K
kellerk
Guest
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, 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.
]Our King is not of this world, His ways are not our ways.Code: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), 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.
Code: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, Over the years I have drawn closest to mainline Protestantism, denominations such as Methodists, Congregationalists, Presbyterians, and Episcopalians which have room for a variety of theological perspectives, where Bible classes welcome divergent views, where there is humility when it comes to matters of doctrine, where conflicting opinions are respected in an atmosphere of :'think and let think'. Finally, isn't it a shame that so many insane wars, so much hatred and bigotry, has been motivated by 'religious' people of various faiths - Christians, Muslims, Jews, and others? I perceive God to be a friend of all those who seriously seek him and seek to serve him, those who love God and one another (as Christ commanded), whatever their faith 'label'. I suspect that God is far more interested in the love we exhibit than in which religious tribe we.belong to. Now, as for Mary, all Christians admire her. Perhaps Protestants went too far in minimizing her. However, this came as a reaction to the way in which Catholicism seemed to deify her, make her basically part of the Godhead by insisting that she - for example - was the one and only person who never sinned. I know that Catholics do not worship Mary, but an alien from another planet would surely think they did after experiencing Catholicism. And why doesn't even one of all those New Testament epistles addressed to early Christians make mention of Mary? Paul and other writers certainly were advising those Christians on what to believe. 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.