Why do some Protestants refuse to tell what their denominations are?

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I think it should be a requirement of membership here that one’s religious affiliation be in their profile and visible on every post they make.

Some Protestant/Reformed websites REQUIRE that you post what church/congregation you belong to as a condition of membership (although Catholics such as myself are banned from membership because of our heretical beliefs).

In MY opinion… if I’m going to discuss religion with someone, I like knowing who I’m talking to and where THEY’RE coming from. If someone doesn’t have a religion, put “none” in the box. I’m very open about being Catholic. I’m not ashamed of it, I don’t hide it, and I don’t shy away from non-Catholics because of it. In the REAL world (away from the interwebs), I never get into debates with Protestants. Ever. Where I live in New England, the biggest challenges to faithful Catholics come from secular “nones” and “former” Catholics. They hate the Catholic Church more than the most fiery Protestant minister.

I digress.

If you’re Baptist, tell the world and be proud. The same goes for Evangelical non-denominationals, Pentecostals, Methodists, etc. People from all religions are allowed to join here. No need to hide who you are.
Exactly. Coming from the Catholic tradition, it is difficult to understand why one should be ashamed to disclose one’s church. If we believe it is the true Church, it follows that we are proud and brave enough to let our Church be known, to be scrutinized, investigated and challenged.
 
Sorry, not even close…as a non-denom, where I’m at and how I’m raised we’re no where close to Pentecostal.

As an aside, this is the first time I’ve ever heard of an issue where an individual doesn’t identify themself. I’ve identified myself as non-denom every time I’ve been asked how I identify myself
Yes, obviously it is not something one meets in a regular basis, that’s why it becomes a question here. In other word, why?
 
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rfournier103:
I think it should be a requirement of membership here that one’s religious affiliation be in their profile and visible on every post they make.

Some Protestant/Reformed websites REQUIRE that you post what church/congregation you belong to as a condition of membership (although Catholics such as myself are banned from membership because of our heretical beliefs).

In MY opinion… if I’m going to discuss religion with someone, I like knowing who I’m talking to and where THEY’RE coming from. If someone doesn’t have a religion, put “none” in the box. I’m very open about being Catholic. I’m not ashamed of it, I don’t hide it, and I don’t shy away from non-Catholics because of it. In the REAL world (away from the interwebs), I never get into debates with Protestants. Ever. Where I live in New England, the biggest challenges to faithful Catholics come from secular “nones” and “former” Catholics. They hate the Catholic Church more than the most fiery Protestant minister.

I digress.

If you’re Baptist, tell the world and be proud. The same goes for Evangelical non-denominationals, Pentecostals, Methodists, etc. People from all religions are allowed to join here. No need to hide who you are.
Exactly. Coming from the Catholic tradition, it is difficult to understand why one should be ashamed to disclose one’s church. If we believe it is the true Church, it follows that we are proud and brave enough to let our Church be known, to be scrutinized, investigated and challenged.
Reuben, Reuben…I cannot find anywhere on your profile where you indicate you are Catholic.
 
Again Ianman i think you need to verify your sourcing. The Areian heresy was fought and defended before the bible, as you know it, came into existance.
All of the books of the Bible were written by the end of the 1st Century and history tells us that there was a wide consensus of which books were to be considered scripture by the end of the 2nd century. There are citations from almost every New Testament book by Clement of Alexandria and Tertullian. Clement did include a few books he calls “scripture” that did not end up in the New Testament. Showing that there wasn’t yet a complete consensus.

The oldest known manuscript that list the orthodox New Testament is called the Muratorian Canon. It was written between 170-200. It included all 4 Gospels, Acts, all 13 Pauline letters, 1 and 2 John, Jude and Revelation. This shows that those text were used as “scripture” long before any council decisions on “what is scripture”.

A man I’ve conversed with who has a Ph.D. Ecclesiastical History with a focus on the Ante-Nicene church wrote this:

"The New Testament developed, or evolved, over the course of the first 250-300 years of Christian history. No one particular person made the decision. The decision was not made at a church council. The particular writings that became those of the New Testament gradually came into focus and became the most trusted and beneficial of all the early Christian writings. "

In other words, the Bible was we know came into being by a consensus of the church. It wasn’t an immediate consensus as it took around 250 years for a final consensus to form. However, the books that we know as the New Testament have been used as authoritative scripture since the before the beginning of the 2nd Century. In the first 250 years a few books were added and few removed because the majority of the churches agreed as to what was and was not to be considered scripture.

As far as the Trinity being Biblical, all you have to do is read the writings of Athanasius and see how much he used Scripture against the Arians. In his work, Against the Arians, there are six scriptural citations in the first paragraph alone.
 
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Maybe they go to the ACC (Anti-Catholic Church) but that is highly classified and can only be revealed on a need-to-know basis. :male_detective::female_detective:
 
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adf417:
Again Ianman i think you need to verify your sourcing. The Areian heresy was fought and defended before the bible, as you know it, came into existance.
All of the books of the Bible were written by the end of the 1st Century and history tells us that there was a wide consensus of which books were to be considered scripture by the end of the 2nd century. There are citations from almost every New Testament book by Clement of Alexandria and Tertullian. Clement did include a few books he calls “scripture” that did not end up in the New Testament. Showing that there wasn’t yet a complete consensus.

The oldest known manuscript that list the orthodox New Testament is called the Muratorian Canon. It was written between 170-200. It included all 4 Gospels, Acts, all 13 Pauline letters, 1 and 2 John, Jude and Revelation. This shows that those text were used as “scripture” long before any council decisions on “what is scripture”.

A man I’ve conversed with who has a Ph.D. Ecclesiastical History with a focus on the Ante-Nicene church wrote this:

"The New Testament developed, or evolved, over the course of the first 250-300 years of Christian history. No one particular person made the decision. The decision was not made at a church council. The particular writings that became those of the New Testament gradually came into focus and became the most trusted and beneficial of all the early Christian writings. "

In other words, the Bible was we know came into being by a consensus of the church. It wasn’t an immediate consensus as it took around 250 years for a final consensus to form. However, the books that we know as the New Testament have been used as authoritative scripture since the before the beginning of the 2nd Century. In the first 250 years a few books were added and few removed because the majority of the churches agreed as to what was and was not to be considered scripture.

As far as the Trinity being Biblical, all you have to do is read the writings of Athanasius and see how much he used Scripture against the Arians. In his work, Against the Arians, there are six scriptural citations in the first paragraph alone.
It seems logical to me that this being accurate, any teachings Jesus gave the disciples before His ascension into Heaven that are necessary for the Churches of God would be recorded in those scripts from the first century. In that complete way Jesus certainly never left His Church stranded or floundering for pure doctrine.
 
They always say Christian to me and when I ask which they say Christian again. I then ask where and they say what there church is called, when I look at their website the main image isn’t the crucifix, Jesus, a cross etc. but the band and their electric guitars.

One woman though at work when she talked about church I said oh you are an Anglican and she aggressively said no I’m church of England. I thought that was the same church.
 
Ianman i take it you are NOT a fan of the philosophy “the church became more corrupt over time” since you state the church came to a consensus on the canon 250 years after the apostles. 😀

Ok if the list of books ever grew more than 1 above or below the orthodox NT canon which we have solid evidence it did, then we have to ask why didn’t the apostles just wrap up this issue for us before they all died, but they didn’t. From this point forward you have implied the church, after 250 years, came to a consensus of what the canon would be. Doesn’t one have to ask then:
  1. why does the church need to wait 250 years after the last apostle dies to reach a consensus?
  2. What purpose is there to come to a any consensus at all?
The church needed to come to a consensus because the list of books was growing not decreasing. The list was at its shortest at the time of the death of the last apostle and he, John, did not declare this list to us. The list grew upwards of more than 400 other books in the 250 year period. There absolutely was a growing need to come to a consensus on the canon but your Ph.D. man does not close the logical door on how this is accomplished except to say how it wasn’t done. maybe @Wannano can help you add to the missing logic here.

Peace!!!
 
It seems logical to me that this being accurate, any teachings Jesus gave the disciples before His ascension into Heaven that are necessary for the Churches of God would be recorded in those scripts from the first century. In that complete way Jesus certainly never left His Church stranded or floundering for pure doctrine.
Quite. This is why Christ established the visible Church; which already had 2nd and 3rd generational leadership present in some places before the ink was dry on the very last pages of the canonical NT.

This is also why Christ didn’t write a book. If the religion was to be textually based, Christ would have proceeded in a way more similar to Muhammad - he’d have written his religion down!

It is from the Church that “pure doctrine” flows. Scripture is obviously one of the many products of that Church since there is obviously a time in Christian history when there was no (NT) scripture and there was no canon - but there WAS a Church.
 
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Reuben_J:
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rfournier103:
I think it should be a requirement of membership here that one’s religious affiliation be in their profile and visible on every post they make.

Some Protestant/Reformed websites REQUIRE that you post what church/congregation you belong to as a condition of membership (although Catholics such as myself are banned from membership because of our heretical beliefs).

In MY opinion… if I’m going to discuss religion with someone, I like knowing who I’m talking to and where THEY’RE coming from. If someone doesn’t have a religion, put “none” in the box. I’m very open about being Catholic. I’m not ashamed of it, I don’t hide it, and I don’t shy away from non-Catholics because of it. In the REAL world (away from the interwebs), I never get into debates with Protestants. Ever. Where I live in New England, the biggest challenges to faithful Catholics come from secular “nones” and “former” Catholics. They hate the Catholic Church more than the most fiery Protestant minister.

I digress.

If you’re Baptist, tell the world and be proud. The same goes for Evangelical non-denominationals, Pentecostals, Methodists, etc. People from all religions are allowed to join here. No need to hide who you are.
Exactly. Coming from the Catholic tradition, it is difficult to understand why one should be ashamed to disclose one’s church. If we believe it is the true Church, it follows that we are proud and brave enough to let our Church be known, to be scrutinized, investigated and challenged.
Reuben, Reuben…I cannot find anywhere on your profile where you indicate you are Catholic.
I am a Catholic. hehe. I am glad to tell you.

I did ask a poster what his church is, and he said he prefer not to tell because he told his wife he would not be telling such personal information in an internet Forum.

It’s ok. It is just unusual for me that people refuse to tell their church denomination.I mean, it is not common for us Catholic to hide our Church. Why the secrecy? What’s the harm? If there’s anything to hide?

Especially important for dicussion, at least from my point of view, you can always check for yourself for further infoprmation about Catholicism, but if I do not tell you what my church is, then you just have to take my word for it, and that’s it. That’s rather limited, is it not?

That’s why I ask. I am a cradle Catholic and admittedly know next to nothing about Protestantism. I got the answers, I think, from psoters in this thread. And thanks for those participating.

I guess probably that’s one of our differences - in how we approach evangelizing and inter-faith discussion.
 
Generally speaking, not all Anglicans are Church of England, but all members of the Church of England would be Anglican so that’s confusing.
 
They always say Christian to me and when I ask which they say Christian again. I then ask where and they say what there church is called, when I look at their website the main image isn’t the crucifix, Jesus, a cross etc. but the band and their electric guitars.

One woman though at work when she talked about church I said oh you are an Anglican and she aggressively said no I’m church of England. I thought that was the same church.
ouch. It’s a jungle out there. It’s hard to know who’s who. Interesting though.

What Jesus said about being ashamed of him comes to mind. …
 
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Maybe they go to the ACC (Anti-Catholic Church) but that is highly classified and can only be revealed on a need-to-know basis. :male_detective::female_detective:
This is really amazing, if true. How is that a Christian can live his life being an anti fellow Christians rather than espousing the love of God?
 
I think most all mean well. They see things through a pair of lenses that we do not. They are conflicted, at the same time, I think. Many are, I believe, though some are pretty darn convinced with no doubt in their minds. But that is just my intuition, I’m not a mind reader, after all.

They remain our brothers and sisters in Christ, and so it’s on us to do our best to help them see otherwise through words and actions.

When I’m not suffering my usual stupidity, I try to remember that famous saying, “There but for the Grace of God, there go I.”

I think many are simply saying, “I am anything, concerning being a Christian, but I am most certainly NOT a Catholic.” It also gives strategic wiggle room, so they can’t be so easily be pinned down in argumentation. Some non-Catholics would use that strategy. 🙂
 
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JamalChristophr:
Maybe they go to the ACC (Anti-Catholic Church) but that is highly classified and can only be revealed on a need-to-know basis. :male_detective::female_detective:
This is really amazing, if true. How is that a Christian can live his life being an anti fellow Christians rather than espousing the love of God?
Well Reuben, I have been wondering that about all the non-Catholic bashing that has been going on. I am going to be brave and tell you that if you are the same Reuben J that was on the old format, something about you has changed. 😟
 
From this point forward you have implied the church, after 250 years, came to a consensus of what the canon would be. Doesn’t one have to ask then:
It is important to note that the vast majority of New Testament books were used as scripture from very early in the church. There was a consensus on most of the books we call the New Testament easily by the beginning of the 3rd Century and probably closer to the beginning of the 2nd Century. So it is not correct to say that we didn’t have any scripture for the first 250 years of the church. The Apostolic Fathers quoted many of our New Testament books and considered them as scripture. What we didn’t have was a final canon. The final canon was formed when a consensus was formed about the final few books. But up until that time the other books were already being used as authoritative scripture.

I’ve never seen the 400 books reference. What I do know is that there were several gnostic gospels and several works of what I would call “fan fiction” that were based on legends that arose about Christian figures in the late 1st and early 2nd century. Most feel that the church used a strict criteria to distinguish between gnostic text, “fan fiction” and outright deceptive books.

The purpose of the canon was to differentiate between books that contained the gospel as delivered by Jesus and the Apostles and the false teachings/stories that propagated the times.
 
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