Speaking of wise approaches in convincing “the other,” love the sarcasm.
You didn’t support it, but others on this thread appear to support the idea.
Many people are too soft though. I know of a lot of Protestants who come to the Church, but who’s religious views do not change much because of a faulty understanding of what the Church teaches. Not everyone is guilty of this, but you can’t deny that it happens.
That’s interesting. I actually haven’t seen this. My husband is an RCIA helper (in charge of training the sponsors), so he comes into contact with a lot of the converts to the Church, and he hasn’t seen it. But I can certainly agree that those who are not well-catechized will be very mushy in their theology.
You suggest we rid the Church of everything they’ll find offensive? That’s being deceitful.
ABSOLUTELY NOT! Sorry, I was responding in the same message to another poster who sent posted a series of pictures in this thread with the message, “Cat, welcome to the dark side.” I don’t get this, but I think he’s just having fun with me, and that’s perfectly OK, and I’m glad that we can all be friends and joke around a little. I have to admit, the first time I ever saw St. Anthony in repose under the altar, I jumped ten feet!
That’s a bit of an exaggeration, don’t you think? Sounds more like a…stereotype…
Of course it’s an exaggeration. But some of the posts on this thread imply that Catholics believe we need to return to a time when Protestants were spurned as heretics and their places of worship shunned as dens of demons.
While very good, that’s not the *only *
method of evangelization that works.
I agree. Each Christian should rely upon the guidance of the Holy Spirit and use the gifts that the Holy Spirit has given to them.
One of the best children’s teachers I ever saw was a dumpy, balding, middle-aged man who used no fancy puppets, videos, powerpoints, magic tricks, or costumes. He just brought in a few pictures–on paper, not a computer!–and talked to the little ones (five and under). When I first saw him in action, I despaired, thinking that the children would be bored out of their gourds in one minute. But for the next ten minutes or so, he held them spell-bound. I thought he was boring, the kids thought he was wonderful. They hung on his every word. He broke every trick in the “How To Teach Children Creatively” Instruction Manual, but they loved him.
And as I studied him in future weeks, I realized that I was seeing an honest-to-goodness gift of the Holy Spirit, the teaching gift spoken of in I Corinthians, in action. It was amazing. There was no human way that this man could have held the attention of all those dozens of small children–it was the Holy Spirit at work.
So yes, I know that some people will break all the rules of good evangelism techniques, and call Protestants foul names and tell them that they have sinned mortally and that The Mother Mary of God is praying for them–and amazingly, instead of turning away, the Protestants WILL respond to this ministry and call upon the Name of the Lord and seek to be fully restored to His True Church. It’s the Holy Spirit at work, and far be it from me to scoff.
But I think that will be a rare gift, a gift that only a few saints have possessed. I think that most of us should stick with sweet reasonableness, as described in Philippians 4:5.
It’s a very valuable approach, but don’t forget that he was addressing non Christians. The way we address rebellious Catholics (the actual heretics
) needs to be straightforward as they are in greater danger of damnation and need to made very aware of that reality.
I personally would back away from addressing rebellious Catholics, because I am a new Catholic myself. I would pray for them, and try to get a more mature, knowledgeable Catholic involved in witnessing to them. Yes, I certainly would stand up for my faith and my Church if no one else was around, and trust that the Holy Spirit would give me the proper words and work in the rebellious person’s heart. But frankly, daughteroftruth, I don’t think that dealing with rebellious Catholics is an area that I am very good at. I think I would make things worse.