I agree with those who have said that many Protestants already meet together 5-6 days a week for some kind of ministry.
You must understand that many Protestants would be put-off by the idea of a daily worship service. All of our lives, when lived in the power of the Holy Spirit, are an act of worship and service to God. Going to “church” all the time would be considered a way of “hiding” from our responsibilities of reaching out to a lost and dying world. We would say that we are not “churchians,” we are “Christians,” and that most of our spiritual growth occurs in the “trenches” of everyday life, not in church.
In fact, it is important to keep this in mind when talking with Protestant Christians. Many of them find the idea of a daily church service “ritualistic” and even unScriptural.
Then it would seem to me that Acts 2:46 is written in hieroglyphics. And I have never heard that the church as described in Acts was “hiding” from its responsibilities
They see no command in the Bible to have “daily mass.” Even the daily communion is something that they say man has invented, that it simply isn’t in the Bible.
I would say that Acts 2 implies otherwise; at any rate it appears that it was much more frequent than it is now, at least at my church, in which we partake far less than once per month.
So fellow Catholics, you are NOT impressing most Protestants when you say you attend daily mass. You are probably putting them off. They think you are “earning Brownie points to get you to heaven by following a tradition of man.” Just a word to the wise–be careful. Make them understand that you are NOT earning brownie points, that you are attending daily mass to draw near to Jesus and your fellow Christians in Holy Communion.
**So if Catholics can have the opportunity to do this on a daily basis, why can’t Protestants? Or is it just because Protestants can’t do what Catholics do? :banghead: **
I honestly think that even though the church sanctuary isn’t usually open for private devotions and worship, most Protestant churches have much, much more “stuff” going on throughout the week than most Catholic churches.
Why shouldn’t a church sanctuary be open for private devotions and worship? Isn’t that what it’s for? And if that opportunity isn’t there for the people who need it, how can having more “stuff” going on in the church possibly compensate? This is quite difficult to understand.
Zirconia