Damus
DRE profile picture
DRE
@AF
I’ve been watching a lot of debates lately about points of disagreement between Catholics and Protestants, as well as stories from Protestants who have converted to Catholicism.

Naturally, I find the arguments from the Catholic Church to be more persuasive and true. Still, I decided to hear the “other side,” meaning testimonies from people who have converted from Catholicism to Protestantism. I literally couldn’t find a single video on YouTube. The closest I came were videos from people explaining why they are not (or not yet) Catholic.

If and when RedeemedZoomer finally joins the Church, it’s a wrap.

Surely, there are people leaving the Catholic Church, but from my point of view, both in real life and from what I’ve seen on YouTube and social media, the number of people who leave after doing a deep dive into Church history and remain unconvinced that the Holy and Apostolic Catholic Church is the one true Church seems minuscule.
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Mark Sea · 22w
I was raised Catholic and I still am, but I just can’t get over 2 things: 1. Their treatment of pedophile priests. Shuffling them between church’s instead of complete banishment from the faith. Absolutely disgusting. 2. The pope’s word is infallible (if I followed this Catholic doctrine, th...
anon000011111 · 22w
Well from personal observation, the non denomination Christian churches in my town are filled with young families and the one catholic church is old folks. As for me, someone who grew up catholic and when to a catholic school, I have been digging deep into the Holy Bible lately and I believe faith ...
Jean DuBois · 22w
I have no hard proof, but I believe that Catholics that convert to Protestantism are people that read and studied the bible for themselves. Specially students of Daniel and Revelation. I have no hard proof for this either, but I believe that Protestants converting to Catholicism are drawn by the s...
Lew☦️ · 22w
But why the great schism of 1054? Rome departed from the "faith once delivered to the saints" after the addition of the filioque in the Nicene creed. The Pope, in this context, was the first "Protestant".