olic Church, in which they use a liturgical outline, colorful vestments, candles, and memorized prayer. More contemporary Protestant churches and non-denomination churches use a very upbeat, charismatic style of worship with heavy rock music, and often incorporates charismatic worship such as speaking in tongues and prophesy into their worship style. Gospel churches focus on music for the entire service verses a sermon. The Churches of Christ don't use any musical instruments, and focus on the sermon and A Cappella music. All these are examples of practices, which come as a result of infallible doctrine. The changing of the liturgical prayer in the Catholic Church is no different then singing a different hymn every Sunday in a Protestant church. The Catholic Church never has, and never will, change doctrine that is directly handed by the Holy Spirit. However, fundamentalists pastors continue to contradict their own practices of worship by claiming that practice and doctrine are connected, and that the Catholic Church is the worst of sinners by changing both doctrine and practice, when in fact that all the practices of Protestant churches came directly from the Catholic Church. Fundamentalist pastors will use examples of so called "pagan" Catholic inventions to prove that the Catholic Church still follows the ancient Roman religion, but the facts are twisted to support a bogus fundamentalist claim. For example, the Doctrine of Transubstantiation is often said by fundamentalist pastors to have been invented in 1215 during the Fourth Lateran Council. But transubstantiation was not invented in 1215; it was only given a name. The Doctrine of Transubstantiation is the long, technical name for the turning of wine into blood, and bread into flesh, as Jesus did in the Gospel of St. John in Chapter 6. When Jesus took bread and wine and turned it into his body and blood, he was enacting the process of transubstantiation, and was officially given t...