L
Lucretius
Guest
You ARE nutsMost of my family are Baptists. They think I’m nuts for converting. Lol.
Christi pax,
Lucretius
You ARE nutsMost of my family are Baptists. They think I’m nuts for converting. Lol.
Point taken. Centuries of contention between our communions, plus the generally unwelcoming atmosphere Catholic immigrants encountered by native Protestants who questioned their right to be there might also account for a level of hostility. Not to mention, as displayed by myself and others on my side of the street, as it were, this tension is built in to our very theologies. The more defensive I get, the more compelled I feel at the end of the day to pray for everybody on CAF, regardless of Christian affiliation, not that they would " join my team," so much as that we’d all find ourselves walking with Jesus.Well, if that’s too brutally honest, then I’m just as guilty.I sometimes conjecture about how I’d guess things are on Protestant forums (e.g. the post you responded to) but it’s not based on direct experience of those sites, but rather on my knowledge of how-things-work generally and my experience on Catholic and Orthodox forums. (Well, and also things I’ve heard about Protestant forums.)
To those Protestant posters who complain about the CA forums, I’d like to challenge you all to consider how much of the problem is really just, if you will, the-way-things-are-on-internet-forums. :ehh: (Not that I’m trying to pin everything on the internet. We could also avoid mentioning the internet and say, for example: “There are certainly Protestants who are more about being anti-Catholic than being Protestant … so why are you all surprised that there are Catholics who are more about being anti-Protestant than being Catholic?” and so on and so forth.)
No.I think that Catholics react that way often because your explanation is ultimately the root of the fruit of relativism in our age. True interpretation, in your view, is based on the individual, and when individuals disagree, who or what is the judge to find who is right? Since Protestants deny any ontologically higher method of finding Truth, there is no way to resolve this controversy. Thus, each individual keeps to himself, and the Truth is unknowable. Truth is relative to the individual.
You can see why we thing this sort of thinking is irrational, unjustifiable, and elitist …] such thinking is inherently fragmentary.
This is as convincing as the previous quote.If Protestants knew what was best for them, they would return to the Church now.
You ARE nutsor, you are nuts as the world defines it. From the Heavenly point of view, everyone of the world are actually the once with screws loose
Christi pax,
Lucretius
Mind if I take notes? I’m always trying to figure out how to get more NCs/Protestants to take my posts seriously – or at least to respond to them
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Thanks, Rita. You’re right. It’s hard* not *to be passionate about something you’ve staked your life and your soul on, but courtesy is important. Dialogue can quickly deteriorate into polemics when you feel the other side is cheering for the destruction of things you hold very dear indeed. I’ve done it, I’m not proud of it, but if somebody wants to mention my faith as a negative, I’ll want to exact satisfaction. " Tit for tat" isn’t exactly what Our Lord taught, rather " if one wants you to carry a load one mile, go two miles. If he demands your coat, give him your shirt as well." I’ve seen and received too much good from the Lutherans and Confessional Lutheranism in my life to stand idly by while people try to submerge it ( in my estimation) into being something less than it is: a Christian fellowship and doctrine that preaches faith alone by grace alone on the principle of Scripture alone, with said Scripture being accurately expostulated in the Book of Concord, known alternatively as " Concordia: the Book of Lutheran Confessions." I still think that CA is the safest site for Christians to come together and dialogue and seeing people from the Religious Society of Friends, Evangelical churches, Anglican churches, Baptist churches, Coptic Orthodox and Eastern Orthodox churches together with both ELCA and LCMS ( I believe there’s at least one WELS member who posts here, too) Lutherans to join our voices with people of NC ( non- Christian) religious beliefs and people who have no religious faith at all in dialogue with Catholics loyal to the Roman See seem to bear that out. My prayers for us all to walk in the Lord Jesus Christ.I think the important point we need to take away from this is to understand these forums are for debates and that what we say to one another (1) should not be written in such a way as to denigrate anyone else here as we are all children of God and (2) this is a hard one for me- - - not to take the things said personally.
It’s so easy for us to sit behind our computers and get angry or upset at the words someone else has written to try and get their points across. The use of the cool iconsshould help us understand better that what is being said is not directly meant for us personally.
Let’s debate, learn from each other, and walk away knowing we have friends with whom we can carry on more conversations later.
Let’s keep each other in prayer and remember that the enemy is thrilled when we get our backs up about something another Christian is saying. I, for one, don’t want to give him that type of entertainment.
God bless us all!!
In Him,
Rita

Ok have a great day and thank you for answering my question.
God’s blessings to you
I try!I like your calm, cool, collective style hope you don’t mind if I copy it.
Peter,
If someone feels the need to call me a heretic then more power to them. I know I am not one and when they try to bait an argument, I simply smile and pray that God shows us both mercy.![]()
Oh, you both make good points … but I’m also mindful of the warning in Vatican II’s Decree on Ecumenism, not to be “falsely conciliar/irenic” (depending which translation you use).Thanks, Rita. You’re right. It’s hard* not *to be passionate about something you’ve staked your life and your soul on, but courtesy is important. Dialogue can quickly deteriorate into polemics when you feel the other side is cheering for the destruction of things you hold very dear indeed. I’ve done it, I’m not proud of it, but if somebody wants to mention my faith as a negative, I’ll want to exact satisfaction. " Tit for tat" isn’t exactly what Our Lord taught, rather " if one wants you to carry a load one mile, go two miles. If he demands your coat, give him your shirt as well."
Do you *really *want an answer to that?Watch the 700 Club. Can I believe everything I hear from a person that has left the Catholic Church on the 700 Club?
The 700 Club is not a reasonably good representation of Evangelical Protestantism. Watching a show and deciding on that basis that that is what all Evangelical Protestants believe would be an error on the level of watching one show hosted by a nun and concluding that all Catholics wear habits.Do you *really *want an answer to that?
But really, I think that often the best thing is to try an’ get people to “level up”. What I mean is, if someone is basing their view of Catholicism (resp. Protestantism) on an internet discussion forum, and you can get them to switch to basing it on, say, Catholic (resp. Protestant) authors/people who have their own TV shows, that should be an improvement.![]()
(I’m trusting that The 700 Club is a reasonably good representation of Evangelical Protestantism, although I don’t know that for sure.)
In saying this, I’m very much aware of the danger of overgeneralizing and oversimplifying. The last thing I want is to sound like I’m making a blanket “Professionals are good, amatuers are bad” :bighanky:.
Granny was forever watching Mother Angelica on EWTN… just a little trip down memory lane…The 700 Club is not a reasonably good representation of Evangelical Protestantism. Watching a show and deciding on that basis that that is what all Evangelical Protestants believe would be an error on the level of watching one show hosted by a nun and concluding that all Catholics wear habits.
Well, I’ve never met a single person who said that they couldn’t (fwiw).Can’t one evangelical believe differently than another evangelical?
It won’t die out. But the gospel is being vitiated by Protestantism. And this is tragic indeed. Calamitous.Do you think Protestantism will die out? I think so.
That’s your personal interpretation.It won’t die out. But the gospel is being vitiated by Protestantism. And this is tragic indeed. Calamitous.
Because of the cardinal principle of Protestantism–“I don’t need any magisterium to tell me what is the kerygma”–it has resulted in the obscenity of tens of thousands of differing Christian denominations, each preaching that its own version of the gospel is the correct one.
This is the paradigm:
A pastor preaches.
A Christian listens.
Disagrees with pastor’s message.
Understands that this pastor is fallible, and by definition is going to be wrong at some point in his interpretation.
Christian says, “I can not abide by this erroneous interpretation”.
Christian leaves.
Christian church shops.
Christian joins a new church, hopeful.
Repeat above 1-2 more times, until Christian realizes: “this is silly!”
Christian says: “I can form my own church!”
#Christiangospelvitiatedyetagain
#yetanotherchristiandenomination
#toomanytocount
And no Protestant can raise objections to the above events since it is formed upon that which Protestantism rises (and falls).
Unfortunately that is not the case - there are many evangelical churches that do have different beliefs but, the majority of them do have the important beliefCan’t one evangelical believe differently than another evangelical? Like, there isn’t a book or writing that lays out evangelical beliefs/rules/understandings, is there?