E
Erick_Ybarra
Guest
Hello everybody,
I have come to the Lord Jesus Christ and to know Him through protestantism. I am reared in the baptistic traditions, calvinistic, etc,etc fundamentalism.
I have been reading alot of books by Scott Hahn, looking at the works of Robert Sugenis, Fr Robert Barron, reading books edited by Marcus Grodi, went through the book by Currie Fundamentalist Born Again Catholic, watching episodes of Marcus Grodi, listening to mp3’s on Catholic apologetics, reading the early fathers, etc,etc
Let me first say that, as a protestant, I was never taught the whole “ask Jesus into your heart and pray a little prayer”. I was taught that the offer of forgiveness was find in self-crucifixion for the sake of Jesus Christ. I learned this in a baptist Church. In fact, all of baptistic history teaches this if you read the Confessions of Faith in baptistic history.
I have always been taught that perserverance is required in order to enter the kingdom of God. Good works are what pass us into the Kingdom at the final judgement. I have learned this in a baptist church. And in fact, all baptists have believed this historically. (minus the apostacy of the last century)
I have always been taught that one is under the authority of a Bishop (of a Baptist church). The idea of ecclesiastical authority was big in the baptist churches that I am familiar with.
Therefore, I am simply unaware of the “type” of evangelicalism that often these converts to Catholicism have experienced such as Hahn, Grodi, Currie, etc,etc.
As of Right now, I am still protestant. However, I believe in the Eucharist as a mystery and sacrifice where Jesus’ real flesh and blood are present with us in the elements. I believe that we are justified (at the final judgement) by our deeds (the assumption of faith doesn’t even need to be mentioned, deeds will do). I believe that baptism is a sacrament wherein God is working his miracle of salvation, the forgiveness of sin, through the sacrament of water and the word of God the father, the son, and the Holy Spirit. I believe that it is extremely important to understand Church History and the early Apostolic deposit of faith, and the Creeds. I believe in the liturgy.
I still consider myself a baptist, however. Despite how weird this seems. I see no practice of infant baptism in the NT or the early church. There is only records of later theologians stating there has been traditions since the apostles. However, this is not attested to in any of the apostolic fathers minus ireneuas. Tertullian, who is well aware of the tradition of the Catholic church and the world-wide plants, has no problem in denying infant baptism, much less it being a order of the church.
I believe that one can lose their salvation if they fall away from the faith.
Right now, the barriers between me and coming into the Catholic Church are twofold:
Erick
I have come to the Lord Jesus Christ and to know Him through protestantism. I am reared in the baptistic traditions, calvinistic, etc,etc fundamentalism.
I have been reading alot of books by Scott Hahn, looking at the works of Robert Sugenis, Fr Robert Barron, reading books edited by Marcus Grodi, went through the book by Currie Fundamentalist Born Again Catholic, watching episodes of Marcus Grodi, listening to mp3’s on Catholic apologetics, reading the early fathers, etc,etc
Let me first say that, as a protestant, I was never taught the whole “ask Jesus into your heart and pray a little prayer”. I was taught that the offer of forgiveness was find in self-crucifixion for the sake of Jesus Christ. I learned this in a baptist Church. In fact, all of baptistic history teaches this if you read the Confessions of Faith in baptistic history.
I have always been taught that perserverance is required in order to enter the kingdom of God. Good works are what pass us into the Kingdom at the final judgement. I have learned this in a baptist church. And in fact, all baptists have believed this historically. (minus the apostacy of the last century)
I have always been taught that one is under the authority of a Bishop (of a Baptist church). The idea of ecclesiastical authority was big in the baptist churches that I am familiar with.
Therefore, I am simply unaware of the “type” of evangelicalism that often these converts to Catholicism have experienced such as Hahn, Grodi, Currie, etc,etc.
As of Right now, I am still protestant. However, I believe in the Eucharist as a mystery and sacrifice where Jesus’ real flesh and blood are present with us in the elements. I believe that we are justified (at the final judgement) by our deeds (the assumption of faith doesn’t even need to be mentioned, deeds will do). I believe that baptism is a sacrament wherein God is working his miracle of salvation, the forgiveness of sin, through the sacrament of water and the word of God the father, the son, and the Holy Spirit. I believe that it is extremely important to understand Church History and the early Apostolic deposit of faith, and the Creeds. I believe in the liturgy.
I still consider myself a baptist, however. Despite how weird this seems. I see no practice of infant baptism in the NT or the early church. There is only records of later theologians stating there has been traditions since the apostles. However, this is not attested to in any of the apostolic fathers minus ireneuas. Tertullian, who is well aware of the tradition of the Catholic church and the world-wide plants, has no problem in denying infant baptism, much less it being a order of the church.
I believe that one can lose their salvation if they fall away from the faith.
Right now, the barriers between me and coming into the Catholic Church are twofold:
- I do not see a papacy in the Early Church centuries. There can be no development for the papacy (conceptually) considering it’s claims. For example, the Davidic office, there can be no conceptual development of it during its earthly course prior to the coming of Christ. God spoke to David, established a dynasty with his seed, and the structure was there right from the beginning. There was no conceptual development. However, the papacy, who claims to be an antitype of the Davidic office, has conceptual development well after Peter himself, and even those who succeeded him. This is embarrassingly weak in my view.
- I was raised Catholic, and from my experience, I have seen a lot of members of the Catholic faith who are outwardly ungodly in their life, but attend mass weekly. From the protestant side of things which I become familiar with later in life, our congregations were held accountable to live holy lives, and if we failed to do this, we were disciplined, and even excommunicated by any unrepentant sin.
Erick