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ignatius777
Guest
I guess its lucky for me that my being a christian doesnt rely on you believing it huh? Or do you REALLY think its necesary for you to believe that I am a christian it in order for it to be true?I’ve also noticed that non-Catholic Christians have more of a tendency toward certainty of their own identity as ones who are “in Christ,” often accompanied by a vivid story of the exact moment at which God caused them to become Christians. Catholics have more of a tendency to…let’s go ahead and say “not do that.”
Do you think that has something to do with it? Try to imagine yourself as a Christian who’s used to testimonies that include a time at which God makes you a Christian and dramatically changes your life, and then you run into people from a different church who talk about being in a state of grace because of the sacraments but they often aren’t sure whether or not they can say for certain that they are currently in a state of grace. What would you think of those people? I know my first thought was “How can I know if they’re Christians; they don’t even know.”
Normally, I just ask people if they’re Christians or not. (In some detail, of course- it’s more than a “Check yes/no” proposition. The idea is that I don’t know so you tell me). But if you don’t even know, what do you want me to think? Am I supposed to say “I know for sure you’re a Christian” when you won’t even say it about yourself? I’d like to, but in a lot of situations, the person on the Catholic side of the conversation makes it kind of difficult.
Of course, when a Catholic does say they know that God made him/her a Christian while also demonstrating a high degree of understanding of and faith in Catholic teaching, I believe that person right away. More so than with most non-Catholics, actually, just because I know what kinds of barriers you have to get through in order to say that.