P
ptisme
Guest
Please dont take this as beating up on you but you use the words “I” and “me” an awful lot. That suggests why you weren’t satisfied with the Baptists and the Catholics previously IMHO.Well, I was a Baptist beforehand for twenty- *one *years. By that argument, I guess you could say that the Baptists were right all along. You can tell a tree by its fruits. I’ve never, as a Catholic, experienced the desire that I do now as a Lutheran to live my life solely for Christ. If going from one supposedly Catholic diocese to another is like going to another denomination( sometimes there are even liturgical variances. What’s up with an altar being put in the middle of the sanctuary and people standing when they should be kneeling?), and if the LCMS is consistent in its doctrine no matter which district you live in, then yes, the LCMS gets points for consistency. I’ve never left a Confession as a Lutheran with doubts that the Confession was valid because I forgot a point or two of minutiae. Lutheran pastors have never been, on a global scale, the focus of the kind of scandals we’ve seen rock the Catholic Church, what with charges not only of pedophilia, but of verbal, physical and emotional abuse of those they are charged to teach. The Holy Spirit led me to the doors of my Lutheran Church Missouri Synod as someone with an open heart who was willing to learn. I’ve been embraced and accepted by Lutherans as I had never been as a Baptist ( the church I was raised in ) or as a Catholic. The Lutherans also make it possible for me to serve the church, to proclaim the Word and to have a direct influence on the affairs of the congregation. With the Word and Sacrament, I am assured of salvation. Where is that assurance in the Catholic Church?