various Evangelical Churches and the Catholic Church. There would still be different views of doctrine and forms of worship, but since all now proclaim that one denomination is as good as another, all become tolerant of one another, and whatever rivalry may exist among the Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Methodists, Baptists, Congregationalists and the hundreds of other Evangelical bodies, each one extends to one another the hand of fellowship. Now this is far from the truth from the Catholic perspective. The Church has never once, and never will, contest any doctrine for public relations, and will never alter a teaching to make it more tolerable for someone else. Despite the fact that Protestantism is the most divided religion in the world, literally having over 45,000 sects and forms of theology, most can come to the same conclusion: they must band together against the Catholic Church. Again, the sudden interest in some form of unity isn't to defeat a massive army that is oppressing the well being of millions of citizens; it is for two main reasons. First, if the Catholic Church is right, they are wrong. And second, since they can't be wrong, they must find a way to make the Catholic Church wrong. Nobody wants to admit he is wrong. But if a Protestant admits that Catholic theology is right, he himself is wrong. An Episcopalian may admit that a Presbyterian is right without surrendering his own position. That is why all the Protestant sects harmonize and fraternize. But an Episcopalian cannot admit that the Catholic is right, and yet remain an Episcopalian. Most Protestant churches will hold that one religion is as good as another, though some claim that they alone are the only church of Christ, such as the Mormons or Seven Day-Adventists. But regardless of who is main line and radical Protestant, the outcome came as a result of the heresy of private judgment and interpretation. If the judgment of one person impels him to be a Baptist, ...