This was a great conversation! I remember when I was a Protestant speaking with a priest and asking him why we should study Scripture. He said, “If you don’t know the Scriptures, you meet a stranger in the Eucharist.” Hit me like a ton of bricks.
@@AcrosstheCanon sure friend! Bible shows us sin = transgression of God's law -- 1 John 3:4 notice: Ex 20:4-6, they still make & bow to statue, idols & body parts. Ex 20:8-11, they are a day late, pretending the 1st day is the Lord's day, while Scripture is clear that it will forever be the 7th day Sabbath. there's much more, but i hope this helps.
@ thanks for responding! Two quick clarifying questions: 1- are you suggesting that all who worship on Sunday are not Christians? 2- if this intellectual concern could be satisfied, would you be open to becoming Catholic?
@@AcrosstheCanon you as well, friend. we are, after all, only doing the Christian thing and trying to take as many as possible with us to Heaven! 1 -- no. Christians actually do worship 24/7 -- however, Scripture shows us that One day was sanctified, blessed, made Holy, for church and communion with other Christians -- Exodus 20:8-11, the 7th day Sabbath, the Lord's day. 2 -- i was catholic 35 yrs, friend. aside from this overwhelmingly clear dichotomy, there are an overabundance of proofs from Scripture that pit this system against what Christianity was originally intended to be. however, i am well able to discuss many other topics of serious concern that (i pray) would make you think about how much catholicism is in contradiction to God's Word. (example: 'hell' -- which the catholic teaching makes our Creator the most vile, disgusting & evil entity to ever be imagined) -- if we believe the catholic concept of it.
Dear Michael, I see you sometimes interview Catholic authors on your show. I am one myself and am very keen on trying to broaden awareness of my works to Catholic audiences. I could talk about my experiences crafting historical fiction narratives with deeply Catholic themes, and exploring Catholic belief through storytelling. What say you?
We are currently booked for the next several months, but you are welcome to send some of your materials to our CTS inbox, thecatholictheologyshow@gmail.com. Thank you for your interest!
This was a great conversation! I remember when I was a Protestant speaking with a priest and asking him why we should study Scripture. He said, “If you don’t know the Scriptures, you meet a stranger in the Eucharist.” Hit me like a ton of bricks.
i believe the Scriptures clearly prove catholicism is not Christianity since it actually mandates sin.
@ could you provide some more information on how?
@@AcrosstheCanon sure friend!
Bible shows us sin = transgression of God's law -- 1 John 3:4
notice:
Ex 20:4-6, they still make & bow to statue, idols & body parts.
Ex 20:8-11, they are a day late, pretending the 1st day is the Lord's day, while Scripture is clear that it will forever be the 7th day Sabbath.
there's much more, but i hope this helps.
@ thanks for responding! Two quick clarifying questions:
1- are you suggesting that all who worship on Sunday are not Christians?
2- if this intellectual concern could be satisfied, would you be open to becoming Catholic?
@@AcrosstheCanon you as well, friend. we are, after all, only doing the Christian thing and trying to take as many as possible with us to Heaven!
1 -- no. Christians actually do worship 24/7 -- however, Scripture shows us that One day was sanctified, blessed, made Holy, for church and communion with other Christians -- Exodus 20:8-11, the 7th day Sabbath, the Lord's day.
2 -- i was catholic 35 yrs, friend. aside from this overwhelmingly clear dichotomy, there are an overabundance of proofs from Scripture that pit this system against what Christianity was originally intended to be.
however, i am well able to discuss many other topics of serious concern that (i pray) would make you think about how much catholicism is in contradiction to God's Word. (example: 'hell' -- which the catholic teaching makes our Creator the most vile, disgusting & evil entity to ever be imagined) -- if we believe the catholic concept of it.
Dear Michael, I see you sometimes interview Catholic authors on your show. I am one myself and am very keen on trying to broaden awareness of my works to Catholic audiences. I could talk about my experiences crafting historical fiction narratives with deeply Catholic themes, and exploring Catholic belief through storytelling. What say you?
Thank you! Your message was passed along to Dr. Dauphinais.
We are currently booked for the next several months, but you are welcome to send some of your materials to our CTS inbox, thecatholictheologyshow@gmail.com. Thank you for your interest!
Just call them" protestants." Don't call them non-catholic. Use the phrase "Christians and Protestants".
i don't believe terms 'catholic' & 'Christian' are synonymous. i believe Bible proves the contrary, Sir.