H
Hlafdige
Guest
OUCH, Brother!!…The opening line of this person’s blog says that he did not watch or read much, because he was predisposed against WYD.
In the middle of the text, he speaks about his days as a Protestant. This can be very telling. Some people convert to Catholicism and they seem to be able to detach from that particular way of thinking. Unfortunately, others who convert, especially from Fundamentalist Protestantism, become believers of the truth and members of the Catholic Church. They embrace the fullness of truth that subsists in the Church, but they can’t shake off the fundamentalist way of thinking. They continue to be rigid, fixated on their opinions, and determined to convert everyone to their point of view.
I saw this in the blog too. He said that he was not interested in hearing from others who he labeled liberals, neo conservatives and something else. In other words, he’s not open to hearing any other opinion but his own. This reminded me of the Jehovah Witness who knocks on your door on Saturday morning.
A lot of us converts from Protestantism consider ourselves “hard-identity Catholics” (h/t to Fr. Z for the term). To say that this is due to a lack of detachment from particularly Protestant thinking is basically an ad hominem argument (you say that because you have thus-and-such faults, therefore what you say isn’t true).
Protestant fundamentalists and orthodox Catholics both want to see truth in advertising: If the label says “Catholic” (or Lutheran, or Baptist…) we think that’s what we should find inside the package.
From Wikipedia’s definition of fundamentalism:
Christian fundamentalism, also known as fundamentalist Christianity, or simply fundamentalism,[1] refers to a movement begun in the late 19th and early 20th century British and American Protestant denominations among evangelicals who reacted energetically against theological and cultural modernism.[2] Fundamentalists argued that 19th century modernist theologians had misinterpreted or rejected certain doctrines, especially biblical inerrancy, which evangelicals viewed as the fundamentals of Christian faith.[3] A few scholars regard Catholics who reject modern theology in favor of more traditional doctrines as fundamentalists.