J
JustaServant
Guest
Everytime I see this thread I think of American Idol.
Are we taking auditions?
Are we taking auditions?
only the evangelical? Iām sure the āabusesā of the catholic church have prompted just as many (historically probably more) theodicies that have plagued athiestsā¦Atheists take this same approach christosdavid. In other words, āWhy become a Christian, just look at the behavior of Christians?!ā The evangelicalās response is, āDonāt look at me, look to Jesus!ā
So if you want to know what the Church teaches, read the Bible. If you still have questions, read the Catechism.
Here is a nice article on the issue of praying to saints, with a supporting article on intercessory prayer located here, and an article on relics located here.
Hereās what all this reminds me of:I agree with the catechism on relics. Yet to the uniformed Catholic and a vast majority outside of Catholic faith view these as superstitious, morbid, magical, idol worship. Seeing Pope Benedict XVI with Pope John Paul IIās blood is a wonderful expression of the Holy Spiritās infusion into John Paul IIās mortal being and his immortal soul while alive. Thatās how I perceived it. How many had a pagan perspective viewing on TV or even in Vatican Square? Does it matter?
:clapping:Hereās what all this reminds me of:
Catholics are right and true in their Faith, thatās why we have prevailed, prevail, and will prevail. Because itās truth. Protestant and Muslim, donāt you understand you are fighting the Truth? Thatās why you have to fight so hard, because itās tough and futile fighting the truth. You may win a skirmish here or there against a poorly Catachised Catholic, you may blow up a Church or two, you put new jumbotrons in your church, get a new Christian rock band on the charts, but in the endā¦
ā¦We are right.
Tu quoque? Ad hominem?only the evangelical? Iām sure the āabusesā of the catholic church have prompted just as many (historically probably more) theodicies that have plagued athiestsā¦
. If you still have questions, read the Catechism.if you want to know what the Church teaches, read the Bible
Indicative of a complete lack of understanding of what sola scriptura is and means.=PatrickSanDiego;9094480]You know, if personal reading and interpretation of sola scriptura is the purest form, why even have potlucks? ā¦I meanā¦Protestant churches?
We donāt have one.btw: I think the jumbotrons are their idols. lol.
Perhaps.Iām getting snappy, I need to go say a few Hail Marys and Saint Michaels,
Done.forgive me.![]()
JWās do have a type of chain w/ropes amulet that they sometimes give to people doing their door-to-door ministries, but they take it back before they leave or when they are finished talking to you. Why they hand the chain to a person is unknown by me.And imagine all those Jehovahās Witnesses going door to door handing out rosaries.
-Tim-

True. Some of us wear crucifixes.You make some good points OP.
Honestly when I was Protestant I refused to wear such things⦠in fact, my mother, devout Protestant Christian, REFUSED to even have Jesus pictures in her home.
I mean, can we be consistent at least? If youāre going to hate on the idol worship maybe you need to reconsider the image youāre presenting to the world by wearing your Jesus t-shirts, Jesus wrist bands and other merchandise.
But to be fair, not all Protestants wear and/or put up such things in their home.
Jon,Indicative of a complete lack of understanding of what sola scriptura is and means.
We donāt have one.
Perhaps.
Done.
Jon
Some of us have them on our altars - you canāt see it from this old pic of our church, but we have an exquisite silver crucifix that was given to our congregation long ago.True. Some of us wear crucifixes.
Jon
What is the modern sense of Protestant?Some of us have them on our altars - you canāt see it from this old pic of our church, but we have an exquisite silver crucifix that was given to our congregation long ago.
Oh, and please ignore our big āidolā in the center
http://i1050.photobucket.com/albums/s402/delta_dame/interior1930.jpg
Jon, this begs the question - are Lutherans āProtestantā in the modern sense?
I think over the past 500 years, Confessional Lutherans and Catholics have moved closer together, maybe not quite kissing (in a brotherly/sisterly way!) but surely holding hands a bit. At the same time, āmainlineā and liberal protestant churches have moved farther away from both (women being ordained, etc)What is the modern sense of Protestant?
I think Lutherans are my favorite non-Catholic denomination.Just sayinā.
Thanks for the explanation.I think over the past 500 years, Confessional Lutherans and Catholics have moved closer together, maybe not quite kissing (in a brotherly/sisterly way!) but surely holding hands a bit. At the same time, āmainlineā and liberal protestant churches have moved farther away from both (women being ordained, etc)
The Evangelical and Reformed positions on the efficacy of Baptism and Holy Communion are deal-breakers for me. I understand the RCC position on the validity of the Lutheran Eucharist but you would find the ordinary Lutheran aghast at the idea that the Real Presence was merely symbolic.
āProtestantā seems more and more used synonymously with Fundamentalist and Evangelical at least in the media - and also gets attached to the very most liberal churches whose doctrines have only a nodding aquaintance with original doctrines (ELCA). Itās so broad itās nearly useless.
We have this very large crucifix which hangs above the altar.=Stilldreamn;9099131]Some of us have them on our altars - you canāt see it from this old pic of our church, but we have an exquisite silver crucifix that was given to our congregation long ago.
No can do.Oh, and please ignore our big āidolā in the center![]()
Certainly some are, or think of themselves that way. I think my profile kind of says how I feel. Evangelical (in the Lutheran sense) Catholic. Iāve often said here that I would be Catholic before any protestant communion.Jon, this begs the question - are Lutherans āProtestantā in the modern sense?