johnbugay
Puritan Board Freshman
Sorry for the double posting -- but in my initial post on this topic, I put a colon in the title, which affected the formatting. I've deleted that one, and all of that same information is here.
In another thread, Dudley provided a link to research that suggested that in the United States today, some 15 million "cradle Catholics" are now Protestant. That link is here:
What's not in that research (that I could see) are numbers of Protestants, and specifically Reformed Protestants, who convert to Catholicism.
Catholics make a big deal about this. In fact, there is a whole industry devoted to telling "stories," from Scott Hahn, EWTN the "Coming Home Network," Patrick Madrid's "Surprised" series, and on and on. James Swan, for example, writes here and here about the "stories" of conversions, and their inherent instability (vs. the Truth of Scripture as a guide).
Something that I see that is particularly insidious are efforts now, specifically to "reach out" to Reformed believers, for the specific purpose of bringing them home to Rome. This one, Called to Communion," is run by some PhD level individuals (and PhD candidates) who are all, from what they say, formerly Reformed.
I really think these guys need to be addressed, and one statistic that would be very useful in doing so would be simply to say, "you are five guys in the world, whereas the vast majority of "conversion stories" are going the other way. Does anyone know what that number is?
In another thread, Dudley provided a link to research that suggested that in the United States today, some 15 million "cradle Catholics" are now Protestant. That link is here:
What's not in that research (that I could see) are numbers of Protestants, and specifically Reformed Protestants, who convert to Catholicism.
Catholics make a big deal about this. In fact, there is a whole industry devoted to telling "stories," from Scott Hahn, EWTN the "Coming Home Network," Patrick Madrid's "Surprised" series, and on and on. James Swan, for example, writes here and here about the "stories" of conversions, and their inherent instability (vs. the Truth of Scripture as a guide).
Something that I see that is particularly insidious are efforts now, specifically to "reach out" to Reformed believers, for the specific purpose of bringing them home to Rome. This one, Called to Communion," is run by some PhD level individuals (and PhD candidates) who are all, from what they say, formerly Reformed.
I really think these guys need to be addressed, and one statistic that would be very useful in doing so would be simply to say, "you are five guys in the world, whereas the vast majority of "conversion stories" are going the other way. Does anyone know what that number is?