Mormon Missionaries at Mass Sat. Night

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Isaac, I don’t know why people would join a different faith if they would feel bad around the people with a different faith. To feel good around people and see that the people are great and good people who have the peace of christ inside them would be a draw to want to know more regardless of the faith.
Salesmanship 101.

The elders are on-message, selling a product. There are certain things that a successful salesman must do, among them LOOK happy and successful, even if he isn’t.

This is demeaning. Thank God we Catholics don’t need to sell our religion door-to-door like the Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses do. I wonder if they ever bump into each other out there on the sidewalks, the Mormons and JWs, and get into arguments about which religion is best.
 
Living in the western US, I have had many contacts with Mormons…some good, some less good. The most interesting was on a group trip through Utah. Being interested in history I insisted we visit the Mormon headquarters.
On the tour, the guide asked us our religion, about half were Catholic, some Protestants and one family rather pointedly agnostic, with one “Saint” among us.
It came as a big surprise to the the majority when the guide told us that the Catholic and Mormon churches were “almost the same”. He didn’t expand upon this.
The only time I’ve attended service in a Mormon church was a funeral that was followed by burial in a Catholic cemetery. I once observed some Mormon Boy Scouts, identifyable by their religious medals, in the front pew of a Catholic Church on Scout Sunday. There were Jewish, Moslem and Buddhist Scouts attending that Mass as well.
 
Isaac, I don’t know why people would join a different faith if they would feel bad around the people with a different faith. To feel good around people and see that the people are great and good people who have the peace of christ inside them would be a draw to want to know more regardless of the faith.
Well, of course. Most people aren’t actually all that bad but everyone can get on someone’s bad side and some people have a tendency to get on everyone’s bad side. Yet other people tend to see the bad side of everyone rather than the good. I see a lot of good in Mormonism and in the people. I do not have a grudge against the church or any member of it. I love the majority of members I’ve come across. I just don’t love the history of the religion because I believe the truth is kept from the members, but that is being discussed in other threads and need not come into this one.
I knew about the devil’s appearance from the very beginning. That made the most sense to me.
This may be the case, but missionaries are not supposed to teach that part of the first vision - it gets into areas of the theology that missionaries don’t have access to clear answers about. Missionaries are only allowed to read certain books while on their mission so as to “avoid deception” by learning deeper doctrine and history of the church. While at the MTC, missionaires go through the temple every week so they will become accustomed to the strangeness of it. My temple president told me not to ask any man questions about the temple ceremonies because the answers are intended to come from God. From what I have felt, God seems to have told me they were all wrong, but that is just my own experience. I’m human, so I’m prone to error. I feel in every respect that it was a sin to take part in them.
 
I was talking to a lady last week who told me that she was a born and raised a Southern Baptist but converted to the Catholic Church two years ago. She was always afraid to even enter a Catholic Church because she was taught growing up that Catholic Churches were houses of Satan and you would become defiled by even stepping foot inside one. This by the way, is the exact same belief the Pharisees held and Jesus condemned!

One day she decided to go to a Catholic Church because she wanted to get some pamphlets on praying the Rosary. When she pulled in the parking lot she became scared and decided to leave, but suddenly her car wouldn’t start so she decided to go ahead and go in.

When she came out she was now worried because she knew she would have to call her husband and tell him where she was, but when she tried to start her car, it started right up and she never had that problem again.
 
Salesmanship 101.

The elders are on-message, selling a product. There are certain things that a successful salesman must do, among them LOOK happy and successful, even if he isn’t.
Thank you for the generalization. However, this is not the case. As the thread relates the missionaries were not selling any products. They just sat in the back and observed.
 
Missionaries are only allowed to read certain books while on their mission so as to “avoid deception” by learning deeper doctrine and history of the church. While at the MTC, missionaires go through the temple every week so they will become accustomed to the strangeness of it. My temple president told me not to ask any man questions about the temple ceremonies because the answers are intended to come from God.
I thought it would be good to clarify that missionaries rarely get a chance to go to the temple after leaving the MTC, even if they are on a mission where the temple is nearby. Investigators often ask “strange” questions, many of which are about the temple. If a missionary cannot go back to the temple in order to refresh their memory about these things, they cannot possibly give a clear answer to such questions. In that way, elders can only provide testimony to feelings they felt while in the temple.
 
Two things about what you’ve written here.

First, no, it is not a sin, mortal or venial, for a Catholic to go into a different church.

Second, it is not likely that you were a “good Catholic as a boy.”
I went to Mass every Sunday and went to confession once a month. And I remember eating fish and chips on Friday. Fish and chips was the only fish meal I could stomach. But we never celebrated these other things like feasts, lent etc. But my father was an usher during high mass until he stopped going to Mass. And I went to catechism until I made my confirmation.

Not bad…and then when I was 16, I began to go to go back to church and attend the early mass on sunday, the 7.00 Mass.
 
Hey Isaac! Why are you a regular member of the forum and I am still a new member of the forum and I have more posts than you? Strange.
 
I am always glad when people of other faiths come to mass, no matter what their motives. Most people have very strange ideas of what goes on at mass. One lady from work that I invited to mass answered “I can’t go to mass - I don’t own a black robe.”

Many have the strange idea that Catholicism is totally Marian-centered. So they think that the mass is about Mary. This was the attitude of my daughter’s in-laws (Presbyterians) who agreed, with some prodding, to attend mass with us one Sunday.

They were genuinely surprised that there was no Mary-worship and that the mass is totally centered on Christ. The MIL remarked that the prayers were beautiful. That can only be a good thing.

God bless 'em,
Paul
 
Hey Isaac! Why are you a regular member of the forum and I am still a new member of the forum and I have more posts than you? Strange.
Probably because I’ve been on the site longer than you have. I’ve just been away for about a year.
 
Hey Isaac! Why are you a regular member of the forum and I am still a new member of the forum and I have more posts than you? Strange.
You are a new member for I believe 30 days after you join no matter how many you have.
 
As long as they weren’t trying to convert anyone mormons are welcome at Mass. I routinely invite them. I have travelled a lot and love the variety of cultural expressions found in the Catholic faith.
 
Thank you for the generalization. However, this is not the case. As the thread relates the missionaries were not selling any products. They just sat in the back and observed.
Fine, but this, which you wrote, is specifically what I was responding to:

““Isaac, I don’t know why people would join a different faith if they would feel bad around the people with a different faith. To feel good around people and see that the people are great and good people who have the peace of christ inside them would be a draw to want to know more regardless of the faith.””

I wasn’t making any judgement about the particular missionaries at Mass. However, it bears noting that they were in uniform, and therefore ready for action.
 
I went to Mass every Sunday and went to confession once a month. And I remember eating fish and chips on Friday. Fish and chips was the only fish meal I could stomach. But we never celebrated these other things like feasts, lent etc. But my father was an usher during high mass until he stopped going to Mass. And I went to catechism until I made my confirmation.

Not bad…and then when I was 16, I began to go to go back to church and attend the early mass on sunday, the 7.00 Mass.
Well, Mormon friend, going to Mass and eating fish sticks on Friday isn’t what constitutes a “good” Catholic, which you would know very well if you’d ever been one. I’m sorry to be so blunt, but I can’t think of a nicer way to put this. You’ve described yourself as having been a “good” Catholic, but done so only in terms of having been a regular at Mass. It appears, based on your own description, that you missed the entire point of the Christian religion. The religion is about the person of Jesus Christ, and his saving work in the hearts of men.

It seems very possible that you were a going-thru-the-motions type of Catholic. You may never have had a personal, heart to heart meeting with Jesus the Savior. And if this is the case, then you were not a “good” Catholic in the truest possible sense of that. This is why you fell into a false religion. You were never truly a member of Catholic religion in spite of your Baptism, confirmation, or Mass attentance, or adherence to dietary regulations. If you had been, Mormonism would never have held any attraction for you. I have never met anyone who, being properly catechised and formed into the Catholic faith, could conceive of leaving it for something so much less as Mormonism, or any of the other cults or sects.
 
I wasn’t making any judgement about the particular missionaries at Mass. However, it bears noting that they were in uniform, and therefore ready for action.
The missionaries are always “in uniform,” during the period of time that they are officially on their mission. That is their fulltime job, during that period of time. They can’t release themselves from it. They only get released from it when they are officially released at the end of their missions.

zerinus
 
Well, Mormon friend, going to Mass and eating fish sticks on Friday isn’t what constitutes a “good” Catholic, which you would know very well if you’d ever been one. I’m sorry to be so blunt, but I can’t think of a nicer way to put this. You’ve described yourself as having been a “good” Catholic, but done so only in terms of having been a regular at Mass. It appears, based on your own description, that you missed the entire point of the Christian religion. The religion is about the person of Jesus Christ, and his saving work in the hearts of men.

It seems very possible that you were a going-thru-the-motions type of Catholic. You may never have had a personal, heart to heart meeting with Jesus the Savior. And if this is the case, then you were not a “good” Catholic in the truest possible sense of that. This is why you fell into a false religion. You were never truly a member of Catholic religion in spite of your Baptism, confirmation, or Mass attentance, or adherence to dietary regulations. If you had been, Mormonism would never have held any attraction for you. I have never met anyone who, being properly catechised and formed into the Catholic faith, could conceive of leaving it for something so much less as Mormonism, or any of the other cults or sects.
Another possible explanation is that he discovered that he had been a part of an apostate religion; and he looked for and found the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ, which is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; and he found his “personal, heart to heart meeting with Jesus the Savior” in that Restored Church, which he never found nor could have found in the apostate one which he was lucky enough to leave behind.

zerinus
 
The missionaries are always “in uniform,” during the period of time that they are officially on their mission. That is their fulltime job, during that period of time. They can’t release themselves from it. They only get released from it when they are officially released at the end of their missions.

zerinus
Thanks, Zerinus. I knew that. I follow the email accounts of two missionaries in south America, the sons of my fiance’s sister. The fiance’s oldest son spent 2 years missionarying in Mexico after his Army service last year, and I know him well.

That is why I made the comment that I did to why me. He seemed to think that the missionaries were at Mass in some sort of non-sales status. The fact is, missionaries are always “on.” They may be at Mass for a variety of reasons, including to inform themselves about the Mass. But the fundamental reason they are there is because they’re looking for the weak-kneed and gullible.

Still, they are welcome. The Lord works in many wonderful ways, and I’m certain that missionaries have had seeds planted during their visits to Catholic churches that grew into beautiful trees in later years. why me mentioned being upset at a program on EWTN’s Journey Home that featured an ex-Mormon. I remember that program from a few months ago. As I recall, this man served his mission in Austrailia. He said it was through contacts with Catholics there that he first started having doubts about the Mormon religion. So the missionary river flows in both directions.
 
Another possible explanation is that he discovered that he had been a part of an apostate religion; and he looked for and found the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ, which is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; and he found his “personal, heart to heart meeting with Jesus the Savior” in that Restored Church, which he never found nor could have found in the apostate one which he was lucky enough to leave behind.

zerinus
Ah, comes Zerinus, riding the horse (or is it a deer?) known as The Great Apostasy.

We’re still waiting for Zerinus’ testimony. He’s so full of facts and figgers which he thinks “prove” that Mormonism is “true” but we’ve never heard him speak of a miracle of God’s grace in his life.

He’s quick to speak up for others, though. Good heavens, poor why me hasn’t even had time to compose his own reply, and here arrives Zerinus giving why me’s testimony for him. Nice.
 
Another possible explanation is that he discovered that he had been a part of an apostate religion; and he looked for and found the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ, which is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; and he found his “personal, heart to heart meeting with Jesus the Savior” in that Restored Church, which he never found nor could have found in the apostate one which he was lucky enough to leave behind.

zerinus
Zerinus, I doubt that you’ll really give my post any thought simply dismissing it out of hand, however I feel the need to say that your accusation that the Catholic Church is an “apostate religion” is shocking. The whole concept of a “Great Apostatsy” in the first place is shocking - and why? Because the Church cannot perish.

Catholig
 
Another possible explanation is that he discovered that he had been a part of an apostate religion; and he looked for and found the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ, which is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; and he found his “personal, heart to heart meeting with Jesus the Savior” in that Restored Church, which he never found nor could have found in the apostate one which he was lucky enough to leave behind.

zerinus
You’ve got to remember that Zerinus is a programmed LDS aparatchik who is hard-wired to do the Salt Lake Temple polka whenever anyone expresses any doubt about the Mormon cult. He has only been popping up srelectively lately, he’s taken some pretty good lumps at the hands of certain posters. Why Me puzzles me, he claims to be Catholic but I think that he’s a closet Mormon.
 
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