F
FrRob
Guest
Ah . . .I like this question, as I am a big science fiction fan.
Of course, we cannot really know the answer, but “alternate history” can be an interesting thing to think about, as it can in some ways help us to examine our own real history, and just what it means to us.
If there had never been a Protestant Reformation . . . the first thing that comes to mind is there would never have been a Counter-Reformation. There would have been no reaction to the quite correct objections some of the reformers had.
The sale of indulgences comes to mind.
If the Church had continued in that vein, without reform of some serious abuses, we could be very much a corrupt institution.
One can argue that Christ would have preserved His Church.
Yes . . . but . . .
The Chosen people of God, Israel, were just that: God’s Chosen People.
This did not stop them from straying into Adultery with idols. They had to be corrected by God many times, always bringing forth a faithful, or repentant, or both, remnant, to carry forward His covenant.
Would God have purified His Church? I have no doubt that He would, but . . .when? How long might we have strayed? 100 years? 1000? 10,000?
We really have no way of knowing.
In some ways, we need to give thanks for the call to reform that was made.
Did this call also lead us down a path where Christians are no longer around one table? Yes, of course.
Could that perhaps also be the punishment or Guiding Hand of God at work, forcing the Church to re-examine Herself?
I think it just may have been.
While we are the heirs of those within the Church who sought to reform, we perhaps also ought to remember that, in a way, we are also the heirs of those who brought about that need for reform.
Perhaps as we continue in Penance, striving to amend what what wrong, and offering prayer for those whose faith was damaged by scandalous practices in the Middle-Ages Church, we will one day regain the gift of our wandering Protestant brothers and sisters rejoining us as the Table of the Eucharist.
Fr. Rob
Of course, we cannot really know the answer, but “alternate history” can be an interesting thing to think about, as it can in some ways help us to examine our own real history, and just what it means to us.
If there had never been a Protestant Reformation . . . the first thing that comes to mind is there would never have been a Counter-Reformation. There would have been no reaction to the quite correct objections some of the reformers had.
The sale of indulgences comes to mind.
If the Church had continued in that vein, without reform of some serious abuses, we could be very much a corrupt institution.
One can argue that Christ would have preserved His Church.
Yes . . . but . . .
The Chosen people of God, Israel, were just that: God’s Chosen People.
This did not stop them from straying into Adultery with idols. They had to be corrected by God many times, always bringing forth a faithful, or repentant, or both, remnant, to carry forward His covenant.
Would God have purified His Church? I have no doubt that He would, but . . .when? How long might we have strayed? 100 years? 1000? 10,000?
We really have no way of knowing.
In some ways, we need to give thanks for the call to reform that was made.
Did this call also lead us down a path where Christians are no longer around one table? Yes, of course.
Could that perhaps also be the punishment or Guiding Hand of God at work, forcing the Church to re-examine Herself?
I think it just may have been.
While we are the heirs of those within the Church who sought to reform, we perhaps also ought to remember that, in a way, we are also the heirs of those who brought about that need for reform.
Perhaps as we continue in Penance, striving to amend what what wrong, and offering prayer for those whose faith was damaged by scandalous practices in the Middle-Ages Church, we will one day regain the gift of our wandering Protestant brothers and sisters rejoining us as the Table of the Eucharist.
Fr. Rob