nadroj1985 said:
The thing is, I am trying to be open to the Holy Spirit when I read the Bible, and when I do this I arrive at my own ideas. Can I not be directed by the Holy Spirit when I read? Have I been fooling myself all this time?
In short, I have too much of an idea of a God that wants to interact with me on a personal level to believe that he interacts with everyone in the same way.
Hi! I thought I might add my opinion if that's ok.

I'm not absolutely positively positive on this so another more learned Catholic member can correct me on this. But the Catholic Church has not given an Official Interpretation on every single verse in the Bible, so I would suppose you would be able to glean what you can on those verses for yourself. That still does not refute or take away from our position that the Catholic Church is right and correct in its interpretation of the Bible and we should follow it. I recommend you read the Part One; Article Two and Article Three: the Catechism of the Catholic Church (If you google it, there are a couple sites for the Catechism online). I think you might find out that it makes a whole bunch of sense.
God
does interact with us on personal levels. There is a thread here about when God is obvious, that is a very good example on how God interacts with us. There are a whole slew of ways for God to interact with us. At the same time God gives us ONE Truth. Not a whole bunch of different Truths. Jesus founded a Church so we could have that ONE Truth.
I know it may seem more 'nice' to be able to interpret the Bible the way you think the Holy Spirit is guiding you, but think about it. God knows how many different kinds of people there are and how equipped or ill-equipped they are to interpret the Bible, so he gave us a Church to pass down the Truth for us, so there wouldn't be confusion about it and so that His Word wouldn't be muddled.
And you might want to think about all those years that the New Testament had not been written or part of the Bible, and think that the Christians that had followed Jesus and were taught by his Apostles were not given information and told, 'Ok, now go and figure it out' They were given Jesus' teachings in the way Jesus wanted it to be taught (
allready interpreted information).
If that was good enough for them, then it is good enough for me.
It might also help if you set aside the more democratic idealogy and try to view it from the perspective of total and utter submission to God's wishes.
Start researching what the early Church father's thought about The Catholic Church interpretations and
then review your earlier position. I only say this because I came from the exact same place as you
I hope I didn't put you off or seemed abrasive. One of the things about Message Boards is that it is hard to carry across inflection and intention that is easier when you are speaking face to face.
I totally follow Catholic teaching when it comes to our 'seperated bretheren', I harbor no animosity nor want to seem as if my post is meant to bludgeon you with my opinion.