Monday, June 28, 2010

HAPPY FEASTDAY SORSOGON! HAPPY STS. PETER AND PAUL DAY!

Sts. Peter and Paul, Co-Patron of the Church of Rome and the Diocese of Sorsogon

We extend our greeting to the Holy Father and the entire Church of Rome as well as the people of Sorsogon for this great Feast of our dearest Apostles PETER AND PAUL. We honor them both and we love them both. They were the greatest pillars of the early Church proclaiming the Faith to various places and in the City of Rome itself.

WE ENTRUST TO THEIR CARE THE HOLY FATHER - THE POPE, THE CITY OF ROME AND OF SORSOGON. Thank you Lord Jesus for giving us such great apostlees and saints.

IS MAN EVIL BY NATURE? IS ORIGINAL SIN A PROOF THAT MAN IS EVIL BY NATURE?

The Lord Jesus forgives the Sinful Woman

Anonymous said...

hi fr. abe. thanks for your explanations!

my main source for warding off uninvited christians-kuno!

pls explain po, is man good or bad by nature? if we are made from the image and likeness of God, then we should be good by nature. ito po ang lagi kong punto.

but then, some protestant colleagues say, man is evil by nature because of the fall of the first man. kaya nga daw tayo may original sin kasi evil ang nature natin. and we always fall into sin as we go on in this world.

pero di po ba ang original sin, hindi naman actual sin? more like deprivation of the kingdom of heaven yun? tama po

June 28, 2010 9:10 AM

Fr. Abe, CRS said...

Dear Anonymous,

[hi fr. abe. thanks for your explanations!]

You are welcome. Praise the Lord for His great love is without end.

[my main source for warding off uninvited christians-kuno!]

Ha, ha, ha...

[pls explain po, is man good or bad by nature? if we are made from the image and likeness of God, then we should be good by nature. ito po ang lagi kong punto.]

Tama. Genesis chapter One categorically and repeatedly stated that God created everything GOOD. And the ultimately created good among His creatures here on earth is THE HUMAN PERSON.

[but then, some protestant colleagues say, man is evil by nature because of the fall of the first man.]

When Man committed sin he lost the state of innocence given by God and it removed him from the state of grace. However, the Bible never stated that since then MAN IS EVIL BY NATURE. O NO. That is only existing in the mind of the Born Again or Protestants because they were poisoned by the heresy of John Calvin. That is not the Biblical teaching.

Man became weak, frail and prone to corruption of sin but he is not by nature evil. Because the Nature of every human person is not created by Satan or by Sin but by GOD. GOD IS OUR CREATOR... GOD IS THE CREATOR OF THE HUMAN RACE. AND GOD SHALL NOT CREATE EVIL. EVERYTHING THAT COMES FROM HIM IS GOOD. So our Nature is still good but there is a taint of Sin or corruption.

The analogy is that of a fruit. There is a part that starts decaying but the rest of the fruit except that small part is still good.

IF MAN IS ALREADY EVIL BY NATURE THEN WE ARE TOTALLY AND COMPLETELY EVIL. WE ARE ALREADY SIMILAR TO THE DEVIL. WE ARE ONLY GOOD FOR DAMNATION.

YET WE KNOW THAT IT IS NOT SO. WE ARE STILL GOOD. WE ARE CAPABLE OF LOVING, DOING GOOD, HELPING OTHERS, WE ARE STILL CAPABLE OF BELIEVING IN GOD AND FOLLOWING HIS WILL THROUGH THE GRACE GOD IS GIVING US.

YES, EVERY GOOD THAT ARE IN US ARE GRACE FROM GOD. THAT IS TRUE. HOWEVER, GRACE BUILDS ON NATURE. LIKE WATER WORKING INSIDE THE WATER TANK. IF THE NATURE OF MAN IS EVIL THEN THERE IS NO WAY FOR THE GRACE OF GOD TO WORK ON IT JUST LIKE IN THE CASE OF LUCIFER AND HIS FALLEN ANGELS.

THE FACT THAT GOD SENT HIS SON TO BE OUR REDEEMER IS PROOF THAT WE ARE NOT EVIL BY NATURE. WE ARE STILL GOOD WHICH MUST BE SAVED FROM THE EVIL THAT IS TRYING TO DOMINATE US.

[kaya nga daw tayo may original sin kasi evil ang nature natin.]

ORIGINAL SIN REFERS ONLY TO THE FACT THAT OUR FIRST PARENTS: ADAM AND EVE SINNED. DUE TO THAT FIRST SIN DEATH ENTERED INTO THE WORLD AND THE ENTIRE HUMAN RACE HAVE BEEN TAINTED BY SIN. IT IS NOT INCLUDED IN OUR DOCTRINE OF ORIGINAL SIN THAT ALL MEN HAVE BECOME EVIL BY NATURE. WELL, IF THAT IS WHAT THEY ARE: PROTESTANTS AND BORN AGAIN AND BAPTISTS... LET IT BE SO. AT LEAST IT CAME FROM THEM NOT FROM US. HA, HA, HA...

THAT IS THE CLASSIC CASE OF THE DEVIL CAUGHT IN HIS OWN MOUTH!

[and we always fall into sin as we go on in this world.]

WE ALWAYS FALL INTO SIN BUT WE ARE ALSO EMPOWERED BY GOD'S GRACE TO BE CLEANSED FROM THAT SIN AGAIN AND AGAIN. IF WE ARE EVIL BY NATURE THEN THERE IS NO WAY WE CAN BE CLEANSED BECAUSE WHAT IS EVIL IS NOT JUST ACCIDENTAL TO OUR BEING BUT ESSENTIAL TO IT. THE FACT THAT JESUS CAN REMOVE OUR SINS THEN SIN IS NOT ROOTED IN OUR NATURE.

IF EVIL IS ROOTED IN OUR NATURE THEN IN ORDER TO CLEANSE US FROM OUR SIN JESUS MUST REMOVE OR DESTROY FIRST OUR NATURE. NO, NO, NO... JESUS DIDN'T REMOVE THE HUMAN NATURE OF THE WOMAN CAUGHT IN ADULTERY WHEN HE FORGIVE HER. JESUS DDIN'T REMOVE THE NATURE OF SAUL WHEN HE FORGIVE HIM. THE SAME WITH PETER AND THE REST OF THE APOSTLES AND ALL THE SINNERS WHOSE SINS HAVE BEEN REMOVED.

OBVIOUSLY, MARY MAGDALEN, PETER AND PAUL WERE HUMAN IN NATURE PRIOR TO THE FORGIVENESS OF JESUS AND THEY REMAINED HUMAN AFTER BEING CLEANSED FROM THEIR SINS.

THE PROBLEM WITH THE BORN AGAIN AND BAPTISTS IS THAT FOR THEM, THEY ARE NOT REALLY CLEANSED OF SINS... THEY ARE DUNGHILL COVERED WITH SNOW. GOSH, THEY ARE ROTTEN REALLY BY NATURE. THEY ARE EXCREMENTS OF COWS AND HORSES DEEP INSIDE.

[pero di po ba ang original sin, hindi naman actual sin?]

YES.

[more like deprivation of the kingdom of heaven yun? tama po]

YES. ALSO, IT MEANS THAT THE PERSON IS AFFECTED BY SIN AND IS PRONE TO SIN AS A CONSEQUENCE OF THE SIN OF OUR FIRST PARENTS. THE HUMAN PERSON IS SUSCEPTIBLE AND CAPABLE OF SINNING.

June 28, 2010 9:57 AM

Sunday, June 27, 2010

ANO BA ANG KAIBAHAN NG CATHOLIC CHURCH SA EL SHADDAI?

Anonymous said...

Ask ko lang po kung ano ang pinagkaiba ng El Shaddai sa Catholic Church, kasi po ikapu kay Velarde, then sa inyo, kahit magkano lang...

Ano po yun? Magkaiba pa rin po ba kayo? Sino po ang totoo sa inyo?

June 27, 2010 3:11 PM

Fr. Abe, CRS said...

Dear Anonymous,

The Catholic Church is of course our ONE AND ONLY CHURCH. The El Shaddai is our largest Catholic group in the Philippines or probably in the world. I'm not sure though because I don't have the statistics.

Ibig sabihin ang El Shaddai ay isang organization lang sa loob ng Catholic Church na pinamumunuan ng isang Catholic layman na si Bro. Mike Velarde. Ito ay under pa rin ng Simbahang Catolico kasi ang pananampalatayang itinuturo dito ay ginagabayan ng Catholic Bishop [Bacani] o pari [Fr. Anton San Pascual] na nagsisilbing Spiritual Adviser at Guardians ng grupo. Every El Shaddai prayer worships either starts or culminates with the celebration of the Holy Mass. Totoong may mga agam-agam na ang grupong ito ay hindi tunay na Catolico subalit ito ay opisyal na pinabulaanan ni Mike Velarde at ni Bishop Bacani.

Tungkol sa IKAPU sa El Shaddai. Sa katunayan bilang mga Catolico hindi sila pwedeng obligahin ni Mike Velarde. Sila ay pinakikiusapan niya na mag-ikapu subalit hindi nya sila pwedeng pilitin kung ayaw. Marami sa kanila ang nag-iikapu subalit personal na desisyon nila iyon.

Sa mga hindi members ng El Shaddai na CAtholics meron ding nag-iikapu subalit ito ay mula sa kanilang sariling kagustuhan at hindi dahil sa utos ng Santa Iglesia. Yon ay personal choice hindi obligation.

June 27, 2010 9:50 PM

THE SOMASCAN SEMINARIANS IN THE PHILIPPINES BATCH 1990-1991

Thanks to our former Seminarian Bro. Edison Enriques for posting this memorable group picture of our seminarians then. Some of them are already priests either in the Somascan Order or in other Congregation, Diocese and many others are already Fathers of the Family. We praise the Lord for His blessings and love in calling us to our own particular vocations. May He continuously fill us with His grace and blessings.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

FAMOUS CATHOLIC SPEAKER AND APOLOGIST AND FORMER BAPTIST STEVE RAY COMING TO MANILA

This is a great opportunity for all those interested to witness this popular convert, Catholic author and speaker. Let him share to you his conversion and answer your questions about the Catholic Faith. IT'S FOR FREE.

DEVOTED FILIPINO CATHOLICS IN THE UNITED STATES OPPOSE SEX EDUCATION PROGRAM OF GMA GOVERNMENT

St. Joseph and the Blessed Virgin treasures the Child Jesus as the greatest happiness they ever have. Unlike in the heartless thoughts of some people who consider the children as the source of the world's problems. The Holy Couple brought their child in Christian Virtues and not on Sex Education invented by the Pro-Abortions of the West.

US Catholics oppose DepEd's sex ed plan

By Henni Espinosa, ABS-CBN North America News Bureau
Posted at 06/26/2010 8:05 AM Updated as of 06/26/2010 8:05 AM

SAN FRANCISCO – Many devout Filipino Catholics in the US agree with the Catholic bishops’ opposition to the teaching of sex education in schools in the Philippines.

Robert Raquipiso said his 13-year-old daughter in the Philippines is too young to learn about sex.

“We’re Filipino. Our customs and tradition say we don’t teach sex education in schools,” said Raquipiso.

Josie Baarde is also opposed to the teaching of sex education in schools back home. Baarde said parents are responsible for teaching children about sex even if they work abroad.

“Ang mga anak natin, na-ga-guide natin sila. Napapangaralan natin sila,” she said.

The Philippine Department of Education (DepEd), with the United Nations Population Fund, says the burden of teaching sex education to children lies on them.

They plan to implement the program in 160 elementary and high schools in the Philippines. They said this would help prevent teenage pregnancies and the rise of sexually-transmitted diseases.

MC Canlas, an outreach coordinator for public health in San Francisco, agrees. “Para kapag lumabas sila sa mundo alam nila kung ano ang kanilang nakikita. Hindi sila namamangha sa mga hindi nila nade-decode na mga pangyayari,” said Canlas.

The DepEd plans to consult with Catholic bishops before implementing the program in schools.

Fr. Ed Dura of St. Patrick’s Church insists children should be taught values on love and family, not the biological aspect of sex.

“Both the government and the church should sit down on how to do this better, rather than debating and politicizing about it. You cannot legislate values,” Fr. Dura said.

The DepEd said psychologists helped prepare the modules to make sure they are appropriate for year levels.

Proponents of sex education in the Philippines say HIV is on the rise among young Filipinos and that many of the nation’s poor do not have access to proper sex education.

They said this is about teaching the children, the future generation, how to make responsible decisions in life, for the betterment of the entire nation. Balitang America

Friday, June 25, 2010

ANO BA ANG MAHALAGA RELIGION O PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP WITH JESUS?

Catholic nun and founder of the Missionary of the Poor MOTHER TERESA OF CALCUTTA, known as the Saint of the Gutter. Shown here feeding the poor from the streets of India. She was doing this daily and regularly until more woman entered her convent and they grew to more than 5,000 nuns doing the same charity to the poorest of the poor for which she won the Nobel Peace Prize.
_______________________
Anonymous said...

FR. Abe ano po ba ang mas mahalaga.. religion or personal relationship with Jesus. Yung friend ko kasing protestant ayaw maniwala sa akin kapag nagpapaliwanag ako about Catholic church. Mas pinaniniwalaan pa nga niya yung book na Babylon Mystery Religion.. sabi ko naman na wala katotohanan ang libro na yun kasi mismong author ang umamin na nagkamali siya. ang sagot lang niya sa akin... religion is not important.. it's your personal relationship with Jesus that matters... sa tingin nyo po na Fr, Abe hayaan ko na lang siya sa paniniwala niya? thanks po...

June 25, 2010 10:49 PM

Fr. Abe, CRS said...

Dear Anonymous,

Your friend is already brainwashed by his or her pastor that religion is not important. Nalason na ang isip niya. Kasi yan ang common na atake at linya ng mga Protestante at mga Born Again: Hindi daw mahalaga ang religion. Subalit kung ating uusisain ang Biblia walang sinasabi ang Biblia na hindi mahalaga ang religion. AT MAS LALONG WALANG SINASABI ANG BIBLIA AN HINDI MAHALAGA ANG CHURCH.

Sa katunayan si Cristo ay nagtatag ng Iglesia [Matthew 16:18-19] at ito ay Kanyang Katawan na tinubos ng kanyang Dugo [Ephesians 1:22-23]. KAYA PAG SINABI NATING HINDI MAHALAGA ANG CHURCH E DI HINDI MAHALAGA PARA SA KANYA ANG KATAWAN NI CRISTO. Kaya ang aral na iyan ng mga Born Again ay galing sa Demonio. Sila lang ang nag-imbento at nagturo nyan. Hindi yan galing kay Cristo o sa mga Apostol. Si San Pablo nagbilin na dapat nating mahalin at pahalagahan at matutong kumalinga sa CHURCH DAHIL ITO ANG BAHAY NG DIOS [1 Timothy 3:15]. KAYA ANG PAGWASAK SA IGLESIA AY PAGWASAK SA BAHAY NG DIOS. ITO AY ISANG KASUMPA-SUMPA AT KASUKLAM-SUKLAM NA KASALANAN SA DIOS. Kaya ang labis na nagkakasala at nagbubulid sa masamang aral na iyan sa iyong kaibigan ay ang kanyang Pastor na labis na sinungaling dahil may relihiyon sila. Meron silang Fellowship o Samahan na nagtataguyod ng kanilang Doctrina at Aral. MGA IPOCRITO ANG MGA IYAN. Ano ba ang sabi ng Biblia tungkol sa relihiyon:

James 1:27 "Ang dalisay na RELIHION at walang dungis sa harapan ng ating Dios at Ama ay ito, dalawin ang mga ulila at mga babaing bao sa kanilang kapighatian, at pagingatang walang dungis ang kaniyang sarili sa sanglibutan." [ANG BIBLIA]

James 1:27 "Pure RELIGION and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world." [King James Version]

KITA MO WORD FOR WORD SA BIBLIA NA SINASABI NI APOSTOL SAN SANTIAGO NA MAY PURE O TUNAY NA RELIHION. AT ITO AY NAKIKITA SA FAITH AND GOOD WORKS DOCTRINE NG CATHOLIC CHURCH. KASI UTOS SA ATIN NA KAILANGAN ANG GOOD WORKS TULAD NG PAGPAPAKAIN SA NAGUGUTOM, PAGPAPAINOM SA NAUUHAW, PAG-AALAGA SA MGA ULILA, ETC. PARA MAKAPASOK SA LANGIT. SA KANILA NAG-IMBENTO SILA NG 'FAITH ALONE" NA WALA NAMAN SA BIBLIA.

Ito pa ang sabi ni San Pablo tungkol sa religion:

1 Timothy 3:16 "No one can deny how great is the secret of OUR RELIGION: He appeared in human form, was shown to be right by the Spirit, and was seen by angels. He was preached among the nations, was believed in throughout the world, and was taken up to heaven." [Good News Bible]

"Our Religion"... Si San Pablo may religion. So bakit sila walang religion. Ibig sabihin hindi sila kauri ni San Pablo. Tayo may religion... meaning tayo ang magkakauri. OBVIOUS NAMAN DI BA? He, he, he...

Tungkol duon sa paniniwala sa mga fictitious books hayaan mo siya sa kanyang kabaliwan. Subalit tama ang ginagawa mong pagpapaliwanag sa kanya. Anong malay mo mabuksan ang sarado nyang isip. Ipagdasal mo pa rin siya at laging kausapin. Hikayatin mo siyang pag-aralan ang mga aral ng Santa Iglesia.

Maraming tao ngayon na gumagawa ng mga FICTION NOVELS na UMAATAKE SA CATHOLIC CHURCH. Ang nakakalungkot may mga baliw na naniniwala sa mga FICTION O KATHANG ISIP NA MGA AKLAT. KASI NASANAY NA ANG ISIP NILA SA KATHANG ISIP NG KANILANG MGA PASTOR.

Mahalaga ang Personal relationship kay Jesus subalit walang sinabi si Jesus na pagtinanggap natin sya e hindi na natin kailangan ang religion o ang Church. KAYA NGA NAGTATAG AT INIWAN SA ATIN NI CRISTO ANG IGLESIA KASI MAHALAGA ITO PARA MAGABAYAN TAYO SA TAMA AT TUNAY NA PANANAMPALATAYA SA KANYA AT SA PAGSUNOD SA MGA ARAL SAKA KALOOBAN MULA SA AMA. Alin ang mahalaga sa dalawa: PAREHONG MAHALAGA DAHIL KUNG ANG RELIHIYON MO AY MALI ANG RELATIONSHIP MO KAY JESUS AY MALI RIN. Like the Born Again, gusto nilang wasakin ang Church, dahil hindi daw kailangan. Mali: KAILANGAN ANG CHURCH SAPAGKAT ITO ANG KATAWAN NI CRISTO.

June 25, 2010 11:35 PM

PERFECTO BA SI CRISTO NUNG NAMUMUHAY SIYA SA LUPA BILANG TAO?

The Risen Lord and Mary Magdalene in the scene called: NOLI ME TANGERE [Touch Me not].

Anonymous said...

Meron po akong prof. ngayong college na tinanong po kami kung perpect daw po ba si Jesus christ. Sumagot po ako na " Opo " and he said na sigurado ka? Hindi ba siya nagkaroon ng even a little mistake? Tapos nag example pa po sya about doon kay Mary Magdalene. Matanong ko lang po Father Abe kung si Jesus Christ po ba noong nagkatawang tao siya eh nagkamali ? or did He commit any mistake... Sabi po kasi ng prof. ko eh hindi po siya perfect. ano po ba tlga?

June 25, 2010 8:32 PM

Fr. Abe, CRS said...

Dear Anonymous,

Para sa ating pananampalatayang Catolico si Jesus ay DIOS NA TOTOO at TAONG TOTOO. Siya ay DIOS NA NAGKATAWANG TAO. Dahil dito siya ay Perfecto at hindi maaaring magkamali bilang Dios. Hindi rin siya nagkamali kahit na sa maliit na bagay bilang Tao sapagkat ang Kanyang Pagka-Dios ay nanatili na kaisa ng Kanyang PagkaTao dito sa Lupa. Hindi naghiwalay ang Kanyang PagkaDios at PagkaTao sa anumang pagkakataon.

Dahil siya ay Dios:

1. Wala siyang Kasalanan.
2. Siya ay Almighty or All-Powerful
3. Siya ay All-knowing or Omniscient

Kaya hindi Siya mamaaring magkamali o magkasala.

Bilang tao naman:

1. Siya ay limitado ng katawang laman.
2. Siya ay nakararanas ng hirap, pagod at maaaring mamatay.
3. Limitado ang kanyang presensia at ang kanyang magagawa bilang tao.

Subalit, ang pagiging limitado ay hindi nangangahulugang may mali siyang ginawa o may nagawa siyang kasalanan.

Yung sinasabi ng professor mo na tungkol kay MARY MAGDALENE e nakakatawa. Kasi, ano ba ang pagkakamali ni Cristo kay Mary Magdalene? Ito ay kanyang pinatawad, iniligtas, binago ang pamumuhay tungo sa kabutihan, at pinabanal. Naging Santa at malinis na babae si Maria Magdalena dahil kay Cristo. So, puro kabutihan at tama ang ginawa ni Cristo kay Maria Magdalena.

As God Jesus is perfect and as Man Jesus is the most perfect Man. He is better than Adam. He lived in absolute goodness and love and virtue during his stay here on Earth.

June 25, 2010 8:49 PM

ANOTHER CONVERSION STORY - CHRISTOPHER LAKE, Reformed Baptist

The beautiful path leading to the Catholic Altar is filled with grace and light. The interior of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C.

56.Christopher Lake June 19th, 2010 6:33 pm :

To all in this discussion,

Reading through the comments for this post, and comments on related posts at C2c, I just had a stunning and terrifying realization. The entire time that I was a convinced Reformed Baptist (from, approximately, 2005 until earlier this year), within the parameters of the Reformed soteriology I held, there was no way for me *know*, in fact, that I was saved. Logically, it would also seem that this would also apply to *anyone* who accepts Reformed soteriology– whether Presbyterian, Reformed Anglican/Episcopal, Bible church, Calvinistic Methodist (as was George Whitefield), and so on. I will explain my thinking and invite anyone to correct me if my reasoning is flawed, or completely incorrect, here.

As a Reformed Baptist who, by definition, believed in the Calvinist doctrine of Perseverance of the Saints (the Reformed understanding of “eternal security”), to be sure (no pun intended!), I believed in assurance of salvation, I sang about it in church, and when I evangelized non-Christians, it was at least my *desire* to share the concept of assurance with them. I *thought* that I knew I was saved, and that my salvation was secure for all eternity. In fact though, there was no way for me to know. All that I could *truly know* is that I possessed *signs* of belonging to the elect.

However, there were other, worrisome “signs” in my life that sometimes led me to *doubt* whether I was one of the elect. I repeatedly struggled with certain sins, and sometimes, chose to give in to them. My Reformed friends would tell me that the fact(s) that I *did* struggle, and that I lamented and hated my sin, showed that I was a true brother in Christ, one of the elect.

There was the other side of that coin though. I still *did* give in to sin at times, and at those exact moments, chillingly, the sin felt good. I also felt sickness, revulsion, and self-reproach, but part of me did like the sin. Soon after would come repentance and confession to God, and many times, talking with fellow Reformed Christians about my various sin struggles. These friends would assure me that I was continuing to hate and fight sin, and that those are signs of being elect. They would also lovingly warn me (as they should have, as my friends) not to become complacent *about* my sin or *about* my assurance– for either of these could lead a hardness of heart and a “falling away,” thus proving that I never really belonged to God.

Therein lies the crux of the problem with the Reformed concept of assurance. It isn’t really assurance. It is a “confidence,” one might say, though without complacence, that one is saved, based on the appearance of *signs* that one belongs to the elect. However, those signs could all be ultimately temporary in one’s life, and therefore, illusory. One must also, from time to time, check one’s life to make sure that the “signs” of belonging to the elect aren’t beginning to be outweighed by possible “signs” of being reprobate (non-elect).

The latter was a periodic struggle (and over time, a heavy burden) for me, as a Reformed Baptist who sought to have “assurance” of my salvation. I could never *truly* have assurance of my salvation, in any sense *other* than how I appeared to be showing signs of belonging to the elect, from one day or week or month (which might have been very encouraging) to another day or week or month (not as encouraging).

To be clear, none of the above has *anything* to do with why I have now, formally and decisively left Protestantism and begun the process of reconciliation to the Catholic Church, which I angrily and ignorantly left almost fifteen years ago. This process has a been a long and very hard one, brothers and sisters. I say that to *all* of my brothers and sisters in Christ– Catholic, Protestant, Eastern Orthodox, and any and all others! :-)

I have re-read and re-studied relevant Scriptural passages (in light of the whole counsel of Scripture). I have studied Church history and the competing claims about that history. I have discovered, and have now been greatly taught and humbled by, the writings of the Church Fathers (both “early,” “medieval,” and more recent). I have had hours upon hours of discussions with Protestant friends, who have attempted to show that the objective evidence doesn’t lead, or doesn’t necessarily *have* to lead, to the Catholic Church. For me to be honest though, with God, myself, and others, the objective evidence has led me there– and I will not, cannot, in good conscience, turn back from what I have seen by God’s grace.

On Tuesday of this now-almost-past week, I met with a wonderful, orthodox, kind, wise, 80-year-old Catholic priest (with age, indeed, comes much wisdom!) and expressed my desire to return to the Church. We talked for 90 minutes, every single one for which I very grateful to God. Lord willing, he will hear my confession as soon as it can be arranged– and then, soon after, the Eucharist, the Real Presence of the Body and Blood of the one Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

Thank you, deeply and truly, to everyone at C2C, for helping to make this possible for me. I am especially grateful to Bryan Cross, Tom Riello, and everyone else who has helped to answer my questions here, and even more, prayed to Our Father for me and, perhaps, asked for the intercession of Our Lady. A world of pain may be about to come down, in my life, from the possible reactions of many of my Protestant friends, including my roommate (I just told him the news late last night). Please continue to pray for me.

Whatever may come though, I am at peace and happy– because very, very soon, Lord willing, I will be back Home, in the fold of the Church that truly *is* (and always has been!) One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic.
____________________
Original Post:

THE CONVERSION STORY OF DAVID MEYER AND FAMILY, Former Presbyterian

The Fathers of the Church. Mostly the great Bishops and Theologians of the Catholic Church from the 2nd to the 5th centuries of Christianity. These are the genuine elders of the Church.

Saturday, June 19, 2010 RECENT CONVERSION IN THE UNITED STATES
*****************
Letter to GSPCPCA

To our brothers and sisters at Good Shepherd Presbyterian:

This letter is to explain why we will be leaving Good Shepherd. We want to make sure our reasons are understood as much as possible, so you will not wonder why we left, and will not think it was for a trite reason. I do not expect you to agree with our decision, but my hope is that this decision will not be misunderstood.

Over the years at Good Shepherd, I have grown increasingly frustrated with the lack of unity in the Reformed community. After a family recently left our church for Eastern Orthodoxy, I felt a deep sense that something was very wrong with the state of unity among Christians. And at first, I thought they left for similar reasons as the dozens* (see note) of other families have done over the past 9 years.

Since my family has been at Good Shepherd, our church has not been able to have children fast enough to replace all the people that have left for this or that picky reason! People left in a mass exodus* (see note) during Pastor Hewitson's time with us because of Federal Vision fever. Since then more have left us to form a new congregation of a 11 year old denomination called the CREC for reasons that I would say are anything but central to the Reformed faith. Others have left with the particular desire to not be under any church authority at all! No pretense even. In my opinion, these people have not submitted to the authority of the church, which we Reformed believe is the arbiter of Scriptural Truth and interpretation,but rather they have become their own authority. They are rogues who have arrogated the authority of the Holy Spirit to themselves, placing their conscience and private judgment over the authority of sessions that they have sworn to be faithful to. This got me thinking...

What makes me submit to the session at Good Shepherd? I have always seen it as a Divinely instituted body put there to guide my family on the Christian path, but what if I disagree with them on some matter of doctrine? EVERY Reformed person I have ever talked to about this situation has said there is nothing wrong with leaving a church and placing my family under another session that agrees with my convictions. When I have mentioned points of disagreement with the PCA everyone has said I could and should leave if it is a big deal to me. What this means is that the authority of Scripture, which is supposed to be exercised through the church, is instead exercised through my personal interpretations by ME!

According to Sola Scriptura, as defined by Keith Mathison,

Scripture is 'the sole source of revelation; [the] the final authoritative norm of doctrine and practice; to be interpreted in and by the church, and that it [is] to be interpreted according to the regula fidei.'.

The problem with this doctrine is that when a believer disagrees with the leaders he is supposed to submit to, he then finds other leaders that agree with his interpretation to submit to. This is not submitting to church authority, it is submitting to self. Submitting to yourself is just another way of saying you don't submit at all! There is a helpful way to remember this concept:

“If I only submit when I agree, the one to whom I submit is me.”

Anyone who has raised children can recognize the obvious truth of this. Or any wife that has tried to submit to a husband. Or submitting to an employer, etc... True submission is shown in conforming our mind to that mind to which we submit. If we are submitting to someone based on a shared set of beliefs, or because we agree with them, that is not true submission! It is actually a dangerous opposite of submission, because it can appear to be submission. If a disagreement never comes between a husband and wife in the entire time of their life together (bear with me I know it is far fetched) we could look at the relationship and see submission. But if inside her heart she is ready to split at the first sign of disagreement, she in no way is submitting to him. Apply this wife/husband scenario to church/Christ, and you can see where my mind is on this issue.

We Protestants submit to our elders based on our agreement with them, and this is a faux submission. This is no longer an option for my family. I do not trust myself to interpret the Scripture when generations of brilliant Protestants (like Dr. Joshua Moon!) can not agree on what it says. If I listen to Josh, then I must ignore Mike Horton. If I listen to Mike Horton, I must ignore Doug Wilson, If I listen to Doug Wilson, I should ignore RC Sproul, and on and on it goes. If I come up with a synthesis of all these mens interpretations, then I have Professor David Meyer's interpretation, and he is an electronics technician, not a theologian. I am not inclined, (and nor should you be) to trust his interpretation.

So after coming to the above conclusions, what then? Should I just continue to form opinions and interpretations with lots of prayer and reflection? Should I just do my best to be part of the group I feel conforms most closely with Scripture? No, I can't because any options within this paradigm of Sola Scriptura lead to the same fateful conclusion that I am my own authority. The only options left for me are:

A. Remain with Reformed Christianity and continue the cycle of “self submission”, knowing in my heart it is wrong.

B. Some form of non-theism,

C.“Choose-your-own-adventure” Christianity that I self consciously make up for myself and do not worry about submitting to church authority.

D. Submit to a form of Christianity that does not subscribe to Sola Scriptura and which has a interpretive authority which can plausibly claim to be led by the Holy Spirit, so as to remove myself as the authority.

Option A: I cannot in good conscience stay with option A I because within Sola Scriptura, I have no way of knowing if I am in schism from Christ's church. Whether I am in schism or not, the situation will look exactly the same from my perspective. I will consider myself to be following the Scripture whether I was in schism or not! If I was in grave error, my circumstances would look no different from being in the fullness of truth. Either way I would be surrounded by a session of my own choosing that would be quick to reassure me I was on the right path.

Option B: For the regenerate Christian that has tasted the beuty of Christ, this is not a real option.

Option C: This is a tempting option. Perhaps Christ is OK with us just making this stuff up as we go? Perhaps that is part of the plan? Pray, read the Scripture, come up with an interpretation, stick with it, and look around at the rest of Christianity totally disagreeing with you. Then pray everyone comes to see the “truth” of what you believe. Unfortunately the church in scripture was not like this. There was authority given and maintained by the Holy Spirit to lead the Church into all truth. (Jn. 16:13) So even though this is perhaps a more consistent position than Sola Scriptura, it is not an option for someone who desires to be “lead” into all truth by the Spirit.

Option D: This makes the most sense. Catholic and Orthodox ecclesiology takes into account the fact that people will disagree about the content of Divine revelation. Not that disagreement implies errancy or falibility, but without a magisterium that is supernaturally protected from error, there is no way for me to be sure I am getting the interpretation that is the right one. If I am able to toss out the 7th ecumenical council (as nearly all Protestants do) because it doesn't match my interpretation, where will the tossing out stop? If church councils themselves are to be judged by a 21st century layman, theologically untrained, and unordained Christian like me, what is the point then of church councils other than to provide some really good advise from some really great men from the history of our faith? If they were not being guided into all truth by the Holy Spirit in these councils, with the expectation that all believers should submit to their decisions, then what use are they other than to help me form my own interpretation to submit to? The ecclesiologies that claim to have living, breathing successors of the apostles which are Divinely gifted with the ability to define doctrine in certain situations are the only ecclesiologies that make sense.

That leaves two possibilities. Catholicism and Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy has stopped having church councils, would not be able to convene one if they wanted, and it can not claim the universality needed in the fourfold definition of the creed. (One, holy, catholic, Apostolic) because it is still largely a regional church and not world wide. Also there is no unifying head to resolve differences.

The Catholic Church is the only option left. In many ways it is a bitter pill to swallow for me. I have been very critical of Catholic doctrine as a Protestant. Much that they believe I am not inclined to believe. But I will have to submit to the mind of what I must believe is the church Christ founded.

To all of you I say that we have loved being at Good Shepherd. If left to my own opinions and interpretations, I would be right there with you guys. Josh Moon is going to turn that church into a shining gem in the PCA, I know it. The little changes he has made here and there are definitely heading Good Shepherd in a great direction. I wish we could speak to each member personally but that is just not possible. We have many friends that we will miss, but please know that we harbor no ill will, and on the contrary, see Reformed Christianity, and Good Shepherd in particular as bright spots in the Protestant world. We all wish for a unified church. And while I don't expect you to agree with my decision, I hope you will see it as something I am doing out of a great love for Christ's Church and its unity. Peace to all of you, our brothers and sisters in Christ.

David Meyer and Family
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Original Source:

THE CONVERSION STORY OF DR. DAVID ANDERS AND HIS WIFE - FORMER BAPTIST, PROFESSOR OF HISTORY

ST. AUGUSTINE the Bishop of Hippo, the greatest of the Latin Fathers of the Church, and one of the greatest philosopher-theologians of the Catholic Church. Insert below is the famous image of the young Heretic John Calvin.

I once heard a Protestant pastor preach a “Church History” sermon. He began with Christ and the apostles, dashed through the book of Acts, skipped over the Catholic Middle Ages and leaped directly to Wittenberg, 1517. From Luther he hopped to the English revivalist John Wesley, crossed the Atlantic to the American revivals and slid home to his own Church, Birmingham, Alabama, early 1990s. Cheers and singing followed him to the plate. The congregation loved it.

I loved it, too. I grew up in an Evangelical Church in the 1970s immersed in the myth of the Reformation. I was sure that my Church preached the gospel, which we received, unsullied, from the Reformers. After college, I earned a doctorate in Church history so I could flesh out the story and prove to all the poor Catholics that they were in the wrong Church. I never imagined my own founder, the Protestant Reformer John Calvin, would point me to the Catholic faith.

I was raised a Presbyterian, the Church that prides itself on Calvinist origins, but I didn’t care much about denominations. My Church practiced a pared-down, Bible-focused, born-again spirituality shared by most Evangelicals. I went to a Christian college and then a seminary where I found the same attitude. Baptists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians and Charismatics worshiped and studied side-by-side, all committed to the Bible but at odds on how to interpret it. But our differences didn’t bother us. Disagreements over sacraments, Church structures, and authority were less important to us than a personal relationship with Christ and fighting the Catholic Church. This is how we understood our common debt to the Reformation.

When I finished seminary, I moved on to Ph.D. studies in Reformation history. My focus was on John Calvin (1509-1564), the French Reformer who made Geneva, Switzerland into a model Protestant city. I chose Calvin not just because of my Presbyterian background, but because most American Protestants have some relationship to him. The English Puritans, the Pilgrim Fathers, Jonathan Edwards and the “Great Awakening” – all drew on Calvin and then strongly influenced American religion. My college and seminary professors portrayed Calvin as a master theologian, our theologian. I thought that if I could master Calvin, I would really know the faith.

Strangely, mastering Calvin didn’t lead me anywhere I expected. To begin with, I decided that I really didn’t like Calvin. I found him proud, judgmental and unyielding. But more importantly, I discovered that Calvin upset my Evangelical view of history. I had always assumed a perfect continuity between the Early Church, the Reformation and my Church. The more I studied Calvin, however, the more foreign he seemed, the less like Protestants today. This, in turn, caused me to question the whole Evangelical storyline: Early Church – Reformation – Evangelical Christianity, with one seamless thread running straight from one to the other. But what if Evangelicals really weren’t faithful to Calvin and the Reformation? The seamless thread breaks. And if it could break once, between the Reformation and today, why not sooner, between the Early Church and the Reformation? Was I really sure the thread had held even that far?

Calvin shocked me by rejecting key elements of my Evangelical tradition. Born-again spirituality, private interpretation of Scripture, a broad-minded approach to denominations – Calvin opposed them all. I discovered that his concerns were vastly different, more institutional, even more Catholic. Although he rejected the authority of Rome, there were things about the Catholic faith he never thought about leaving. He took for granted that the Church should have an interpretive authority, a sacramental liturgy and a single, unified faith.

These discoveries faced me with important questions. Why should Calvin treat these “Catholic things” with such seriousness? Was he right in thinking them so important? And if so, was he justified in leaving the Catholic Church? What did these discoveries teach me about Protestantism? How could my Church claim Calvin as a founder, and yet stray so far from his views? Was the whole Protestant way of doing theology doomed to confusion and inconsistency?

Understanding the Calvinist Reformation

Calvin was a second-generation Reformer, twenty-six years younger than Martin Luther (1483-1546). This meant that by the time he encountered the Reformation, it had already split into factions. In Calvin’s native France, there was no royal support for Protestantism and no unified leadership. Lawyers, humanists, intellectuals, artisans and craftsman read Luther’s writings, as well as the Scriptures, and adapted whatever they liked.

This variety struck Calvin as a recipe for disaster. He was a lawyer by training, and always hated any kind of social disorder. In 1549, he wrote a short work (Advertissement contre l’astrologie) in which he complained about this Protestant diversity:

Every state [of life] has its own Gospel, which they forge for themselves according to their appetites, so that there is as great a diversity between the Gospel of the court, and the Gospel of the justices and lawyers, and the Gospel of merchants, as there is between coins of different denominations.

I began to grasp the difference between Calvin and his descendants when I discovered his hatred of this theological diversity. Calvin was drawn to Luther’s theology, but he complained about the “crass multitude” and the “vulgar plebs” who turned Luther’s doctrine into an excuse for disorder. He wrote his first major work, The Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536), in part to address this problem.

Calvin got an opportunity to put his plans into action when he moved to Geneva, Switzerland. He first joined the Reformation in Geneva in 1537, when the city had only recently embraced Protestantism. Calvin, who had already begun to write and publish on theology, was unsatisfied with their work. Geneva had abolished the Mass, kicked out the Catholic clergy, and professed loyalty to the Bible, but Calvin wanted to go further. His first request to the city council was to impose a common confession of faith (written by Calvin) and to force all citizens to affirm it.

Calvin’s most important contribution to Geneva was the establishment of the Consistory – a sort of ecclesiastical court- to judge the moral and theological purity of his parishioners. He also persuaded the council to enforce a set of “Ecclesiastical Ordinances” that defined the authority of the Church, stated the religious obligations of the laity, and imposed an official liturgy. Church attendance was mandatory. Contradicting the ministers was outlawed as blasphemy. Calvin’s Institutes would eventually be declared official doctrine.

Calvin’s lifelong goal was to gain the right to excommunicate “unworthy” Church members. The city council finally granted this power in 1555 when French immigration and local scandal tipped the electorate in his favor. Calvin wielded it frequently. According to historian William Monter, one in fifteen citizens was summoned before the Consistory between 1559 and 1569, and up to one in twenty five was actually excommunicated.1 Calvin used this power to enforce his single vision of Christianity and to punish dissent.

A Calvinist Discovers John Calvin

I studied Calvin for years before the real significance of what I was learning began to sink in. But I finally realized that Calvin, with his passion for order and authority, was fundamentally at odds with the individualist spirit of my Evangelical tradition. Nothing brought this home to me with more clarity than his fight with the former Carmelite monk, Jerome Bolsec.

In 1551, Bolsec, a physician and convert to Protestantism, entered Geneva and attended a lecture on theology. The topic was Calvin’s doctrine of predestination, the teaching that God predetermines the eternal fate of every soul. Bolsec, who believed firmly in “Scripture alone” and “faith alone,” did not like what he heard. He thought it made God into a tyrant. When he stood up to challenge Calvin’s views, he was arrested and imprisoned.

What makes Bolsec’s case interesting is that it quickly evolved into a referendum on Church authority and the interpretation of Scripture. Bolsec, just like most Evangelicals today, argued that he was a Christian, that he had the Holy Spirit and that, therefore, he had as much right as Calvin to interpret the Bible. He promised to recant if Calvin would only prove his doctrine from the Scriptures. But Calvin would have none of it. He ridiculed Bolsec as a trouble maker (Bolsec generated a fair amount of public sympathy), rejected his appeal to Scripture, and called on the council to be harsh. He wrote privately to a friend that he wished Bolsec were “rotting in a ditch.”2

What most Evangelicals today don’t realize is that Calvin never endorsed private or lay interpretation of the Bible. While he rejected Rome’s claim to authority, he made striking claims for his own authority. He taught that the “Reformed” pastors were successors to the prophets and apostles, entrusted with the task of authoritative interpretation of the Scriptures. He insisted that laypeople should suspend judgment on difficult matters and “hold unity with the Church.”3

Calvin took very seriously the obligation of the laity to submit and obey. “Contradicting the ministers” was one of the most common reasons to be called before the Consistory and penalties could be severe. One image in particular sticks in my mind. April, 1546. Pierre Ameaux, a citizen of Geneva, was forced to crawl to the door of the Bishop’s residence, with his head uncovered and a torch in his hand. He begged the forgiveness of God, of the ministers and of the city council. His crime? He contradicted the preaching of Calvin. The council, at Calvin’s urging, had decreed Ameaux’s public humiliation as punishment.

Ameaux was not alone. Throughout the 1540s and 1550s, Geneva’s city council repeatedly outlawed speaking against the ministers or their theology. Furthermore, when Calvin gained the right to excommunicate, he did not hesitate to use it against this “blasphemy.” Evangelicals today, unaccustomed to the use of excommunication, may underestimate the severity of the penalty, but Calvin understood it in the most severe terms. He repeatedly taught that the excommunicated were “estranged from the Church, and thus, from Christ.”4

If Calvin’s ideas on Church authority were a surprise to me, his thoughts on the sacraments were shocking. Unlike Evangelicals, who treat the theology of the sacraments as one of the “non-essentials,” Calvin thought they were of the utmost importance. In fact, he taught that a proper understanding of the Eucharist was necessary for salvation. This was the thesis of his very first theological treatise in French (Petit traictĆ© de la Sainte CĆØne, 1541). Frustrated by Protestant disagreement over the Eucharist, Calvin wrote the text in an attempt to unify the movement around one single doctrine.

Evangelicals are used to finding assurance in their “personal relationship with Christ,” and not through membership in any Church or participation in any ritual. Calvin, however, taught that the Eucharist provides “undoubted assurance of eternal life.”5 And while Calvin stopped short of the Catholic, or even the Lutheran, understanding of the Eucharist, he still retained a doctrine of the Real Presence. He taught that the Eucharist provides a “true and substantial partaking of the body and blood of the Lord” and he rejected the notion that communicants receive “the Spirit only, omitting flesh and blood.”6.

Calvin understood baptism in much the same way. He never taught the Evangelical doctrine that one is “born again” through personal conversion. Instead, he associated regeneration with baptism and taught that to neglect baptism was to refuse salvation. He also allowed no diversity over the manner of its reception. Anabaptists in Geneva (those who practiced adult baptism) were jailed and forced to repent. Calvin taught that Anabaptists, by refusing the sacrament to their children, had placed themselves outside the faith.

Calvin once persuaded an Anabaptist named Herman to enter the Reformed Church. His description of the event leaves no doubt about the difference between Calvin and the modern Evangelical. Calvin wrote:

Herman has, if I am not mistaken, in good faith returned to the fellowship of the Church. He has confessed that outside the Church there is no salvation, and that the true Church is with us. Therefore, it was defection when he belonged to a sect separated from it.7

Evangelicals don’t understand this type of language. They are accustomed to treating “the Church” as a purely spiritual reality, represented across denominations or wherever “true believers” are gathered. This was not Calvin’s view. His was “the true Church,” marked off by infant baptism, outside of which there was no salvation.

Making Sense of Evangelicalism

Studying Calvin raised important questions about my Evangelical identity. How could I reject as unimportant issues that my own founder considered essential? I had blithely and confidently dismissed baptism, Eucharist, and the Church itself as “merely symbolic,” “purely spiritual” or, ultimately, unnecessary. In seminary, too, I found an environment where professors disagreed entirely over these issues and no one cared! With no final court of appeal, we had devolved into a “lowest common denominator” theology.

Church history taught me that this attitude was a recent development. John Calvin had high expectations for the unity and catholicity of the faith, and for the centrality of Church and sacrament. But Calvinism couldn’t deliver it. Outside of Geneva, without the force of the state to impose one version, Calvinism itself splintered into factions. In her book Orthodoxies in Massachusetts: Rereading American Puritanism, historian Janice Knight details how the process unfolded very early in American Calvinism. 8

It is not surprising that by the eighteenth century, leading Calvinist Churchmen on both sides of the Atlantic had given up on the quest for complete unity. One new approach was to stress the subjective experience of “new birth” (itself a novel doctrine of Puritan origins) as the only necessary concern. The famous revivalist George Whitefield typified this view, going so far as to insist that Christ did not want agreement in other matters. He said:

It was best to preach the new birth, and the power of godliness, and not to insist so much on the form: for people would never be brought to one mind as to that; nor did Jesus Christ ever intend it.9

Since the eighteenth century, Calvinism has devolved more and more into a narrow set of questions about the nature of salvation. Indeed, in most people’s minds the word Calvinism implies only the doctrine of predestination. Calvin himself has become mainly a shadowy symbol, a myth that Evangelicals call upon only to support a spurious claim to historical continuity.

The greatest irony in my historical research was realizing that Evangelicalism, far from being the direct descendant of Calvin, actually represents the failure of Calvinism. Whereas Calvin spent his life in the quest for doctrinal unity, modern Evangelicalism is rooted in the rejection of that quest. Historian Alister McGrath notes that the term “Evangelical,” which has circulated in Christianity for centuries, took on its peculiar modern sense only in the twentieth century, with the founding of the National Association of Evangelicals (1942). This society was formed to allow coordinated public action on the part of disparate groups that agreed on “the new birth,” but disagreed on just about everything else.10

A Calvinist Discovers Catholicism

I grew up believing that Evangelicalism was “the faith once for all delivered to the saints.” I learned from Protestant Church history that it was hardly older than Whitefield, and certainly not the faith of the Protestant Reformers. What to do? Should I go back to the sixteenth century and become an authentic Calvinist? I already knew that Calvin himself, for all his insistence on unity and authority, had been unable to deliver the goods. His own followers descended into anarchy and individualism.

I realized instead that Calvin was part of the problem. He had insisted on the importance of unity and authority, but had rejected any rational or consistent basis for that authority. He knew that Scripture totally alone, Scripture interpreted by each individual conscience, was a recipe for disaster. But his own claim to authority was perfectly arbitrary. Whenever he was challenged, he simply appealed to his own conscience, or to his subjective experience, but he denied that right to Bolsec and others. As a result, Calvin became proud and censorious, brutal with his enemies, and intolerant of dissent. In all my reading of Calvin, I don’t recall him ever apologizing for a mistake or admitting an error.

It eventually occurred to me that Calvin’s attitude contrasted sharply with what I had found in the greatest Catholic theologians. Many of them were saints, recognized for their heroic charity and humility. Furthermore, I knew from reading them, especially St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Catherine of Siena, St. Teresa of Avila and St. Francis de Sales, that they denied any personal authority to define doctrine. They deferred willingly, even joyfully, to the authority of Pope and council. They could maintain the biblical ideal of doctrinal unity (1 Corinthians 1:10), without claiming to be the source of that unity.

These saints also challenged the stereotypes about Catholics that I had grown up with. Evangelicals frequently assert that they are the only ones to have “a personal relationship with Christ.” Catholics, with their rituals and institutions, are supposed to be alienated from Christ and Scripture. I found instead men and women who were single-minded in their devotion to Christ and inebriated with His grace.

The Catholic theologian who had the greatest impact on me was undoubtedly St. Augustine of Hippo (354-430). All of my life, I heard the claim that “the Early Church” had been Protestant and Evangelical. My seminary professors and even Calvin and Luther always pointed to St. Augustine as their great Early Church hero. When I finally dug into Augustine, however, I discovered a thorough-going Catholicism. Augustine loved Scripture and spoke profoundly about God’s grace, but he understood these in the fully Catholic sense. Augustine destroyed the final piece of my Evangelical view of history.

In the end, I began to see that everything good about Evangelicalism was already present in the Catholic Church – the warmth and devotion of Evangelical spirituality, the love of Scripture and even, to some extent, the Evangelical tolerance for diversity. Catholicism has always tolerated schools of thought, various theologies and different liturgies. But unlike Evangelicalism, the Catholic Church has a logical and consistent way to distinguish the essential from the non-essential. The Church’s Magisterium, established by Christ (Matthew 16:18; Matthew 28:18-20), has provided that source of unity that Calvin sought to replace.

One of the most satisfying things about my discovery of the Catholic Church is that it fully satisfied my desire for historical rootedness. I began to study history believing in that continuity of faith and trying desperately to find it. Even when I thought I had found it in the Reformation, I still had to contend with the enormous gulf of the Catholic Middle Ages. Now, thanks to what Calvin taught me, there are no more missing links. On November 16, 2003 I finally embraced the faith “once for all delivered to the Saints.” I entered the Catholic Church.

1.“The Consistory of Geneva, 1559-1569,” BibliothĆØque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 38 (1976): 467-484. [↩]
2.Letter to Madame de Cany, 1552. [↩]
3.Institutes of the Christian Religion, ed. J. T. McNeill, trans. Ford Lewis Battles. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1960: 3.2.3, 4.3.4. [↩]
4.Institutes 4.12.9. [↩]
5.Institutes 4.17.32. [↩]
6.Institutes 4.17.17; 4.17.19. [↩]
7.Letters of John Calvin, trans. M. Gilchrist, ed. J.Bonnet, New York: Burt Franklin, 1972, I: 110-111. [↩]
8.Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1994. [↩]
9.Cited in Mark A. Noll, The Rise of Evangelicalism: The Age of Edwards, Whitefield and the Wesleys. Downers Grove: IVP, 2003, 14. [↩]
10.Evangelicalism and the Future of Christianity. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1995, 17-23. [↩]

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Dr. David Anders and his wife completed their undergraduate degrees at Wheaton College in 1992. He subsequently earned an M.A. from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in 1995, and a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa in 2002, in Reformation history and historical theology. He was received into the Catholic Church in 2003. He will be on EWTN Live on June 23rd, 7:00 pm Central (8 EST), and may be discussing some of the material from this article.