Saltmeister said:Catholicism's concepts can sometimes be so "foreign" to most Christians. That's why we call ourselves "mainstream." I suppose it can be a bit offsensive at times. It's like we're looking for a word to describe Christians that have a lot in common and we happen to choose the word "mainstream."
From what I've read of church history, the idea of being able to pray to Mary comes from Catholic traditions. It originated during medieval times when people thought they could pray to God through their deceased friends and saints who had gone to heaven. Then they came up with the idea that if they prayed to Mary, Jesus' mother, there was a greater chance of their prayers being answered.
As least in the past, Catholics were taught that if they didn't believe in what the Catholic Church taught, then they were heretics and would be excommunicated. I don't know if that practice continues. Finding the right church can be hard, especially if you're used to the one you were born in. It can be hard finding the right church after you've been kicked out of one that has been teaching you Christian concepts for almost all your life. The reality can be scary.
Catholics stay with the Catholic Church because they have no idea where to go if they are excommunicated. Being with a church that is generally close to the Truth is better than going out and being led astray by false teachers, and that is why I think Catholics stay Catholics. They don't know who else to listen to and believe.
That is in interesting set of views you present. However, I would like to present a fact or two, and then offer my perspective.
There are 2.3 billion people on earth who profess to be Christian. And of that number 1.2 billion people claim Catholocisim of one variation or another as their denomination of choice. That actually means there are more Catholic Christians than "mainstream" Christians.
Not that catholics are in a race with others, just that for a 'minority' faith, catholics are not technically the minority.
As for why catholics remain catholic, well there are many positive reasons for doing so. The church is rich in tradition, symbolism, mystery and revelation. No matter what church I go into, the presence of God is quite palpable, as though there is only the thinnest of veils seperating heaven from earth.
Anywhere in the world I can walk into a Catholic mass (service), and regardless of the language being used to present mass, I can follow along and understand. Though I may be a foriegner, our common bond is our faith.
There is an "oldness" about catholisicm that seems to strip away the millenia between now and the time of Christ.
The richness of the chatholisicm lies not it it material wealth, but rather in the history of the people who helped form it, shape it, flesh it out. Their lives are intrinsically woven into the fabric of the church. The saints and prophets, just ordinary people of their time, who rose to extraordinary measures and accomplishments, for the love of God and the love of the Son of God, and yes, the love of the young woman who submitted to the will of God.
Catholisicm is also very close to the Jewish roots it sprang from. It is marked by orthodox beliefs, and by episcopal church government. Which makes it different as well as similar.
From my perspective...why drive in a Ford, when I can drive in a Cadillac?
v/r
Q