Lilllabettt Posted May 1, 2015 Share Posted May 1, 2015 the formatting problems makes the previous posts yucky to read. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarysLittleFlower Posted June 3, 2015 Share Posted June 3, 2015 I used to be "non denom". The reason I don't really feel comfortable with this description now is because - for one, it's not truly "non denom". The beliefs are most similar to Baptist or evangelical, usually, at least my community was, - which makes it Protestant in theology. The theology in "non denom" communities originated since the Protestant reformation. Another reason why I disagree with the term now is simply because I don't want to be "non denom", I want to be in the visible Church, but that's why I'm Catholic Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarysLittleFlower Posted June 3, 2015 Share Posted June 3, 2015 (edited) I see it was mentioned about having a Bible study with Protestants.. I used to attend Campus Crusade for Christ (now known as another title which I forget at the moment) - when I was Protestant. Then I continued attending during my conversion to Catholicism... but eventually, I found it really hard. For one thing, there was always an implicit sort of understanding (or even explicit) that "Catholics are not Christian". The theology was also very Protestant, and the Scripture translations were Protestant. It can be very easy for a Catholic to get confused in this situation, or it can lead to religious indifference and giving the impression that "it's all the same", or at the very least it would lead to a lot of mental pain for the Catholic. (I'm not generalizing Protestants because they don't all have this view, but SOME might see you as the "Mary worshipping person who believes you don't need grace"). I would advise against it. It's better to organize a Bible study at your parish if you don't have one, and invite the priest, - our parish has a monthly "theology group" like that :)) Edited June 3, 2015 by MarysLittleFlower Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarysLittleFlower Posted June 3, 2015 Share Posted June 3, 2015 you need to be more succinct homes. I'm sure you've convinced yourself of how right you are. It's cool. I've done it too, and will probably do it again in the near future, but you don't seem open to the possibility that perhaps you are quite incorrect making dialogue rather fruitless.I was born Catholic, but in my teens years I ascribed to this non-denom mentality (though never attended a church) and in my own head I had Catholicism figured out and I knew exactly how corrupt and manipulative it was. I was CONVINCED. And my logic was sound, and if anyone tried to poke a hole in it I'd patch it up right away. At this time I was also scared to look for the truth, because I feared that if I dug to much, I might find out that what I'm believing is a crock of poo. But I KNEW in my heart that Christ was God, and that was the most precious truth I was afraid to lose. So until then I only really looked for evidence that would comfort my rightness.Eventually my mental health deteriorated to the point where this was no longer a viable defense mechanism because I realized that eventually the questions become too weighty and complex for a spin-off series to respond to let alone answer. It was actually by reading another Christian forum and seeing how, to my shock and surprise, the Catholics there (who were outnumbered btw) were able to respond more thoroughly than intelligent non-Catholics most of the time, and how it just seemed more authentic. Modern day Christianity had a lot of things and contradictions that didn't make any sense to me (sola fide, OSAS etc). Also finding out Luther was kind of a Johnsonville brat and not really the freedom-fighter high school portrayed him as, among other things.Now I'm a lot more comfortable with my faith because on a daily basis I am confronted with how much I don't know. It seems more human to me. I'm not afraid to dig because I know that scholars and mystics have likely already confronted these questions and their knowledge is accessible to me, and if the details don't make absolute sense the core doctrines of the faith are thoroughly explained and when combined with prayer and faith the fear is eliminated.Just sayin' you talk a lot, but you ain't sayin' much. I"m guilty of the same thing so I'm not tryin' to disparage you,hollaz? I can relate.. I used to think when I was Protestant that Catholics: - believe in salvation by works without grace - worship Mary - have a "non spiritual" type of worship - that the Catholic Church is just a human organization and the "real Church" is only spiritual, not visible - that Catholics don't "really know God" (probably the most insulting belief I had about Catholics, because this one got personal and wasn't even about doctrine anymore). I even tried to evangelize Catholics.. Somehow I later ended up Catholic. anyways I saw that ALL of my views about the Church were incorrect. So was a substantial portion of my theology. But I wasn't giving the Church a chance for a while because I was so convinced that I'm right about it. It turned out that everything I thought about Catholics was actually incorrect. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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