Gold Dragon
Well-Known Member
Agreed, it is odd. I have experienced this in many of my discussions with ex-catholics. It does seem to be that many long-time ex-catholics have some of the most skewed perspectives on the Catholic church out there and for the longest time that confused me.Originally posted by D28guy:
Lets see, I was a Catholic for 24 years. 8 years of parochial school, religion class, catechism class, I was an altar boy, CCD class, Mass every Sunday, etc etc etc.
DHK has a backgroand similar to mine.
But we have "protestant misunderstandings" of Catholicism?
This seems a bit odd to me.
I have found some exceptions and most of them seem to be more recent converts from Catholicism who seem to be much more informed about current Catholic positions while still rejecting them for protestant ones.
I've come up with a few possible explanations.
1) The reforms of Vatican II which I believe moved the Catholic church in a much more "protestant" direction have taken a long time to trickle down to local parishes.
2) The conversion process from Catholicism to Protestantism was one that was viewed with much more hostility before Vatican II, resulting in many hurt feelings and susceptability to accepting many of the exaggerated anti-Catholic mistruths that some Protestants have held about Catholicism because of centuries of only hostile communication between the two groups.
3) A bitter convert from Catholicism, like a bitter former employee, spouse, girlfriend, boyfriend, etc, tends to normalize the negative while forgetting the positive. Many of the more recent converts from Catholicism have done so in a non-bitter fashion.
4) A decision like converting betwen Catholicism and Protestantism is strengthened when they can be defended with what appears to be good reasons to demonize the former associate.
These explanations may or may not apply to you and DHK, but they are just some possibities.