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What Charlie Kirk Gets Wrong About Catholicism

Audio only:

In this episode Trent reviews a recent discussion on Catholicism between Michael Knowles and Charlie Kirk.

My Take on “Same-sex Blessings” (with Ben Shapiro): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZnL2WKPbGo

The Errors of Liberation Theology: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vShLRgd9Xiw&t=1s

Transcription:

Trent:

Recently Catholic commenter Michael Knowles took an audience question at a live event about how to foster a greater love for the Eucharist, which prompted an impromptu discussion on Catholicism with evangelical commenter. Charlie Kirk. In today’s episode, I want to expand a bit more on their discussion and show how Kirk’s critique of Catholicism actually undermines the Protestantism he defends. However, bear with me, my voice is still out after getting over a cold and speaking at Sikh 2025. I also want to be clear that I’m not interested in critiquing Knowles’s answers. This was an impromptu discussion among friends and Knowles is primarily a political commenter, not a Catholic apologist. Also, I’ve been in the hot seat and I can tell you it’s not as easy as it looks. You often wish you had said certain things differently or taken a different approach, and so while I wouldn’t have offered some of Noel’s comments, he did present useful roads for the discussion to go down. So let’s take a look at it.

CLIP:

Your goal should be to bring people to Jesus, not Catholicism. Hold on. What’s the difference? What’s the, I don’t think, hold on, hold on. I’m not saying that they’re contradictory, but your goal should not to bring people to a specific sect of Christianity. That is to bring people to the cross. You’re saying to bring people to the fullness of the truth and the universal, but not the maxims of every Catholic dogma.

Trent:

I hear a lot of evangelicals say a person should follow Jesus, not a certain denomination, hence the widespread popularity of being a non-denominational Christian. But imagine if Kirk heard someone say, you shouldn’t bring someone to Christianity. You should bring them to Jesus. He’d ask, well, what’s the difference? And that seemed to be the point Knowles was getting at when he asked What’s the difference between Jesus and Catholicism? I’d also point out that since Jesus is fully present in the Eucharist, the original query about promoting a love for the Eucharist is about bringing people to Jesus. But for some Protestants, what matters is so-called mere Christianity or the essential doctrines that every Christian must believe. They want people to at least believe the Jesus stuff and not worry so much about denominational differences. But this raises an issue that Knowles will note soon that assumes everyone on the Protestant side agrees on the essentials and an external teaching authority isn’t needed to settle disputes among the faithful,

CLIP:

Am I a Christian if I don’t believe in maryology?

Well, we’re talking about the fullness of the

Trent:

Truth. It depends. A Christian is someone who has a valid baptism and believes in the Trinitarian God Father, the Son who also became incarnate and the Holy Spirit. So if you deny that Mary is the mother of God, you could end up embracing the historian heresy, which denies that Jesus was always God and thus you would deny the incarnation. So yes, you might not be a Christian if you deny some of the Marion dogmas or you might be a heretical Christian depending on what you exactly deny. If you deny other Marion dogmas like Mary’s perpetual virginity, then you could be a Christian who is still guilty of heresy. But your culpability for the sin of heresy would vary based on whether you are ignorant of the truth because of sinful attitudes like laziness or pride or other factors like having a faulty understanding of the Marian dogmas because of other external factors.

Now, Protestants may not like hearing that they embrace heresy if they willingly deny Marian dogmas, but they think the same thing. Many of them would say that a Christian must believe that Mary did not have sex even during pregnancy before Jesus was born, or a Christian must believe in the dogma of the virgin birth. So Protestants would still bind people to a Marian dogma. Now, Protestants will probably fire back by saying that the virgin birth is clearly taught in scripture and they would claim that the other dogmas are not clearly taught in scripture. But that’s not my point. Calvinists think that Calvinism is clearly taught in scripture, but Calvinists do not say that non Calvinists are heretics or not Christians for denying Calvinism. Nearly all Protestants believe there are dogmas. One must accept to be a Christian beyond the mere facts related to Jesus’s passion, death and resurrection.

The question is what are those dogmas and who has the authority to determine them? For example, what makes someone a Christian? The Bible doesn’t explicitly say what are the essential beliefs of Christianity and Protestants don’t agree on what those essential doctrines are. CS Lewis wrote in his book, mere Christianity, when two Christians of different denominations start arguing, it is usually not long before one asked whether such and such a point really matters and the other replies matters why it’s absolutely essential. One of those essential doctrines would be the definition of Christianity and Protestants don’t agree on whether Catholicism falls under that definition. For example, Gavin Orland has been recently criticized for saying that Catholicism is an error, but it’s still Christian, whereas other Protestant apologists are more prone to say Catholicism is not Christian or it does not possess the true gospel. So the question is not, do you think I’m a heretic as if we just want to know if the person simply holds a shocking view about us. Instead, the question is what has God revealed in the deposit of faith that we must believe and how do we know that God revealed it, which is a route that Noel starts to go down when he talks about receiving the fullness of the faith.

CLIP:

Am I a Christian if I don’t believe in transubstantiation?

You are a little confused if you don’t, but I’m confused. But you can have sincere, but you can have sincere

Faith. No, it’s fine. I think that bringing people to Catholicism is fine, of course. Great, terrific. But that is hopefully a means to the ultimate end. You exist to bring to people to

Yes,

No, of course, of course. That is the goal. I’m just maybe being semantically.

Trent:

As I noted in a previous episode on the faulty logic of Father Thomas Reese, the word transubstantiation itself is not dogma because it’s a medieval theological term that is not found in the deposit of faith. You could object to the term and not be a heretic, but you could not object to the theological ideas that the term represents, specifically the substantial presence of Christ’s body, blood, soul, and divinity in the consecrated elements. Once again, I want to emphasize that it isn’t just Catholics who think that there are required beliefs to be a Christian beyond just facts about Jesus. It’s all Christians who think this. So this line of questioning by Kirk to try to make Catholicism look like it unjustly imposes dogmatic burdens simply doesn’t work. For example, I could ask Charlie Kirk, can I be a Christian and not go to church and only attend occasional Bible studies?

Many Protestants say, no, you can’t, but they don’t have firm ground to say that Christians must attend church weekly. They might cite Hebrews 10 24 through 25, let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together as is the habit of some. Of course, this verse doesn’t say anything about meeting every Sunday to hear a 40 minute sermon preached in a church and to say this verse shows you must attend church or you’re not a Christian is classic iso Jesus or reading into the text, do you have to follow every exhortation or good judgment in scripture or you are not a true Christian? What about one Corinthians chapter 11, stronger exhortation for women to veil their heads when they pray are women who don’t veil at church, not Christian. This shows that when Protestants chide Catholics were demanding that Christians believe too much or they take offense at being called heretics, they often hop over their inability to define heresy and essential doctrines in the first place. And Noles senses this problem, which is why he takes the conversation in this direction when he asked about what Christians are supposed to do when there’s theological disagreement among them,

CLIP:

Happen all the rest. But the serious question is what happens when someone has a question on something really important like is Christ God the divinity of Christ? There has to be an interpretive hermeneutic to figure it out. Of

Trent:

Course, yeah, this is a great point for Michael Knowles, but unfortunately it gets sidetracked when Charlie Kirk says he agrees with a lot of Catholic teachings, but that his big hangup is with the papacy,

CLIP:

But the biggest one is the papacy. I can’t get over the idea of this Marxist who calls himself the head of your church being a representation of Christ our Lord. I mean that as someone who loves the Catholic impact on the world that says it openly and by the fruit, you will know it and you have very Marxist fruit. Why should I care at all what that guy from Argentina has to say? Well, because you care what your pastor has to say, yes, but if my pastor starts saying crazy things, I find a new pastor. So if your pope starts saying crazy things, maybe he’s not the pope and maybe that’s a bad representation.

Well, I guess if your pastor says crazy things, you go to a new pastor and then you have division in the church. It used to be in the old days, it used to be if the pastors disagreed, they’d go to an elder or a bishop or someone, right? You’ve unless the bishop is

Corrupted and

Then you taken up higher. Yeah,

And then maybe the pope is corrupted and we write 95 points of complaints and hammer ’em through a door and get back to the word.

Trent:

I’ll get to Kirk’s criticisms of the Pope in a bit, but notice that the essence of his objection to Catholicism is basically this, I should be free to be under any pastor I want, and if I’m Catholic, then I’d have to be under the Pope, so I don’t want to be Catholic, but where does the Bible teach that Christians have this kind of freedom? Nowhere. In fact, the Bible teaches that this kind of attitude promotes sinful factionism. St. Paul says the following, one Corinthians chapter one, I appeal to you brethren by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ that all of you agree and that there be no dissensions for the Greek schiz mata from which we get the word schism among you, but that you be united in the same mind, in the same judgment. For it has been reported to me by Chloe’s people that there is quarreling among you, my brethren.

What I mean is that each one of you says, I belong to Paul or I belong to Apollos, or I belong to PHAs or I belong to Christ. Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you or were you baptized in the name of Paul in the year 1 0 7, Saint Ignatius of Antioch said the following, it is fitting then not only to be called Christians but to be so in reality as some indeed give one the title of Bishop but do all things without him. Now, such persons seem to me to be not possessed of a good conscience seeing they are not steadfastly gathered together according to the commandment. This coheres the Hebrews 1317 which says, obey your leaders and submit to them for they are keeping watch over your souls as men who will have to give account. This doesn’t mean you have to do everything your priest tells you to do, but it does mean that Christians must give their pastor the authority he is due, which will differ based on whether he is the local pastor, a priest, the regional pastor, a bishop or the universal pastor, the pope.

Even in that case, the obedience isn’t unquestioning unless it is something the Pope or all of the bishops have infallibly defined. However, the Bible never says a person can become a pastor on his own authority. Instead, a pastor must receive his authority to oversee the faithful from someone else who is connected to the apostles who lays hands on him. Finally, notice in Charlie Kirk’s examples that one thing is always taken for granted. He is not the one saying crazy stuff. Kirk always needs to be able to flee from a church that fails his theological standards instead of allowing the church to form his theological standards Under his view, a pastor is never in a position to tell Charlie Kirk, actually, you think I’m saying crazy stuff, but the truth is that you are the one saying crazy things that contradict the faith. Here’s one example.

CLIP:

My question for you was if you believed if IVF was wrong or not, IVF done correctly is moral, which would have to be one fertilization of an egg at a time.

Trent:

If Charlie Kirk’s pastor condemned in vitro fertilization, then it seems like Kirk would just leave that church and find a pastor who agrees with him instead of allowing the church to convict him of his sinful belief and urge him to repent. It’s no wonder some Catholics say that under Protestantism, every man is his own pope who can be judged by no one. Knowles was also on the right track by saying that if your priest says something crazy, you go up the chain of command. You don’t just leave the church. Kirk’s response is that, well, what if the craziness goes all the way up to the pope? But Jesus told the apostles he would not leave them as orphans, so the Holy Spirit guides the church to not allow it to infallibly bind the faithful to craziness. That’s the doctrine of infallibility. There’s also the doctrine of ineffect ability, ensuring the church’s correctness in its general teaching methods.

Now, you can have this kind of a doctrine in the Catholic church, but not in the church, lowercase c espoused by Protestants. That is just an invisible collection of Christians who believe contradictory doctrines on essential issues like salvation or sacraments. I point out that Kirk has this same problem because an atheist could tell him, if you follow a book and it starts saying crazy stuff, you get a new book and then they point to allegedly crazy things in the Bible like the kosher laws and the Old Testament or slavery regulations to justify getting rid of the Bible. I bet Charlie Kirk would say that the Bible needs to be interpreted and not everything in the Bible is a permanently binding belief on the faithful. Well, that’s true of church teaching and what the Pope says, especially when it’s something the Pope said off the cuff above 35,000 feet. But then this raises the question of why we should trust Kirk’s foundational source of doctrine in the first place, the Bible.

CLIP:

I think that if you have the Bible as any sort of semblance of a bedrock, you’re going to last.

But who canonize the Bible? Well, who canonized it? Where did we get it from? Our Lord didn’t leave us a Bible. He left us a church in the church that

Codified the Bible. Sort of true. I mean, I think our Lord as part of God, God is the author of all 66 books, right? Yeah, of

Course

We had Wait. Oh, you slipped that in. Hey, come on. You can’t do that to me all time. No, this is interesting though. Why is it that Catholics acknowledge divine books that Jews themselves don’t think are divine? The keepers of the Torah don’t even agree with your canon,

Trent:

And I’d say so, why should I care what the Jews of the second century who rejected Christ in his apostles thought was or wasn’t? Scripture, as I’ve shown in a previous episode, responding to Alan Parr, the New Testament alludes to deutero canonical books like Wisdom and Maccabees as being Divine Scripture, and the early Christians, many of whom were Jews, believed these books were scripture in the first century. Jews like the Sadducees and the Pharisees disagreed about what constituted the Old Testament canon plus the Greek translation of the Old Testament that Christ and the apostles primarily quoted from contained the Deutero canonical books of scripture. For more on that, see my debate with Steve Christie on the Protestant Old Testament canon, but this gets away from the main issue, which is why it was unfortunate that Kirk pivoted away from Noel’s question about the canon of scripture.

If you’re saying the Catholic church demands that people believe too much and we should use souls scriptura instead, well, where does scripture say that? And where does scripture say that? What you call scripture is scripture? This is a huge problem for Protestants that even they recognize. For example, James White writes in his book Scripture Alone For Many, the issue of the canon is the Achilles heel of scriptural sufficiency, and Douglas Wilson writes the following. The problem with contemporary Protestants is that they have no doctrine of the table of contents with the approach that is popular in conservative evangelical circles. One simply comes to the Bible by means of an epistemological lurch. The Bible just is, and any questions about how it got here are dismissed as a nuisance, but time passes. The questions remain unanswered, the silence becomes awkward and conversions of thoughtful evangelicals to Rome proceed a pace. Cameron Bertuzzi also raised this problem in a recent episode on his channel, and Gavin Orland and other Protestants have responded to him. Though in the next few weeks I’ll be releasing my own episode showing why the canon problem is still a huge problem for Protestantism.

CLIP:

We all rebel against corrupt institutions we don’t like,

But an unjust law is no law at all. It’s a species

Rather, okay? Just pope is not a pope.

Yeah, there’s nothing unjust about the Pope talking about climate change. You just don’t pay attention to it.

Okay? So you just pick and choose what it’s like a buffet line.

No,

I like what he says about this, but not about that. But yes, he is the inheritor of St. Peter. No, like no,

No, no. The papal authority is that he speaks infallibly when speaking ex cathed on faith and morals. It doesn’t talk about climate change at all. So the Pope can say things that are crazy. Yeah, so this is perfect. Then why have one if what he says in order to speak

Infallibly ex cath ther on faith and morals. Okay, so that has not happened since what? Vatican two?

No,

It’s a little bit. When was the last time the Pope spoke?

Well, that Ced was part of

The master. When was the last time? Like 50, 60 years.

The last probably ex cathedra infallible teachings from a Pope were probably Pop Pius thei like 150 years ago.

Okay, so then therefore there really is no functional use for a Pope for 150 years.

No, no. He’s

The leader of the church. He’s the exactly your figurehead, your top leader is not good.

Trent:

This reveals a common misconception about the authority of the church and the authority of the Pope. Some people, including Catholics, think that the only teachings we are bound to accept are those the church is infallibly defined. And it’s true that if you personally deny teachings that have been infallibly defined as part of divine revelation or dogma, then that is a grave act that can be a mortal sin. But that doesn’t mean everything else is up for grabs or is mere personal opinion that Catholics can ignore whenever they feel like it. In fact, some people claim that they can reject the Second Vatican counsel because it didn’t infallibly define anything. However, between infallible teachings and pastoral personal opinions or prudential judgments, there is the church’s ordinary teachings. The Second Vatican Council, put it this way. In the document, lumen genium in matters of faith and morals.

The bishops speak in the name of Christ and the faithful are to accept their teaching and adhere to it with a religious ascent. This religious submission of mind and will must be shown in a special way to the authentic magisterium of the Roman pontiff, even when he is not speaking ex cathedra. That is, it must be shown in such a way that his supreme magisterium is acknowledged with reverence. The judgments made by him are sincerely adhered to according to his manifest mind and will his mind and will in the matter may be known either from the character of the documents, from his frequent repetition of the same doctrine or from his manner of speaking. So Catholics can’t just say, well, the Pope wasn’t speaking infallibly, so you don’t have to worry about anything else that he says. Kirk is correct, that if that’s all that mattered, infallible definitions, then why even have a Pope when his last ex cathedral statement setting aside things like canonization was in 1950 to define the bodily assumption of the blessed Virgin Mary.

The Pope’s primary way of teaching the faithful is through his ordinary magisterium and documents like papal and cyclicals. But even in this context, we have to distinguish between the Pope making a doctrinal statement and him making non doctrinal exhortations or prudential judgments in the same documents. For example, encyclical Laudato Sea, which discusses the environment in some parts, Pope Francis affirms church teaching or doctrine found in the catechism that it is contrary to human dignity, to cause animals to suffer or die needlessly, along with affirming other church teachings. But in other parts of the encyclical, the Pope offers non doctrinal statements related to science or practical proposals to improve the common good that do not require the religious submission of mind and will. This is evident in the wording used in other parts of the encyclical, which say the church does not presume to settle scientific questions or to replace politics and on many concrete questions, the church has no reason to offer a definitive opinion.

She knows that honest debate must be encouraged among experts while respecting divergent views. So noles is correct that the Pope’s practical proposals on things like climate change are not a part of church teaching, though they should be given due consideration in virtue of the Pope’s office and the Pope and the church’s ordinary teachings that require the religious submission of mind and will are not necessarily gravely sinful to fail to ascent to the teachings that have been in foully defined to be a part of dogma. Kirk’s other objection though seems to be that the Pope has shortcomings like the Pope allegedly being ambiguous on the teaching related to homosexuality or him being a Marxist apparently. Now, I’ve addressed Pope Francis’s orthodoxy on those issues and my episodes on same-sex blessings and liberation theology, so I won’t retread that ground here. You can watch them in the links in the description below if you want to learn more.

But let’s Grant Kirk’s point the Pope is not perfect and he says and does things that might make him not look like in a desirable light. Well, no successor of St. Peter is perfect, and some of them are downright scandalous, including St. Peter himself. Imagine an early Christian saying Your leader St. Peter sucks because he denied Jesus three times and Peter was afraid to dine with the Gentile Christians and St. Paul had to rebuke him. That guy is a coward. He denies the truth of who Jesus is. So I’m going to follow a new leader instead, or imagine an ancient Israelite saying, look at the sins of Moses or Gideon or David. I’m going to go follow the priests of Baal. Instead, the leaders that God chooses for his people often have shortcomings, but that never invalidated. They’re divinely given authority to lead God’s. People

CLIP:

Look, to be very clear, like nine out of 10 of Catholic dogmas, evangelicals hold nine out of 10, right? And that is why I believe Catholics are Christian, even though you don’t give me that same sort charity, no, I would. I would. I’m giving you a hard time. I actually think the world is a better place because of faithful Catholics. I’ve spoken out with great criticism of how evangelicals remained quiet here in Arizona on Prop 1 39, while the Catholic diocese was so courageous on the fight for life while evangelicals were silent. I want a better Catholic church, and I personally would not be able to be part of an institution with the figurehead, with a worldview that is so corrupted and opposite of what I think the Bible teaches. And I wouldn’t give him the benefit of the doubt. I’d be like, no, I’m actually not part of this. I’m leaving.

Trent:

We’ve already addressed how a leader shortcomings don’t invalidate his authority, and I’d point out that Knowles does a good job of asking Kirk to give specifics on what’s wrong with Pope Francis and Kirk Stonewalls because his objections to Pope Francis are about what’s described in headlines related to the Pope, not the Pope’s actual teaching, but I’d rather take the discussion away from Pope Francis and note that Kirk and Knowles disagree on a much more fundamental issue. It’s just not true that evangelicals and Catholics agree on 90% and the last 10% are secondary issues. Lutherans, Anglicans and other mainline churches don’t have as much disagreement with Catholics on some of these issues, but evangelicals usually disagree with Catholics on important doctrines like baptismal regeneration, whether infants should be baptized, who has the authority to be a pastor to lead the church, who oversees those pastors if the Eucharist is truly Jesus and whether salvation can be lost.

All of these doctrines dramatically affect how we live out our faith instead of just saying, yeah, Catholics are great, it’s just the Pope who bothers me. Well, I’d ask Kirk what he thinks of Catholics who adore the Eucharist as Christ himself. If Kirk is right about Catholicism, then Catholics are idolaters in that case, who should flee from their false religion. But if Michael Knowles is right, then Charlie Kirk should repent from his rejection of Christ and his church and receive Jesus in the Eucharist. Now, I appreciate ecumenism that correctly identifies what Catholics believe and where Catholics genuinely have common ground with Protestants, but sometimes the discussion can be more fruitful with rabid anti Catholics than with lukewarm Protestants. Lukewarm Protestants often see the Catholic church as just another Christian denomination, and maybe it has too many statues. Their objection is just, well, Catholicism is not my thing or the Pope freaks me out.

And so an intellectual argument about Christian foundations won’t move them, but anti Catholics who say the church is a work of the antichrist force, the issue to come front and center are Catholics idolaters when they worship Christ and the Eucharist, or are Protestants heretics for denying this truth? We need to figure out which group is correct and embrace the truths that God has revealed through his church. And the best way to do that is to have more discussions between those who disagree about important issues related to faith and morals. And if Charlie Kirk would ever like to sit down with me to have a respectful chat about that, I’d be more than happy to oblige Jim. So if you want to learn more about the issues raised in today’s episode, I recommend my colleague Jimmy Akins book, teaching with Authority since many of Kirk’s objections dealt with what things Catholics are bound to believe, as well as my book, why We’re Catholic, our Reasons for faith, hope and love. Thank you so much, and I hope you have a very blessed day.

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