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It baffles me that this thread is 38 pages long. The answer is no. Cafeteria Catholics don’t need to run off and throw away the Church altogether. They need caring, compassionate people to remind them of the beauty and purpose of all these things they reject, and to extend some open arms and hearts and show some compassion.
No, we can’t tell them they’re doing the right thing in rejecting Church teachings. But we can encourage them to seek answers, and give any answers we’ve found ourselves. We can encourage them to go to confession and receive the Eucharist and follow the Church by faith if not by sight, until they can reach a better understanding. We can remind them that some things aren’t comprehensible, and remind them of God’s unfailing love and mercy. We can show them the truth in love, as their brothers and sisters in Christ.
Why are we here, learning all we can through apologetics and conversation, if we’re just going to let people walk out without trying to help them? Why are we trying to draw people to the faith with our answers to all these hard questions if we’re letting people walk out without those same answers?
Nicki, in case you missed it in the 38 pages, the majority supports just what you’ve been saying. . .that "Cafeteria Catholics’ should not become Protestant or be treated ‘poorly’.
That being said, it would be a poor return we give to Christ if we, seeing the error of a brother or sister, said NOTHING to help them find the truth.
It would be a poor return to Christ if we ENCOURAGED people to continue in error with the false idea that telling them OF the error would somehow ‘hurt feelings’ or possibly cause them to ‘walk away’.
I mean, if people are already not following Christ, and we say, “my brothers and sisters, we wish you to follow Christ, here is the way”, and they say, “Oh my way was all right and because you have now hurt my feelings by disrespecting my way and ‘judging’ me, I will leave your way and it is your fault now, nyah”. . .
Have we really done anything WORSE for the person than allowing him to continue the evil with our SANCTION? I don’t think so.
Naturally nobody WANTS a person to leave the truth, but let’s face it. I could speak with the tongue of angels and exude love enough to swamp the seven seas, but if an individual didn’t ‘like’ to hear what I said, even if it’s the truth, he or she is going to yell, “mean, hurtful, bigot” at me just as much and more than if I actually had BEEN any of the above.
Because at least if a person is genuinely nasty (and yes we have sadly seen some of that), then the person who reacts with anger can feel all ‘justified’ because he can say it is the nastiness of the person that’s the problem and he can feel the nastiness ‘proves’ that the person who was nasty is ‘wrong’ and thus he the so-called sinner is ‘right’.
It’s harder to get that angry with genuine love. . .but thanks to an age which has elevated ligitation and entitlement to unpredecented lengths, even genuine love can be ‘painted’ to be nastiness. And in order to feel justified the person in error has to whip things up and ramp up the volume even more to ‘convince’ himself that it is truly ‘nasty.’ As I said, it’s harder to do but in the end if successful the person is even angrier at the ‘nice’ person than at the nasty one. Sad, but I still trust in God that this kind of situation will NOT long abide.