C
CB_Catholic
Guest
I find that “once a protestant always a protestant” statement to be rather offensive, I must tell you that. I hope you rethink that statement and that attitude, because there are numerous converts on this forum, and they probably just got the impression that you don’t think they are fully Catholic, and are still Protestants at heart.i couldn’t agree with you more de maria.
i know protestants criticize Catholics for not reading Bibles, but i order the Magnificat and take that with me to mass. that way i have the daily readings in a small prayerbook. i have many Bibles at home for Bible study.
i have tried bringing my Bible to the episcopal, Anglican and Catholic church.
but i would either have to have the readings marked before mass or then fumble to find them. meanwhile, i am missing the reading while i am looking for the scripture.
my magnificat does just fine and i keep it. they are not disposable at my house.
once a protestant, always a protestant i say. he might be roman catholic,
but i am sure he brought many protestant ways with him.
and i know he is a folk hero to many people so i won’t say anymore.
They are as Catholic as you are, make no mistake about it, and that is what the Church says also. Our converts are most emphatically not Protestants, or Jewish, or whatever they came from. Most of the converts to our faith are more faithful to our Church than the majority of cradle Catholics in this country, about 60% of whom don’t even darken the doors of a Church except maybe for Christmas and Easter.
In fact, our Mission on this earth, as given to us by Christ,and re-emphasized by our last 2 Popes, at least, is to go out and find people and make converts. Not just do our devotions, go to Mass, say our rosaries, do our Catholic thing. Our churches should be FULL of converts, if we were doing our job, which we aren’t. And we are to consider them fully and authenticaly Catholic.
And I think people like Cardinal Dulles, Cardinal Newman, St Elizabth Seton, GK Chesterson, etc., would take exception to being thought of as always Protestant.