You’re right, all of this is on faith. But I choose to interpret Scripture in the light of the Saints who have gone before and what they have consistantly said for thousands of years.
If I don’t choose this, then we are relying strictly on our own intellect and understanding, which is something I am not willing to do.
You say, all of this is on faith…then you say that you choose to “interpret Scripture in the light of the Saints who have gone before” …
which means you have FAITH in the “Saints who have gone before” …
the Protestant would say, “I have faith in the Holy Spirit.” …which the Lord promised would “guide us into all truth”…
We stand on the promises of God, and we believe these promises were not just for an elect few…and this is a serious difference in doctrine.
I am not Catholic because I did not experience the Holy Spirit in the Catholic Church. That was simply my experience…I am not saying it wasn’t there…but it certainly wasn’t expressed as a gift I might hold. It was only for the priests…and that, to me, is the source of great sadness.
I might have forever been “luke warm” if I had not come to know Christ and to have the indwelling of His Spirit. You say it’s taught. Well, I stand as evidence that the teaching lacked and many of my generation didn’t get it.
The teaching of the church is complicated and overwhelming and so many of your average Joe Catholics are just that, average Joe Christians…That’s a serious enough offense to cause many to miss out completely on any kind of real faith at all…and that surely is not the will of God. … it is a serious enough offense to keep me out of the church, because I feel that the church is not feeding the sheep.
They’re starving, they’re running astray, and so, so, many are lost.
Don’t get irate about these words…I’m speaking truth as I see it in my own life and in the lives of the Catholics around me…and the sad truth is that many, many Catholics trust the CHURCH to get them to heaven.
It’s like living in an institution…where they make your bed, bring you meals, and care for your every need…Who wants to get well? They don’t see their need for a personal trust in a real and living God. They do not look for a Savior, since they figure they are covered by the blood of the church as long as they show up. That’s the danger I see in the doctrine that is based on much tradition and ritual…the ritual acts replace the heart condition.
Paul spoke many words against such teachings that would “be a stumbling block” — we take the focus off the work of God through Christ and put it on the work we do as patrons of a system. That’s scary to me…that’s not pleasing to God.
I believe that there’s a balance somewhere … to be reverent is important, to worship and pray and remember His work…but where is the joy in the RCC?
The joy of the Lord is my strength!
Someone on here said that protestants don’t believe in confession. That’s a HUGE lie! It is essential in the walk of a protestant to humbly come before the Lord, confessing their sins…it’s just that they don’t feel that it has to be to the priest to be effectual. It is good to do so with an elder, so that we have support and prayer. But I can go directly to Christ with my sins anytime, anywhere. To me, that’s an amazing gift, and I am sad for my friends who don’t have it because they believe the only way it “counts” is before a priest.
How can THAT teaching not grieve our Lord? That His beloved children would feel they could not come to Him? **“Let the children come unto me!” **
Oh, I could go on and on, you all know that by now.
**To love the Lord with all thy heart, soul, mind and strength, and to love thy neighbor as thyself. ** If we are to do these things, His Spirit will alight on our hearts and we will walk like Christ.
So simple, so lovely, so amazing, so transforming, so true.
D.