In separating from the Catholic Church, Protestants reject doctrines of Catholicsm. They say you believe such and such and we do not. What we believe contradicts those things that were believed in the past and that you believe now. Those things are false. We are right. In rejecting or repuduating these things that were believed we no longer belong to this heritage. We are something else now, no longer part of the thing we left.
There are Protestants who think that way, but they are delusional, and are certainly not representative of all modern Protestants.
Why not leave it at that? Why not be happy with this new state of affairs? You go your way and I’ll go mine. Farewell. Best wishes.
Because Protestantism isn’t a new religion and doesn’t claim to be. Protestants believe in Jesus, accept the Scriptures, confess (for the most part) the Apostles’ and Nicene Creeds, celebrate baptism and a form of the Lord’s Supper (even if the latter isn’t valid from the Catholic perspective). You can read this in official texts of your own Church like Lumen Gentium and the Catechism. It shouldn’t be a new perspective to you.
Protestants cannot free themselves from the Catholic heritage without ceasing to be recognizably Protestant, because they cannot free themselves from the Catholic heritage without ceasing to be recognizably Christian. There can be no going separate ways with best wishes. All of us who are baptized into Jesus Christ are bound together, whether we like it or not.
Again, it shouldn’t take an Anglican to tell you this. You should have heard it from your own Church, which clearly teaches this.
When we consider religious doctrines, any or all religious doctrine, beliefs about spiritual matters, faith and morals, there is one fundamental statement we can make about them and all agree, even atheists. They are either true or false.
But they are extremely unlikely to be entirely either the one or the other. Complete falsehood is an ontological impossibility. Complete truth within a human mind is a practical impossibility this side of the Beatific Vision. (Yes, divine revelation is entirely true, but divine revelation exists in fallen human minds, which inevitably perceive it imperfectly.)
Truth can not by its nature, compromise or be compromised.
That’s just obviously, empirically false. All truth that we know on earth is compromised truth. All mortal knowledge falls short of the divine reality.
It can not meet error halfway and make peace with it.
Certainly. There can be no deliberate compromise with error.
We all err, but we should reject error as soon as we discover it.
However, we must recognize that those with whom we disagree also have some truth, and we must be open to recognizing
that truth–not compromising with error but correcting our error by their truth.
Reuniting Christianity is not a matter of finding a way to harmonize contradicting docrtines. It is a matter of those that are false being exposed and rejected and affirming those that are true.
Indeed. And when doctrines contradict, it is, practically speaking,
never because one set of doctrines is entirely true and the other set entirely false (or even entirely false where they contradict the other set). Error would find no purchase in the human mind if there were no truth mixed up in it, and truth would not be rejected by sincere people if it were not compromised in some way by human weakness and error (as it always is).
Any time two people disagree, each of them has something to learn from the other, except where one of them is clinically insane or willfully lying (sometimes even then, of course).And that goes for groups as well, with the further caveat that a large group of people cannot be insane and is highly unlikely to be willfully lying as a whole.
Edwin