C
Cyril_Of_Canada
Guest
Hi guys. This was said to me a few months back and I’m really pondering on it. I finally am getting around to asking for advice about it. I’m going to bring it up with my spiritual guide next week when he comes back into town at the Catholic parish where I see him. He is a priest there that has taken me under his wing. But it doesn’t stop me from asking you guys for advice on this. Hearing this at the time really broke my heart and caused me a lot of stress, fear and anxiety. And some of you who know me know that my wife has since sided with the pastor who put this idea into her head. I’ve been threatened with divorce if I become Catholic. Today was the first time I ever refused to participate in a protestant communion service, and the person I happened to be sitting beside was non other than this person! It was so awkward, so my action is bound to get back to my wife and others that I refused their church’s bread and wine in their communion service due to a disagreement with it. The pastor knows I want to be a catholic, so my journey to Rome is bound to come up in conversation again and how they feel the Holy Spirit doesn’t want me in the catholic church and that I can’t move if my wife doesn’t approve of it because “we are one.”
Here is the quote:
"“You must be able to defend the Catholic faith because if we can’t defend the faith that we believe in then it’s not worth having, right? So, I think you must really say “This is definately the right way to go.” And then, even then…otherwise, there would be no point in becoming a Catholic. And then the other problem you saw we can have different faiths, but you can’t because of your son. You know, you want to grow up together. You want to be able to say…we see how difficult it is in other countries when one parent is christian and one isn’t, you know. In the end, the child is confused. Which church would your son go to: Catholic Church or Protestant Church? Families worship the Lord together. I would assume that your wife would go with your to the Catholic Church, but why would…and so that is why you can’t really make the move until your wife or maybe she doesn’t move at all, and so you can’t make this move. You two are one! You both make decisions together. For example, you feel the Lord has called you to go on missions. You wanted to go on missions but your wife doesn’t want you to go, then I’m sorry but the Lord hasn’t called you.”
The advice on the forum I received a few months back was not to deride the faith of the pastor and my wife and not to get into verse slinging with them and defend the catholic faith. But I want to be prepared for a quick defence as a protestant why I am no longer taking their protestant communion. I’ve done a good bit of reading since then on Protestantism, and from Devin Rose, Scott Hahn, and Steve Ray, Catholic Answers has been a truly wonderful source of information, but I’m terrible at explaining things, especially when under anxiety and stress.
Here is the quote:
"“You must be able to defend the Catholic faith because if we can’t defend the faith that we believe in then it’s not worth having, right? So, I think you must really say “This is definately the right way to go.” And then, even then…otherwise, there would be no point in becoming a Catholic. And then the other problem you saw we can have different faiths, but you can’t because of your son. You know, you want to grow up together. You want to be able to say…we see how difficult it is in other countries when one parent is christian and one isn’t, you know. In the end, the child is confused. Which church would your son go to: Catholic Church or Protestant Church? Families worship the Lord together. I would assume that your wife would go with your to the Catholic Church, but why would…and so that is why you can’t really make the move until your wife or maybe she doesn’t move at all, and so you can’t make this move. You two are one! You both make decisions together. For example, you feel the Lord has called you to go on missions. You wanted to go on missions but your wife doesn’t want you to go, then I’m sorry but the Lord hasn’t called you.”
The advice on the forum I received a few months back was not to deride the faith of the pastor and my wife and not to get into verse slinging with them and defend the catholic faith. But I want to be prepared for a quick defence as a protestant why I am no longer taking their protestant communion. I’ve done a good bit of reading since then on Protestantism, and from Devin Rose, Scott Hahn, and Steve Ray, Catholic Answers has been a truly wonderful source of information, but I’m terrible at explaining things, especially when under anxiety and stress.