viva_filipinas_feast_day_of_transfiguration_of_our_lord_jesus_christ

The great Protestant mystery:

Not long ago, it was popular for modern Protestants to ask:  “What would Jesus do?”  That moral guideline was so respected that many Protestants simply used the initials.  They would simply say “WWJD?”about moral questions and issues.

“What would Jesus do?” was particularly popular among young, modern Evangelicals, Mainline Protestants, and Pentecostals.  People in tens of thousands of denominations asked themselves, and each other, “What would Jesus do?”

Every church featured sermons centered on the question “What would Jesus do?”

Even the big-money Profiteers of Protestantism would leave their mega-mansions and private jets long enough to ask contributors, “What would Jesus do?” when making their demands for greater donations.

Then, almost overnight, the question “What would Jesus do?” disappeared from Protestant conversations.  It became The great Protestant mystery:  Why did so many Protestants suddenly stop using “What would Jesus do?” as a moral guideline?

“What would Jesus do?” is still a profound question.  Millions of people stayed on the right path by asking “What would Jesus do?”  when facing moral issues.  The great Protestant mystery:  Why did Protestants simply stop asking “What would Jesus do?”

“What would Jesus do?” made the world a better place.  It was good that millions of Christians were helped to do what was right, simply by asking “What would Jesus do?”

So, why has the phrase disappeared from Protestant thinking?  It remains a puzzle.  The great Protestant mystery:  Why don’t Protestants, today, continue to seek guidance by asking “What would Jesus do?”

There is an answer to The great Protestant mystery:

Protestants stopped asking “What would Jesus do?” when the answer became apparent:  “Jesus would be in The Only Church He Founded.  Jesus would be a Catholic!”

As soon as professional Protestants realized that “What would Jesus do?” was answered by “He would be Catholic.”, the question disappeared from Protestant conversations.

 

Author's Notes:

Related:

Today, The Bible tells us: “Be…

Today's Simple Rhyme: "Pray to obey / Or be lost every day."...

Catholics can best make this connection!

St. Paul explains what blessed these early Macedonian Catholics with such "generosity" despite their "profound poverty":...

How does Today’s Reading tell us to:…

Today’s “Alleluia” tells us what a blessing it is to be Catholic. John 15:16: “I chose you from...

A Fundamental reason to Be Catholic in…

Catholics, blessed to receive His Holy Body and Blood in Catholic Communion, know what Jesus said next! "Then...

Words of Moses brings many to Jesus.

In Deuteronomy 18:15 Moses said: “The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me...

On the Last Day of the Year, this Catholic Reading…

This is the Last Day of 2025 and the First Day of the rest of our lives. So,...