I have it on good authority that as long as one says the “sinner’s prayer” and “makes a decision for Christ” then all is well for eternity. It doesn’t matter if you said that prayer 36 years ago – never will a question be raised after that. And if you ever doubt your decision and your salvation, the Pastor will tell you: (1) did you pray the sinner’s prayer? (2) did you mean it? were you sincere? (3) God promises salvation to those who believe. do you trust that God honors his promises? If you answer “yes” to 1, 2 and 3, then (4) is a reassurance that you are most definitely “saved”; you just need to rebuke the Devil.
Make the sign of the cross to seal the deal (or not!) on the one and only Sacrament of the Protestant faith (i.e., that would be the Sinner’s Prayer) and you are golden. It doesn’t matter if you live like Lucifer himself the remainder of your life – you are saved. Can I get an “amen”? How about a “preach it sister?” And in fact, it isn’t just a matter of “justification by faith alone” — it is also a matter of “sanctification by faith alone.” Jesus plus nothing. And if you do any works (absent denial that anything is/ was of yourself) …
well then … you have just put your entire eternal destiny at risk. Why? Because it’s all about “double imputation.” Yep, “the same gospel that justifies you, saves you” and be sure to “preach the gospel to yourself every day” and “we preach Christ crucified to both the lost and the saved”. Your sin is imputed to Christ and Christ’s righteousness is imputed to you. You have an “alien righteousness” – no righteousness of yourself. Now as for that “essential” and “non-essential” list, you can find that at 1 Peter 2: 5-12. (Not! Nowhere in the Bible is such a thing and the Protestant denominations themselves cannot agree about it.)
Protestants do not grasp the nuance that Catholics actually do believe in grace alone through faith alone with respect to our initial salvation/ justification/ baptism. What works can an infant or child possibly claim? None at all. It is for sanctification that Catholics believe in a “informed faith” – as in faith working through charity or James’ “faith without works is dead”. But that is probably too nuanced for many Protestants and it does not translate nicely into sound bites. And if you are a Pastor who earns his living as minister of the gospel, well, that is added incentive not to look too closely at Catholic doctrine. Just repeat the anti-Catholic rhetoric. No need to think about it or do any research!
Why? Because the truth of Catholicism can carry a hefty price tag – career, pastorate, family, friends, pension, benefits, reputation. Just ask any of the Protestant pastors, educators, scholars, TV hosts, writers, etc. who converted to Catholicism – what did your conversion cost you? Read some of the testimonies and conversion stories. And while we are asking questions, one might ask how well it pays to write anti-Catholic books, run an anti-Catholic apologetics group or ministry, etc. I hate to be cynical, but if a man’s pay check depends upon holding certain beliefs … he has great incentive to keep eyes closed.
But don’t ya know … it’s all for the good of “saving Catholic souls” … Alleluia! Amen!