Agree! It was a very interesting presentation and you’re right, there would be a great deal to say about each topic touched upon.
Overall, I think the presenter makes some really great points, but also makes some pretty serious errors.
- The presenter doesn’t seem to have a very good grip at all on the Reformation generally speaking, or Sola Scriptura in particular, and then (worse) tries to connect modern evangelicalism as inheritors to the Reformation in ways that are are not accurate or authentic. Note the way he uses the terms Protestant, Reformed and Evangelical almost as if they were interchangeable.
- He’s right that many evangelicals charicature Catholic beliefs, but then he goes on to do exactly the same thing when discussing, for example, the belief that sacraments work “magically.” Generally speaking, he has a poor understanding of the history and development of sacraments and sacramental theology, probably because it doesn’t fit well in his very Platonist/Evangelical theological perspective and thus has never really needed to address it in a serious way.
- You’re right, history is at the core here, and I think the **presenter makes some really excellent points about Catholic misrepresentations of church history and the church fathers. **I have also heard some Catholic portray the church as if it were a worldwide, totalized unity under the pope until 1056, which just doesn’t square at all with actual church history. Some converts to Catholicism that I have met claim to have studied the church fathers as part of their conversion experience, but when you press them on it, you find out that what they’ve actually read are cherry-picked quotes from the church fathers in various compilations (Jergens being a popular one), usually almost exclusively sourced from the Latinate Church. The presenter doesn’t understand the Reformation view of authority and tradition very well at all, but I think actually sums up the Catholic view on authority fairly accurately for someone who isn’t Catholic.
- I thought his remarks on the possibility of Cardinal Newman’s being disillusioned with his conversion to Catholicism to be intriguing, so I will have to do more research on that.
Overall, I think that evangelicals try to do a massive “end run” around
church history–basically ignoring it entirely because a great deal of it supplants their ideas about sacramental theology and worship. So when some evangelicals find a church that at least addresses history (the Catholic Church or Orthodox Churches) they find this very appealing and ultimately compelling. But as I see it, the trend of evangelical conversions to Catholicism in particular is more a matter of people trading
one set of fundamentalisms for a different set of fundamentalisms–agreed, a more logical and better grounded set–but still a fundamentalism.