Let me say, first off, that I love the Quakers and their peace testimony.
I come from a mixed Catholic-Protestant heritage (French Canadian, Yankee Puritan), and have been interested in warm relations among all Christians - and, beyond that, among those of every faith community. I have concluded over the years that none of us know all that much about eternal truth,
**Really? You conclude that no one knows much about eternal truth? Did you never meet Christ, did you never see him? Did you never see anyone healed of deadly disease in his name? Did you never meet anyone who was far beyond you in wisdom and holiness? **
that this mammoth and miraculous and mysterious universe is beyond human understanding. All that fortifies my awe before God however. It increases my simple faith rather than undercuts it.
Well, it seems there’s not much to undercut now is there?
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My problem with traditional Catholicism is that it too often has the attitude of years ago: error has no rights. This is the core conviction of all forms of totalitarianism, whether in religion or in politics (e. g., Nazism and Communism). Call it what you will (and it usually is denounced as egotism) but I guess I'm too much of an independent thinker, have read too many Church Fathers (brilliant for their era but naive in light of our knowledge today),
**Really, and what knowlege is it, that you have today? I hope you don’t refer to material possessions as subsitite for God. You call yourself an independent thinker… believe me, I grew up among people who call themselves such. What they have in common is a condescending view of other eras and peoples, and they believe that its better to be searching forever, than to actually find answers. Like, questions matters, but please don’t give the the answer God! Otherwise I am no longer a “free thinker”. Sorry, but how " free" is that? **
have become too well acquainted with Christian history and its cruel chapters, have questioned too many required doctrines (e. g… transubstantiation, Immaculate Conception, papal infallibility in faith and morals) - well, etc.
"Its cruel chapters huh? Have you also gotten acqainted with the cruel chapters of atheistic history? I’ll help you in your study… you only have to look at the last 100 years. Look at Pol Pot, Mao Zedong, Stalin and Hitler. Atheistic-agnostic ideologies that costed millions of lives, far more than all religious wars combined thhrough all of history. I wonder if you are able to see the doctrine of imperialistic relativism from the outside, or are you blinded by its embrace?
Have you ever read C. S. Lewis “The Great Divorce”. There is a great description of “free thinkers” in there
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As for evangelical Protestantism, much of it parallels traditional Catholicism in that it, too, insists that it has all the important answers.
I have attended enough of its worship services to respect its enthusiasm and its sincerity, but have found it full of qustionable teachings along with all sorts of conflicting denominations, those who have infant baptism and those who don’t, those who believe once saved always saved and those who don’t. those who insist upon the rapture and those who don’t - etc,
Do you believe Jesus Christ died for your sins, though? Thats the defining question. Or are you too smart for Jesus Christ? Maybe sin is also an archaic concept? Its clear you are part of progressive ideology… people who believe that we, as human race, are always progressing towards something better. But what if we are loosing our humanity more and more because we have become too smart for God? In my college days I sometimes spent the night listening to young people who were running around drunk, singing about their genitalia. These were agnostic university students. The icing of western culture… From there the word “Monkey party” developed in my vocabulary. All these young people were, by the way, “free thinkers”.
God bless people of every creed, color, culture and country. True religion should humbly seek to build bridges rather than boast that it alone knows and owns the pathway to eternal life.
Do you believe in eternal life? What do you think of it when Jesus said: “Repent and believe in the Gospel. The way is wide that leads to damnation”. He was not a “free thinker” I suppose he would not have been very welcome in your study group.