THE CATHOLIC CHURCH HAS THE ANSWER
by Paul Whitcomb
Catholics believe that theirs is the one true Church of Jesus Christ,
firstly, because theirs is the only Christian Church that goes back in
history to the time of Christ; secondly, because theirs is the only
Christian Church which possesses the invincible unity, the intrinsic
holiness, the continual universality and the indisputable apostolicity
which Christ said would distinguish His true Church; and thirdly,
because the Apostles and primitive Church Fathers, who certainly were
members of Christ's true Church, all professed membership in this same
Catholic Church (See Apostles' Creed and the Primitive Christian
letters). Wrote Ignatius of Antioch, illustrious Church Father of the
first century:
"Where the Bishop is, there let the multitude of believers be; even as where Jesus is, there is the Catholic Church." Our Lord said: "There shall be one fold and one shepherd", yet it is well known that the various Christian denominations cannot agree on what Christ actually taught. Since Christ roundly condemned interdenominationalism ("And if a house be divided against itself, that house cannot stand." Mark 3:25), Catholics cannot believe that He would ever sanction it in His Church.
"Where the Bishop is, there let the multitude of believers be; even as where Jesus is, there is the Catholic Church." Our Lord said: "There shall be one fold and one shepherd", yet it is well known that the various Christian denominations cannot agree on what Christ actually taught. Since Christ roundly condemned interdenominationalism ("And if a house be divided against itself, that house cannot stand." Mark 3:25), Catholics cannot believe that He would ever sanction it in His Church.
THE CATHOLIC CHURCH is the world's largest, and Christianity's oldest,
religious body. Her one billion members inhabit the width and breadth of the earth,
comprising almost one-fifth of the total human population. She is far and away the
most popular religious concept the world has ever known. Paradoxically, however, the
Catholic Church is also the world's most controversial religious concept. Catholic
belief is different, too different to be orthodox, say Protestants and Christian cultists.
Catholic belief is too ethereal to be logical, and too strict to be enjoyable, say the
humanists and agnostics. Hence to millions of people, Catholicism is not only a
colossal success, it is also a colossal enigma. Of course, there has to be an
explanation for these contradictory opinions – and there is an explanation:
Protestants and others who have questions about Catholic belief too often make the mistake
of going to the wrong place for the answers. Too often books written by religious
incompetents are consulted. The result is incomplete and distorted information.
With such information, one cannot help but see the Catholic faith as a colossal enigma.
The right place to go for information about Catholic belief – in fact
the only place to go for complete and authoritative information – is the Catholic Church
herself. As any detective will tell you, no investigation is quite so complete as
an on-the-spot investigation. Hence, dear reader, if you are a Protestant, an
unaffiliated Christian, or an agnostic, who wants to know the truth about Catholic belief,
take this friendly advice: Seek out a Catholic priest and put your questions to
him. You will find him a very understanding and obliging person. Or read this
little booklet. This booklet was written by a Catholic who knows the questions you
are likely to ask, as well as the answers, because once he, too, was outside of the
Catholic Church, looking in. The questions in this booklet are basically the same
ones he put to a Catholic priest, and the answers are basically the same ones given him
by that priest. Read this booklet; then forget all the fiction you have heard about
the Catholic Church, for you will have the gospel truth.
Contents
- Why do Catholics believe that the universe and all life in it was created by, and is governed by, an all-powerful Spirit Being called God? What actual proof is there of God's existence and omnipotence?
- Why do Catholics believe that God is three Persons, called the Holy Trinity? How can God be three Persons and still be one God?
- Why do Catholics believe that Jesus Christ was God the Son – the Second Person of the Holy Trinity? Would it not be more reasonable to believe that He was a great and holy man... a religious leader of exceptional talent and dedication... a prophet?
- Why do Catholics believe that their Church is the one true Church of Jesus Christ? Wouldn't it be more reasonable to believe that Christ's true Church is a spiritual union of all Christian denominations?
- Why do Catholics refuse to concede that their church became doctrinally corrupt in the Middle Ages, necessitating the Protestant Reformation?
- If the Catholic Church never fell into error, how does one explain the worldly Popes, the bloody Inquisitions, the selling of indulgences and the invention of new doctrines?
- Why do Catholics believe that Peter the Apostle was the first Pope, when the word "Pope" doesn't even appear in Catholic Bibles? Just where does the Pope get his authority to rule over the Catholic Church?
- Why do Catholics believe the Pope is infallible in his teachings when he is a human being, with a finite human intellect, like the rest of us? What is the scriptural basis for this belief?
- Why do Catholics believe in seven sacraments, while Protestants believe in only two? Exactly what is a sacrament, and what does it do for a person?
- Why does the Catholic Church discourage Bible reading when, according to the Apostle, "All scripture, inspired of God, is profitable to teach...[and] to instruct in justice"? (2 Tim. 3:16).
- If the Catholic Church really honors the Bible as the holy Word of God – if she really wants her members to become familiar with its truth – why in times past did she confiscate and burn so many Bibles?
- Why does the Catholic Church base some of her doctrines on tradition instead of basing them all on the Bible? Did Christ not tell the Pharisees that in holding to tradition they were transgressing the commandment of God? (Matt. 15:3, Mark 7:9).
- Why do Catholics try to earn their own salvation, despite the fact that salvation can only come as a free gift from Jesus Christ?
- Why do Catholics believe that good works are necessary for salvation! Does not Paul say in Romans 3:28 that faith alone justifies!
- Why do Catholics worship Mary as though she were a goddess, when it is clear in Scripture that she was not a supernatural being?
- Why do Catholics pray to Mary and the saints when Sacred Scripture states that there is one Mediator between God and man – Christ Jesus? (2 Tim. 2:5).
- Why do Catholics repeat the same prayer over and over again when they pray the Rosary? Is this not the vain repetition condemned by Christ in Matthew 6:7?
- Why do Catholics believe in a place between Heaven and Hell called Purgatory? Where is Purgatory mentioned in the Bible?
- Why do Catholics confess their sins to priests? What makes them think that priests can absolve them of the guilt of their sins? Why don't they confess their sins directly to God as Protestants do?
- Granting that priests do have the power to forgive sins in the name of God, what advantage does confessing one's sins to a priest have over confessing directly to God in private prayer?
- Do Catholics confess all the sordid details of their sins to the priest?
- Why do Catholics believe that Christ is sacrificed in each and every Mass, when Scripture plainly states that He was sacrificed on Calvary once and for all?
- Why do Catholics believe their Holy Communion is the actual Flesh and Blood of Jesus Christ? Why don't they believe as Protestants do that Christ is only present symbolically, or spiritually, in the consecrated bread and wine?
- Why are Catholic lay people usually given Holy Communion only under the one form of bread? By not giving the consecrated bread and wine, isn't the Catholic Church depriving its people of the full benefit of Holy Communion?
- Why is Latin the language of the Church? How can the congregation understand the Mass whenever it is said in Latin?
- Why do Catholics call their priests "Father" despite the fact that Christ said: "Call no man on earth your father; for one is your Father, who is in heaven"! (Matt. 23:9).
- Why do Catholics practice fasting and abstinence from meat on certain days? Does not St. Paul call abstaining from meats a "doctrine of devils"? (1 Tim. 4:1-3)
- Why don't Catholic priests marry? The Bible says that a bishop should be "blameless, the husband of one wife" (1 Tim. 3:2), which certainly indicates that Christ approves of marriage for the Christian clergy.
- The Bible says that after Christ was baptized He "came out of the water" (Matt. 3:16), indicating that He was baptized by total immersion. Why doesn't the Catholic Church also baptize by total immersion instead of by pouring on the head?
- Why does the Catholic Church baptize infants, who have no understanding of what is taking place?
- Why is the Catholic Church opposed to birth control? Where in the Bible is birth control condemned as being contrary to the Will of God?
- Why does the Catholic Church make no exceptions when it comes to divorce? Does not the Bible say that Christ permitted divorce in case of fornication? (Matthew 19:9).
- Why have Catholic women traditionally worn hats in church? Are bareheaded women forbidden to enter Catholic churches?
- Why must Catholics pay money for a Mass that is offered up for deceased relatives and friends when the Bible states that the gift of God is not to be purchased with money? (Acts 8:20).
- Conclusion One man's story of conversion.
Why do Catholics believe that the universe and all life in it was created by, and is governed by, an all-powerful Spirit Being called God? What actual proof is there of God's existence and omnipotence?
Catholics believe that the universe is the creation,
and the exclusive dominion, of an infinitely powerful Spirit Being,
called God, because the evidence which points to that conclusion is so
overwhelming that there is no room left for even the slightest vestige
of doubt. First, there is the evidence of logic. Through the process
of simple mathematical-type reasoning, man inevitably comes face to face
with certain indisputable principles: Everything has a cause; nothing
can bring itself into existence. Obviously there is a long chain of
causes in the universe, but ultimately there must be a first
cause, an uncaused cause. This uncaused cause we call "God." (The
theory of evolution, even if it could be proved, would not explain the
origin of anything; evolution simply deals with what may have happened after
matter came into existence.) Further, 1) personal creation (man)
presupposes a superior Personal Creator, 2) universal order presupposes a
Universal Orderer, 3) cosmic energy presupposes a Cosmic Energizer, 4)
natural law presupposes a Universal Law Maker. Basic principles of
reason such as these explain why so many of the world's leading
scientists are firm believers in God.
Then, there is the evidence of divine revelation –
on countless occasions God has revealed Himself by voice, vision and
apparition (by means which are receptive to the human senses), and
demonstrated His Omnipotence by stupendous, obviously supernatural
miracles. Many of these revelations are a matter of authenticated
historical record. The Scriptures, for example, are full of such
accounts; and in modern times the world has been witness to such
Heaven-sent miracles as those at
Fatima, Lourdes,
and St. Anne de Beauprè in Quebec, Canada, where the cured have left a
forest of crutches in testimony. (The Lourdes Medical Bureau is open
for examination by any doctor.) In addition, there is the liquefaction
of the blood of St. Januarius which still takes place in Naples each
year on September 19, his feastday; the incorruption of the bodies of
many Catholic saints (such as St. Bernadette, who died in 1879); and the
miraculous Eucharistic Host of Lanciano, Italy, which has been
scientifically proven to be human flesh and human blood, type AB–
to mention only a few of the miracles still on-going in the 20th
century, which point to the existence of a God.
And lastly there is the evidence of human intuition.
Psychologists have long known that every human being
–
the atheist included –
intuitively seeks God's help in times of great calamity, and
instinctively pleads for God's mercy when death is imminent. Hence the
renowned Voltaire, who was so eloquent in his denial of God while he
enjoyed health, fame and fortune, repudiated all of his atheistic
writings on his deathbed and frantically sought the ministrations of a
Catholic priest. Nikolai Lenin, as he lay on his deathbed, looked
around him and frantically asked pardon of the tables and chairs in the
room. For as hunger for food proclaims the existence of food, man's
intuitive hunger for God proclaims the Reality, the Omnipotence and the
Justice of God. Catholic belief in God, therefore, is purely and simply
an expression of intellectual sanity.
Why do Catholics believe that God is three Persons, called the Holy Trinity? How can God be three Persons and still be one God?
Catholics believe there is one God consisting of three
distinct and equal divine Persons
–
Father, Son and Holy Spirit –
because on numerous occasions God has described Himself thus. The Old
Testament gives intimations that there are more than one Person in God.
In Genesis 1:26, God says, "Let us make man to our image and likeness." In Isaias 9:6-7, God the Father revealed the imminent coming into the world of God the Son. In Psalms
2:7, we read, "The Lord hath said to me: Thou art my son, this day
have I begotten thee." And in the New Testament, God reveals this
doctrine even more clearly. For example, at the baptism of Jesus
Christ, the Holy Spirit appeared in the form of a dove, and the voice of
God the Father was heard: "This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased." (Matt. 3:16-17). In Matthew 28:19, God the Son
commanded the Apostles to baptize "in the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Ghost." And in 1 Cor. 12:4-6, the Bible refers to God with three names: Spirit, Lord, and God
–
corresponding to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
Three divine Persons in one Godhead may be
incomprehensible to the human mind, but that is to be expected. How can
man fully comprehend God's infinite make-up when he cannot fully
comprehend his own finite make-up? We have to take God's word for it.
Also, we can satisfy ourselves as to the feasibility of God's triune
make-up by considering various other triune realities. The triangle,
for example, is one distinct form with three distinct and equal sides.
And the clover leaf is one leaf with three distinct and equal petals.
There are many physical trinities on earth, therefore a Spiritual
Trinity, who is God in Heaven, is not against human reason
–
it is simply above human reason.
Why do Catholics believe that Jesus Christ was God the Son – the Second Person of the Holy Trinity? Would it not be more reasonable to believe that He was a great and holy man... a religious leader of exceptional talent and dedication... a prophet?
Catholics believe that Jesus was God the Son,
incarnate in human flesh, firstly because God's physical manifestation
on earth, plus all the circumstances of that manifestation, were
prophesied time and again in Divine Revelation, and Jesus fulfilled that
prophecy right to the letter; secondly, because He claimed that He was
God (John 10:30, 14:9-10 and numerous other passages), and He never deceived anyone; thirdly, because He proved
His divinity by His impeccable holiness and the flawless perfection of
His doctrine; fourthly, because only God could have performed the
miracles He performed miracles such as walking on the sea, feeding five
thousand people with five loaves of bread and two fish, and, after His
death on the Cross, resurrecting Himself from His own tomb; fifthly,
because only God could have, in the brief space of three years, without
military conquest, without political power, without writing a single
line or traveling more than a few score miles, so profoundly affected
the course of human events; sixthly, because only God can instill in the
soul of man the grace and the peace and the assurance of eternal
salvation that Jesus instills.
Why do Catholics believe that their Church is the one true Church of Jesus Christ? Wouldn't it be more reasonable to believe that Christ's true Church is a spiritual union of all Christian denominations?
Catholics believe that theirs is the one true Church
of Jesus Christ, firstly, because theirs is the only Christian Church
that goes back in history to the time of Christ; secondly, because
theirs is the only Christian Church which possesses the invincible
unity, the intrinsic holiness, the continual universality and the
indisputable apostolicity which Christ said would distinguish His true
Church; and thirdly, because the Apostles and primitive Church Fathers,
who certainly were members of Christ's true Church, all professed
membership in this same Catholic Church (See Apostles' Creed and the Primitive Christian letters).
Wrote Ignatius of Antioch, illustrious Church Father of the first
century: "Where the Bishop is, there let the multitude of believers be;
even as where Jesus is, there is the Catholic Church." Our Lord said:
"There shall be one fold and one shepherd", yet it is well known that
the various Christian denominations cannot agree on what Christ actually
taught. Since Christ roundly condemned interdenominationalism ("And if
a house be divided against itself, that house cannot stand." Mark 3:25), Catholics cannot believe that He would ever sanction it in His Church.
Why do Catholics refuse to concede that their church became doctrinally corrupt in the Middle Ages, necessitating the Protestant Reformation?
Catholics refuse to concede such a thing out of faith
in Jesus Christ. Christ solemnly pledged that the gates of Hell would
never prevail against His Church (Matt. 16:18), and He solemnly
promised that after His Ascension into Heaven He would send His Church
"another Paraclete... the spirit of truth," to dwell with it forever (John 14:16-17), and He inspired the Apostle Paul to describe His Church as "the pillar and ground of the truth." (I Tim.
3:15). If the Catholic Church (which Protestants admit was the true
Church of Jesus Christ before Luther's revolt) became doctrinally
corrupt as alleged, it would mean that the gates of Hell had prevailed
against it
–
it would mean that Christ had deceived His followers. Believing Christ
to be the very essence of truth and integrity, Catholics cannot in
conscience believe that He could be guilty of such deception. Another
thing: Catholics cannot see how the division of Christianity into
hundreds of rival camps and doctrinal variations can be called a
"reformation" of the Christian Church. In the Catholic mind, hundreds
of conflicting interpretations of Christ's teachings do not add up to a
true interpretation of Christ's teachings.
If the Catholic Church never fell into error, how does one explain the worldly Popes, the bloody Inquisitions, the selling of indulgences and the invention of new doctrines?
A careful, objective investigation of Catholic history
will disclose these facts: The so-called worldly popes of the Middle
Ages
–
three in number –
were certainly guilty of extravagant pomposity, nepotism and other
indiscretions and sins which were not in keeping with the dignity of
their high church office
–
but they certainly were not guilty of licentious conduct while in
office, nor were they guilty of altering any part of the Church's
Christ-given deposit of faith. The so-called bloody Inquisitions, which
were initiated by the civil governments of France and Spain for the
purpose of ferreting out Moslems and Jews who were causing social havoc
by posing as faithful Catholic citizens
–
even as priests and bishops –
were indeed approved by the Church. (Non-Catholics who admitted they
were non-Catholics were left alone by the Inquisition.) And the vast
majority of those questioned by the Inquisition (including St. Teresa of
Avila) were completely cleared. Nevertheless, the popes roundly
condemned the proceedings when they saw justice giving way to cruel
abuses, and it was this insistent condemnation by the popes which
finally put an end to the Inquisitions.
The so-called selling of indulgences positively did not involve any "selling"
–
it involved the granting
of the spiritual favor of an indulgence (which is the remission of the
debt of
temporal punishment for already-forgiven sins) in return for the giving
of alms
to the Church for the building of Christendom's greatest house of prayer
–
St.
Peter's Basilica in Rome. One must understand with regard to
indulgences
that there are always two acts to be fulfilled by the one gaining the
indulgence: 1) doing the deed (e.g., alms-giving) and 2) saying of some
prescribed prayers with proper spiritual dispositions. In the case in
point, the first act for gaining the indulgence was "giving alms." If
the almsgiver thereafter failed to say the requisite prayers, he would
not receive the indulgence because he had failed to fulfill both
required acts. The indulgences therefore were not "sold"; the very
giving of money was itself the first of two requisite acts for gaining
the indulgence in question.
The so-called invention of new doctrines, which refers
to the Church's proclamation of new dogmas, is the most baseless and
ridiculous charge of all
–
for those "new" dogmas of the Church were actually old doctrines dating
back to the beginning of Christianity. In proclaiming them to be
dogmas, the Church merely emphasized their importance to the Faith and
affirmed that they are, in truth, part and parcel of divine revelation.
The Catholic Church followed the same procedure when, in the fourth
century, she proclaimed the New Testament to be divinely revealed.
Hence it is obvious that the Catholic Church did NOT fall into error
during the Middle Ages as some people allege, for if she had, she could
not have produced those hundreds of medieval saints
–
saints the caliber of St. Francis, St. Bernard, St. Bonaventure, St.
Clare, St. Anthony, St. John of the Cross, St. Thomas Aquinas, St.
Elizabeth and St. Vincent Ferrer (who performed an estimated 40,000
miracles).
Why do Catholics believe that Peter the Apostle was the first Pope, when the word "Pope" doesn't even appear in Catholic Bibles? Just where does the Pope get his authority to rule over the Catholic Church?
True, the word "Pope" doesn't appear in the Bible –
but then neither do the words "Trinity," "Incarnation," "Ascension" and
"Bible" appear in the Bible. However, they are referred to by other
names. The Bible, for example, is referred to as "Scripture." The
Pope, which means head bishop of the Church, is referred to as
the "rock" of the Church, or as the "shepherd" of the Church. Christ
used that terminology when He appointed the Apostle Peter the first head
bishop of His Church, saying: "Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-Jona . . .
Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church." (Matt. 16:17-19). "There shall be one fold and one shepherd." (John 10:16). "Feed my lambs . . . feed my sheep." (John
21:15-17). The words "rock" and "shepherd" must apply to Peter, and
they must distinguish him as the head Apostle, otherwise Christ's
statements are so ambiguous as to be meaningless. Certainly the other
Apostles understood that Peter had authority from Christ to lead the
Church, for they gave him the presiding place every time they assembled
in council (Acts 1:15, 5:1-10), and they placed his name first every time they listed the names of the Apostles. (Matt. 10:2, Mark 3:16, Luke 6:13-14, Acts 1:13).
In addition, there is the testimony of the Church
Fathers. In the second century St. Hegessipus compiled a list of Popes
to the time of Anicetus (eleventh Pope) which contained the name of St.
Peter as first. Early in the third century the historian Caius wrote
that Pope Victor was "the thirteenth Bishop of Rome from Peter." In the
middle of the third century St. Cyprian related that Cornelius
(twenty-first Pope) "mounted the lofty summit of the priesthood . . .
the place of Peter." Even Protestant historians have attested to
Peter's role as first Bishop of Rome, first Pope of the Catholic
Church. Wrote the eminent Protestant historian Cave in his Historia Literaria:
"That Peter was at Rome, and held the See there for some time, we
fearlessly affirm with the whole multitude of the ancients." Hence the
source of the Pope's authority to rule over the Catholic Church is quite
obvious: It was given him by none other than Jesus Christ
–
by God Himself.
Why do Catholics believe the Pope is infallible in his teachings when he is a human being, with a finite human intellect, like the rest of us? What is the scriptural basis for this belief?
The doctrine of Papal Infallibility does not mean the
Pope is always right in all his personal teachings. Catholics are quite
aware that, despite his great learning, the Pope is very much a human
being and therefore liable to commit human error. On some subjects,
like sports and manufacturing, his judgment is liable to be very
faulty. The doctrine simply means that the Pope is divinely protected
from error when, acting in his official capacity as chief shepherd of
the Catholic fold, he promulgates a decision which is binding on the
conscience of all Catholics throughout the world. In other words, his
infallibility is limited to his specialty–
the Faith of Jesus Christ.
In order for the Pope to be infallible on a particular statement, however, four conditions must apply: 1) he must be speaking ex cathedra . . . that is, "from the Chair" of Peter, or in other words, officially, as head of the entire Church; 2) the decision must be for the whole
Church; 3) it must be on a matter of faith or morals; 4) the Pope must
have the intention of making a final decision on a teaching of faith or
morals, so that it is to be held by all the faithful. It must be
interpretive, not originative; the Pope has no authority to originate new doctrine.
He is not the author of revelation
–
only its guardian and expounder. He has no power to distort a single
word of Scripture, or change one iota of divine tradition. His
infallibility is limited strictly to the province of doctrinal
interpretation, and it is used quite rarely. It is used in order to
clarify, to "define," some point of the ancient Christian tradition. It
is the infallibility of which Christ spoke when He said to Peter, the
first Pope: "I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And
whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in
heaven." (Matt. 16:19). Certainly Christ would not have admonished His followers to "hear the church" (Matt. 18:17) without somehow making certain that what they heard was the truth
–
without somehow making the teaching magisterium of His Church infallible.
For a complete understanding of the Pope's infallibility, however, one more thing should be known: His ex cathedra decisions are not the result of his own private deliberations. They are the result of many years
–
sometimes hundreds of years –
of consultation with the other bishops and theologians of the Church. He is, in effect, voicing the belief of the whole
Church. His infallibility is not his own private endowment, but rather
an endowment of the entire Mystical Body of Christ. Indeed, the Pope's
hands are tied with regard to the changing of Christian doctrine. No
Pope has ever used his infallibility to change, add, or subtract any
Christian teaching; this is because Our Lord promised to be with His
Church until the end of the world. (Matt. 28:20). Protestant
denominations, on the other hand, feel free to change their doctrines.
For example, all Protestant denominations once taught that contraception
was gravely sinful; but since 1930, when the Church of England's
Lambeth Conference decided contraception was no longer a sin, virtually
all Protestant ministers in the world have accepted this human decision
and changed their teaching.
Why do Catholics believe in seven sacraments, while Protestants believe in only two? Exactly what is a sacrament, and what does it do for a person?
Catholics believe in seven sacraments because Christ
instituted seven; because the Apostles and Church Fathers believed in
seven; because the second Ecumenical Council of Lyons (1274) defined
seven; and because the Ecumenical Council of Trent (1545-1563) confirmed
seven. In short, the enumeration, seven, arises from the perpetual
tradition of Christian belief
–
which explains why that enumeration is accepted not only by Catholics,
but by all of the other ancient and semi-ancient Christian communities
–
Egyptian Coptic, Ethiopian Monophysite, Syrian Jacobite, Greek Orthodox
and Russian Orthodox.
To understand what a sacrament is, and what it does
for a person, one must know the correct, the traditional Christian,
definition of a sacrament. Properly defined, a sacrament is "an outward
sign instituted by Christ to give grace" (holiness) to the soul . . .
that is to say, it is a divinely prescribed ceremony of the Church in
which the words and action combine to form what is at the same time both
a sign of divine grace and a fount of divine grace. When this special
grace
–
distinct from ordinary, inspirational grace –
is imparted to the soul, the Holy Spirit of God is imparted to the
soul, imbuing the soul with divine life, uniting the soul to Christ.
As the Scriptures point out, this grace is the grace
of salvation
–
without it man is, in a very real sense, isolated from Christ. And as
the Scriptures point out, Christ gave His Church seven sacraments to
serve as well-springs of this ineffable, soul-saving grace, the grace
which flows from His sacrifice on Calvary:
BAPTISM –
the sacrament of spiritual rebirth through which we are made children of God and heirs of Heaven: "Amen, amen I say to thee, unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." (John 3:5. Also see Acts 2:38, Rom. 6:2-6).
CONFIRMATION –
the sacrament which confers the Holy Spirit to make us strong and perfect Christians and soldiers of Jesus Christ: "Now
when the apostles, who were in Jerusalem, had heard that Samaria had
received the word of God, they sent unto them Peter and John. Who, when
they were come, prayed for them, that they might receive the Holy
Ghost. . . . Then they laid their hands upon them, and they received the
Holy Ghost." (Acts 8:14-17. Also see Acts 19:6).
The EUCHARIST –
the sacrament, also known as Holy Communion, which nourishes the soul
with the true Flesh and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus, under the
appearance, or sacramental veil, of bread and wine: "And whilst they
were eating, Jesus took bread; and blessing, broke, and gave to them,
and said: Take ye. This is my body. And having taken the chalice,
giving thanks, he gave it to them. And they all drank of it. And he said
to them: This is my blood of the new testament, which shall be shed for
many." (Mark 14:22-24. Also see Matt. 26:26-28, Luke 22:19-20, John 6:52-54, 1 Cor. 10:16).
PENANCE –
the sacrament, also known as Confession, through which Christ forgives sin and restores the soul to grace: "Receive
ye the Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven
them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are retained." (John 20:22-23. Also see Matt. 18:18).
EXTREME UNCTION –
the sacrament, sometimes called the Last Anointing, which strengthens the sick and sanctifies the dying: "Is
any man sick among you? Let him bring in the priests of the church,
and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the
Lord . . . and if he be in sins, they shall be forgiven him." (James 5:14-15. Also see Mark 6:12-13).
HOLY ORDERS –
the sacrament of ordination which empowers priests to offer the Holy
Sacrifice of the Mass, administer the sacraments, and officiate over all
the other proper affairs of the Church: "For every high priest
taken from among men, is ordained for men in the things that appertain
to God, that he may offer up gifts and sacrifices for sins . . .
Neither doth any man take the honor to himself, but he that is called by
God, as Aaron was." (Heb. 5:1-4. Also see Acts 20:28, 1 Tim.
4:14). Also: "And taking bread, he gave thanks, and broke; and gave
to them, saying: This is my body, which is given for you. Do this for a
commemoration of me." (Luke 22:19).
MATRIMONY –
the sacrament which unites a man and woman in a holy and indissoluble bond: "For
this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his
wife, and they two shall be in one flesh. Therefore now they are not
two, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together, let no man
put asunder." (Matt. 19:5-6. Also see Mark 10:7-9, Eph. 5:22-32).
There you have it, the Word of Christ and the example
of the Apostles attesting both to the validity and the efficacy of the
seven Sacraments of the Catholic Church. In truth, every one of them is
an integral part of Christ's plan for man's eternal salvation.
Why does the Catholic Church discourage Bible reading when, according to the Apostle, "All scripture, inspired of God, is profitable to teach...[and] to instruct in justice"? (2 Tim. 3:16).
If the Catholic Church discourages Bible reading, the
Pope, the thousands of Catholic Bishops, and the many millions of
Catholic lay people, are not aware of it. For the Popes have issued
pastoral letters to the whole Church, called encyclicals, on the
edifying effects of Bible reading. The Catholic Bible far outsells all
other Christian Bibles worldwide. In fact, it has always been thus.
The very first Christian Bible was produced by the Catholic Church
–
compiled by Catholic scholars of the 2nd and 3rd century and approved
for general Christian use by the Catholic Councils of Hippo (393) and
Carthage (397). The very first printed Bible was produced under the
auspices of the Catholic Church
–
printed by the Catholic inventor of the printing press, Johannes
Gutenberg. And the very first Bible with chapters and numbered verses
was produced by the Catholic Church
–
the work of Stephen Langton, Cardinal Archbishop of Canterbury. It was
this perennial Catholic devotion to the Bible which prompted Martin
Luther
–
who certainly cannot be accused of Catholic favoritism –
to write in his Commentary on St. John: "We are compelled to
concede to the Papists that they have the Word of God, that we received
it from them, and that without them we should have no knowledge of it at
all."
[See also "The Church or the Bible"]
[See also "The Church or the Bible"]
If the Catholic Church really honors the Bible as the holy Word of God – if she really wants her members to become familiar with its truth – why in times past did she confiscate and burn so many Bibles?
The Bibles which were collected and burned by the Catholic Church in times past
–
notably the Wycliff and Tyndale Bibles –
were faulty translations, and therefore, were not the holy Word
of God. In other words, the Catholic Church collected and burned those
"Bibles" precisely because she does honor the Bible, the true
Bible, as the holy Word of God and wants her members to become familiar
with its truths. Proof of this is seen in the fact that after those
Bibles were collected and burned, they were replaced by accurate
editions. There can be no doubt that the Wycliff and Tyndale
translations were corrupt and therefore deserving of extinction, for no
church has ever attempted to resurrect them. Nor can there be any doubt
that the Bibles which replaced them were correct translations, because
they have long been honored by both Protestants and Catholics.
Why does the Catholic Church base some of her doctrines on tradition instead of basing them all on the Bible? Did Christ not tell the Pharisees that in holding to tradition they were transgressing the commandment of God? (Matt. 15:3, Mark 7:9).
Observe that in the Bible there are two kinds of religious tradition
–
human and divine. Observe that when Christ accused the Pharisees He was referring to "precepts of men" (Mark 7:7), to their human traditions. Christ wanted divine
tradition preserved and honored because He made it part and parcel of
the Christian deposit of faith
–
as the Apostle Paul affirmed: "Stand fast; and hold the traditions
which you have learned, whether by word, or by our epistle." (2 Thess. 2:14. Also see 2 Thess.
3:6). This divine tradition to which Paul refers
–
this revealed truth which was handed down by word rather than by letter
–
is the tradition upon which, along with Sacred Scripture, the Catholic
Church bases her tenets of faith
–
as the primitive Christian Fathers affirmed. Wrote St. Augustine:
"These traditions of the Christian name, therefore, so numerous, so
powerful, and most dear, justly keep a believing man in the Catholic
Church." The New Testament itself is a product of Christian tradition.
Nowhere in the New Testament is there any mention of a New Testament.
[See also "The Church or the Bible"]
[See also "The Church or the Bible"]
Why do Catholics try to earn their own salvation, despite the fact that salvation can only come as a free gift from Jesus Christ?
Catholics fully recognize that Jesus Christ died on
the Cross for their sins and thus "opened the gates of Heaven," and that
salvation is a free gift which no amount of human good deeds could ever
earn. Catholics receive Christ's saving and sanctifying grace, and
Christ Himself, into their souls when they are baptized. Yet they also
know that Christ has established certain conditions for entry into
eternal happiness in Heaven
–
for example, receiving His true Flesh and Blood (John 6:54) and keeping the commandments (Matt.
19:17). If a Christian refuses or neglects to obey Our Lord's commands
in a grave matter (that is, if he commits a mortal sin), Our Lord will
not remain dwelling in his soul; and if a Christian dies in that state,
having driven his Lord from his soul by serious sin, he will not be
saved. As St. Paul warned the Galatians with regard to certain sins:
"They who do such things shall not obtain the kingdom of God." (Gal.
5:21). It must be added that Christ will always forgive and return to a
sinner who approaches Him with sincerity in the Sacrament of Penance.
Catholics follow St. Paul, who did not think
that his salvation was guaranteed once and for all at the moment he
first received Christ into his soul; for he wrote: "I chastise my body,
and bring it into subjection: lest perhaps, when I have preached to
others, I myself should become a castaway." (I Cor. 9:27). Also: "With fear and trembling work out your salvation. For it is God who worketh in you..." (Phil. 2:12-13). "And unto whomsoever much is given, of him much shall be required." (Luke 12:48). "He that shall persevere unto the end, he shall be saved." (Matt.
10:22). Nevertheless, Catholics realize that even the fulfilling of
Our Lord's requirements for salvation is impossible without the free
gift of His grace.
[See also "The Number of Those Who Are Saved"]
[See also "The Number of Those Who Are Saved"]
Why do Catholics believe that good works are necessary for salvation! Does not Paul say in Romans 3:28 that faith alone justifies!
Catholics believe that faith and good works are both
necessary for salvation, because such is the teaching of Jesus Christ.
What Our Lord demands is "faith that worketh by charity ." (Gal. 5 :6). Read Matthew
25:31-46, which describes the Last Judgment as being based on works of
charity. The first and greatest commandment, as given by Our Lord
Himself, is to love the Lord God with all one's heart, mind, soul, and
strength; and the second great commandment is to love one's neighbor as
oneself. (Mark 12:30-31). When the rich young man asked Our Lord what he must do to gain eternal life, Our Lord answered: "Keep the commandments." (Matt. 19:17). Thus, although faith is the beginning, it is not the complete
fulfillment of the will of God. Nowhere in the Bible is it written
that faith alone justifies. When St. Paul wrote, "For we account a man
to be justified by faith, without the works of the law," he was
referring to works peculiar to the old Jewish Law, and he cited
circumcision as an example.
The Catholic Church does NOT teach that purely human
good works are meritorious for salvation; such works are NOT meritorious
for salvation, according to her teaching. Only those good works
performed when a person is in the state of grace
–
that is, as a branch drawing its spiritual life from the Vine which is
Christ (John 15:4-6)
–
only these good deeds work toward our salvation, and they do so only by the grace of God and the merit of Jesus Christ. These
good works, offered to God by a soul in the state of grace (i.e., free
of mortal sin, with the Blessed Trinity dwelling in the soul), are
thereby supernaturally meritorious because they share in the work and in the merits of Christ. Such supernatural good works will not only be rewarded by God, but are necessary for salvation.
St. Paul shows how the neglect of certain good works
will send even a Christian believer to damnation: "But if any man have
not care of his own, and especially of those of his house, he hath
denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel." (1 Tim. 5:8).
Our Lord tells us that if the Master (God) returns and finds His servant
sinning, rather than performing works of obedience, He "shall separate
him, and shall appoint him his portion with unbelievers." (Luke 12:46).
Furthermore, Catholics know they will be rewarded in
Heaven for their good works. Our Lord Himself said: "For the Son of
man . . . will render to every man according to his works." (Matt.
16:27). "And whosoever shall give to drink to one of these little ones
a cup of cold water only in the name of a disciple, amen I say to you,
he shall not lose his reward." (Matt. 10:42). Catholics
believe, following the Apostle Paul, that "every man shall receive his
own reward, according to his own labor." (1 Cor. 3:8). "For God
is not unjust, that he should forget your work, and the love which you
have shown in his name, you who have ministered, and do minister to the
saints." (Heb. 6:10). "I have fought a good fight, I have
finished my course, I have kept the faith. As to the rest, there is
laid up for me a crown of justice, which the Lord the just judge will
render to me in that day: and not only to me, but to them also that love
his coming." (2 Tim. 4:7-8).
Still, Catholics know that, strictly speaking, God
never owes us anything. Even after obeying all God's commandments, we
must still say: "We are unprofitable servants; we have done that which
we ought to do." (Luke 17:10). As St. Augustine (5th century)
stated: "All our good merits are wrought through grace, so that God, in
crowning our merits, is crowning nothing but His gifts."
Had St. Paul meant that faith ruled out the necessity
of good works for salvation, he would not have written: ". . . and if I
should have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not
charity, I am nothing." (1 Cor. 13:2). If faith ruled out the
necessity of good works for salvation, the Apostle James would not have
written: "Do you see that by works a man is justified; and not by faith
only'? . . . For even as the body without the spirit is dead; so also
faith without works is dead." (James 2:24-26). Or: "What shall
it profit, my brethren, if a man say he hath faith, but hath not
works? Shall faith be able to save him?" (James 2:14). If
faith ruled out the necessity of good works for salvation, the Apostle
Peter would not have written: "Wherefore, brethren, labor the more,
that by good works you may make sure your calling and election. For
doing these things, you shall not sin at any time. For so an entrance
shall be ministered to you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." (2 Peter 1:10-11). If faith
ruled out the necessity of good works for salvation, the primitive
Christian Fathers would not have advocated good works in such powerful
words. Wrote St. Irenaeus, one of the most illustrious of the primitive
Christian Fathers: "For what is the use of knowing the truth in word,
while defiling the body and accomplishing the works of evil? Or what
real good at all can bodily holiness do. If truth be not in the soul?
For these two, faith and good works, rejoice in each other's company,
and agree together and fight side by side to set man in the Presence of
God." (Proof of the Apostolic Preaching). Justification by faith alone is a new doctrine; it was unheard of in the Christian community before the sixteenth century.
[See also "The Number of Those Who Are Saved"]
[See also "The Number of Those Who Are Saved"]
Why do Catholics worship Mary as though she were a goddess, when it is clear in Scripture that she was not a supernatural being?
Catholics DO NOT worship Mary, the Mother of Christ –
as though she were a
deity. Of all the misconceptions about Catholic belief and practice,
this one is the most
absurd. Catholics are just as aware as Protestants that Mary was a
human creature, and therefore not entitled to the honors which are
reserved to God alone. What many non-Catholics mistake for adoration is
a very profound love and veneration, nothing more. Mary is not adored,
first because God forbids it, and secondly because the Canon Law of the
Catholic Church, which is based on Divine Law, forbids it. Canon Law
1255 of the 1918 Codex strictly forbids adoration of anyone other than
the Holy Trinity. However, Catholics do feel that Mary is entitled to a
great measure of exaltation because, in choosing her as the Mother of
Redemption, God Himself exalted her
–
exalted her more than any other human person before or since.
Catholics heap tribute and honor on Mary because they earnestly desire
to be "followers of God, as most dear children." (Eph. 5:1).
Mary herself prophesied: "For behold from henceforth all generations
shall call me blessed. Because he that is mighty, hath done great
things to me; and holy is his name." (Luke 1:48-49). Catholics
know that every bit of the glory they give to Mary redounds to the glory
of her divine Son, just as Mary magnified God, not herself, when
Elizabeth blessed her. (Luke 1:41-55). They know that the
closer they draw to her, the closer they draw to Him who was born of
her. In the year 434 St. Vincent of Lerins defended Christian devotion
to Mary this way: "Therefore, may God forbid that anyone should attempt
to defraud Holy Mary of her privilege of divine grace and her special
glory. For by a unique favor of our Lord and God she is confessed to be
the most true and most blessed Mother of God." Today 75% of all
Christians still hold to this same view.
Why do Catholics pray to Mary and the saints when Sacred Scripture states that there is one Mediator between God and man – Christ Jesus? (1 Tim. 2:5).
When Catholics pray to Mary and the other saints in
Heaven they are not bypassing Christ, whom they acknowledge as the sole
Mediator between God and man. They are going to Christ through Mary and the other saints. They are asking Mary and other saints to intercede for them before the throne of Christ in Heaven. "For the continual prayer of a just man availeth much." (James
5:16). How much more availing is the unceasing prayer of the sinless
Mother of Our Lord Jesus Christ! St. Paul asked his fellow Christians
to intercede for him: "Brethren, pray for us." (2 Thess. 3:1).
And again: "I beseech you therefore, brethren, through our Lord Jesus
Christ, and by the charity of the Holy Ghost, that you help me in your
prayers for me to God . . ." (Rom. 15:30). Christ must
particularly approve of our going to Him through Mary, His Blessed
Mother, because He chose to come to us through her. And at Cana, He
performed His first miracle after a word from His Mother. (John 2:2-11).
It is clear in Sacred Scripture that the saints in
Heaven will intercede for us before the throne of Christ if they are
petitioned in prayer (Apoc. or Rev. 8:3-4), and it is
clear in the records of primitive Christianity that the first Christians
eagerly sought their intercession. Wrote St. John Chrysostom in the
fourth century: "When thou perceivest that God is chastening thee, fly
not to His enemies, but to His friends, the martyrs, the saints, and
those who were pleasing to Him, and who have great power." If the saints
have such power with God, how much more His own Mother.
Why do Catholics repeat the same prayer over and over again when they pray the Rosary? Is this not the vain repetition condemned by Christ in Matthew 6:7?
Catholics DO NOT just repeat the same prayer over and
over again when they pray the Rosary. The Rosary is a progression of
many prayers
–
the Apostles' Creed, the Lord's Prayer, the Gloria, the Hail Mary and
the Salve Regina
–
and these prayers are accompanied by many holy meditations. As the
Rosary progresses, Catholics meditate on the joyful, the sorrowful, and
the glorious mysteries of the life of Christ and His Mother. True, the
Hail Mary is repeated many times during the course of the Rosary, and
some of the other prayers are repeated several times, but this is not
"vain" repetition, certainly not the vain repetition condemned by Our
Lord. The vain repetition He condemned is that of people who pray
standing "in the corners of the streets, that they may be seen by men."
No prayer is vain, no matter how often repeated, if it is
sincere, for Christ Himself engaged in repetitious prayer in the Garden of
Gethsemani (". . . he went again: and he prayed the third time, saying the
selfsame word" –
Matt. 26:39, 42, 44), and we are informed in the Apocalypse (Revelations)
4:8 that the angels in Heaven never cease repeating, night and day, the
canticle: "Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty, who was, and who is,
and who is to come." The publican humbly repeated the prayer: "O God,
be merciful to me, a sinner," and he went away justified; whereas the pharisee went home unjustified after his long-winded extemporaneous prayer. (Luke
18:9-14). God was likewise pleased with the repetitious prayer of the
three young men in the fiery furnace, whom He preserved miraculously
untouched by the flames. (Dan. 3:52-90). Protestants also
engage in repetitious prayer: the same prayers at mealtime grace, the
same prayers at Benediction, etc. The time lapse is no factor; it is
still repetitious.
Why do Catholics believe in a place between Heaven and Hell called Purgatory? Where is Purgatory mentioned in the Bible?
The main body of Christians have always believed in
the existence of a place between Heaven and Hell where souls go to be
punished for lesser
sins and to repay the debt of temporal punishment for sins which have
been forgiven. Even after Moses was forgiven by God, he was still
punished for his sin. (2 Kg. or 2 Sam. 12:13-14). The
primitive Church Fathers regarded the doctrine of Purgatory as one of
the basic tenets of the Christian faith. St. Augustine, one of the
greatest doctors of the Church, said the doctrine of Purgatory "has been
received from the Fathers and it is observed by the Universal Church."
True, the word "Purgatory" does not appear in the Bible, but a place
where lesser sins are purged away and the soul is saved "yet so as by
fire," is mentioned (1 Cor. 3:15). Also, the Bible distinguishes between those who enter Heaven straightaway, calling them "the church of the firstborn" (Heb. 12:23), and those who enter after having undergone a purgation, calling them "the spirits of the just made perfect." (Heb. 12:23). Christ Himself stated: "Amen I say to thee, thou shalt not go out from thence till thou repay the last farthing." (Matt. 5 :26). And: "Every idle word that men shall speak, they shall render an account for it in the day of judgment." (Matt.
12:36). These are obviously references to Purgatory. Further, the
Second Book of Machabees (which was dropped from the Scriptures by the
Protestant Reformers) says: "It is therefore a holy and wholesome
thought to pray for the dead, that they may be loosed from sins." (2 Mach.
12:46). Ancient Christian tomb inscriptions from the second and third
centuries frequently contain an appeal for prayers for the dead. In
fact, the custom of praying for the dead
–
which is meaningless if there is no Purgatory –
was universal among Christians for the fifteen centuries preceding the
Protestant Reformation.
Furthermore, ordinary justice calls for a place of
purgation between Heaven and
Hell. Take our own courts of justice, for example. For major crimes a
person is executed or sentenced to life imprisonment (Hell); for minor
crimes a person is sentenced to temporary imprisonment for punishment
and rehabilitation (Purgatory); for no crime at all a person is rewarded
with the blessing of free citizenship (Heaven). If a thief steals some
money, then regrets his deed and asks the victim for forgiveness, it is
quite just for the victim to forgive him yet still insist on
restitution. God, who is infinitely just, insists on holy restitution.
This is made either in this life, by doing penance (Matt. 3:2; Luke 3:8, 13:3; Apoc. 3:2-3, 19), or in Purgatory.
Also, what Christian is there who, despite his faith in Christ and his sincere
attempts to be Christlike, does not find sin and worldliness still in his heart? "For in many things we all offend." (James 3:2). Yet "there shall not enter into it [the new Jerusalem, Heaven] anything defiled." (Apoc. or Rev.
21:27). In Purgatory the soul is mercifully purified of all stain;
there God carries out the work of spiritual purification which most
Christians neglected and resisted on earth. It is important to remember
that Catholics do not believe that Christ simply covers over their
sinful souls, like covering a manure heap with a blanket of snow (Martin
Luther's description of God's forgiveness). Rather, Christ insists
that we be truly holy and sinless to the core of our souls. "Be you therefore perfect, as also your heavenly Father is perfect." (Matt. 5:48). This growth in sinlessness
–
in Christian virtue and holiness –
is of course the work of an entire lifetime (and is possible only
through the grace of God). With many this cleansing is completed only
in Purgatory. If there is no Purgatory, but only Heaven for the perfect
and Hell for the imperfect, then the vast majority of us are hoping in
vain for life eternal in Heaven.
Why do Catholics confess their sins to priests? What makes them think that priests can absolve them of the guilt of their sins? Why don't they confess their sins directly to God as Protestants do?
Catholics confess their sins to priests because –
as it is clearly stated in Sacred Scripture –
God in the Person of Jesus Christ authorized the priests of His Church
to hear confessions and empowered them to forgive sins in His Name. To
the Apostles, the first priests of His Church, Christ said: "Peace be
to you. As the Father hath sent me, I also send you... Receive ye the
Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven them; and
whose sins you shall retain, they are retained." (John
20:21-23). Then again: "Amen I say to you, whatsoever you shall bind
upon earth, shall be bound also in heaven; and whatsoever you shall
loose upon earth, shall be loosed also in heaven." (Matt. 18:18). In other words, Catholics confess their sins to priests because priests are God's duly authorized agents
in the world, representing Him in all matters pertaining to the ways
and means of attaining eternal salvation. When Catholics confess their
sins to a priest they ARE, in reality, confessing their sins to God, for
God hears their confessions and it is He who, in the final analysis,
does the forgiving. If their confessions are not sincere, their sins
are not forgiven.
Furthermore, Catholics DO confess their sins directly
to God as Protestants do: Catholics are taught to make an act of
contrition at least every night before retiring, to ask God to forgive
them their sins of that day. Catholics are also taught to say this same
prayer of contrition if they should have the misfortune to commit a
serious sin (called a "mortal sin" by Catholics).
Granting that priests do have the power to forgive sins in the name of God, what advantage does confessing one's sins to a priest have over confessing directly to God in private prayer?
Catholics see several advantages in confessing their
sins to a priest in the Sacrament of Penance. First, there is the
Church's guarantee of forgiveness, which private confessions do
not provide; secondly, there is the sacramental grace which private
confessions do not provide; and thirdly, there is the expert spiritual
counseling which private confessions do not provide. With the Apostles,
Catholics recognize that the Church is, in a mysterious way, the Body
of Christ still living in the world (Col. 1:18); therefore they
recognize that God will receive their pleas for mercy and forgiveness
with far greater compassion if their pleas are voiced within the Church,
in union with the Mystical Body of His Divine Son, than if they are
voiced privately, independent of the Mystical Body of His Divine Son.
Do Catholics confess all the sordid details of their sins to the priest?
No, Catholics are instructed NOT to confess the sordid
details of their sins, because it would serve no useful purpose. All
that is required of the penitent is the number and classification of
sins committed, as well as a sincere contrition for having sinned, a
promise to make restitution if the sin has harmed others, a firm resolve
to avoid future sins and the occasions of sin, and the carrying out of
the penance assigned by the priest (usually the praying of a few
prayers). Actually, there are fewer intimacies revealed to the priest
in the confessional than are usually revealed to one's doctor, lawyer,
or psychiatrist; hence the Sacrament of Penance is not the embarrassing
experience many non-Catholics imagine it is. Rather, it is a wonderful relieving
experience, for it is through this sacrament that sins committed after
Baptism are washed away by the blood of Christ and the sinner becomes
once again reconciled with God.
Why do Catholics believe that Christ is sacrificed in each and every Mass, when Scripture plainly states that He was sacrificed on Calvary once and for all?
Most non-Catholics do not realize it, but Christ
Himself offered the first Mass at the Last Supper. At the Last Supper
He offered (sacrificed) Himself to His Father in an unbloody manner,
that is, under the form of bread and wine, in anticipation of His bloody
sacrifice on the cross to be offered on the following day, Good
Friday. In the Mass, not now by anticipation, but rather in retrospect,
Christ continues to make that offering of Himself to His Father
–
by the hands of the priest. "And whilst they were at supper, Jesus
took bread, and blessed, and broke: and gave to his disciples, and
said: Take ye, and eat. This is my body. And taking the chalice, he
gave thanks, and gave to them, saying: Drink ye all of this. For this
is my blood of the new testament, which shall be shed for many unto
remission of sins." (Matt. 26:26-28). Christ ordered His Church
to perpetuate that sacrificial rite for the continued sanctification of
His followers, saying, "Do this for a commemoration of me" (Luke
22:19)
–
so the Catholic Church complies with His order in the Mass. In other
words, every Mass is a re-enactment of Our Lord's one sacrifice of
Calvary. The Mass derives all its value from the Sacrifice of the
Cross; the Mass is that same sacrifice, not another. It is not
essentially a sacrifice offered by men (although men also join in), but
rather it is the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.
Christ's bloody sacrifice on Calvary was accomplished "once" (Heb.
10:10), just as Scripture says. The Catholic Church likewise teaches
that the sacrifice of the Cross was a complete and perfect sacrifice
–
offered "once." But the Apostle Paul –
the same Apostle who wrote this text in the book of Hebrews –
also bears witness that the sacrificial rite which Christ instituted at
the Last Supper is to be perpetuated
–
and that it is not only important for man's sanctification, but is the principal factor in man's final redemption. In 1 Corinthians
11:23-26, St. Paul tells how, at the Last Supper, Our Lord said: "This
do ye, as often as you shall drink, for the commemoration of me. For
as often as you shall eat this bread, and drink the chalice, you shall
show the death of the Lord, until he come." Thus at every Mass the
Christian has a new opportunity to worship God with this one perfect
sacrifice and to "absorb" more of Christ's saving and sanctifying grace
of Calvary. This grace is infinite, and the Christian should
continuously grow in this grace until his death. The reason the Mass is
offered again and again is not from any imperfection in Christ, but
from our imperfect capacity to receive.
Finally, the holy sacrifice of the Mass fulfills the
Old Testament prophecy: "For from the rising of the sun even to the
going down, my name is great among the Gentiles, and in every place
there is sacrifice, and there is offered to my name a clean oblation:
for my name is great among the Gentiles, saith the Lord of hosts." (Mal. 1:11). The Sacrifice of the Mass is offered every day throughout the world, and in every Mass the only truly "clean oblation" is offered, that is, Christ Himself; thus the Mass is the perfect fulfillment of this prophecy.
Why do Catholics believe their Holy Communion is the actual Flesh and Blood of Jesus Christ? Why don't they believe as Protestants do that Christ is only present symbolically, or spiritually, in the consecrated bread and wine?
Catholics believe that their Holy Communion, the
Blessed Eucharist, is the actual Flesh and Blood of Jesus Christ,
because that is what Christ said It was: "This is my body . . . This
is my blood" (Matt. 26:26-28; see also Luke 22:19-20 and Mark
14:22-24); because that is what Christ said they must receive in order
to have eternal life: "... Except you eat the flesh of the Son of man,
and drink his blood, you shall not have life in you . . ." (John
6:48-52; 54-56); and because that is what the Apostles believed: "The
chalice of benediction, which we bless, is it not the communion of the
blood of Christ? And the bread, which we break, is it not the partaking
of the body of the Lord?" (1 Cor. 10:16). "Therefore whosoever
shall eat this bread, or drink the chalice of the Lord unworthily,
shall be guilty of the body and of the blood of the Lord. But let a man
prove himself: and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of the
chalice. For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and
drinketh judgment to himself, not discerning the body of the Lord." (1 Cor. 11:27-29).
Also, Catholics believe that Holy Communion is the actual Flesh and
Blood of Jesus Christ because that is what all Christians believed until
the advent of Protestantism in the 16th century.
Wrote Justin Martyr, illustrious Church Father of the
second century: "This food is known among us as the Eucharist... We do
not receive these things as common bread and common drink; but as Jesus
Christ our Savior, being made flesh by the Word of God." Wrote St.
Cyril of Jerusalem, venerable Church Father of the fourth century:
"Since then Christ has declared and said of the bread, 'This is my
Body,' who after that will venture to doubt? And seeing that He has
affirmed and said, 'This is my Blood,' who will raise a question and say
it is not His Blood?" In addition to the witness of Sacred Scripture
and Christian tradition, Catholics have the witness of the Holy
Eucharist itself: On numerous occasions great and awesome miracles have
attended its display, and seldom has its reception by the Catholic
faithful failed to produce in them a feeling of joyful union with their
Lord and Saviour. In the face of all this evidence, Catholics could
hardly be expected to adopt the Protestant position.
Why are Catholic lay people usually given Holy Communion only under the one form of bread? By not giving the consecrated bread and wine, isn't the Catholic Church depriving its people of the full benefit of Holy Communion?
In the Catholic Church the congregation is usually
given Holy Communion only under
the one form of bread because, if the consecrated "bread" is accidently
dropped on the floor
in the serving, it can be wholly retrieved –
particles of the Body of Christ would not be left on the
floor to be desecrated. If Holy Communion were given under both forms,
and if the consecrated "wine" were accidentally spilled on the floor in
the serving, it would be a virtual impossibility to retrieve all of the
precious Substance
–
some part of the Blood of Christ would, through smearing and
absorption, inevitably be desecrated. By not giving the congregation
Holy Communion under both forms, the Catholic Church is not cheating
anyone, because in receiving EITHER the consecrated "bread" OR the
consecrated "wine," the communicant receives the complete Body of
Christ, including His Flesh AND His Blood, His Soul and His Divinity.
The consecrated "bread" by itself imparts a true Holy Communion with
Christ, a full measure of sanctifying grace, even as Christ said: "The
BREAD that 1 will give, is my flesh, for the life of the world.... He
that eateth this BREAD, shall live for ever." (John 6:52,59).
And the Apostle Paul: "Therefore whosoever shall eat this bread, OR
drink the chalice of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body
and of the blood of the Lord." (1 Cor. 11:27). After the
Consecration the priest receives Holy Communion under both forms, and
this suffices to complete the Holy Communion part of the Mass service.
Why is Latin the language of the Church? How can the congregation understand the Mass whenever it is said in Latin?
The Catholic Church began in the days of the Roman
Empire, and the language spoken throughout that Empire was Latin. St.
Peter moved the seat of Church government from Antioch to Rome, and the
Catholic Church government remains centered there to this very day. It
was only natural that Latin became the language of the Church. As the
centuries elapsed, for example, Latin still remained the language of the
educated classes
–
even into the 18th and 19th centuries. Therefore, it is not at all
surprising that Latin should still be the official language of the
Catholic Church. It simply always has been. Furthermore, a universal
language greatly facilitates the unity of the Church. Ecumenical
Councils, for example, have always been held in Latin, enabling bishops
from all over the world to communicate with each other easily.
Moreover, unlike English, French, German and the other
languages of the Western world, Latin does not change over the
centuries
–
it is not affected by national idioms, slang and the like –
therefore, in Western countries Latin is the official language of the
Mass because it helps to preserve the original purity of the Mass
liturgy
–
although today, the Mass is usually said in the language of the
people. Catholics have always had a complete translation of the Mass
Latin in their missal, or Mass handbook, so they have always been able
to understand and follow everything the priest says and does at the
altar, even when the Mass is in Latin. It should also be borne in mind
that the Mass is never exclusively in Latin. All sermons, Gospel and
Epistle readings, parish announcements and closing prayers are in the
language of the congregation.
Why do Catholics call their priests "Father" despite the fact that Christ said: "Call no man on earth your father; for one is your Father, who is in heaven"! (Matt. 23:9).
Catholics call their priests "Father" because in all
matters pertaining to Christ's holy faith they perform the duties of a
father, representing God. The priest is the agent of the Christian's supernatural birth and sustenance in the world. "Father" is a title which does not conflict in the slightest with Matthew 23:9. Christ forbids the Christian to acknowledge any fatherhood which conflicts with the Fatherhood of God
–
just as He commands the Christian
to "hate" his father, mother, wife, and his own life, insofar as these conflict with the following of Christ. (Luke
14:26). But Christ does not forbid Christians to call His own
representatives by the name of "Father." Catholic priests share in the
priesthood of Jesus Christ (not a human priesthood), and their sacred
ministry partakes of the Fatherhood of God. Like St. Paul (himself a
Catholic priest), every Catholic priest can refer to the souls he has
spiritually begotten as his children in Christ. (1 Cor.
4:14). St. Paul considered himself to be the spiritual father, in
Christ, of the Corinthians: "For if you have ten thousand instructors in
Christ, yet not many fathers. For in Christ Jesus, by the gospel, I
have begotten you." (I Cor. 4:15). The title of "Father" is entirely proper for an ordained priest of Jesus Christ.
Why do Catholics practice fasting and abstinence from meat on certain days? Does not St. Paul call abstaining from meats a "doctrine of devils"? (1 Tim. 4:1-3).
Catholics give up eating meat –
for example, on Good Friday –
to commemorate and honor Christ's Sacrifice on that day, and to follow
His instruction to deny ourselves, take up our cross, and follow Him. (Matt. 16:24; Mk. 8:34; Lk.
9:23). It is a practice that dates back to the earliest days of the
Christian Church. Tertullian and Clement of Alexandria both mention it
in their writings. It is a practice which is thoroughly Christian, for
we note that Christ Himself recommended fasting, saying: "When thou
fastest anoint thy head, and wash thy face... and thy Father, who seeth
in secret, will repay thee." (Matt. 6:17-18). In the same vein
the Apostle Paul described his own suffering for Christ: "... in hunger
and thirst, in fastings often..." (2 Cor. 11:27). Fasting was practiced both by Christ's followers (Acts 14:22) and by Christ Himself. (Matt. 4:1-2). And Our Lord told His disciples that some devils cannot be cast out "but by prayer and fasting." (Matt.
17:20). Paul's denunciation of those who abstain from eating meat
applies to those who reject the eating of meat entirely, as though it
were evil in itself. His denunciation has nothing to do with the
abstinence of Catholics, for on other days Catholics eat as much meat as
do other people. Moreover, the abstinence from meat is not binding on
all Catholics. Young children, old people, sick people, and all
Catholics in countries where meat is the principle diet, are excused.
Why don't Catholic priests marry? The Bible says that a bishop should be "blameless, the husband of one wife" (1 Tim. 3:2), which certainly indicates that Christ approves of marriage for the Christian clergy.
Catholic priests do not marry because, while Christ
does indeed approve of marriage for the Christian clergy, He much
prefers that they do not marry. He made this quite clear when He
praised the Apostles for giving up "all" to follow Him, saying, "And
every one that hath left house, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or
mother, or wife, or children, or lands for my name's sake, shall receive
an hundredfold, and shall possess life everlasting." (Matt.
19:27-29). The Apostle Paul explained why the unmarried state is
preferable to the married state for the Christian clergy: "He that is
without a wife, is solicitous for the things that belong to the Lord,
how he may please God. But he that is with a wife, is solicitous for
the things of the world, how he may please his wife: and he is
divided." (1 Cor. 7:32-33). In other words, matrimony is good
–
Christ made it one of the holy sacraments of His Church –
but it is not conducive to that complete dedication which is incumbent
upon those who submit themselves to another of Christ's holy sacraments
–
that of Holy Orders. Even so, the unmarried state of the Catholic
priesthood is not an inflexible law
–
under certain conditions a priest may be dispensed from this law.
The Bible says that after Christ was baptized He "came out of the water" (Matt. 3:16), indicating that He was baptized by total immersion. Why doesn't the Catholic Church also baptize by total immersion instead of by pouring on the head?
The Catholic Church usually baptizes by pouring: 1)
because water sufficient for total immersion is not readily obtainable
in some localities, 2) because total immersion would be cruel for
babies, fatal for some sick people and impossible for some prison
inmates, and 3) because the Apostles baptized by pouring. In the Didache,
composed by the Apostles, the following procedure for Baptism is
prescribed: "Pour water three times on the head in the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." The words "came out of
the water" do not necessarily imply total immersion. They could
just as well imply that Christ came up on the shore of the river Jordan
after standing ankle deep in the water. This is not to say that the
Catholic Church considers Baptism by total immersion invalid
–
she simply does not consider it practical as a universal form.
Why does the Catholic Church baptize infants, who have no understanding of what is taking place?
The Catholic Church baptizes infants because Christ
wills it. He must will it because He said, "Suffer the little children,
and forbid them not to come to me." (Matt. 19:14). According to the Apostle Paul, one cannot truly come to Christ except through Baptism. (Rom. 6:3-4). Christ must will it because the Apostles baptized "all the people" (Luke 3:21) and whole households (Act 16:15, 1 Cor.
1:16). Certainly "all the people" and whole "households" included
infants. Christ must will it because He stated categorically that
Baptism is a necessary prerequisite for salvation (John 3:5), and
He certainly desires the salvation of infants. He must will it because
the primitive Christian Church, which had fresh firsthand knowledge of
His Will, baptized infants. In the ancient catacombs of Rome the
inscriptions on the tombs of infants make mention of their having been
baptized. One such inscription reads: "Here rests Archillia, a
newly-baptized; she was one year and five months old; died February
23rd."
An unbaptized infant is not simply in a "natural"
state; it is in the state of reprobation, living under the reign of
Satan, with the sin of Adam "staining" its soul. Therefore infants
should be baptized as soon as is reasonably possible
–
usually within 2-3 weeks of birth. When children grow up with Our Lord
dwelling in their souls, they have a powerful protection against sin.
Moreover, Our Lord can thereby draw children to a deep love for Himself
at a very early age
–
as He did with St. Therese, St. Maria Goretti, St. Dominic Savio, and
Francisco and Jacinta Marto.
Why is the Catholic Church opposed to birth control? Where in the Bible is birth control condemned as being contrary to the Will of God?
The Catholic Church is not opposed to birth control
when it is accomplished by natural means, by SELF control. She is
opposed only to birth control by artificial means, by the employment of
pills, condoms, IUD's, foams, jellies, sterilization, non-completion of
the act of sexual union
–
or any other means used to prevent conception from resulting from this
act
–
because such means profane the marital embrace and dishonor the
marriage contract. God slew Onan for practicing contraception (Gen.
38:9-10); the word "onanism" derives from Onan's deed. In fact, up
until the Church of England's Lambeth Conference of 1930, which accepted
contraception and thus broke with the Christian tradition,
contraception had been considered by all Christian churches, both
Catholic and Protestant, to be gravely sinful. The Catholic Church does
not feel free to change the law of God, as do Protestants.
In the New Testament, there is only one instance where
sin is punished by God with immediate death, this was the fate of
Ananias and Saphira, a husband and wife who went through the motions of
giving a gift to God but fraudulently kept back part of it. The Bible
says they lied to the Holy Spirit. (Acts 5:1-11). In
contraception, two people go through the motions of an act of
self-giving, but obstruct the natural fruition of their act, i.e., the
conception of children, which is the ultimate purpose for which God
created sexuality. Sexual union is a gift from God to the married, but
by practicing contraception, married couples are accepting the pleasure
God built into the act and yet denying Him its purpose, new people.
They are in effect mocking God. But "Be not deceived, God is not
mocked." (Gal. 6:7). Christ cursed the fig tree which, despite a fine external appearance, bore no fruit. (Matt. 21:19; Mark
11:14). Marriage is God's plan for populating Heaven, yet
contracepting couples refuse Him the specific fruit of their marriage,
which is children, when they engage in the act which should produce
children yet frustrate the natural, God-intended result.
Further, the sin of "sorceries" or "witchcrafts" ("pharmakeia"
in the Greek –
Gal. 5:20; Apoc. 9:21; 21:8) –
which the Bible condemns along with fornication, murder, idolatry, and
other serious sins
–
very possibly includes secret potions mixed to prevent pregnancy or
cause abortion. Such potions were known and used even in the first
century.
Common sense and conscience both dictate that
artificial birth control is not only a violation of the Natural Law but
is a perfidious insult to the dignity of man himself. For it implies
free reign to physical impulses; it implies total disregard for the fate
of the human seed; it implies utter contempt for the honorable birth of
fellow humans, those fellow humans who are born as the result of a
contraceptive having failed and whose very existence is therefore
considered to be an unfortunate "accident," rather than a gift of God;
it implies the most extreme selfishness, for no advocate or practitioner
of artificial birth control would have wanted it for his or her own
parents. Further, contraception undermines the respect of husband and
wife for each other and thereby loosens the marriage bond. Worst of
all, many "contraceptives," such as the IUD and most if not all birth
control pills, work by actually causing an abortion early in the
pregnancy; thus, this so-called "contraception" is in reality abortion
–
the killing of a human being –
rather than the preventing of conception.
In every age there is some favorite sin which is
accepted by "respectable" worldly Christians; in our times the
"acceptable" sin is contraception
–
a sin which fits in perfectly with the view that the purpose of human
life is to attain earthly happiness. The true Christian couple, on the
other hand, will realize that God desires them to have children so that
these children can come to know Him and love Him and be happy with Him
eternally in Heaven. Marriage is God's plan for populating Heaven. How
wise it is to let God plan one's family, since He loves children much
more than do their earthly parents, and His plans for them go far beyond
any plans of these parents.
Innumerable stories are told of God's Providence to
Christian parents who trusted in Him and obeyed His law. For those who
have a true and serious need to space or limit the number of their
children, the new methods of natural family planning based on periodic
abstinence have proven to be extremely reliable (unlike the earlier
"rhythm" methods).
Finally, the Christian will realize that the
self-denial involved in bearing and raising Christian children is a
school of Christlikeness. Our Lord said: "If any man will come after
me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me." (Matt. 16:24). But He also said: "My yoke is sweet and my burden light." (Matt.
11:30). God promises sufficient grace to those who seek to obey Him.
And the resulting peace of soul which the obedient married couple enjoys
is beyond all price.
Why does the Catholic Church make no exceptions when it comes to divorce? Does not the Bible say that Christ permitted divorce in case of fornication? (Matthew 19:9).
The Catholic Church makes no exceptions when it comes
to divorce because Christ made no exceptions. When Christ was asked if
it was lawful for a man to put away his wife "for every cause," He
replied that a man "shall cleave to his wife, and they two shall be in
one flesh . . . What therefore God hath joined together, let no man put
asunder." (Matt. 19:3-6). And the Apostle Paul wrote: "But to
them that are married, not I but the Lord commandeth, that the wife
depart not from her husband. And if she depart, that she remain
unmarried, or be reconciled to her husband. And let not the husband put
away his wife." (1 Cor. 7:10-11). In Matthew 19:9
Christ does not permit divorce in cases of fornication. He permits
separation. This is clear from the fact that those who separated were
cautioned not to remarry. Read Mark 10-12 and Luke 16:18.
Also, we know that divorce is against Divine Law
because it is plainly against right reason. Were it not for our
man-made laws which "legalize," popularize, and even glamorize divorce,
discontented married couples would make a more determined effort to
reconcile their differences and live in peace; they would be obliged by
necessity to swallow their false pride and accept the responsibilities
they owe to their spouses, to their children, to society as a whole, and
to God. Any sociologist will confirm that there is far less
immorality, far less suicide, far fewer mental disorders and far less
crime among peoples who reject divorce than among the so-called
"progressives" who accept it.
Why have Catholic women traditionally worn hats in church? Are bareheaded women forbidden to enter Catholic churches?
The Apostle Paul explains that Catholic women should
cover their heads while in church: "You yourselves judge: doth it
become a woman, to pray unto God uncovered?" (I Cor. 11:13).
"Every man praying or prophesying with his head covered, disgraceth his
head. But every woman praying or prophesying with her head not covered,
disgraceth her head: for it is all one as if she were shaven...." (I Cor.
11:4-5). Paul's words do not imply that the Church is closed to women
who have no head covering immediately available, nor does the custom of
the Catholic Church imply this.
Why must Catholics pay money for a Mass that is offered up for deceased relatives and friends when the Bible states that the gift of God is not to be purchased with money? (Acts 8:20).
Catholics are not compelled to pay for Masses offered
up for someone's special intention. They are simply reminded that
giving a "stipend" (usually $5) is the custom. Priests will oblige
without a stipend being paid if the one making the request can ill
afford it. Giving stipends for special intention Masses is the custom
because it is only fitting and proper that there should be some token of
appreciation for the special service rendered, especially in view of
the fact that the average priest draws a very small salary. For many
priests these stipends mean the difference between standard and
sub-standard living conditions. And this custom definitely has
scriptural approval. Wrote the Apostle Paul: "Who serveth as a soldier
at any time, at his own charges? . . . Who feedeth the flock, and
eateth not of the milk of the flock? . . . So also the Lord ordained
that they who preach the gospel, should live by the gospel." (I Cor.
9:7-14). Of course the gift of God is not to be purchased with money.
But that does not imply that God's ministers are free-serving slaves.
Protestants will generally agree to this because within Protestantism it
is likewise customary to give the minister who performs baptisms,
marriages, etc. a token of appreciation in the form of money.
Protestants do not call their gift of money a stipend, but that is
exactly what it is.
CONCLUSION
There it is –
the truth about Catholic belief and practice. This is the truth which
brought the author of this booklet into the Catholic Church . . . the
truth which brings millions of people into the Catholic fold year after
year... the truth which explains why Newman, Chesterton, Knox, Brownson,
Maritain, Mann, Swinnerton, Muggeridge and a host of other world-famous
intellectuals chose to embrace the Catholic Faith. This is the truth
which inspired the following confession by the renowned scientist, John
Deering
–
a confession which expresses in eloquent fashion the fundamental
motivation of every Catholic convert, be he famous or unknown:
"I was born and raised in an atmosphere of proud,
agnostic intellectualism. My father, a medical doctor by profession,
was a disciple of Schopenhauer and Freud, and my mother was an ardent
disciple of my father. My own favorite dish as a youth was Voltaire.
Thus by the time I reached manhood, I was quite thoroughly baptized in
the pseudo-religious cult of humanism. I preferred to call it humanism
because, unlike the blunt Voltaire, I never could profess publicly to
being an out and out atheist, even though there really isn't much
distinction between the two.
"Being of a curious, speculative turn of mind, with
strong leanings toward the more challenging fields of dialectics, I
eventually took up the study of metaphysics
–
the science of the fundamental causes and processes of things. This
subject intrigued me, indeed obsessed me, as no other subject had
before. Here, I told myself, was the science of sciences. Here
was the supreme test of my personal philosophy. If God exists, I told
myself, metaphysics would reveal Him. Either I would be justified in my
quasi-atheism, or I would be compelled in conscience to abandon it
completely.
"Then the inevitable happened. I came face to face
with the proposition, proved by all the principles of logic, that God
does indeed exist. The evidence was so abundant as to be
incontrovertible. Just as sure as two and two make four, God not only
exists, He is existence. To argue the point would have been tantamount
to arguing against all reality!
"Toppled at last from the vainglorious perch of
agnosticism, I immediately set about making another intellectual ascent
–
this time up the great imposing structure of Christian theology. I
procured a Bible and spent every free moment absorbed in its sacred
content. I had established the existence of God in my mind; now I must
know something of the nature, the personality, of God. The Bible, I figured, would give me a clue.
"Much of what I read in the Bible was vague –
I was not, after all, familiar with the customs and language idioms of
the ancient Jews who wrote the Bible
–
but I could grasp the central theme. Quite obviously, the central
theme of the Bible portrayed God not only as an Omnipotent,
All-lntelligent Spiritual Being, but as the Essence of Love, Essence of
Justice and Essence of Mercy. In other words, God is pre-eminently a personal Being. And Jesus Christ was God
personified, come into the world not only to make atonement for
the sin of Adam, but to reassert His Sovereignty, elaborate on His Laws
and illuminate with brighter light the pathway to heavenly immortality.
And the torchbearer of this light was His Church, founded on the
Apostles. Endowed with the authority of God, and imbued with the Holy
Spirit of God, His Church was given the holy task of perpetuating His
ministry of salvation after His return to Heaven.
"There was the divine plan of redemption, life's real purpose, brought into clear and beautiful focus by the Author of the plan
–
God Himself. There, in brief, is man's only real hope for happiness and security.
"Only one thing remained to be solved. God's Church
–
Where amidst the vast galaxy of the world's churches was God's true
Church to be found? Then I recalled something Christ said: 'Seek and
ye shall find... knock and it will be opened unto you.' Inspired by
these words of divine wisdom, I embarked on the search. I undertook an
extensive study of comparative religion, concentrating on the Christian
religions. Since the other religions rejected the divinity of Christ,
they naturally were in default.
"With painstaking impartiality I held every Christian church
up to the light of Scripture, logic and history, checking and double-checking
lest I overlook some small but significant piece of evidence. Three years
of this meticulous checking, then I found the object of my search. I
finished with one name superimposed in great bold letters on my conscience –
'Catholic!'
"On every ground I found the claims of the Catholic
religion valid and altogether irresistible. The Catholic Church is the
oldest Christian church, I determined; therefore, she is the original Christian Church, the one Church founded, constituted and sanctioned by Jesus Christ Himself.
"I had no other recourse in conscience but to embrace
the Catholic Faith. And now I must testify that it satisfies my mind,
solaces my heart and gratifies my soul. My blessed Catholic Faith fills
my soul with a peace and a sense of security I had never before thought
possible.
"Now that I am in the Catholic Church I have a much clearer picture of its true image. I see in all her vitals the Image of Christ.
In the reception of her sacraments I feel His comforting hand; in her
pronouncements I hear His authoritative, cogent voice; in her manifold
world-wide charities I see His love and compassion; in the way she is
harassed and vilified I see His agony and humility on Calvary; in her
worship I feel His Spirit girding my soul.
"This compels my obedience. All else is shifting sand."