Several years ago, at a beach outing, I was
riddled with questions about Catholics by several non-Catholic moms. 
It was a get-together with homeschoolers and I was the lone Catholic that day.  I
no longer homeschool, but I had learned early on that there were some who did not mind Catholics and some who believed we were going to hell— I
was told as much—nicely, of course. 
One time I was asked if
Catholics considered themselves Christian. Funny.
  But it was no joke. 

Sitting in the sand while our kids had fun, one mom ventured
a question about Catholics and others jumped in. 
Here is the gist of what I had to explain.
·              
Catholics don’t think they are better than everyone else; we
are happy that we have all seven sacraments that were present at the beginning.
·              
We pray to Mary to intervene to her Son, (and to the saints
to) just as she intervened at the wedding at Cana.  Yes, we do believe she can see and hear
us.  For more on the Blessed Mother, go here.
·              
We don’t think the pope is always right.  We believe he is infallible when teaching ex cathedra—from the chair of Peter—in
union with the bishops on matters of faith.
·              
We only worship God. The angels and saints we honor as friends of God and ask for their help.
·              
We do think that non-Catholics are in heaven.
·              
We don’t think it’s our good works that get us into heaven. They are the follow-up
to our faith in Jesus. Even the devil believed in the existence of God.  James said that without works, faith is dead.
(James 2: 14-26).
·               
·            Medals, crucifixes, etc. are not good luck charms. They remind us of elements of our faith and if they are blessed, the blessing is bestowed
on us as we wear them.  

   
·              
Yes, the Protestant version of the 10 Commandments are different. Yours say not
to make any graven images, but graven images refer to objects for
false worship. Our images remind us of our loved ones in heaven.
·      Why do Catholics and Protestants have different versions of
the Ten Commandments? I did not know this at the time, but t
he
Catechism 2066 reads: “The division and numbering of the Commandments have
varied in the course of history. The present catechism follows the division of
the Commandments established by St. Augustine, which has become traditional in
the Catholic Church. It is also that of the Lutheran confessions. The Greek
Fathers worked out a slightly different division, which is found in the
Orthodox Churches and Reformed communities.” 

·              
We don’t believe the Bible is the only rule of
faith but everything we believe can be defended in the Bible.
·              
We don’t believe anyone can interpret the Bible
on their own, but everyone is encouraged to read the Bible. At daily Mass we
have 3 readings from the Bible and 4 on Sundays.
During
19 years of homeschooling, that was my Catholic moment in the sun. Our 2
youngest attend a local Catholic high school, just as 9 of our 10 kids did. (We
switched from public to Catholic high school early on.)  It’s nice being surrounded by people that
speak the same language, but interpreting for people of another faith language
was a blessing that day.
~~~~~~~~
For more inspiration check out Patti’s latest bookHoly Hacks: Everyday Ways to Live Your Faith & Get to HeavenOther books include:  Big Hearted: Inspiring Stories from Everyday Families and the best-selling Amazing Grace Series.
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