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safa92
Guest
I’m in a conversation with some anti-catholic protestants and they keep asking me what the gospel is. Why does that even mean?
No, this is not what Protestants mean when they talk about the gospel.The angel announced to Joseph: “You shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.” The same is true of the Eucharist, the sacrament of redemption: “This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.”
The trouble you will have in dialogue with evangelicals is that the meanings of the Words have changed. For Catholics, to be “in Christ” means to be obedient to Him, and remain in a state of grace. For them, to be “in Christ” means one has prayed the sinners prayer.Thank you for the link
There are some very good Catholic Responses to the TULIP, which is a collection of heresies developed by Calvin and espoused by some current evangelical Christians.I thought it was going to be a Catholic response but I get what you are saying
While I agree with you, many evangelicals have been taught that the message ofthe Gospel is contained in the “four spiritual laws”.The Gospel is the living word of God, the Word made flesh
Were you thinking I was suggesting otherwise? The OP wanted to know the reference point of the question, not the Truth!We all need to be able to answer these questions from the position of the Truth.
Yes, of course, but the persons quizzing the OP are most likely looking for that nutshell version. Anti-Catholic protestants don’t believe that Catholics know what the “good news” really is. They are taught a great many errors about what we believe.The 4 Gospel s tell of the Gospel.
Thus the need to be able to speak the Catholic position with accuracy. As Scripture says, always be prepared to answer. Anti-Catholic protestants don’t believe that Catholics know what the “good news” really is. They are taught a great many errors about what we believe.