Valletta
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- Oct 10, 2020
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Catholics focus on Jesus at the mass. Having a personal relationship with Jesus through prayer is key to a holy Catholic life. Without such a personal prayer life many Catholics have fallen away. For us Jesus (and his Church which teaches us about Jesus) comes first. Learning the teachings of Jesus through the oral word is ideal. But certainly Bible study is fruitful and can be an important aid to that close relationship with Jesus. As Saint Augustine recommended, learning Greek and Hebrew can be helpful. The Catholic approach, and I make it a habit, is to pray to the Holy Spirit for discernment when I pick up the Bible and get ready to read, and then I say a prayer afterwards. Besides readings from the Bible at mass we also say or sing Psalms, and as I have said before much of the liturgy is from the Bible.Carson is not "my guy" and I have seen plenty of selective quotes from Catholic authors that say only as much as they want to highlight.
Protestants also "do this" but most of us believe communion is a memorial and do not hold to transubstantiation. We don't believe in "Saints" so naturally do not name them or pray to them. Our services are also not get-togethers for personal prayer. Aside from transubstantiation, the biggest difference I see is our focus on teaching the Word. Most Protestant services spend no less than 30 minutes on teaching from the Word and some far longer. My pastor goes book-by-book and verse-by-verse through the Bible. We are currently in the Book of Romans. My pastor goes in-depth. He explains the Greek, the historical background, the theology, etc. We believe in learning the Word of God in-depth and passages in context. We pray, we celebrate communion, but the biggest focus is on learning the Word. As Romans 12:1-2 says, the Word of God transforms us through the working of the Holy Spirit. That is why we take so much time to learn it. The main focus of the Mass is on the Eucharist because you believe you receive grace through it. You have 3 Scripture readings but the Homily barely scratches the surface in explaining them. Most Catholics never even open a Bible. Few know it. Even in these online forums most just quote Catholic Answers or some other Catholic apologist. Not saying all but the average Catholic does not know the Bible. I know as I grew up Catholic and have been around Catholics my entire life. It is not the emphasis of the RCC to see their members learn the Bible and be able to study it for themselves. They want their members to just believe what the church tells them it means and not test them as the Bereans tested Paul. Most Catholics I have known know more about their church than the Bible. Their focus is always on the church. Take away the church and most of them would be lost. We had one Bible in our house growing up and it was this over-sized Catholic Bible with lots of pages for writing down birthdays, first communions, etc. Never once did anyone open it and read it. Not once. That is until I did and then read it cover to cover four times. I did that on my own after praying to receive Jesus as my Lord and Savior (years after Confirmation). Then I did it because I longed to know what it said. No priest or nun or parent suggested I read the Bible. My Mom lived her entire life as a Catholic and never made it through the Bible once. I've lost track of how many times I have read the Bible and I mean the entire Bible. I don't mean that pridefully but to me that is natural. Why would I not want to be in the Word of God constantly? I love my church but my church is secondary to my personal relationship with Christ. My church does not mediate between me and God. I receive grace from God not my church. That is the major difference between Catholics and Protestants. You are all about your church.
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