Mothra said:
Let me help you with the differences between your faith and ours:
Let me correct your list.
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Evangelicals believe works are an outcropping of our faith in Christ, demonstrating faith in Christ, but are not a requirement for salvation, as this is a position that finds no biblical support.
Works (or fruit, if you prefer the term,I do due to the baggage surrounding the term works) are an outcropping of our faith in Christ, not the means of our justification (or reconciliation if you prefer the term as Paul states in Romans). However, they are required according to Luke 12:48, Matthew 25:14-30, and James 2:14-26, John 3:36. As you can clearly see, there is ample biblical support for this position and none for the idea that fruitless faith saves a man.
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Evangelicals believe in the authority of scripture, whereas Catholics believe in the authority of scripture AND the authority of the Roman Catholic Church and its Pope (and its traditions), and use both to instruct their practices.
Scripture, as interpreted by the Church fathers, is authoritative. That is, scripture and tradition. For example, you cannot excise Matthew 7:1 from the bible and try and use it to justify modernist proclivities. You cannot excise Acts 2:4 as a defense of the practice of fake prophecy and pig latin in the service. There used to be a saying in Baptist circles, "If it's new, it isn't true. If it's true, it isn't new." 100% correct, except the reference frame for that isn't American in 1970. It is the Levant from 33 AD to 787 AD.
The Roman Catholic Church has no authority. It is a schismatic modernist institution that fell away from the Christian faith 1,000 years ago. Since then, they have stacked innovation upon innovation to the point that it, and their hippie pope are almost unrecognizable as a Christian institution.
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Catholics believe sacraments are required for salvation. Evangelicals (correctly) believe this position finds no scriptural support whatsoever, and is contrary to the verses quoted above.
Sacraments aid us in finishing the race and living a disciplined Christian life. To use an analogy, they are like water/first aid stations along a marathon course. There are other Christian disciplines like this. Prayer, fasting, reading the Bible, charitable works.
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Evangelicals believe all sins cause us to fall short of the glory of God, and that there is no differentiation between "mortal" sins and other sins. Catholics - through tradition not scripture - have come up with their own list of what sins they believe "lead to death" and those which do not, although scripture does not identify these sins.
Correct. The wages of sin is death, the gift of God is eternal life. There is no supernatural distinction between the felony and misdemeanor from a judgement perspective.
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Evangelicals believe salvation is a one time event, and that for the true convert, his name cannot be blotted from the Book of Life.
Yes, you do. This despite Jesus clearly saying ""He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life" (Revelation 3:5). Reconciliation is an event. Salvation is a process. Even the erroneous terms on the evangelical side (salvation followed by sanctification) are designed to prop up OSAS.
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Catholics believe salvation (or justification) is a process, and that they must do enough good works to eventually (or hopefully) attain (or earn) salvation (again, a position diametrically opposed to the plain language of scripture).
Salvation is a process, but the good works we do don't earn it. Over and over the scriptures repeat the phrase "he who overcomes", "the one who perseveres". The fruit we bear is the proof that we continue to abide in Christ, carry our cross, and run the race.
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Evangelicals believe in two places we go in the afterlife - Heaven and Hell. Catholics believe in a third option - purgatory - though it once again finds no support in scripture.
Purgatory doesn't exist. It was dogmatized and added to the Roman Catholic religion at the Council of Trent in the 1500s.
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Evangelicals believe in sharing in communion among believers as an act of obedience. Many Catholics believe, however, that the Eucharist is a requirement for salvation (again, a position not found in scripture).
The question here is whether or not the real presence of Christ is in the bread and wine. This was the clear teaching of Christ in John 6. Moreover, it is what Christians believed and taught for the first millenium and a half of Church history. Even Martin Luther believed this. The idea of communion as a mere remembrance is an innovation that is roughly 400 years old at this point. I don't understand how it happens scientifically, nobody does. Then again, I don't understand how raising the dead happens scientifically either. Just take Him at His word.
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Catholics believe that the Roman Catholic Church is the only true church referred to in scripture
They do believe that. It is not.
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and that all other sects are essentially going to Hell.
They used to believe that, they actually changed that teaching at Vatican 2.
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Evangelicals believe that anyone who has put their faith in Christ and received his salvation is a part of the body of Christ (i.e. the Church) and that one doesn't have to subscribe to Catholicism (or any particular sect or congregation) be saved or a part of Christ's body.
Think about what you're saying here. The individual can say I've put my faith in Christ, I've received my boarding pass to heaven, and not to be part of the body of Christ or bear fruit in any meaningful way here on earth?
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Catholics have placed special importance over mortals referenced in scripture, believing that tradition teaches that Mary was a perpetual virgin (not difficult to believe when you realize that other historical sources of the time say that Joseph was an elderly widower when Mary was betrothed to him), immaculately conceived (added in 1854), assumed into heaven, and coronated the Queen of Heaven (added in 1950) (a position found nowhere in scripture, but instead a part of tradition).
As seen above, much of that Marian doctrine is relatively new innovation.