I'm feeling conflicted here. On one hand I want to say a hearty "amen" to your experiences of meeting wonderful, faithful *Christian* Catholic people. I have had this too.
But on the other hand, I feel enormously uncomfortable about any sort of wholesale softening towards the Catholic church. I firmly believe that in a number of different ways Catholic doctrine undermines the sufficiency of Jesus' person and sacrifice, and, in so doing, cause him to be a little less worthy of our praise and a little less capable of winning our pardon. This is no small matter - it's the biggest deal there is.
I'll quote from one reply. Before I do so, I want to say that all my interlocutors have given their okay for me to do this. I have, however, sometimes shortened what they said and only occasionally have I provided the surrounding context. I have tried not to misrepresent anyone, but may have been unsuccessful. So, the reply:
I have certainly experienced much that is very carnal and idolatrous in the Pente fraternity... ranging from a totally anthropocentric "gospel" ("Come to Jesus SO THAT... He can save you, heal you, make you rich... etc") and the cult and worship of leaders... all the more dangerous, because most feligreses don't know (and would deny hotly) that they are doing so.And here are some later responses:
Fiona: My (still extremely limited) experience of the scene is that the closer you get (geographically, but especially doctrinally) to "Rome"... the worse are the anomalies and the undermining of Jesus' all-sufficiency - by politics, greed, self-protection and worse (Conspiracies reeking of the films "daVinci Code" and "Angels and Demons" really exist, I am convinced).
Contrarywise, the more you find an inspired, Spirit-Filled (whether he knows he is or not is immaterial) priest, under a bishop who gives freedom of individual expression to his underlings... to that degree will you find the very best that the RCC has to offer, with the least "Romanic" contamination.
Today, a GOOD Christian Catholic priest knows, lives, and preaches that Jesus did it all and does it all, and will point people away from any sort of worship either of saints, Mary, or iconry in general. Contemporary RCC teaching (admittedly, frowned upon heavily by the non-Christian Catholic heirarchy) says that all iconry, saints and even DEVOTION to (not worship of) Mary herself... are little more than windows through which our humanity can make meaningful, bilateral spirit-to-spirit contact with Divinity.
Show me a Christian, any Christian, who is either ignorant of or perfectly at ease with their denominations doctrine and I'll show you a Christian with an agenda that goes well beyong following Jesus. Does that mean they are any more or less a Christian than you or I? Not for me to judge.and:
Sifting the catechism is a good way to find things to ague with. It isn't a good way to access the richness of Catholic faith as it is lived. A question worth investigating: "What is the role and relative importance of doctrine in Catholic faith?"which was followed by:
@A... GREAT comment! My point exactly: The very core of phariseism is seeking out those who were "doctrinally impure" and throwing stones at them - figuritively and otherwise. (NATURALLY... all for the glory of God, needless to say) ....and finally:
I don't read Jesus anywhere saying, "Blessed are the doctrinally pure, for they will see the Kingdom of Heaven" or, "Unless ye have your eschatology perfect, ye shall be cast into outer darness with much gnashing of teeth".
He DID speak a lot about Loving God, Loving one another as His disciples and like themes.
I'd go as far as saying that if you died a hideous death as a convicted muderous thief who knew nothing of doctrine of any kind, or even Jesus except for a mysterious loving revelation in your final moments that brought you to a place where ... you could allow yourself to fall into the everlasting arms of the great I AM..., you'd still be saved. You know what? We are all that guy no matter Catholic, Protestant, Mormon, Muslim, Buddhist or Hindu. And sadly, no matter wether we have followed the way our whole lives or just the last few seconds. We are not saved or damned by our understanding of doctrine. Our petty differences of opinion on points of law just get in the way of us accepting that we are accepted, by grace thorough Christ who is so much more.To be honest with you, I found these replies profoundly disturbing. It is this that I would like to explore. At first I wasn't sure just what I was reacting to, but later I realised that I was troubled by the assumptions that my friends were working from. As I see it, they were thinking that: (a) doctrinal differences between Catholics and Protestants are no more serious than those between the various Protestant denominations; (b) doctrine has a limited role to play - sincere faith is more important; and (c) generalisations about the beliefs held by a group of people are hardly worth making - it is only really helpful to speak about the beliefs of individuals/smaller communities. (This last point stemming from a fourth assumption - that the belief of a group as-a-whole is likely to have limited impact on the individuals who make up that group.)
I, on the other hand, was assuming that: (a) doctrinal differences between Catholics and Protestants are way more serious - indeed fundamental - than those between Protestant denominations [I have included my reasons in small print below]; (b) sincerity of faith is never enough to save anyone - it has to be faith in something true, well, in someone true - the divine man Jesus Christ who died that people might be forgiven; (c) a group will always make demands on and affect its members - in diverse ways, to be sure, yet there will be common threads that make speaking about the group as-a-whole a profitable exercise. (This last may seem like a minor point, but the postmodern insistence on being able to find Truth only in an individual's experience has the lamentable effect of silencing discussion.)
Actually, when I said my friends' assumptions that distressed me, that wasn't quite true. What disturbed me most was that my claim that the Lord Jesus is dishonoured and belittled by the Catholic faith was never really at the heart of the discussion.
[The specific concerns I expressed about Catholic doctrine:
"I'm afraid I'm still feeling profoundly uncomfortable - firstly, because of the sort of thing that C applauded ("all iconry, saints and even DEVOTION to [not worship of] ...Mary herself... are little more than windows through which our humanity can make meaningful, bilateral spirit-to-spirit contact with Divinity."). I'm afraid that this is exactly the sort of thing that I see as undermining the sufficiency of Jesus' work in gaining us direct, personal access to the Father. So that's the first reason I'm feeling uncomfortable.
The second is that, even if this were resolved, there are a number of other ways in which I think Catholic doctrine diminishes Jesus. Here's some I can think of:
- the belief that conversion happens when you get baptised irrespective of whether you believe;
- the belief that participating in the sacraments is *essential* for a person to be saved;
- the belief that at least some confession and forgiveness *must* be mediated through a priest;
- the belief that you have to be good enough for God in this life, or else make it up in purgatory.
It seems to me that these things run dangerously close to turning Jesus into little more than a divine helper.
But I want to make it clear that I think that some/many Catholics are Christians and should be treated as brothers and sisters in Christ. But this is exactly my point - they are only Christian if they are either ignorant of the import of these sort of Catholic doctrines, or if they reject some of what the Catholic church teaches."]
3 comments:
Fiona, I acknowledge your commitment to explore truth. This is crucial. I continue to "work out my salvation with fear and trembling".
One thing that I'm becoming disturbed about is the amount of "easy salvation" preached primarily by the Protestant arm of the Church. I think at its core, the reductionist approach (which can be summed up as... "Oh God loves you. God has a plan for your life to prosper you and bless you. Just come to Jesus and He'll bless you and keep you and save you!" YUK!!!!!) completely misses the heart of the Gospel.
Our Lord made it abundantly clear that to be "saved" we must believe, AND be faithful to the END... Similarly the Lord says.... "He that LOVES his life will lose it (GULP), but he what HATES his life will gain it". (Emphases mine).
On the other hand Fiona, you raise important issues about the diminution of the centrality of Christ (as expressed via some arms of the Catholic church).
The most sobering scripture of all is found in Mat 7: "MANY will come to me on that day and say 'Lord Lord haven't we cast out demons in your name and done many miracles in your name?' to which the Lord replies... "Depart from me I never knew you".
I sense from this that there will be MANY who believe they are saved who are not....
My namesake Paul Washer explores this very issue - with tears and much lamentation.
May this blog cause many to explore the inner convictions of their hearts…
Paul Evans
As one of the "quoted" above, I'm with Paul E. pretty much.
Is the chewing-gum-munching 17yo who saunters up the aisle in a pente church more "saved" than the person on the margins of Christianity who, without knowing the name of Jesus, yearns with all their heart for everything He stands for?
Is the person in a "Bible-believing" evangelical church more saved (due to the doctrinal purity of the Jesus that is presented to him weekly)than the person who has known nothing more than RCC doctrine all their life, and, while loving Jesus, goes beyond the "line of orthodoxy" in their love for Mary?
Is there a person alive on the earth with such wisdom that they could answer the above questions with 100% surity?
NB: All the above are rhetorical questions.
Thanks for your contributions Paul and Christopher. I disagree with a couple of things you say Paul, but I won't highjack the discusssion by going into those here.
Chris, two can play at this game ;). So then I ask you (and this is not rhetorical), what of the sincere Muslim who knows nothing of Jesus but labours all their life to please Allah? Are they saved?
If you answer no, then we agree that truth (or as you sometimes put it, doctrinal purity) is important. It's just that we are drawing the lines differently.
If yes, well that's a whole another conversation.
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