I am Catholic. When I was a kid, I recognized that there were other Christian denominations, but I didn’t really know why, and it didn’t bother me at all, as I thought it was a matter of preference. Live and let live.
Maybe in high school or college I learned about Martin Luther and the 95 Theses. I thought perhaps the Church had been corrupt or ignorant, and this needed to be cleaned up. It made me sad that the Protestants left.
Now that I am a parent, and we experienced the sacraments again, I have renewed appreciation of the Catholic Church. It infuriates me that the Catholic Church preserved and protected Christianity for 1500 years. The members fought off heretics, were persecuted and killed, yet these Protestants had the gall to believe they are superior to the sum of all of that history. Even Martin Luther knew that, if not for the Catholic Church, he would be nothing and have nothing, including his salvation.
When I look at the imperfections of the Church, I see my role is partly to try and make the Church better, not break away and get this big rush of superiority because I church-shopped and became a Protestant. One could argue that if you think Catholicism is so wrong; then therefore, it’s all wrong, and all of Christianity goes down in flames with your petty protestations. Be careful when you crack the strongest leg off a table.
The Forty Anti-Catholic Lies is interesting because much of the anti-Catholicism is rooted in ignorance and misperception. The biggest boast of the Protestant is that he or she is saved for “doing absolutely nothing” – by faith alone. Well, that’s interesting, because even “receiving” Christ as your Lord and Savior is an ACT. God throws a ball, and catching a ball is an action. Your brain expends chemical energy to even have the thought of faith. You have to do a million acts of eating, walking, seeing, listening, learning, reading, etc. to receive salvation. All VERBS. Plus, the saved Christian is exemplified by good deeds, not evil deeds. Furthermore, no Catholic believes he earns salvation by good deeds.
Like Martin Luther, the Protestants eat, drink beer, cuss, and fart across Europe, and they think that doing nothing saves them! I have contained my Catholic exceptionalism - until now. No longer!
So, you can read for yourself the rebuttal to misperceptions of what Catholics did during the Inquisition and Crusades. Much of it was not ideal, but Protestants are not free of misdeeds, such as the Salem witch trials. Today, many Protestant Churches are associated with accumulation of wealth and God’s favor – sort of self-help gurus that fleece small business owners for donations.
My big criticism of the book is that the author did not address the pedophile scandal. For an apologist book written in 2018, it is a mystery why this wasn’t included.
In summary, next time you see Catholics, thank them. Thank them for what? You ask. … Thank them for everything, you dolt!