Protestants, why are you not Catholic?

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I am much interested in converting. I would be frightened of the negative reaction it would cause in my family.
 
When I reach full adulthood, I am considering attending RCIA-have any former Protestants had to deal with a negative reaction my grandmother believes that Catholics are eternally dam***. I also fear my mother will think she failed me?
 
His blessing also with you, Josie.

I indeed said Luther’s was not the majority view. We have no disagreement there. The fact that others through history, including St. Jerome, the quote you provided notwithstanding, proves that Luther’s was neither new, nor novel, nor non-traditional.

Jon
Jon, I said that Luther’s actions were non-tradition/novel because his translation of the Bible did not include the deuterocanonical books as scriptural, i.e., divinely inspired books in every sense of the word. St. Jerome included the deuterocanonical in the Vulgate Bible because he put his view aside and followed the Church’s authority,i.e., they were not considered “apocrypha”. Furthermore, there were no bibles before Luther/reformation that did not include these books as part of the canon. And there were also no councils that denied these books as scriptural. Jesus (and the apostles) also quoted from these books in the N.T. It was not “Catholic” what Luther did.
 
Jon, I said that Luther’s actions were non-tradition/novel because his translation of the Bible did not include the deuterocanonical books as scriptural, i.e., divinely inspired books in every sense of the word. St. Jerome included the deuterocanonical in the Vulgate Bible because he put his view aside and followed the Church’s authority,i.e., they were not considered “apocrypha”. Furthermore, there were no bibles before Luther/reformation that did not included these books as part of the canon. And there were also no councils that denied these books as scriptural Jesus (and the apostles) also quoted from these books in the N.T. It was not a Catholic viewpoint that Luther was espousing.
Gotcha. Luther included them, his own personal opinion (permitted by the Church) that they were apocryphal in his preface. Apparently, he put this personal opinion of them aside and included them. Though I am not sure regarding your claim that no Bible before Luther didn’t include them, I will assume you are right. And to my knowledge, it wasn’t until the early 1800’s that this happened.

No ecumenical councils ever affirmed them, either, which is why Catholic liberty allowed people to dispute them. I’ve never used the argument regarding their quotation in the NT by Jesus or others. Luther’s was not not a Catholic viewpoint, either.

Jon
 
JosieL
would you please provide the scripture references for your statement that the bible plainly teaches about Catholic doctrines concerning grace & salvation. Please explain your position. By the way I don’t have a different bible…I have a Catholic Bible written in 1953. I will agree that the bible plainly & very clearly shows the correct path to grace & salvation…ie…Jesus Christ…do you agree with that?

Shalom
Walt
Yes, Walt I do agree with this, but the Bible is not as clear as we would like it to be (that is why we have Apostolic succession). Just recollect the story of the man (eunuch) who needed help understanding scripture, and then Philip (apostle) came along to help him interpret.
 
I suppose at it’s very simplest, I am unconvinced that I must do so in order to be saved. Perhaps I am wrong.

I receive the Grace of God through our Word and Sacraments, forgiveness of sins through Baptism and absolution and the Holy Spirit works through me to do works of mercy and love. Yet we are told we lack the fullness of truth. For me, and with great love and respect for my Brothers and Sisters in Christ, it seems quite sufficient.
And thats worked very well and still does.🙂
 
Stilldreamn…if you read the bible you will find out that the only way to have Gods Grace is thru the acceptance of Christ as your Lord & Savior. Also baptism has absolutely nothing to do with forgiveness…Christ’s sacrifice upon the cross does. Please buy a bible & read it & let the Holy Spirit guide you into all truth. Christians are saved by the sacrifice of Christ, & become living breathing walking talking saints who are perfect, holy, righteous, blameless, justified & of a royal priesthood. If you don’t believe that then read the bible. I will be glad to send you references to all that I stated above. Send me a PM.

Shalom
Walt
You might want to check your Bible on that statement, friend, as the following verses do not agree with your personal interpretation.

First, nowhere does the Bible say that Baptism is merely a “symbolic” act…that passage simply does not exist.

Second, let’s see what the Bible does say about Baptism:
Ezek 36:25-27, it says, “I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and you shall be clean from all your uncleannesses…a new heart I will give you and a new spirit I will put within you…and I will put My spirit within you…” Here, in the Old Testament, we have a foreshadowing of New Testament baptism.

Now, let’s see if the New Testament corresponds to what we just read in Ezekiel. Acts 2:38, “Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.” Note that there is no symbolic language here…this is real! The Book of Acts says, “Be baptized for the forgiveness of your sins.” Ezekiel says, “I will sprinkle clean water upon you and you shall be clean from your uncleanness.” The Book of Acts says, “…and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.” Ezekiel says: “…and I will put My Spirit within you.” Do you begin to see how God, in the Old Covenant, was preparing us for what He gives us in the New Covenant?

Acts 22:16 - “And now why do you wait? Rise and be baptized, and wash away your sins…”.

1 Cor 12:13 - “For by one Spirit we were all baptized into one body…” What body was that? The Body of Christ.

1 Ptr 3:21: “Baptism, which corresponds to this, now saves you…”

Scripture simply does not support the non-Catholic notion that Baptism is symbolic. Scripture does very directly and very clearly support the Catholic teaching that Baptism saves us; that Baptism makes us members of the Body of Christ; that Baptism washes away sin; and that through Baptism we receive the Holy Spirit…just as the Catholic Church teaches!

Source.

If Baptism has nothing to do with forgiveness as you claim, then how do you deal with the above verses, which explicitly and plainly state that Baptism “wash[es] away your sins” and “now saves you”?

Also, I agree with you (and so does the Catholic Church) that we are forgiven because of Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross. However, this forgiveness is given to us initially through the grace received in the sacrament of Baptism. We see this in Colossians 2:11, “In him also you were circumcised with a spiritual circumcision, by putting off the body of the flesh in the circumcision of Christ; when you were buried with him in baptism, you were also raised with him through faith in the power of God, who raised him from the dead.”
 
SoMissCatholic…well it is not my interpretation of what baptism is, but it is what the bible clearly teaches & it is your misunderstanding due to a lack of studying it out. Baptism in the sense of being immersed in water is a public statement of ones acceptance of Christ. The baptism you are referring to has to do with being baptized in Christ…when you are immersed it is symbolic of what Christ did in His death & resurrection, ie, it is symbolic of dying to ourself & being resurrected in a new life as the bible says. When we accept Christ as our Lord & Savior all our sins, past, present & future are forgiven. Don’t make accusations without reading totally what I have said. The statements made are not my personal interpretations but are the accurate interpretation based on a careful word study which apparently you have not done.
By the way nowhere in scripture can you find a basis for infant baptism. Baptism is after the fact of receiving Christ as one’s personal Lord & Savior & is a public acknowledgement of such.

How is a Catholic saved?

Shalom
Walt
 
I’m sure Stilldreamn will appreciate you thoughtful words, but we Lutherans believe that the references found in the Book of Concord reflect what scriptures say.

www.bookofconcord.org

Jon
No…no…no you wrote that wrong. It is call the bookofcommonprayer. 😃
Yes, Walt I do agree with this, but the Bible is not as clear as we would like it to be (that is why we have Apostolic succession). Just recollect the story of the man (eunuch) who needed help understanding scripture, and then Philip (apostle) came along to help him interpret.
Josie(love the name) the Bible is clear. You go by the Catholic interpretation and I respect that. 👍
And thats worked very well and still does.🙂
Very well if I may say so myself. 😃
 
My name is Walt & I am a Christian thru Christ alone. I know there are churches out there that profess to be Christian however when you study their beliefs & doctrines they are anything but. If this question is inferring that protestants are not Christians then I challenge you to “define” what a Christian is according to the bible & post it as such. I am a truth seeker.

Why are Protestants not Catholics ? To even ask the question as to why protestants are not Catholic is to infer that protestants are not Christians according to the Catholic Churches standards. Where in the bible does it say that the Catholic Church is the true church. I have had Catholics tell me that I will go to hell because I am not attending the Catholic Church. Well that is a lie from the pit of hell.Let me give you my reasons why I left the Catholic church:

God and only God sets the bar or standards for us to live by

I am a follower of Jesus & His teachings. I do not put a “tag” on what church or denomination I am. I attend a church where biblical truth is taught & the teaching alone can last anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. I don’t see that in the Catholic church.

I test what I am told by someone be it a priest, rabbi or pastor & have found a lot of teaching to be incorrect both in the Catholic Church as well as a main stream Christian church. I will test the spirits to see whether they are of God or satan.

By the way when I went to Catholic sunday school I would be grabbed by the ear or struck with a black belt if I questioned anything.

Satan comes as an angel of light to deceive & tempt, to kill steal & destroy.

The church that Christ established was done so on the day of Pentecost & the people in the church were referred to as Christians solely not Catholic. I was born & brought up in the Catholic faith from 1947 until 1980 when I made a decision to leave the Catholic Church after reading the bible. I had such a hunger & thirst for the bible & could not put it down. What I found out was that there are many many contradictions between the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church & the bible.

The bible is the sole source of God’s word…not the pope nor any other man. The bible admonishes us to test the spirits & to study & show ourselves approved. The Holy Spirit guides us to all truth…not man.

I don’t see any Catholics carrying a bible…maybe a chatechism.

Also I love & enjoy the praise & worship in the church I go to which is Calvary Chapel of Aurora Co. Our service lasts upwards of 2 hrs. The Catholic Service is usually an hour long & to me is not enjoyable.

The bible states praying to the dead is detestable to God.

We need not confess our sins to a priest which, by the way, the priesthood ended when the 2nd temple was destroyed in 70 AD. We confess to Christ, who is our mediator according to the bible & we are assured we are forgiven.

The bible tells us that as a Christian we belong to a royal priesthood.

The priest in the temple never ever held confession. He offered up the sacrifices people brought for the atonement of their sins as their sins were not “forgiven”. There is a difference.

Christ alone saved us thru His shed blood & His death & resurrection upon the cross.

Mary has no place in salvation, she was solely the earthly mother of Christ & stated she needed a savior . Mary was not sinless regardless of what the church teaches. The Catholic Church can’t back it up with scripture.

There are many many changes in the teachings of the Catholic Church today that were different from when I attended the Catholic church. God never changes, He is the same yesterday, today & forever & His word never changes.

Purgatory is not biblical.

Christians are saints & saints are Christians…living & breathing believers in Christ

I was told by Catholic Church Radio years back that I cannot have an absolute assurance of going to heaven when I die but I could have a moral assurance. That makes no sense at all & undermines the suffering, shed blood & the death & resurrection of Christ. It is also a lie from the pit of hell. The bible tells us in many places that we have the assurance of salvation & going to heaven when we die because we accepted Christ as our Lord & savior.

If I am “excommunicated” from this site because of my response…so be it but I answered the question asked.

Now I have a question…Catholics…why are you not Protestants.

Blessings in Christ
Walt
A bad teacher can suck the fun out of anything. A bully for Christ is still a bully. Im sorry this happened to you. A good pastor and supportive congregation can cure a host of ills.🙂
By the way we Episcopalians carry the Book of Common prayer and revised lectionary and sometimes the bible. The Catholics carry the Roman missal which has the biblical text already in there. We are trying to avoid carrying a backpack of books to church.
Hopefully some day you will find a pastor who really can call you to peace. Thats what its really all about.
 
My name is Walt & I am a Christian thru Christ alone. I know there are churches out there that profess to be Christian however when you study their beliefs & doctrines they are anything but. If this question is inferring that protestants are not Christians then I challenge you to “define” what a Christian is according to the bible & post it as such. I am a truth seeker.

Why are Protestants not Catholics ? To even ask the question as to why protestants are not Catholic is to infer that protestants are not Christians according to the Catholic Churches standards. Where in the bible does it say that the Catholic Church is the true church. I have had Catholics tell me that I will go to hell because I am not attending the Catholic Church. Well that is a lie from the pit of hell.Let me give you my reasons why I left the Catholic church:

God and only God sets the bar or standards for us to live by

I am a follower of Jesus & His teachings. I do not put a “tag” on what church or denomination I am. I attend a church where biblical truth is taught & the teaching alone can last anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. I don’t see that in the Catholic church.

I test what I am told by someone be it a priest, rabbi or pastor & have found a lot of teaching to be incorrect both in the Catholic Church as well as a main stream Christian church. I will test the spirits to see whether they are of God or satan.

By the way when I went to Catholic sunday school I would be grabbed by the ear or struck with a black belt if I questioned anything.

Satan comes as an angel of light to deceive & tempt, to kill steal & destroy.

The church that Christ established was done so on the day of Pentecost & the people in the church were referred to as Christians solely not Catholic. I was born & brought up in the Catholic faith from 1947 until 1980 when I made a decision to leave the Catholic Church after reading the bible. I had such a hunger & thirst for the bible & could not put it down. What I found out was that there are many many contradictions between the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church & the bible.

The bible is the sole source of God’s word…not the pope nor any other man. The bible admonishes us to test the spirits & to study & show ourselves approved. The Holy Spirit guides us to all truth…not man.

I don’t see any Catholics carrying a bible…maybe a chatechism.

Also I love & enjoy the praise & worship in the church I go to which is Calvary Chapel of Aurora Co. Our service lasts upwards of 2 hrs. The Catholic Service is usually an hour long & to me is not enjoyable.

The bible states praying to the dead is detestable to God.

We need not confess our sins to a priest which, by the way, the priesthood ended when the 2nd temple was destroyed in 70 AD. We confess to Christ, who is our mediator according to the bible & we are assured we are forgiven.

The bible tells us that as a Christian we belong to a royal priesthood.

The priest in the temple never ever held confession. He offered up the sacrifices people brought for the atonement of their sins as their sins were not “forgiven”. There is a difference.

Christ alone saved us thru His shed blood & His death & resurrection upon the cross.

Mary has no place in salvation, she was solely the earthly mother of Christ & stated she needed a savior . Mary was not sinless regardless of what the church teaches. The Catholic Church can’t back it up with scripture.

There are many many changes in the teachings of the Catholic Church today that were different from when I attended the Catholic church. God never changes, He is the same yesterday, today & forever & His word never changes.

Purgatory is not biblical.

Christians are saints & saints are Christians…living & breathing believers in Christ

I was told by Catholic Church Radio years back that I cannot have an absolute assurance of going to heaven when I die but I could have a moral assurance. That makes no sense at all & undermines the suffering, shed blood & the death & resurrection of Christ. It is also a lie from the pit of hell. The bible tells us in many places that we have the assurance of salvation & going to heaven when we die because we accepted Christ as our Lord & savior.

If I am “excommunicated” from this site because of my response…so be it but I answered the question asked.

Now I have a question…Catholics…why are you not Protestants.

Blessings in Christ
Walt
 
JonNC…if the references found in the book of Concord reflect what the scriptures say then why do you need the Book of Concord why not just the Holy Bible, which was written before the Book Of Concord by men inspired by the Holy Spirit ?

Shalom
Walt
 
JonNC…if the references found in the book of Concord reflect what the scriptures say then why do you need the Book of Concord why not just the Holy Bible, which was written before the Book Of Concord by men inspired by the Holy Spirit ?

Shalom
Walt
To help the people understand the faith. It is the teaching role of the Church to set doctrine and catechize people into the faith. It has been the role of the Church for, essentially, 2000 years, to preach the word and administer the sacraments. Part of preaching the word is teaching the faith. In the early Church, this was critical because there was no proliferation of scripture, other than by word of mouth. And even when the availability of writings started to grow, the Church was still the place where the faith was taught because few had access to writings, and fewer still could read. The Church taught by preaching and teaching, it also taught with artwork and other forms of iconography.

For Lutherans, during the time of the Reformation, the Lutheran reformers felt it necessary to present our views of some of the abuses and problems not only regarding the Catholic Church in communion with the Bishop of Rome, but also of the dramatic departures from the historic teachings of the Church Catholic in the Reformed/Calvinist, Anabaptist, and other Reformation era movements not connected to the Lutheran Reformation. These documents moved forward as not only a doctrinal statement, but also a teaching tool, most notably the Small Catechism, intended for fathers to use in the home to teach their families, but also the Large Catechism.

Jon
 
Gotcha. Luther included them, his own personal opinion (permitted by the Church) that they were apocryphal in his preface. Apparently, he put this personal opinion of them aside and included them. Though I am not sure regarding your claim that no Bible before Luther didn’t include them, I will assume you are right. And to my knowledge, it wasn’t until the early 1800’s that this happened.

No ecumenical councils ever affirmed them, either, which is why Catholic liberty allowed people to dispute them. I’ve never used the argument regarding their quotation in the NT by Jesus or others. Luther’s was not not a Catholic viewpoint, either.

Jon
Transubstantiation was not dogmatized until after the schism, does this mean that the Catholic Church did not hold this to be true or to be part of the deposit of faith, i.e., doctrines and/or matters of faith were dogmatized when heresies arose. The same could be said about the deuterocanonical books, i.e., they were contested by the reformers and as such the Catholic Church had to respond via an ecumenical council to ensure their validity as scripture (there was no ecumenical council prior to this because there was no movement within the Church that contested these books). And there is a difference between having these books in the Bible as apocrypha and having them in the Bible as scripture, that is, although they were in the Bible they were not part of the Bible.

p.s. The deuterocanonical books were mentioned in the 7th ecumenical council and at Florence.
 
Josie(love the name) the Bible is clear. You go by the Catholic interpretation and I respect that. 👍
Well, I did provide scripture so as to “back up” my Catholic point of view (Philip the apostle interpreting scripture for the eunuch who could not understand what he was reading). And I think that if the Bible were that clear we would not have hundreds of denominations claiming to have the correct interpretation.

p.s. And flattery will get you nowhere (although I like my name too). :pshaw:
 
Well, I did provide scripture so as to “back up” my Catholic point of view (Philip the apostle interpreting scripture for the eunuch who could not understand what he was reading). And I think that if the Bible were so clear we would not have hundreds of denominations claiming to have the correct interpretation.

p.s. And flattery will get you nowhere (although I like my name too). :pshaw:
lol…Ok I hate your name 😛

The NT concept would have been vague to anyone reading it. Just because Philip was interpreting does not mean only the Apostles could do so. 😉

For the record, the Catholic’s interpretation is not much different that TEC’s. We just kind of do not create doctrines from stuff that is not there and rather tend is go by the Creeds.
 
lol…Ok I hate your name 😛
😃
The NT concept would have been vague to anyone reading it. Just because Philip was interpreting does not mean only the Apostles could do so. 😉
Actually, it could not be scripture from the N.T. as there was nothing written down yet. It was O.T. scripture.
For the record, the Catholic’s interpretation is not much different that TEC’s. We just kind of do not create doctrines from stuff that is not there and rather tend is go by the Creeds.
Well, I wouldn’t say TEC didn’t “create doctrines from stuff that is not there”
 
Transubstantiation was not dogmatized until after the schism, does this mean that the Catholic Church did not hold this to be true or to be part of the deposit of faith, i.e., doctrines and/or matters of faith were dogmatized when heresies arose. The same could be said about the deuterocanonical books, i.e., they were contested by the reformers and as such the Catholic Church had to respond via an ecumenical council to ensure their validity as scripture (there was no ecumenical council prior to this because there was no movement within the Church that contested these books). And there is a difference between having these books in the Bible as apocrypha and having them in the Bible as scripture, that is, although they were in the Bible they were not part of the Bible.

p.s. The deuterocanonical books were mentioned in the 7th ecumenical council and at Florence.
I am not certain when transubstantiation began to take hold. I know that consubstantiation is part of catholic thought by the thirteenth century (Duns Scotus), but I don’t know how early Aristotelian metaphysics started. I can say that the Orthodox never accepted it, and I as a Lutheran have never seen an ECF quote on the Eucharist I disagree with.
I’ve already told you that our confessions refer to them as “scripture”. That a council mentions them does not close them in the canon. If you want to argue that Luther was wrong in his opinion, fine. But you can’t historically argue that this opinion was novel, or not permitted, as neither is the case.

Jon

EDIT: it is important that I point out that neither of our communions accept consubstantiation. I only mention it as a reference point regarding Aristotelian metaphysics.
 
SIMPLEAS…God does not call us to a specific religion but He draws us to Himself thru Jesus. As Jesus stated “no man comes to the father but thru me”…John 14:6. after Jesus calls us to Himself & we accept His free gift of salvation then we are to find a church where HIS word is taught. We are also admonished to study & show ourselves approved, to rightly divide the word & to test the spirits. Pray for a spirit of discernment to find a church where the bible is rightly divided & taught.

Shalom
Walt
 
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