God bless Christians (and non-Christians for that matter).
But seriously, if there is ‘truth’ in a religion, it is ‘truth’ whether or not it makes sense to me, or fits my own limited, human desires and knowledge and personal ‘choice’ of what I think '‘makes sense to me’–as though “I” am the only person on earth and if I don’t get it, well, it just ‘can’t be so’.
So just as a general well-wishing, pray long and hard about whether you (general you, not directed specifically at anyone) want to do God’s will, whether or not it makes ‘sense’ to you, or whether you want to pick what ‘makes sense’ to you and then demand that God accommodate to it.
I find that religions which seem to offer ‘all the answers’ appear to do so simply to those who don’t ask ‘all’ the questions. When a question comes up which hadn’t been ‘asked’, or when somebody comes up with a different answer, it comes as a shock. How easy it is to go with the pleasant, the reassuring, the ‘sensible’, the easy way.
Trouble is, throughout Scripture and throughout the history of the church, the ‘easy’ way is never really all that easy. There is always a ‘yoke’; there is always a cross.
Too many want to bypass the idea that they need a personal cross. Oh, they’re more than ready to accept Jesus’s cross–because He’s “done it” and they can just relax, bound for heaven. Everything is optional, pretty much; pick and choose, go through the cafeteria, don’t like Sunday service? Don’t have to go. Don’t like hell-fire and brimstone? Don’t need to hear it. etc. etc.
Imagine the idea that our cross might just, possibly, have to do with rejecting something that keeps us from God. The world, the flesh, and the devil. . .the unholy three. Feeling uncomfortable about sexual sin? The world tells us, “Relax, if you don’t think it’s sinful, it isn’t.”
Christ tells us, “Take up your cross and follow me.”
Which is easier? I think you know the answer. Which is right? Again, I think you know the answer. And those answers differ, don’t they?
Who will you choose to follow: Christ and His Church, or those who want Christ but on their terms, God love them? Some people may find Christ outside the Catholic Church (God bless them), but why make things harder than they need to be? I know they want to fully know God, these wonderful people who are a part of the body of Christ and whom we love deeply as brothers and sisters.
I extend the hands of welcome to all, Catholic, nondenominational, non-Catholic Christian “other”, nonChristian. I know there isn’t an ‘easy’ way to say, “I firmly believe and trust in Christ and His Church” without the obvious inference that any ‘other’ church or belief is wrong in some way. But heck, every one of us is ‘wrong’ at one time or another and it doesn’t make us stupid, or unworthy, or anything like that. It makes us human. We need God’s help. Lately I know my fellow Christians have become more aware that there is more that ‘unites’ us than divides us, and as the Devil is well aware, he is using that consciousness to try to bring out the ‘division’. He’s trying to make each ‘group’ more suspicious of the other, more entrenched in holding onto grudges, because he is afraid that if people let go of the prejudice that has long existed by Protestant denominations toward the Catholic faith (not individual Protestants and individual Catholics, mind you), they would indeed find the eternal truth of Catholicism and we would be a united force for good the like of which the world has not yet seen and cannot imagine.