Reading all these posts made me think.
I am realy super glad to see so many Protestants who have moved closer to the center of christianity(Catholicism) and are striving for ecumenism.

I 100% see these men and women as my brothers and sisters in Christ. I expect to see just as many of them on judgement day, preparing to enter into heaven as I do Catholics. I can’t blame them for believing what they believe. I believe in sacremental life thru apolstolic authority, and if someone led my forefathers into schism in the 1600’s I would hope Jesus would grant me mercy for having done what I thought was right. Being Only if I stayed true to the main philosophies of Christs teachings as so MANY Protestants do. The majority do.
Job was not instituted into a sacremental life by means of apostolic type succession as we’re the Hebrews of old, yet he practiced a type of this. I am not saying at ALL, that Protestantism as a whole should not seek communion along with there new(er) traditions with the bishops and the heir of Peter. I’m saying that seeing the protestant movements back towards sacramental life is a good sign of two things, one being that the schism is starting to heal and two, that the Holy spirit is working in their lives. GOD BLESS THE PROTESTANTS and may the Holy Spirit continue to guide them back, now with their new(er) traditions into communion within the “One, Holy, Apostolic Church”. There is hope for this secular world, and it’s future lies within re-unification of all Christs followers. The Catholic church is indeed apostolic, and is indeed infallible in matters of faith and morals, and is guided into truth, and kept safe from deviation of these truths by the Holy Spirit, BUT that doesn’t mean she is right all the time about how to handle every situation that comes along. Nor is she absolutely best suited to perform evangelism on this new secular world. BUT! She is best suited for being the pillar and bulwark of truth, and of reform for And between Protestants. If I could give advice to any Protestants seeking ecumenism AND unity between denominations, on matters of faith and morals as well as sacremental practices, look to the Catholic church for middle ground. Most(?) protestant denominations are fragments of catholicism and hold the very same truths Catholics do, just not all of them. If you were to add together most(?) Protestant denominations and trimmed the “fat” you would see a community of believers that would look (almost?) exactly like the Catholic church. If that happened, and they came into full communion with the sacrements and the heir of Peter, the new “Catholic” community would benefit so much. If tomorrow we woke up and the Anglicans, Baptists, episcopalians, Lutherans, Pentecostals, wesleyans, presbyterians, Methodists, and all others I forgot were in communion in the One, Holy, universal and Apostolic church, we as a whole could bring so much good into the world.