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Amalgamate religions: you can be Catholic and Protestant, at the same time?

If you're Irish, you fly your own car.

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10 comments for “Amalgamate religions: you can be Catholic and Protestant, at the same time?”


  1. Rissa Ro says:

    we should all be united in heart. The unity of God's desire. We must never differentiate in their name. It's the biggest pain of Jesus to see a differentiator in its own name when he prayed to be united all. While we all want division in sin. We all know who the father of the division ( "Diavolo") is.
      Does that mean we can be both Orthodox and Protestants and Catholics together. Yes and no. Maybe when the unit is achieved, and will, we will be 3, to some extent.
      However, when it comes to the finer details that some things are irreconcilable. That is, if you believe in the Catholic sacraments, especially Eucharist, can not keep going to a Protestant church and not partake of the Eucharist. You refuse to Christ. You can also recognize Mary as the Great Mother of God, who was assumed into heaven, and yet continue to preach and believe she is an ordinary being.
      We can all begin to love the other, really love each other. Unit will continue.

  2. Wolfebla says:

    I think the Anglicans consider themselves Catholics and Protestants together. They view themselves as Catholics because they say the apostolic succession, while Protestants are identified, as they also split from Rome.

  3. 2hearts says:

    That's like trying to sit and stand at the same time. No true Catholic would never accept the teachings of Protestantism.
      Either you are in complete agreement with the Catholic Church or not - there is nothing in between.

  4. Smeg says:

    religions are not even taken separately. That's like asking if one can be a Christian and a Muslim. all the same, the religion of exclusion.

  5. bad tim, PWO says:

    Protestants got their name, denying the authority of the Pope, a senior leader of Catholicism. You must be one or the other.

  6. Jen says:

    Secret

  7. PJJ says:

    Um … A word … NO

  8. Karenita EWTN ((Allecat)) says:

    Not too different.

  9. irk.some says:

    No.
      Protestants got their name in protest of the Catholic Church. That's like saying you are a Christian and a Jew. It works.
      I did not even refer to "Jews for Jesus. I think most of them like me "Christian pagans." Choose a park and play with other children. Do not cherry pick your faith and then expect people to "do things". "Jews for Jesus" is a group that is trying to infiltrate the Jewish society and "save their souls." What * have read about them and their efforts disgusts me.

  10. ~Heathen Princess~ says:

    Protestant religions were the offspring of the Catholic faith to begin with … in protest against what … well, I do not think so. However, the four true Protestant denominations (Lutherans, Presbyterians, Episcopalians and Methodists) forge an alliance with the papacy when they register as members and / or otherwise pass through the confirmation. So I think that makes us slightly Catholic. Or Catholic cousins. So no … and yes. Sorta. The Protestants, of course, do not include all non-Catholics. The real Protestants are only the four mentioned above.



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