Tenchi
Member
As I was reading your post, which I agree with BTW - as to how is coming up -
I thought of the CC before you even mentioned it,
and I thought of the reformed church.
I've been thinking of both a lot lately.
Being a Protestant for over 40 years now, I really disliked how the CC seemed to me to have man-made doctrine.
I've come to study it for about the past 10 years, maybe more, and the more I learn, the more I realize how it really is not different than what we believe.
I appreciate your acknowledgement of (basic) agreement with my observations.
I am married to a former RC adherent, all of whose family, immediate and extended, claim allegiance to the RC faith. They don't believe what I believe at all. I've heard RC advocates point out that there is an often very large divergence between formally-communicated doctrine from the Vatican and the average RC lay-person's understanding of the faith and that one ought not to judge the former by the latter. I don't know about this... I've also got Protestant friends who grew up RC and they, too, describe an enormous difference between what they practiced into their late teens as coattail RC "Christians" and what they came to understand of biblical Christianity as adults. Mere "veneration" of Mary, prescribed by the Vatican, is full-blown worship of her among my wife's family. Mary's essentially a fourth member of the Godhead. Regenerational baptism and trans-substantive communion are also firmly held beliefs by all those I know who are even marginally-dedicated RCs. The idea of the Pope as the "Vicar of Christ" and the pantheon of dead saints to whom RC folk appeal for aid also diverges widely from what I understand of biblical Christianity. The list goes on. What is surprising, however, is, in the few masses I've attended with my wife's family, I have heard a plain, exact, biblical rendering of the Gospel!
In this I'm struck by the very...prosaic observation I heard from Dr. Vernon McGee that dropping a spoonful of muck into a glass of pure, crystal-clear water doesn't purify the muck, it fouls the water. The RC church may preach the Gospel, pure and clear, but doing so is fouled horribly by the muck of traditions, and edicts, and outright contradictions of God's word with which the Gospel is so frequently mixed.
OTOH, I find the reformed church to be different in every way.
And yet, we always mention the CC and not the reformed church, which is exactly what you did above.
I used to be a Calvinist (but of the halfhearted variety). It was never a very satisfying perspective rationally and I kept running into apparent contradictions to Reformed doctrines in God's word. It turns out, there are much better soteriological perspectives out there (Molinism and Provisionism, for example). I agree with you that Reformed Christianity is just as dangerous, just as much a departure from biblical Christianity, as the RC "denomination" is, sharing a similar attitude toward those outside the "fold," as well as an astonishing proliferation of deeply-tangled arguments in favor of Reformed views (See: Occham's Razor). But one has only to follow Reformed thinking carefully and to its end to see the glaring and awful problems it has. For a comprehensive explanation of those problems see:
www.soteriology101.com
Like the RC church, Reformed teachers don't get everything wrong. They get a lot less wrong than the RC church, I think. And about some things, they are spot-on. But where Reformed proponents go wrong, they go VERY wrong.
So a couple of questions:
1. What is the Ecumenical Movement?
2. Do you believe the CC is more heretical than the reformed church?
(If you're reformed, no need to answer no. 2!).
What is the Ecumenical Movement (or, Christian Ecumenism)?
The Ecumenical Movement
Members of the Protestant, Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Mormon churches all call themselves Christians—yet they also maintain theologies and practices that diverge in significant ways. Ecumenical organizations such as the World Council of Churches and the National Association of Evangelicals...
pluralism.org
It is a liberal "Christian" effort to bring all Christian "streams" of belief and practice once again under the aegis of the RC church. It promotes unity over Truth. And more and more it is encompassing non-Christian religions within its scope. Yikes. Beware!