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people at the Vatican still trying to make the Church more and more Protestant.
Why they think Catholics want to be Protestants, I've never understood. Some do, obviously; I think you prefer many of the Protestant things, like the Children's Liturgy, but many of us don't like the steady encroachment of Protestant customs, hymns, etc. I did not become Catholic to be another form of Protestant.
They didn't translate the Traditional Mass from Latin, you know, they created an entirely new and quite different service, the Novus Ordo, which of course means New Order, eerily like New World Order. Finding this out has been most disturbing to me. I never dreamed Holy Mother Church would do such a thing, but they did. They omitted parts and made up new parts and mistranslated some key words, most notably in the Consecration itself.
Result: 70-90% of Catholics, depending on which survey you read, no longer understand/ believe in the Real Presence. Of course, with the Consecration having an error in it in English and most other languages -- I think only the Polish and Portuguese translations are correct -- maybe it's not the Real Presence except in Polish and Portuguese churches, and in the Traditional Latin Mass where it is still offered. Maybe that was the whole idea of the "mistake."
Anyway, I think you would find that the "fellowship" and "hospitality" in Protestant churches such as the imaginary Grace Lutheran in your quote are not as sincere as they seem to be. I base that assertion on my experiences attending at least eighteen Protestant churches in seven states and overseas; Presbyterian, Episcopal, Baptist, Methodist, Quaker, with a couple of visits to Mormon, Unitarian and Jehovah's Witnesses services. (You move around a lot when you're a military family.)
It's true that Protestants stand around and chat after services more than Catholics do but a lot of that is more about showing off of clothes (or was in the past) than in Catholic churches and if you miss a Sunday, several people will approach you and say "We missed you last week," followed by a pregnant pause in which you're supposed to explain your absence. I've never heard that in the Catholic church, which is ironic since Catholics have a Sunday obligation and Protestants don't!
Truth is, some churches are better communities than others, doesn't matter whether they're Catholic or Protestant. The people in the church are what matters, as well as the leadership of the priest or minister. In my experience, there are people in every group, church or not, who are nice and welcome newcomers and others who are not so nice and stay in their little cliques. Really, most adults still act like they did in high school.
:shrug:
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