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Dave_Noonan
Guest
I think Tim Staples could clean up probably 75% of his errors by substituting the word “Evangelical” for “Protestant”. Ideally, CA and other Catholic apologists would simply ban the word “Protestant” from their shows and writing because it would force them to be more truthful and accurate.I am not sure what errors you are having a beef with. Converts like Tim Stables and others will speak to the ideas and beliefs that they knew and grew up with while in Protestant Churches but that doesn’t mean that they are speaking for all Protestants because even they say they aren’t. The background of Tim Stables is going to be much more common than lets say someone from a liberal Protestant background like myself. I had in the Methodist Church the religious ed director who didn’t’ believe in the virgin birth. Denominational liberal Protestantism is much more in the decline and smaller numbers than evangelical/charismatic groups that Tim Stable came from. Plus there is movement from and between Protestant groups as they split and reform etc and so. When I attended non-denominational Charismatic churches, everyone there was an ex-something 99% being Protestant. That is the dilemma of Protestantism. Now may you don’t want to think of yourself as “Protestant” but, if you are not Catholic which as one poster pointed out is monolithic, or Orthodox which has more divisions, then you come out of the reformation in some manner, even if you don’t think so. Usually when the Catholic apologists are addressing things taught in the wide river that never ends of Protestantism, they address things that are most commonly taught and thought of which is going to be in the evangelical/fundamentalist stream of things. Likewise those are the groups that are or can be most anti-Catholics and our Catholic apologist are usually trying to answer some of those charges. Likewise even for the uninformed, unchurched person, their view of even Protestantism is going to shaped by what they see on TV in the roles of Joel Osteen and Joyce Meyers who represent even a small fraction of Protestantism.
Unfortunately though, when apologists like Tim Staples present what they call the “Protestant” position, it’s usually some mishmash of American Evangelicalism often followed by some inaccurate historical information about Martin Luther—who theologically wouldn’t have had that much in common with Evangelical thought—the latter stemming from the Calvinist and/or radical branches of the Reformation.
Because Evangelical/Fundamentalist theology is easiest to critique, the tactic that the Catholic apologists use is to paint all non-Catholics/non-Orthodox with the same Evangelical/fundamentalist broad-brush. That’s just wrong and that’s what I “have a beef” with to answer your question. The tactic is dishonest and contrary to claims that apolgists are people dedicated to finding out and disseminating the truth.