Image,
I did not call you stupid. I honestly can’t see that I have insulted you personally in anything I have said. But I know that I’m more comfortable with vigorous argument than many people. Do consider the fact that you made a sweeping attack on Protestantism as a whole, and as far as I’m concerned that made your post fair game. I did not intend to attack your personal character or intelligence in any way. In my book, attacking someone’s knowledge of a particular topic is legitimate and is not the same thing as attacking their general intellectual ability. We are all ignorant on many topics, and on boards like this most of us fall into the trap of pontificating about some of those topics based on insufficient evidence. I have certainly done so many times in the past.
I admit, there is much I have to learn about Protestantism-I’m sure the term brings some dissatisfation,
I do not object to the term in the slightest.
You don’t need to be sorry, as far as I’m concerned. The important question is whether you were right or wrong, not whether you offended me or not.
but to claim that “I no absolutely nothing about Anglican History” is a very harsh attack on someone you do not even know.
I honestly can’t see that this is harsh. You made a statement about Anglican history that couldn’t be more wrong. It’s like saying “in the sixteenth century Catholics were ecumenical and open-minded, but these days they believe that all non-Catholics are going to hell.” It’s the exact opposite of the truth.
When you post opinions on a board like this, you open your opinions to criticism. Try not to take it as a personal attack. That is not how it was intended.
And no I am not a former Anglican, but I do have Anglican relatives. To accuse me of “closing my ears to the Pope” is to call me a heretic!
No, it’s not, because the papal statements to which I allude (chiefly his ecumenical address at Cologne last year) are in no sense covered by the charism of infallibility. It is not doubt proper for Catholics to listen to non-infallible statements by the Pope, which is why I used this argument in the first place. But I was not calling you a heretic.
Do you not know that these are very harsh statements?
No, I don’t. They don’t seem harsh to me. I think you are being overly sensitive here, but of course it may be that I am insufficiently sensitive to your feelings.
Do you know how many sects there are? I really suggest you read The Unity of Christians.
How on earth is this relevant?
So you are telling me, that St. Augustine thought religion as simply “individual choice” and ambitiously promoting his?
It’s true that Augustine called for Donatists to return to the Catholic Church, but he did so on the grounds that Donatists were in a state of mortal sin and that their church had no validity whatever. Like it or not, that is not what the Catholic Church says today about Protestants. That is not the language the Pope used at Cologne. He explicitly rejected the “ecumenism of return.”
If Protestantism is utterly bogus and evil, then calling on Protestants to become Catholic is not individualistic. But if Catholicism is the fullness of the faith that is imperfectly contained in Protestantism, then the thing to do is to move Protestant churches toward that fullness of faith. And that is what the Pope has called for. Abandoning a church that can give me nothing but damnation is not the same thing as abandoning a church that has many elements of Catholic truth and participates imperfectly in the reality of the Church.
If the Pope were to make a direct and unequivocal appeal for all Protestants to convert to Catholicism, I would call the nearest RCIA program immediately. That’s how much I respect this Pope. I’m trying to follow the ecumenical program that he himself has laid out. He said–not me–that we are all (Protestants, Catholics, and Orthodox) “members of the one Body of Christ” through baptism.
You go read
the Pope’s speech and tell me how I’m misinterpreting it
I might have stated some of my opinions on the religion of some Protestants, but I have not insulted anyone as you have just have done so.
Essentially what you are saying is that insulting someone’s faith is less serious than insulting their knowledge of Anglican history or their awareness of the non-infallible statements of their own leader! I find that quite incredible. I have accused you of nothing worse than hasty statements about other Christians, overly influenced by American culture and insufficiently aware of the nuances of your own Church’s position.
Edwin