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believerdoc
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Protestants tend to pray in the name of Jesus based on Christ words “no one comes to the Father but through me” and the statement that there is " but one mediator between God and man and that is Christ Jesus". We also use "In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit’ frequently but at very specified times such as marriages, baptism, etc.There are other manifestations of the differences between us and our Protestant brethren. For example, I could never understand why a weather vane was perched atop a beautiful steeple, in place of a cross. The cross is a clear manifestation of Christian faith, but the weather vane, seen on some Protestant churches …well I’m not sure what it represents.
Also at the end of a Protestant prayer, just Christ, the second person, is acknowledged with the words…“in Jesus Name” but the trinity is not, as in the Catholic words…“In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” So what did the trinity- believing Protestant reformers have against the saying of those words, and the making of the sign of the cross?
One might conclude that the unwritten rule for some of those reformers was, if the Catholics do it this way, we’re gonna do it a different way…a sort of contrarianism as it were.
But with respect to (in-church) crucifixes, in defense of Protestants I will say that the art behind some can be a real distraction. In one church I attend occasionally, the statue on the cross appears to be dressed in a semi-pleated mini skirt, rather than a simple cloth covering. Couldn’t the artists’ eccentricity be eliminated by providing a standard for all “in church” crucifixes?