reasons not to be catholic… “Pope Myself the First” has a nice ring to it for some people.
I think it often does boil down to an authority problem. Mankind still suffers from the same hubris he did in the garden of Eden. He thinks that he can determine for himself what is best for him without the commandment of God.
I have been mulling over this post since last night:
In reply to the OP, above, for me personally…
I believe that one should truly enjoy their worship experience, and I just didn’t enjoy the RCC for worship. There are many, many on this forum that will tell me that I am simply wrong in that, and that it may in fact damn me to Hell, but I’m ok with that. My reasons for not being Catholic (uppercase) are:
I agree with you, but I suspect for very different reasons.
No well catechized Catholic will ever tell you that anyone is “damned to hell”. This is against the Teachings of the Apostles that are infallibly preserved in the Church by the Holy Spirit. Someone may tell you that the road to hell is paved with our desires to please ourselves, but at the same time, that one should be in fervent prayer for you that you get on a different road.
- I believe that each individual has the** right **and the means to interpret Scripture
The Bible was produced by the Catholic Church. There is nothing in it that is not Catholic. When one takes a literary work and removes it from the context in which it was written one loses the ability to understand the meaning properly. It is like reading Shakespeare with no histoirical context.
Catholics believe that Scripture is part of the revelation by God of Himself to mankind. No human creature has a “right” to God’s revelation. On the contrary, if we all got what we deserved, we would all burn in the pit. He has revealed Himself to us because of his love, and by grace, we can receive His disclosrue of Himself. This is to be done with humility adn obedience, not an emphasis on our “rights”, which we only have through His Mercy and the blood of His son.
- I don’t agree with large portions of the Catechism
Great!
I mean, great that you are here with your disagreement. Let’s start a new thread for every one!
-** I** believe that all Christians, even if they are on different paths, are on the right path - back to Christ
A comforting platitude that is a function of the culture of relativism in which we live. We have all been contaminated by it to one degree or another. I used to think this too.
- I believe priests should be allowed to marry
The Catholic Church does not fobid marriage to anyone.
Holy Orders are also not a “right” but a privilege and a gift. Does the clay say unto the Potter, why hast thou made me thus?
-** I** believe that Christians have the RIGHT to enjoy worship, and to choose a worship style that reflects themselves
In the end I think it boils down to whether we see ourselves as creatures, obligated to serve our Creator,or if we believe that we should be served.
For most people, the desire for religious experience is one which will best suit themselves.
I believe that Christians have the RIGHT to enjoy worship, and to choose a worship style that reflects themselves
I am pretty certain that namaste is talking about the variations of personality, and personal preferences for entertainment, music styles, etc. Whether the worship is contempletive or loud and boisterious, etc.
I used to think this way, and left the faith for a long time, seeking an ecclesial community that would meet my emotional needs. I often would say that I was not being “fed” in the CC,
Did God command that things should be done a certain way, or not? If He has designed worship according to what He beleives we need, who are we to change it?
I look back on the worship that was proscribed for Israel, and the only time I see anyone saying they wanted to redesign it to suit themselves was met by the earth opening and swallowing up the rebellious.
No, I take that back, some of the rebellious were put to the knife.
I have been trying to put into coherent thoughts and words exactly what you wrote here. I am Catholic (sort of). Guess I really don’t know where I belong. What ever, thank you for stating so clearly what I have wanted to for so long.
This, then, is an improvement, LIT. It means that you have made your decision to abandon the faith of your baptism based on actual facts of what the Church teaches, however, misguided, it is not a decision made based upon lies you have been told about what Catholics believe (like that they should not read their bibles).