QUOTE(JVKn @ Apr 27 2008, 07:16 AM)

QUOTE(Scott & Lai @ Apr 27 2008, 02:28 AM)

[First, Catholics are Christians, they believe in the Trinity, the Deity of Christ, his death on the cross, and his resurrection and ascension. Catholicism is not a separate religion.
Second, many Christians, not just Catholics, do wear crosses and even crucifixes. I'm not Catholic, I'm Lutheran, but I wear a crucifix all the time. A crucifix is not a "Catholic" symbol, it is a Christian symbol. And sure, as was pointed out, Christ isn't still on the cross, but his death on the cross is what saves us, which is the point of the symbol.
Interesting. I think catholicism and christians (lutherans, baptists, evangelics...) are considered different religions, they have many similarities (after all, they used to be one), but they also have differences
*Different sacraments ( catholicism has baptism, penance and reconciliation, eucharist, confirmation, anointing of the sick, holy orders and matrimony)
*Catholics believe in transubstanciation
*Have a different view on the virgin mary
*The head of the church is the Pope
I remember when pope John Paul II summoned the different religions to pray together, the christian church had it's own representative? and I used to watch this show back in Argentina, it was very interesting, different representatives of different religions would discuss their views on different topics, and the panel had a representative from the catholic church, one for the christian church, judaism, muslim and hindu...
but I'm just pointing out the differeces I know from what I've observed, I'm opening the topic for discussion.
And the reason I thought christians did not wear crosses comes from the experience with talking to evangelics, so I guess lutherans and evangelics don't agree on this point?
Saludos,
Caro
Each of the Christian groups you mentioned (catholicism and christians (lutherans, baptists, evangelics...)) confesses Jesus as Lord and God, which makes them Christian, and not separate religions. They are divided from one another, but it is better to think of them as divisions within Christianity, than as distinct religions. If a group can confess the doctrines of the Nicene Creed, whether or not they actually use creeds in their worship, then they are Christian.
As for the representatives you mentioned, there is no institution called "the Christian Church" in the sense that there would be one representative for it, as the Pope as the Bishop of Rome represents the Roman Catholic Church.
Lutherans and "evangelicals" (actually a rather broad term) don't generally agree on crosses, specifically crucifixes. Lutherans were the conservative branch of the Reformation, and basically took the approach of keeping whatever had been handed down that did not get in the way of Christ. So, things like the liturgy of the Western Catholic tradition, crucifixes, icons, making the sign of the cross, etc. don't bother us the way they do some other Christian groups. Some Christians criticize the use of crucifixes on the grounds that since Christ rose from the dead, an empty cross should be used as a sign of the Resurrection. But, even if Christ were still in the tomb, the cross would still be empty, so an empty cross really doesn't symbolize the Resurrection. A crucifix, however, is a sign of the central doctrine of Christianity, that Christ died on the cross for the sins of the world. Also, an empty cross has become merely a symbol of Christianity as a world religion in the same way a Star of David is a symbol of Judaism and a crescent is a symbol of Islam, without really saying anything specifically Christian, as far as doctrinal content goes. Plus, as has been mentioned, a simple cross is not a uniquely Christian symbol. A crucifix, however, is an explicitly, unambiguously Christian symbol, and clearly communicates what Christianity is about.