M
MaryT777
Guest
ROFLOL!..Sniff: I don’t recall being invitedI had a previous engagement.
GKC
ROFLOL!..Sniff: I don’t recall being invitedI had a previous engagement.
GKC
Raising hand :: I have…My friend is a LCMS Pastor! Count me in as being around some conservative LutheransClearly you haven’t been around conservative Lutherans.![]()
One word: HereticsWhat’s a Protestant?
Thanks. I like that, because honesty is always wellcome. I hold the faith that was anathemiized in Trent. To be conistent a Catholic should consider me a heretic and call m one, instead of using the condescending term ”separated brother".One word: Heretics
You are very kind.Making mental note to but GKC a motley crew Tshirt for a gift…LOL…
sorry off topic but I love that
Mary.
This is the non-Catholics forum, whose stated purpose is to “explore the history and beliefs of non-Catholic and non-Christian faiths, dialogue with their adherents.”What would be the best way to address this issue when posting a thread. I know nothing of the differences between all different denominations nor could I keep up.
I concur most Catholics think either Catholic in union with Rome or Protestant not
in union with Rome.
=Kal2012;10586795]I tend to take an “either - or” view.
Either you are a Catholic or you aren’t.
It doesn’t make us Catholic, in communion with the Bishop of Rome. And infant Baptism isn’t bunk, and scripture doesn’t save you. And the pope is a leader in the Church, as he is the Bishop of Rome, and the western patriarch.The Protestant world is huge and has lots of different branches. You can be a high-church protestant or a low church protestant and still agree that the Pope isn’t the leader of your church, that scripture only will save you and that infant baptism is bunk. Just because your protestant church has more in common w/Catholics than the “low-church” folks doesn’t make you Catholic.
Coming into the RCC from a Low-church background, I still have a hard time with mass because it is fundamentally different than what is offered as worship in low-church settings.
Individual Catholics may disagree with what is taught on the social stuff, but Church leadership is clear on what the proper position to take on any issue is. That opinion doesn’t change whether you go to the “Liberal” or “Conservative” parish.
My standard is whether you can take communion in the RCC or you can’t. If you can’t, then either you are an unbeliever (can be in various ways) or a protestant Christian. Either way, you aren’t in alignment with the RCC and its beliefs.
I was deeply offended that, as a protestant Christian, I couldn’t take communion in an RCC. However, after learning and growing in the Catholic faith and becoming a Catholic, I understand why there’s that standard.
My understanding is that belief in the real presence is not the determining factor as to whether or not one may receive in a Catholic church. Lutherans believe in the real presence, so do many Anglicans.I am more offended these days that my RCIA director is okay with non-Catholics taking communion because my husband made it quite clear when we were dating that **non-Catholics weren’t supposed to participate because we (as protestants) don’t believe in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. ** I’ve since learned that there are a few exceptions, but still, for the most part, either you are in-line with teachings of Catholicism or you aren’t.
Same problems within Lutheranism.There is room to question w/in both traditions. Still, I don’t consider my Catholic doubting friends, protestants just because they have doubts. There has to be clear rejection of what the RCC teaches on other things besides the social stuff. It’s a given that most people in America have problems with the church’s stance on the social stuff.
I was a cradle Baptist and enjoyed that very much. There was nothing I was protesting as I was following the religion of my parents. That is pretty much the same for most following the religion of their parents. They aren’t protesting anything and I hate the term protestant. It is long past being a definitive term since the reformation happened centuries before any of us was born.It seems in this forum one is often categorized into one of two factions. One is either Protestant or Catholic (OK, one could be Orthodox, but let’s leave them aside for a moment.)
Yet, this categorization becomes very sticky, especially when many of the threads are titled, “Protestants, Why Do You Believe _____?” And, I think, “which Protestants are you asking? I certainly don’t believe that.”
I’m trying to avoid countless regurgitations from Wikipedia’s entry, so tell me how you are using the word “Protestant?”
For me, if you write “Protestant,” and mean Episcopalians, Lutherans, Presbyterians and Methodists, then OK, I’m fine with that. We have similar beliefs and one could lump us together for discussion’s sake.
But if you write “Protestant” and mean Non-denominational, Pentecostal, Evangelical, Charismatic and Fundamentalist, then I take issue. I don’t have much in common with those folks and couldn’t speak on their behalf, nor would I want them to speak on mine.
What are your thoughts? I’d like to hear from Catholics and non-Catholics (see what I did there?) alike.
This is what I understand the Catholic teaching to be. Further, it would be inappropriate for a non-Catholic to receive in a Catholic church, if for no other reason than they ask us not to. Just good manners. Contrary to the Catholic view of our sacrament, Lutherans believe that the Catholic Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ, but there is much more to “communion” than agreement on the real presence.There are Protestants that believe in the Real Presence, but the Catholic Church does not recognize their communions as the true body and blood, soul and divinity of Christ, therefore, they should not receive the Eucharist without the premission of the Catholic bishop.
Conversely, Catholics may not receive Protestant communion no matter what that particular ecclesial body believes about it because, in the eyes of the Catholic Church, it is not the Eucharist. Receiving in a Protestant church means, to a Catholic, being in union with that church’s beliefs. Since we do not hold to their beliefs, we cause scandal and sin if we receive in their churches.
…There was nothing I was protesting as I was following the religion of my parents. That is pretty much the same for most following the religion of their parents. They aren’t protesting anything and I hate the term protestant. It is long past being a definitive term since the reformation happened centuries before any of us was born.
I don’t think intentional, but, yes, it can be confusing…There are Catholics that use the term “the church” when talking about the body of Christ as being all encompassing of all denominations. Then they will turn around and use the term “the church” to mean the Catholic Church. That can be very confusing and it’s probably an intentional use.
I seek Someone and something more; to be Protestant is not bad; perhaps just not complete.Again, back to protestant. I never was protesting until I started to protest the religion of my parents and seeking something better. It wasn’t until I started to investigate the Catholic Church that I became a protestant. My plans to enter RCIA in August will make my protest complete.
While this isn’t what you are looking to find, these ideas have been rolling around my mind for a while. It just highlights how foolish to still use terms such as protestant are…
There are Catholics that use the term “the church” when talking about the body of Christ as being all encompassing of all denominations. Then they will turn around and use the term “the church” to mean the Catholic Church. That can be very confusing and it’s probably an intentional use.
I just finished an inquiry in the local parish. On one of those nights, we were discussing the body of Christ and the other gentleman and I were asking how other denominations fit into that. There is a Methodist church about a mile away and we were using it as an example. The instructor, who I have great affection, explained how the good people at X(Methodist Church) were part of the church and part of the body of Christ but they weren’t in full communion with “The Church”.:
I don’t think intentional, but, yes, it can be confusing…
Communion is, of course, the union between God and his people. The Eucharist is a part of that, but a very substantial part. It is baptism that unites us, though. Sadly, no matter what we believe about each other’s sacraments, we are not in union there. I wish it were otherwise for the sake of all our separated brethren and the world.This is what I understand the Catholic teaching to be. Further, it would be inappropriate for a non-Catholic to receive in a Catholic church, if for no other reason than they ask us not to. Just good manners. Contrary to the Catholic view of our sacrament, Lutherans believe that the Catholic Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ, but there is much more to “communion” than agreement on the real presence.
Jon
Della that was very well stated; nice post.There are Protestants that believe in the Real Presence, but the Catholic Church does not recognize their communions as the true body and blood, soul and divinity of Christ, therefore, they should not receive the Eucharist without the premission of the Catholic bishop.
Conversely, Catholics may not receive Protestant communion no matter what that particular ecclesial body believes about it because, in the eyes of the Catholic Church, it is not the Eucharist. Receiving in a Protestant church means, to a Catholic, being in union with that church’s beliefs. Since we do not hold to their beliefs, we cause scandal and sin if we receive in their churches.
I’m glad you posted this for I tend to use the word church as in universal/catholicI just finished an inquiry in the local parish. On one of those nights, we were discussing the body of Christ and the other gentleman and I were asking how other denominations fit into that. There is a Methodist church about a mile away and we were using it as an example. The instructor, who I have great affection, explained how the good people at X(Methodist Church) were part of the church and part of the body of Christ but they weren’t in full communion with “The Church”.
Of course, what he meant was: the good people at X(Methodist Church) were part of the church and part of the body of Christ but they weren’t in full communion with the Catholic Church. This instructor was a revert that had spent 8+ years at an evangelical church until he reverted back to Catholicism. He should have known that his statement could cause confusion. It wasn’t until the other gentleman, that was in inquiry with me, and I discussed it alone, that we became clear on his meaning of all this.
Some Catholics can be very territorial. They don’t consider themselves as a denomination but as “The Church”. It’s can be confusing and off putting.
I grew up in an Evangelical Pentecostal home. When my parents converted, the term ‘Protestant’ was and is still deemed to be gravely offensive. I’m not offended, but it is inaccurate.It seems in this forum one is often categorized into one of two factions. One is either Protestant or Catholic (OK, one could be Orthodox, but let’s leave them aside for a moment.)
Yet, this categorization becomes very sticky, especially when many of the threads are titled, “Protestants, Why Do You Believe _____?” And, I think, “which Protestants are you asking? I certainly don’t believe that.”
I’m trying to avoid countless regurgitations from Wikipedia’s entry, so tell me how you are using the word “Protestant?”
For me, if you write “Protestant,” and mean Episcopalians, Lutherans, Presbyterians and Methodists, then OK, I’m fine with that. We have similar beliefs and one could lump us together for discussion’s sake.
But if you write “Protestant” and mean Non-denominational, Pentecostal, Evangelical, Charismatic and Fundamentalist, then I take issue. I don’t have much in common with those folks and couldn’t speak on their behalf, nor would I want them to speak on mine.
What are your thoughts? I’d like to hear from Catholics and non-Catholics (see what I did there?) alike.