Okay. You come from one of the high church denominations. It may be that there is more emphasis on theological study in those denominations. I know what those terms mean now, but not when I was a practicing protestant.
I know from my experience that most folks did not study theology except for seminarians or those who took a real interest and those were few.
Most of the books I read were on deepening one’s spiritual life and how to evangelize. Any Apologetics books I read were Protestant in nature.
We believed in the Virgin birth. Mary was indeed the mother of Jesus who was God.
Did we talk about the Theotokos? Not in those terms. The focus was on Christ. It is not important to talk about the Theotokos when she is considered to be a sinner. Yes, she is called called blessed because God chose her. However, there is no communion of saints, in Evangelical beliefs, so the focus on Mary is just not there.
We understood this.
I think I believed both, based on various verses, but it wasn’t something debated because I had no concept of the Eastern churches and honestly, when you are out on the street Evangelizing, people are not asking you about the Filioque.
Definitely believed in the Trinity.
I had no concept of the development of doctrine. The general belief was this:
- Early Christians from Acts until you go to the Catholic Church
- The CC apostatized and took control of Christianity and caused many abuses, idolatry, etc
- The Protestant Reformation was inspired and supported by God. The reformation brought back the early church
Did Jesus abandon his church? No. The church went through a period of darkness and but Jesus wasd always there.
Yes, I thought they were early Christians. I didn’t read about the early church fathers, so I had no idea when Christians started to call themselves Catholic.
I thought the martyrs were again, generic Christians.
I know this seems like a whole lot of ignorance but my focus was on knowing what the Bible says, avoiding sin and maintaining my relationship with Christ. Everything else was just butter.