Some Protestants do not believe in the physical presence of Christ in the sacrament
If you’re talking about the Real Presence comment, I was talking specifically about the Catholic understanding of it. As far as I’m aware, no Protestant group believes that the bread and wine literally become the body and blood of Christ, just that Christ is present in some way with it. If you could point me to a Protestant group that does believe in it as we do, then fine, but the closest I know of are Lutherans and Anglicans, who still aren’t quite Catholic enough.
As far as apostolic succession, that to is false. We have a different understanding of what apostolic succession means.
I know, but again, you reject the Catholic and historical understanding of it.
Bear in mind, my comment was made as a Catholic to a Catholic in a discussion about how Protestants differ from Catholic interpretation. Frankly, I wasn’t that concerned about getting into all the little nuances of the dozen or more Protestant interpretations because, as far as I’m aware, none accept either as we do.
No we don’t. We believe in the correct interpretation of scripture.
Ignoring the Protestants who absolutely and unashamedly profess belief in private interpretation as part of their “personal relationship with God”, even the more traditional Protestants ultimately make tradition subject to one’s personal interpretation of the Scripture, because tradition is only accepted on the grounds that it can be found in Scripture. Of course, being found in Scripture is itself contingent on the interpreter being able to get the same interpretation. To quote John Calvin, “[A]ll things our ours.” In other words, you’re still the final authority, but you’re just not willing to admit to it openly.
Granted, I know some Protestants who do submit to a tradition in all ways, but that just leads to a bizarre scenario of, for instance, Reformed Christians yelling “no one is always right” while simultaneously treating the Westminster Confession as always right.