CJ,
Bob, you quoting a popular Protestant proverb often used to distance ourselves from Catholicism -
That isn't an exclusively Protestant proverb, CJ. Catholics say it all the time - and have said similar things long before Protestantism ever existed.
Why is Catholicism "Jesus and WE" - not ME - aside from the fact that the very word "catholic" denotes universality (which is hardly a concept centered on singularity)?
After all, we believe in:
1. The Communion of Saints - this is HUGE with us. You claim to believe in the Communion of Saints (for which I applaud you), but very few Protestants even understand the concept.
2. Submitting to the teaching authority of the Church - we do not believe the INDIVIDUAL person has authority to teach others apart from what the Church teaches, nor may we personally dissent. This is a COMMUNAL aspect of the faith because the entire family (over a billion people) is called to "row in the same direction"...thus it isn't what I, personally, believe insomuch as it is what we, collectively, believe and are taught.
3. Look at the wording of our favorite prayers: it is the OUR Father, not the MY Father. In the Creed it is "WE believe in one God, the Father almighty...WE believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ...for US men and for our salvation He came down from heaven...For OUR sake He was crucified under Pontius Pilate...WE believe in the Holy Spirit...WE believe in One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, WE acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins, WE look for the resurrection of the dead...". It is "Hail Mary...pray for US sinners, now and at the hour of OUR death..." - it is not "pray for ME a sinner, now and at the hour of MY death..."
4. When we partake of the Eucharist, we are communing not only with our fellow parishoners in Church at that moment, but also with all Catholics around the world - AND - all those in heaven. Thus all of time and space is set aside in a manner of speaking, and ALL of the Church - ALL of WE throughout time and eternity - WE as a family are in communion.
5. We affirm that the True Church also has a MYSTICAL and invisible dimension that includes in it all who are joined to Christ by the grace of baptism, even if they are not within the formal institutional boundaries of the Catholic Church. If Protestantism is "we and Church" based primarily on its embrace of the invisible Church, then the same applies to Catholics who ALSO embrace that SAME belief.
The list can go on and on and on with regard to how familial Catholicism is theologically, liturgically, and devotionally.
In Protestantism, however, the focus is greatly shifted to individualism (this is not to imply it is entirely individualistic - my point is that the primacy of the personal often carries more weight than submission to the communal).
For example:
1. If I, or a faction like me, doesn't agree PERSONALLY with the teaching of the given pastor of a body (or the teachings of a denomination in some cases)...then it is not even blinked at if I go church shopping, or begin to encourage a church split, etc... Church splits happen because the INDIVIDUAL reigns supreme in Protestantism. Everybody gets to be their own Pope.
2. Sola Scriptura pretty much depends upon individualism. Sure, each person is free to consult what various teachers, preachers, commentaries, creeds, and so on have to say on any given Bible passage - but in the end it pretty much boils down to each person deciding for himself (supposedly with the help of the Holy Spirit) what they think the Bible is saying. There is no central authority to guide the individual in this area.
3. Protestants will often focus almost obsessively over the whole "personal relationship with Jesus" aspect of the Christian faith. We Catholics agree that this is a necessary part of salvation, but only rarely do Protestants speak of the communal aspects of salvation. When Catholics talk about "Co-mediator" or "Co-redeemer" or "Co-anything" most Protestants go bonkers and immediately press forward their individualism and the need for a "personal relationship" as if our salvation cannot be influenced and aided through the family of God going WITH us all TO God together.
Again, I could go on and on and on about how Protestantism champions the primacy of the individual over and against the communal.
Just because we believe the Catholic Church is the True Church doesn't mean we reduce the faith down to personal expressions of the faith.
IMHO, and from my experience, there's no denomination on the planet (with the possible exception of the LDS) that even comes close to the RCC's obsession with ITself, and that insists that the church essentially is ITself. "Jesus and ME!!!!!!"
Two points:
1. This is EXACTLY what secularists, atheists, and non-Christians say to ALL Christians who dare to suggest that CHRISTIANITY is the ONLY True faith. A secularist would say, "You Christians are obsessed with Christianity and ITself. If there is a God - Christianity insists that IT is the only way to believe...as if God and Christianity are one and the same thing."
Since YOU, Josiah, are a Christian, do you feel it is appropriate to tell non-believers that the ONLY way to salvation is through Christ? I do. Why? Because it is TRUTH itself to tell people that Jesus alone is the way, the truth, and the life. I have ZERO problem with telling non-believers that Christianity is the only True religion.
And since I, as a Catholic, also believe that the Catholic Church is the "True Church" (I know you disagree), then there is nothing wrong or inconsistent with saying so. Why? Because it is TRUE that the Catholic Church is the ONLY True Church in the sense that it contains the fullness of what Jesus intended and founded to continue His Incarnational Ministry on earth while He is gone - it is visible and invisible - it is mystical and institutional - it is exactly what Jesus gave to the world. Again, I know you disagree, and I respect your right to that opinion because I know you hold that opinion in good faith. But to claim that the Catholic Church is the True Church is not quite the same thing as some pathological obsession you seem to imply - it is NO MORE "obsessive" than YOU (correctly) telling a non-believer that Christianity is the only True religion.
2. I fail to see how our claims to be the True Church is equated with "Jesus and ME" since, as I have explained numerous times, our theology is primarily familial and secondarily personal, whereas the word "me" denotes the individual and not the family. We have a billion "me"s in the Catholic Church - and we all play our roles that affect the Body and are interconnected with the saints in heaven and the believers on earth. A more accurate (but not entirely accurate) thing to accuse us of would be to say we believe in "Jesus and US Catholics and the mystical Church of believers (plural)" - not "Jesus and ME."
The whole foundation of the RCC is that assertion of self alone for self alone.
As is the foundation for Christianity itself, Josiah. But it isn't "FOR" self alone, but rather the Church is given as a universal ministry - to bring the Good News to the entire world. That is hardly "self". It is everyone that we reach out to. Again, you remind me of a secularist who rejects the idea that Christianity is the only true religion partly because the very idea that such a thing as one true faith is counter to his relativistic mindset. If Christianity is the only true faith, then Christians SHOULD SAY SO. If the Catholic Church is the True Church, then Catholics SHOULD SAY SO. Again, I know you disagree that the Catholic Church is the True Church. Fine. Furthermore, if you want to claim for yourself that your church is not the True Church, or that it is impossible for a True Church to exist...then fine...I will happily agree with you on the former, but respectfully disagree with you on the latter.
And virtually all discussions with Catholics about nearly anything in Catholicism all boils down to that insistence of self for self (as did our little discussion here).
As would any discussion with a non-believer over the claims of Christianity itself. Granted, just because a religion claims to be the True religion, doesn't make it so. And just because a church body claims to be the True Church doesn't make it so either. But the vercity of the claim should not be judged on whether such a claim was made. If every religion was objectively false just because it claimed to be true - then Christianity itself would be false. And I will submit that Catholicism should not be judged as false just because it "insists for itself" that it is True.
CJ, it seems to me that you are actually the one with an obsession. In this thread and many others you seemingly cannot get past the idea that ANY Church, whether it is the LDS or the Catholic Church or whatever, is audacious and outlandish enough to actually say out loud that THEY are True. You bring this up early and often. And repeatedly. You always come back to it. It is not my place to crawl inside your head to find out why this is so important to you (and I am not asking for an answer) - but I hope you will take a little time and step back a bit and reflect on why this one topic is such a big deal to you. Furthermore, I would ask you to ask yourself why it is okay for Christians to tell non-believers that Christianity is True, but it isn't okay for Christians to tell others that their particular church is True.
Now...I have done exactly what I hoped to avoid and got distracted once again. I will try to get back to my earlier "project" and post a bit more of the "evidence" I had been promising. I worked a little bit on it yesterday, but other things pulled me away. I should be able to post some stuff later today.
God's Peace,
NewMan