J
JustaServant
Guest
Not theological, but practicalities.

I imagine that every community is somewhat different from the next, but the experience that I have in my local area would involve two Catholic parishes that are just as willing to cooperate in joint community worship services on special occasions as any of the Protestant churches. The feeling we have here is one of love and acceptance in spite of doctrinal differences. I canāt think of any one thing in my locality that the Catholics need to learn from the area Protestant churches in terms of practicalities.Not theological, but practicalities.
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Good question, but I think it would be best answered by Catholics who come from Protestant backgrounds or Catholics who have visited Protestant churches or have Protestant friends because they might be able to do a better job of comparing the two.Not theological, but practicalities.
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As a former protestant I would tend to agree with this. I am often surprised at how some Catholics seem to not read their Holy Bible on their own. But as a new Catholic, I must say I am so grateful for the sacraments!I once went to a talk by an Anglican bishop who explained this very well. You need to be āfedā by two things - the word of God and the sacraments. Catholics (and Anglo-Catholics, high church Anglicans etc) focus on the sacraments and can neglect the word. Protestants tend to be the other way around - plenty of āwordā, little attention to sacraments. What protestants do well is open up the word.
That depends.From what Iāve heard, Protestant churches have more outreach, that they see members in need and pull together to help them.
Except for in many places, people go to be seen. In the Catholic church everyone is welcome, no matter their class or station in life. I would hate to see the pressure be on appearances.Dress like you are in the house of God! Growing up Catholic in a heavily Protestant southern city, I attended many churches with my friends. The one thing that always stood out to me, even as a teenager back then, was that people dressed really nice, in their āSunday Bestā whereas in my own parish people were in shorts and jeans and flip flops and whatever it seems could be found rummaging around in their laundry pile, as if they were headed to the beach or a picnic or going to some athletic event!
I am a convert from protestantism. The non-denominational type mostly but I had Pentecostal leanings, I went to Calvary Chapel for a long time and even attended a Lutheran church for about a year before becoming CatholicNot theological, but practicalities.
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