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Micosil, you sound very well informed. That is wonderful. Are you becoming Catholic next Easter? 
Not to steal his thunder, but since I think he signed for for now, yes, I believe that he said on another thread that he is planning on being received into the Church next Easter!Micosil, you sound very well informed. That is wonderful. Are you becoming Catholic next Easter?![]()
I have noticed that you are the only one to even address that part of my post.Oh indeed, I hope nobody gets the impression I was implying this is something unique to Catholics. Had it just been this I may not have left the church, but on reflection I think it was the âstraw that broke the camels backâ so to speak. It was the last major âbadâ event before I decided to leave, it just happened to be a rather dramatic one.
There are good and bad Catholics, as there are good and bad Protestants, Muslims, Athiests and every other group.
I must say I share this concern with you, although it is not one that ever crossed my mind until I left the Catholic Church.
I find the very concept of a confessional upon reflection to be a very shady affair. Allow me to share a true example; a former friend of mine had an affair and was advised by his confessor not to tell his wife.
Lets think about this. The mistress in question thankfully wasnât but could have been a common prostitute riddled with every sexual transmitted disease under the sun. The man is placing his wife at risk and she isnât been giving any warning to take precautions (testing, preventative treatments etc). Not only that but he was encouraging the idea of lying to ones spouse, that is terrible and why I decided to tell his wife myself by sending an explicit picture of the mistress and him heâd been keeping on his phone to the wife. For the record they are still together but she made him be tested and wait six months to be âin the clearâ from any STDâs that may not have revealed themselves. You may think Iâm a troublemaker bringing scandal on a good Catholic couple, I think I may have prevented her from catching something awful from his whore.
We can bring this out to anything really, murder, rape, child abuse is the big one that comes to mind reallyâŚâDonât tell your wife, youâll bring scandalâ. As weâve seen in the past fifty years itâs all too tempting to replace âwifeâ with âyour parentsâ. I feel very uncomfortable with the level of underhand dealing Catholicism encourages, from radical convalidation to confession.
Micosil, you sound very well informed. That is wonderful. Are you becoming Catholic next Easter?![]()
Yes, indeed, God willing next Easter Vigil I will receive the sacraments of initiation.Not to steal his thunder, but since I think he signed for for now, yes, I believe that he said on another thread that he is planning on being received into the Church next Easter!
May God bless you all abundantly and forever!![]()
Almost an oxymoron. Almost.Can you find a neutral website or two that claims what the two websites above do?
I donât think youâre likely to get one honestly; but you arenât the only one who views it like that.I have noticed that you are the only one to even address that part of my post.
Any church that encourages one to lie to their spouse or betray their spouse is not a church that I want to be part of.
I was approached by a priest in relation to various projects within my field of expertise that they required assistance on a few years ago. It eventually sparked an interest in the past year or so.Any of you come âthis closeâ to embracing Catholicism, but havenât been able to? How come?
Did any of you start as Catholic but ended up converting to Eastern Orthodox or Anglican or Lutheran or something else? Why?
Any of you âcafeteria Catholicsâ and are comfortable with it? How did you reconcile that?
Just trying to find my place in this world!
Jesus was a Catholic, why wouldnât you want to be ?I came extremely close. Some of the members here wonder âwhat the heck happenedâ because of just how close I was.
For me, itâs that Catholics around me have no heart. They have grey hair, they have a couple family members with them, theyâre not open about their Faith, and itâs really just a part of their culture. No one took any interest in me when I visited CCâs.
Theyâre not interested in âGoing and making Disciples of all nations.â As for me, I want everyone to know who Christ is, I want to discuss it with my closest friends and I want them to be inspired in our discussions. I want God to be the centre of my life, and the Church I attend makes sure thatâs your attitude. There is no âCultureâ where I go to Church. People come in whether rich, poor, old, young, whatever. People are on fire for God where I go.
There are some doctrinal reasons I am not Catholic, but when my conscience was hurting and I couldnât decide because both my Church and the CCâs sounded so right, I then decided I would only pray and read my Bible. I put it in Godâs hands. And for whatever reason, it seems so obvious to me that He wants me where I am.
Where I am now I know Christians who are only Christians because they want to be. We feed the poor, not to be social, but because we want to preach Christ. Thereâs so much good where I am, and I wonât give it up unless God brings me somewhere else.
He was a Jew.Jesus was a Catholic, why wouldnât you want to be ?
Lutherans have only two sacraments: baptism and communion, although sometimes penance (confession) is also included. Marriage is not considered a sacrament but rather a sacramental (i.e. material objects, things or actions that are set apart or blessed).In regard to marriage, Jesus clearly elevated it to sacramental level (and I believe that the Lutherans have it as a Sacrament, too).
I was baptized Catholic only to placate my Fatherâs side of the family who said theyâd be furious if I was not baptized as such. I went to Catholic school and was brought to church as a child by my Father when he wasnât working (once or maybe more by my Mother, who is not Catholic). At 12-13, I felt like something wasnât right in my life. I saw my family members say âthere is no other religion in the world but Catholicismâ and making fun of my Orthodox Mother and Grandmother, but I didnât see them backing it up. Likewise, I didnât see it at my school, nor did I see it from the pulpit when the priest said remarks like âon your wedding day, be like a Jewish princess, ladies; sit down, do your nails, and relaxâ and âyou all make the sign of the cross wrong; itâs left to right, not right to left. Only the Orthodox make it like that, and nobody cares about them!â I made non-serious attempts at looking into Buddhism and Judaism. Then, I decided to look into my Motherâs religion. At first, I was running from Catholicism, but after the advice of an old, Greek hairdresser, I decided that I shouldnât be running away from Catholicism, I should be running into Orthodoxy. I got serious about studying the Church, went through three years of catechism, and never looked back.Any of you come âthis closeâ to embracing Catholicism, but havenât been able to? How come?
Did any of you start as Catholic but ended up converting to Eastern Orthodox or Anglican or Lutheran or something else? Why?
Any of you âcafeteria Catholicsâ and are comfortable with it? How did you reconcile that?
Just trying to find my place in this world!
First of all, there is a question of theological certainty. There are certain doctrines and teachings that are within the free range of theological research as well as teachings with low degree of certainty. These are teachings and statements that can be discussed and disputed, in particular within the realms of professional theology.Yes. Thatâs why there are absolutely no doctrinal disputes in Catholicism. LOL.
I was baptized Catholic only to placate my Fatherâs side of the family who said theyâd be furious if I was not baptized as such. I went to Catholic school and was brought to church as a child by my Father when he wasnât working (once or maybe more by my Mother, who is not Catholic). At 12-13, I felt like something wasnât right in my life. I saw my family members say âthere is no other religion in the world but Catholicismâ and making fun of my Orthodox Mother and Grandmother, but I didnât see them backing it up. Likewise, I didnât see it at my school, nor did I see it from the pulpit when the priest said remarks like âon your wedding day, be like a Jewish princess, ladies; sit down, do your nails, and relaxâ and âyou all make the sign of the cross wrong; itâs left to right, not right to left. Only the Orthodox make it like that, and nobody cares about them!â I made non-serious attempts at looking into Buddhism and Judaism. Then, I decided to look into my Motherâs religion. At first, I was running from Catholicism, but after the advice of an old, Greek hairdresser, I decided that I shouldnât be running away from Catholicism, I should be running into Orthodoxy. I got serious about studying the Church, went through three years of catechism, and never looked back.
Thatâs why Iâm not Catholic.
I doubt it. Very, very few Catholic Americans know that Eastern Catholicism exists.Does that priest know Eastern Catholics also make the Sign of the Cross like the Orthodox do?
Itâs those sorts of bigoted comments that should always be pointed out, imho, and be charitably corrected.
That question is not of consequence to me. Whether your faith community is all holy, not at all holy, or somewhere inbetween has no bearing on my spiritual-journey, nor is it my judgement call to make. I know full well that the Church is, however.I can understand why youâd be put off by Catholicism after such experiences, though I hope you understand most Catholics arenât like that, and that a priestâs moral integrity (or lack thereof in this case) doesnât make the Church any less holy.
That the laity in general may not know is one thing. But I always find it surprising when priests and bishops, who usually have graduate-level training and qualifications in theology, canon law, and the like, make ignorant claims such as these.I doubt it. Very, very few Catholic Americans know that Eastern Catholicism exists.
That question is not of consequence to me. Whether your faith community is all holy, not at all holy, or somewhere inbetween has no bearing on my spiritual-journey, nor is it my judgement call to make. I know full well that the Church is, however.
Sadly true.I doubt it. Very, very few Catholic Americans know that Eastern Catholicism exists.
The Catholic Church considers Marriage a Sacrament when a man and women, both Baptized and free to marry, make their vows to each other in the presents of their minister. God Bless, MemawWhich Lutheran church considers marriage to be a Sacrament?
Yes, this is one of the strong arguments.I
I know youâve given this great thought and struggled with it. But regarding issue #1 how do you resolve the words of Jesus in Matthew 18:17?
âIf the member refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; and if the offender refuses to listen even to the church, let such a one be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector.â
It seems to me that without a single church in some sense this verse is rendered meaningless. If Iâm excluded from one church but can just go join another and still be in the Church then isnât this teaching drained of any real meaning? There has to be one visible Church in some sense from which I can be excluded. The best candidate seems to me the Catholic Church. This was an important factor for me in my conversion.
It isnât malarkyâit just doesnât fit your local experience.As a Canadian this is utter malarky. People are more likely to look down on Evangelicals here.
But what if they have different beliefs on gay marriage for clergy and on what is meant by Holy Communion?I believe strongly that the local Christian community should be united, and that every local community should be in communion with every other.