Humbly noted, Melchior.
But I also would recommend you read Holy Mother Church’s historical position on this.
The book “
What is Liberalism?” is the same one I recommended to Brother JR.
Chiefly among these religious duties is to love our neighbor as ourselves. This means first and foremost the corporal and spiritual works of mercy, the latter being more important.
Our Lord said “he who has ears to hear, let him hear.”
He did not mince words. He did not tell people why their current lives were admirable with seeds of truth but could be improved if they wanted to listen to Him.
He told us, point blank and frankly, that He is the ONLY way to the Father and to life everlasting. Take it or leave it.
Now I can agree that there is a great deal to be said about tact, humility and kindness.
There is a gentleness - at times - to be taken. But if some people don’t like to hear that our Lord is the only way, and through his Church (his one faith) the only way, it is ultimately and unfortunately their loss.
Lead first with all kindness and gentleness. If they should obstinately persist in sin or heresy, a more stern approach is necessary.
If they still persist, shake the dust from your feet and move on our Lord said.
The book that you’re recommending has to be read with great caution. I read. It’s a good book. However, it is not an authoritative representation of the Church. The only authoritative presentation of the Church is the one that comes from the Church herself and from those who conform to what the Church has to say for and about herself.
As to conversions, remember what I said. One has to look at the totality of Christian Tradition. It is not enough to look at scripture. That’s a very Protestant approach, one which Catholics should always avoid. Scripture in isolation from the Magisterium and Sacred Tradition can be and often is very confusing.
One cannot just recommend that people read scripture. One has to recommend the whole… Read Sacred Scripture, read about the missionary tradition of the Church and read what the current Magisterium has to say on the subject. Always keep in mind that the last word always belongs to the Magisterium.
Only the Magisterium has the authority to interpret and apply scripture for the general population. We don do this for us, but not for other Catholics. For other Catholics, we must give them what the Magisterium says, be it about scripture or something else.
For this particular subject, read the scriptures, the missionary tradition of the Church and what the current Magisterium has to say about missionary activity and about the target population that you want to convert. Then use the means and methods that the Magisterium lays down for us.
The methods and means may not be the solution. They may not work. However, we are not judged by what works or does not work. God will judge us by our fidelity to His Church and our obedience to Peter.
Also, bear in mind that it’s not just a matter of telling non-Christians that Jesus is Lord and Savior. Any non-Christian who has gone to school beyond 4th grade knows World History. Therefore, he knows Christianity’s claims regarding Christ. If that’s all that has to be said and done, the we can save our breadth. People have read about it in school.
We must remember that these are people of faith or skeptics. Either way, they need time to wrap their head around what Christians profess. The person of faith does not want to do what may be the wrong thing to do. This is good. We don’t want people to act contrary to their conscience. Such an action would offend God, because it means that the person could care less whether something is right or wrong.
The skeptic does not want to be sucked into what may be a crutch. There is such a thing as toxic faith, when religious beliefs are a crutch, not a way of life. He needs to see the faith lived day after day by those who are good role models. All of us are called to be good role models.
hudson;10287704:
The thing is, he atleast told them the truth. It was up to them if they denied this truth. They would then be judged on that denial of the son of God. What it sounds like to me is now days we are told to not to even proclaim the truth as revealed by god that subsists in its fullness in the Catholic Church.
This has never been said to us. What has been said to us is that there is a right way and a wrong way of doing it. We are being told how the Church wants us to go about it and we’re resisting. Which makes it look like we need to be converted to Catholicism first.
If we who are Catholic are resisting what the Holy See is telling us, how can we convince anyone to come into communion with Peter and to accept a faith that is built on the faith of Peter?
For this reason, St. Francis and St. Dominic told their friars that they were not to preach in places where the bishop or the pope told them not to preach, regardless of the need. Because without obedience to authority, their preaching would be hypocritical. They would be asking others to submit to a Church that they disobeyed.
Everyone remember this: avoid the Protestant approach to any question of faith, morals and Christian duty. We have already seen that it has not worked for our Protestant brothers and sisters. It is not sola scriptura. There is a tradition and there is a pope. The only one who can authoritatively interpret scripture and who can authoritatively tell us what is and is not Tradition is the pope.
Don’t just whip out a bible and start telling people how to fulfill their Christian obligations without consulting with the Magisterium’s statements.