Let me ask you a question;
Wouldn’t you say that it is your hope that all n-C’s would conform their minds to the teaching of the CC? If so, were I to become Catholic, would that be Church-hopping? Or would you consider a good decision on my part. I ask this because, while not mentioned in my hypothetical, perhaps only one or two communions would I consider - Catholic, and perhaps a conservative Anglican setting.
Jon
This question is very intriguing. Looking back, this is exactly what I was considering when I abandoned atheism/agnosticism a couple of years ago. At first, I shopped religions and quickly came to the conclusion that Christianity was the true religion. Then I shopped denominations and it occurred to me that I was looking at all of them as being on par with each other.
This didn’t work for me because I knew there was only one objective truth. Jesus established His Church and that Church established the canon of scripture. For me it became an easy choice and this is what actually went through my head: if I’m going to commit to Christianity, why wouldn’t I go OEM (I’m into cars, this means ‘original equipment manufacturer’ for those who don’t know)? Everything else is aftermarket IMHO and if the original Church established by Christ was good enough for Him, then it was good enough for me.
So the “shopping around” aspect turned into really a choice of one “vehicle” with everything else being nothing more than “accessories and body kits” meant to alter the appearance of the one available vehicle to match personal taste.
I see where someone of a different faith tradition would hold on so dearly to what they believe because they see it as being in alignment with what Christ believes, and it probably is
for the most part. Coming from the perspective of complete and unbiased non-belief, I didn’t have the issue of belief in a particular flavor of Christianity and this is what made it easier for me to make an objective choice.
I suppose the question for me at this point is this: As a function of free will has it boiled down to a human being conforming their mind to the Church as opposed to one conforming the Church to their mind and is this one of the great divides between Catholicism (including the Eastern Churches) and Protestantism? If a Protestant says they are willing to conform their minds to their Church then they must be open to receiving the truth from outside their own opinions. How much more true then is Magisterium backed by Apostolic authority than that of a Church without it?
To answer your questions, Jon, I would say:
- yes, because the Catholic Church is the True Church.
- no, because I see joining the Catholic Church as a return to the origianl intended Church that Christ established for all mankind. Shopping between Protestant Churches, IMHO, is akin to changing rims or getting a new paint job on an already altered version of the original.
- yes, it would be a good decision because it demonstrates obedience to Christ and a rejection of continued rebellion, however slight that rebellion may be. Once we see the truth and acknowledge it as truth we are bound by it.
God bless!