The Banned said:
Howdy, it is me! said:
Howdy, it is me! said:
Thoughtful video - thanks for sharing.
Couple things came to immediate mind (and I'm not sure I'm saying much that the video didn't say, but for what it's worth…):
1. Even the apostles had some disagreements and corrections to address. I would not hold the church fathers, beyond the apostles, to an infallible esteem if even the apostles were fallible (as we know all men are).
2 This video feels like a question and emphasis on tradition and not theology. If Paul or Peter walked into our Sunday service, what would they say? Well, I think they'd consider the teaching; they'd ask is what being taught biblical? Are you deepening and growing your understanding from our teaching (which was ultimately from Jesus)? I think they'd look around and ask are you meeting together regularly? Are you loving one another? They'd see we take communion in reverence and hold baptism seriously. We follow church discipline and address our sins. What would they say about a Catholic Church? In other words, what would the most important aspects be to the apostles?
3. The reformation came about because things NEEDED to be reformed. This is a genuine question: do Roman Catholics disagree with that statement? Do they think nothing at all needed to be addressed by the reformers? Now I understand this video is addressing the 2nd-4th century fathers so wouldn't even the Roman Catholics say their church, at least at one point, would have been a place the early church fathers would have been uncomfortable at? Would they consider the idea of a great apostasy within the RCC at a point in history? And, as a follow up (which is posed in the video), would they be comfortable in your church today?
ETA: I've never felt more unwelcome in my life than the time I found myself at a Catholic mass. The only other time I've been more uncomfortable was when I found myself at a Pentecostal service…but at least there I felt welcome. It's interesting to me how exclusive the RCC is when Jesus and the NT is all about inclusivity. In past posts we've discussed judging others' salvation - the RCC seems to be the poster child for this practice. How would the early church father's respond to this?
Whoops…I see I responded vs ETA. It's early…give me grace, haha.
Would you mind describing what you faced that was so unwelcoming?
Sure, but first, rereading what I wrote, I feel like maybe I sounded a bit harsh. I'm sorry if that's the case. My experience left an impression…apparently.
The biggest issue was not being able to partake in communion. Admittedly, at the time, I didn't understand the RCC's belief of transubstantiation. Regardless, I sat there in shock as the person I was with told me I was not allowed to go up and partake. I couldn't understand why, was I not also a sister in Christ? Why was I not worthy of communion? This is where my accusation of the RCC's judging of one's salvation stems from. Even if I had understood, even if I had been catechized and whatever else is necessary to participate in the RCC communion, it's still ultimately only for God to judge and decides one's heart. Why is it up to the priest to say my companion was worthy but I was not?
Beyond that, there was just this overwhelming sense of being out of place. There is so much order and tradition and "steps" to a mass that I was completely lost. I knew it would be different than a Protestant church but I expected to be among brothers and sisters and that's not how I felt at all. It was like I wasn't one of them, and I wasn't. Additionally, (and I'll admit this was many years ago and either my memory could be misleading or I was so busy being uncomfortable I missed this altogether) I felt like the focus was solely on keeping to a prescribed step-by-step process (one of which I knew nothing about). Everyone was reciting by rote memory. Where was the teaching? Where was the praying for specific needs of the community? Where was the freedom to love and get to know our neighbors and siblings in Christ? It was sterile and prescriptive, not warm and loving.
Maybe one day Jesus will say "You got it completely wrong" but I believe a main purpose of the church is to equip and edify the saints (we could discuss seeker churches as another thread on this topic). As my study Bible says, "…the church will build on this foundation [laid by the apostles], not by adding new revelation but by coming to an ever fuller understanding of what the apostles have given us and an ever more faithful application of their teaching to believers."