Question 62 – Is It Ok To Pray With Protestants?

Interview Organization: Confraternity of Our Lady of Fatima
Interviewer Name: Christopher P. Wendt
Date: November 13, 2021
Praying official liturgies together with Protestants promotes relativism and tolerance, which is incorrect. While we can pray privately and collaborate on moral issues like abortion and LGBT ideologies, official liturgical unity should be avoided. We must form alliances with good Protestants to resist societal degradation and the new "COVID religion."
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Transcript:

I would like to clarify my expression concerning doing official and common liturgies in the Churches. This is leading to relativism and at the same time we are portraying a message of tolerance. This is truly incorrect because we have prayed and desired that our protestant brothers and sisters will come to the fullness of the Catholic faith.

We can pray together public prayers (e.g. Our Father, Psalms, Songs) in a private manner. If we can share a meal and conversations with our protestant brothers and sisters or even protest together on moral issues such as abortion and LGBT ideologies,  why should praying together be any different?

We have to make our alliances with good protestants to fight against the degradation of our society; abortion, the LGBT agenda, and the COVID religion. This COVID religion is growing and it has characteristics of tyranny and dictatorship.

The health and COVID religion is a new form of idolatry and paganism. To overcome the evil that is all around us, we, brothers and sisters in Christ, must fight together to resist it and to encourage one another to form alliance groups.