Your 3 points are arbitrary and not supported by any logical argument or authority. I am a Christian Church Pastor (Conservative Congregational Ordination, Baptist Degrees through D.Min., believers baptizer by immersion, biblical innerantist,et.al.) and I disagree.
Consider some protestant (I'm including non-denoms and everybody else here) hypocrisy. We cite Sola Scriptura (rightly) yet we must recognize that the Church (Catholic Church) canonized it. We often cite Church Fathers, mystics, and others for spiritual authority ignoring that most were Catholic.
You can't come to Christ through the RCC? What about the reformers? They were Catholics who walked away over legitimate concerns, BUT came to a more biblical understanding IN the Catholic Church.
I disagree with the metaphysical basis of transubstantiation, but the Eucharistic nonetheless celebrates Christ. I could easily argue that no one can come to faith through the teaching of Independent Fundamentalist Baptist, especially when they treat the KJV in an idolatrous fashion.
I could say that most protestants deny the authority of Jesus and His prayer for unity when we make of our faith a smorgasbord buffet of theological ideas to reject or accept as though each man or woman is the arbiter of truth; even if it is the pastor with his doctorate, am I really always right???
Look at GreekTim's signature line:
Hermeneutic: messianic/christocentric & missional based on Luke 24:44-48
Bibliology: ISV or ESV preferred; full-inerrantist, ipsissima vox; Sturzian style textual critic position
Soteriology: 5 point Calvinist; supralapsarian
Ecclesiology: reformed SBC; plurality of elders; elder led
Eschatology: Amillennial; partial-preterist
No offense intended, but this is ridiculous and I have a list of theological and praxis preferences at least as long! We pick and choose how to interpret truth and the RCC offers the Magisterium to simplify the faith of adherents and clarity on what the Bible means. I get it, I don't agree with this autocratic approach, but there are FLAWS in our approach as well.
What about this passage?
Jesus said to them, "I tell you the truth,
unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day. For
my flesh is real food and my blood is real drink . Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me, and I in him." (John 6:53-56 NIV84)
Jesus says that we have to eat His flesh and drink His blood and then says that it is REAL food and drink! This passage can easily, on its own merit mean that Jesus is telling us to literally take His life (blood) and His sacrifice (body) into our very being; with no ascetic divorce between immaterial and material (spirit & body); no dualism; just all of Jesus.
The text goes on to say that "On hearing it, many of his disciples said, "This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?" (John 6:60 NIV84)
If all Jesus was saying is that once a month, once a quarter, or two times a year, we would eat some wonder bread cut into squares and drink a thimble of grape juice, then
WHY was it a
hard saying????
Listen, I'm not soon to jump ship to the Roman Catholic Church, but lets remember that slandering them is like slandering your Great-Grandmother, even though you disagree with her outdated and backward ideas, you show her grace on some level.
We should be busy proclaiming truth to a generation without Christ, rather than fighting in our own house. Oh ya, but its a lot easier to argue with family than to go out and change the world isn't it?