use of alcoholic beverages. Whether it be general passages like Proverbs 9:1-5, or Isaiah 55:1, or examples like Christ’s miracle in Cana (John 2:1-11), or Christ’s use of wine in the Last Supper and while instituting the Lord’s Supper, or Paul’s fatherly advice to Timothy (1 Timothy 5:23), the legitimate and proper use of alcoholic drinks is clearly established. It is a matter of Christian freedom, and we have no right to bind another’s conscience on this point.
wels.net/what-we-believe/questions-answers/christian-living/drinking-alcohol

Jon
 
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