Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Mystery, Meditation, Media: An Interview with Matt Swaim - Former Presbyterian)
CatholicExchange.com ^ | March 20. 2010 | Shane Kapler

Posted on 03/21/2010 6:20:02 PM PDT by Salvation

Mystery, Meditation, Media: An Interview with Matt Swaim

March 20th, 2010 by Shane Kapler

I recently had the good fortune to talk with Matt Swaim, producer of EWTN Radio’s Son Rise Morning Show, regarding his first book, The Eucharist and the Rosary: Mystery, Meditation, Power, Prayer (Ligouri Publications, 2010).

Shane Kapler: Matt, I know that you entered the Church at Easter, 2005.  Tell us about your journey:

Matt Swaim: I was baptized by the Presbyterians, although it would be improper for me to say that I was ever formally Presbyterian.  I was kind of United Methodist then Nazarene, then Free Methodist, then sort of non-denominational, then part of the Emergent Church Movement. I actually had a Bible study that kind of turned into a house church along the way — totally by accident.  Then I eventually made my way to Catholicism.

I can say this:  it seemed like I was joining newer and newer, smaller and smaller Christian communities.  Not just newer parishes, but newer denominations…and there was just this breaking point, where I realized there was no smaller and no newer available to me.  I realized the only option left to me was the biggest and the oldest thing out there!  Namely Catholicism, because I had exhausted every single other narrow possibility.

Kapler: In your book you relate how you had been reading various authors and the ones who made the most sense to you turned out to be Catholic.

Swaim: The gateway for me was C.S. Lewis, who was not Catholic – mostly because of his baggage.  He and I are very similar in that regard; I had sort of anti-Catholic prejudices much like Lewis did.  But Lewis is very Catholic in his worldview and he opened the door for me to go other places.  Some people stay stuck on Lewis forever and never advance beyond him, but some people say, “I gotta get a bigger fix than this.  He’s touching on things but not exploring them to the full extent.”  Then I went on to Chesterton, and Chesterton really swings that door wide.

A lot of those issues that Lewis brings up are fleshed out by Chesterton, and when I say “fleshed out,” I mean Incarnation.  Lewis is essentially a Protestant — not just because he claims to be one — but because, even though he was a High Anglican, his sense of the sacraments falls really short of Catholicism; and there was a dissatisfaction that I developed reading his work.  I still totally love it, but I did have that dissatisfaction and so when I moved on to people like Chesterton I felt the tangibility there.

I found it especially in the works of Catholic fiction writers, because that incarnational worldview is so imbued in the way they look at fiction, that it’s hard to deny.  One of the most profound theological statements that I’ve ever heard about the theology of communion is from Flannery O’Connor when, in reference to the Eucharist, she made the comment that, “If it’s not the Body and Blood of Christ, then to hell with it!”

Kapler: When you started reading these Catholic authors, what was your view of the Rosary?

Swaim: I had a total indifference to it.  When I thought of Catholicism I didn’t think of the Rosary. I thought of Mary worship and the arrogance of the papacy.  The Rosary was something kind of symbolic to me, kind of like a crucifix.  If you had showed me a set of beads with a crucifix on the end, I would have said it was a cross necklace.  It wasn’t until the end of my journey toward Catholicism that I had a concept of what the Rosary was.

Once I started to have a hunger for Catholic prayer, and I mention this in the book, I thought of it more like a Catholic i.d. card.  When I started praying the Rosary at first, it was to try and develop some Catholic “street cred.”  As I began to pray it seriously, I quickly realized that there was a whole lot more to it.  Here was the entire Gospel and a method for reflecting on the entire Gospel in a 15-minute span.  Here was this thing that I thought was a decoration, and it ended up being the entire Life of the Church that you could fit in your pocket, so to speak.

Kapler: Great image.  So was there one “ah ha” moment, when you first recognized that there was power in this prayer, or was it just a gradual thing?

Swaim: My whole entry into the Church was very gradual.  It was probably about an eight year, incremental journey toward Rome; and the Rosary was probably in the last 25% of it.  It wasn’t an “ah ha” moment in that I found this crazy, awesome tool; it was more like, “This is my journey; I’m going to pick up every weapon I can find along the way to get to where I have to get.”  And the appreciation for it has definitely developed over time.  It’s not like an explosion; it’s like a spark that grows steadily into a bonfire.

Kapler: What about the Mass?   When did you first attend, and what was going through your mind as you were listening to the prayers?

Swaim: I have to tell you, the first time I went to Mass, I did not love the Mass.  I had grown up in the Bible-Belt.  Most of my trek toward Catholicism had happened before I met a single Catholic, because they’re just not around in central Kentucky, or so I thought.  When it came to my Catholic understanding, I developed a completely Catholic worldview based on people like Chesterton, Merton, Flannery O’Connor, and Graham Greene.  I developed this worldview without any experience of the Liturgy whatsoever.

I moved up to Cincinnati in 2004, and after awhile decided I was going to attend my first Catholic Mass.  Now at that point I had no concept of what the Second Vatican Council was, nor of this thing they call “the spirit of Vatican II.”  I walked into that first Mass and was expecting to be smacked between the eyes with incense and incarnation, liturgy and eternity — to be just knocked off my feet.  What I found was really mediocre music, even worse preaching, and a whole bunch of people who didn’t even say, “hello,” to each other at the end of the service.  And I thought to myself, “What a lame experience this is.”  I had come from the Bible-Belt which is powerful hymns, dynamic preaching, deep and engaging fellowship.  I thought to myself, “Maybe the Sacrament wasn’t there this time,” because I just didn’t have that understanding of the Church.

Now, as I went on to understand, I had to weed the Protestantism out of myself — the Protestantism that was “cult of personality,” or that follows services because they appeal to me, or they get me where I need to be got.  I realized that there’s a total difference between the way that Catholics view the Mass and that Protestants view church services.  Mass is not designed to appeal to the congregation.  Mass is designed to yank the congregation out of themselves and force them to focus, if only for an hour, on something that is totally bigger, totally greater, totally beyond them.  It is not to call God down from Heaven, although that happens in the epiclesis.  It is to call us up into Heaven — just for peeks, so that we can get can get a taste of what we will hopefully get, if everything works out well.  The development of my appreciation for the Mass was really difficult because first I thought, “What if I can be a Catholic and just not have to experience the lameness of this progressive, boring Mass?”  Now eventually I found things like the Latin Mass and English Masses that had great reverence and great homiletics; but that was a real struggle for me from the beginning.

Kapler: I’m amazed by this element in conversion stories, how often times the first experience people considering conversion have when they come into contact with Catholics attending the Liturgy can be very disappointing, and yet how the Holy Spirit continues to give them the grace to persevere until they find an authentic manifestation of liturgy as it is meant to be.

Swaim: Well, I can tell you what that is: it’s a testament to the grace of the sacraments.  I believe I mention this in the chapter on the Visitation, that regardless even of the disposition of the people in the congregation, Christ is present.  It’s real, no matter how “bad” the people around are, or even how “bad” the priest is.  And that’s really something that a lot of us cynical people need to break out of — that no matter how much liturgical abuse you see, as long as the right things are said, at the right time, by the right person, it’s real no matter how annoyed you are afterward.

Kapler: You’ve described your book as a work of personal devotion – you are reflecting upon the illumination the Rosary gives the Eucharist and vice versa — as opposed to a work of speculative theology.  I couldn’t help but notice though, how you are repeatedly communicating some pretty intense theological insights in the process.  Which truths stood out to you most clearly as you were writing?

Swaim: One of the things that was really helpful for me, was to have finalized this book during the Year for Priests.  As I was working on – especially mysteries such as the Fifth Luminous Mystery, the Institution of the Eucharist — some of the thoughts of St. John Vianney really struck me.  In his Catechism on the Priesthood he talks about how, “If you wish to attack religion, you begin by attacking the priest.  Without the priest there is no sacrifice, and without sacrifice there is no religion.”  If there is no sacrifice then there is no religion, you’re just getting together and talking about how to be nice people.  For me that was a really striking thought.  You can’t talk about the Mass without talking about the priest, because the priest stands there, right there, in the person of Jesus.  The priest has had hands laid on him, by a guy who had hands laid on him…all the way back to Jesus Christ.  And that’s the only reason you can have a Mass.  You eliminate the priesthood and you eliminate the Church.

That sounds like a slap in the face to our equilateral, post-modern, laity-empowered ecclesiology, but it’s not.  It’s understanding how the Body of Christ works; and it’s recognizing that priest is there to empower the laity, but then the laity have the work of evangelizing the whole world!  And so, you can’t breathe with only one of those lungs. So for me, the fact that I was writing during the Year for Priests, really helped to connect some threads that I was thinking about at that time.

I want to say something about personal devotion too.  I should point out that I’m wired more intellectually than devotionally, so I wrote this book probably — and I don’t mean to sound overly narcissistic — to try and snap myself out of some of my dry musings on eternity into more of a devotional relationship with these two prayers.  It’s easy to be able to write down on paper what this all means.  It’s a lot harder to let your heart be impacted by what’s happening.  I’m really good at intellectual assent to truths such as the Real Presence, but I’m really bad about letting myself be moved by that knowledge.

Kapler: With you only starting to go to Mass and to pray the Rosary about six years ago, I’m very curious how God took you so deep, so quickly.

Swaim: As we all know, the Rosary is prayer of discipline.  It’s like the baseball season.  You practice, you play, you do the best you can.  Some days you go 0/4.  Some days you go 4/4.  You’re successful if you bat .300.  That’s the way it is with the Rosary.  I pray it, and I pray it, and I pray it.  If I were to give up on it altogether, I know that I’d be missing out greatly.  Now, I pray it and sometimes and fall asleep in the process.  I’ll pray it sometimes to fall asleep.  But every now and then something strikes you that you never were struck with before, and that’s what makes it worth it.

When it comes to some of the things I include in the book — those weren’t things that occurred to me the first time around.  Those weren’t things that occurred to me even the 100th time around.  But I will say this:  the Rosary, because it is the gospel, and because I was raised in a family that had such a deep love of the Scripture, the framework was all there.  It’s like building a remote control car and putting in the battery!  Now it could go.  Once I had that Catholic understanding, and once I saw the Mass the way I should have seen the Mass, it was just bulb after bulb waiting to go off — not all simultaneously, and not as fast as I’d liked; but the bulbs continue to go off.

Kapler: In the book you make a distinction between Christian meditation and Eastern meditation, Buddhist and Hindu meditation.  Describe proper Christian meditation for our readers.

Swaim: Wow, I’m a Swaim, but not a swami.  Our spiritualistic culture says we’re all just going up the same mountain, using different paths.  Well, if you know anything about eastern theology, we’re not even on the same dadgum mountain.  The pinnacle of Eastern meditation is to become annihilated and subsumed into the great whatever, whereas Christian meditation is to be given ourselves back fully, so that we can participate as our actual selves in the heavenly Kingdom.  The way that Christians and Easterners meditate reflects that.

As Christians we come with what we have and are and look at Something greater than ourselves, not because we want to forget ourselves completely but because we want to understand how we can reconcile ourselves with that.  The Eastern view of things is that we focus inward on ourselves to become totally annihilated.  The fact of the matter is, if you’re meditating inward on yourself, you’re going to worship what you’re meditating on; and that’s why Easterners tend to think they’re a part of God, as opposed to a part of the Kingdom of God.

Kapler: How would recommend a Christian dispose himself, or herself, to meditate most successfully?

Swaim: For me, I have to have a tool.  If it’s just me hanging out, deciding, “I’m going to contemplate now;” and I don’t have an object of contemplation, I’m going to contemplate on everything in the world except for what I set out to contemplate.  I’m going to contemplate some song stuck in my head, some responsibility I’ve left undone, my own interests or obsessions.  That’s why I think iconography is so useful, why Adoration is so fruitful.  That’s why I think the Rosary is so powerful — you have a system.

I joke in the book that having a tool and an object for contemplation forces you to meditate on the Holy Trinity of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, as opposed to the holy trinity of me, myself, and I.  We want to think that what’s between me and God is just between me and God; and we have this personal relationship.  Well, do you?  Do you? What do you know about God, this Guy you have a personal relationship with?  How can you know this Person that you never think about, or Whose sufferings you never enter into?  How can you know that Person?  Of course He knows you, but how badly do you want to know Him?

Spontaneous prayer obviously has great value, but some of us aren’t mature enough to keep our spontaneous prayer disciplined, in order to focus outside of ourselves.  If we let that be our dominant form of prayer, very often our spontaneous prayer can be extremely narcissistic — at least I know mine is, and I’ve spoken to many people who relate the same thing.  So I think the great thing the Catholic Church offers us is balance.

Kapler: If you had to summarize your greatest hopes for what readers will take away from your book, what would you say?

Swaim: I want people to realize that the things they get to do everyday, such as attend Mass or pray the Rosary, are not ordinary things in the sense that the world uses the word “ordinary.”  They are ordinary in the sense that they order us.  I think that if we understand the genius of the Church in trying to imbue the entire Gospel into both of these prayers, that we will get a much better sense of what it means to be a Catholic, a Christian, who is redeemed by God and loved by God – to understand why He was born in the first place, why He died, and what that means for us in the eternal picture of things.

Kapler: So what is in the works, what’s next on your plate?

Swaim: I have a lot of really insane ideas, none of which will probably come to fruition.  I think the most practical thing that I’m working on right now is something having to do with prayer and the age of information — something having to do with contemplation in a media-saturated culture.  I’m trying to be really tangible with that so I’m taking some of the insights of St. John of the Cross and St. Therese of Lisieux, someone like T. S. Elliot.  I’m going to try and use some St. Benedict, some Teresa of Avila and Augustine in there too.  The great thing about writing something systematic like The Eucharist and the Rosary is that I had a definite start and a definite end point.  This next project is just like, “Where do you stop?  When have you said enough?”  Of course the fact of the matter is, you can never say enough!

For the past 20 years Shane has been involved in the evangelistic and catechetical ministry of the Archdiocese of St. Louis. He is the author of The God Who is Love: Explaining Christianity From Its Center. He holds an M.A. in Speech-Language Pathology and is engaged in clinical practice with school-age children. He vehemently maintains, however, that his "best gig" is being the father of two.



TOPICS: Catholic; Ministry/Outreach; Religion & Culture; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; catholiclist; eucharist; rosary
Quite a journey for this gentleman.
1 posted on 03/21/2010 6:20:02 PM PDT by Salvation
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway; Lady In Blue; NYer; ELS; Pyro7480; livius; Catholicguy; RobbyS; markomalley; ...

**Here was this thing that I thought was a decoration, and it ended up being the entire Life of the Church that you could fit in your pocket, so to speak.**

Rosary and Discussion Ping!


2 posted on 03/21/2010 6:23:31 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Salvation
Let us remember the Prayer OUR LORD gave us...
It "Orders our Lives" Day by Day


3 posted on 03/21/2010 6:38:02 PM PDT by HangnJudge
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: HangnJudge

Part of the Rosary. Say it with every decade.


4 posted on 03/21/2010 6:45:58 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Salvation
The Lord's Prayer has been Sufficient for this Fallen Christian
His Manna never fails

It is I who is Insufficient

It took a while to accept Marianism as legitimate
But that Vision has not been Appointed me yet

God Father to Catholic Boy for last 20 years...
but merely Christian

It has been quite a journey
I See well the Oath
but poorly the Tradition involved

5 posted on 03/21/2010 7:01:38 PM PDT by HangnJudge
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: HangnJudge

Congratulations on being the godfather of a young man. They always need a positive image as they are growing up. Someone to talk to other than their parents.

I know it was after my son had done many things that he came back around to God. Yet he and I are the closest of all my five children.


6 posted on 03/21/2010 7:12:21 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Salvation
Strangely, for a Protestant
I find the Pope to be an extraordinary Leader

If He was revered as a Apostle, this would make sense to me

But many (most) Catholics I’ve known
widely disregard His Teachings and Leadership

Stepping away from
The Clear Teachings of the Scriptures,
The Clear Tradition of the Catholic Church, and the
The Clear Messages from the Pope

On issues such as Homosexuality, Abortion, Sanctity of Life

When it is "Inconvenient"

It is so confusing to this limited mind

7 posted on 03/21/2010 7:30:09 PM PDT by HangnJudge
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Salvation

This is not to say that this issue is peculiar to the Catholic Church

I’ve yet to meet a Christian who does not fail in service
I’ve yet to meet a Christian who is not damaged and fallen short

Me first

It was Paul who said “I am the Greatest of Sinners”
And if one who, in God’s name Healed, Raised the Dead, did Wonders
can say this, and know it in his heart
who am I to Judge the Heart of another


8 posted on 03/21/2010 7:41:13 PM PDT by HangnJudge
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: HangnJudge; Salvation

It’s confusing to me, too. When I was a drifting Protestant - my “existentialist period” - I discovered Pope John Paul II, and said, “I want to be like him.” It took a while to process through the bureacracy - our daughter was a Catholic before my husband and I were - but now I have JP2 and so many more right with me all the time.


9 posted on 03/21/2010 7:44:14 PM PDT by Tax-chick (Mother of your new alien overlords. You want to be on my good side.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: Tax-chick

Perhaps the sentinel event is an Act of Submission
Gifting our Selves to THE LORD

And in a Catholic sense
to the Priests, Bishops, Pope
Tradition, Scripture

From that standpoint, it is the Submission of Self
Surrendering to Christ
Accepting His Path for our Lives

That matters


10 posted on 03/21/2010 7:53:38 PM PDT by HangnJudge
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: Salvation

Bump for Monday reading.


11 posted on 03/21/2010 8:41:28 PM PDT by SuziQ
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: All
EWTN - The Journey Home - Monday March 22 - Fr. Donald Calloway
Mystery, Meditation, Media: An Interview with Matt Swaim - (Former Presbyterian)
The Reasons for G.K. Chesterton's Conversion
Fr. John Corapi's Conversion story - March 6 at 10pm on EWTN
Responding to the Pope’s Anglican Invitation (priest relates journey from Pentecostalism) [Father Douglas Grandon ]

In the Breaking of the Bread (conversion story of Tim Drake)
Australia's Traditional Anglicans Vote to Convert to Catholicism
Church of England Bishop Converts to Rome [Bishop Paul Richardson}
From Krishna to Christ: The Conversion Testimony of Father Jay Kythe
Ex-Protestant at home in Byzantine Catholic Church {Father James Barrand]
In Iraq, soldier finds a new faith (Muslim converts to Catholic faith)
Why I Left Anglicanism [Fr. Longenecker]
EWTN - The Journey Home - Oct. 26, 2009 - David Twellman, former United Methodist
Senior Anglican bishop reveals he is ready to convert to Roman Catholicism, Rev John Hind
Book: "You Have Not Chosen Me, But I Have Chosen You..." (23 Surprised Converts)

Newt Gingrich on Catholicism and JPII
Mickey Rourke thanks God and Catholic faith for 'second chance'
Catholic convert and political commentator Robert Novak passes away
Why Newt Gingrich Converted to Catholicism
Reading Into the Church [Deal W. Hudson]
Gnarly: from abuse victim, to prostitute, to surfer, to minister [Mary Setterholm]
Cathedral rector’s priestly journey began with early conversion [ Fr. Bob Clements]
The Great Philosopher Who Became Catholic [Mortimer J. Adler]
The Greater Blessings [David Mills]

EWTN - Journey Home - June 22, 2009 at 8pm - Dr. Jay Budziszewski - former Episcopalian
Cardinal says Catholics humbled by Anglicans' decision to join church
Catholic convert from Oregon coast becomes a priest (former Evangelical)
EWTN - The Journey Home - June 15, 2009 - Marcus interviews a Muslim convert [Talat Strokirk]
(All Saints) Sisters Doing It For Themselves (Anglican House converting en masse)
Journey Home to the Catholic Church: I Have Jumped into the Tiber to Swim Across (UK minister, Fr. Jeffrey Steel )
EWTN - Journey Home - June 8, 2009 at 8pm - Fr. Jay Toborowsky, Jewish convert
EWTN - Monday 8pm - Journey Home - Jerry & Yolanda Cleffi (former Assembly of God)
Exclusive: Newt Gingrich Opens Up on Catholic Conversion and Embracing 'Overt Christianity'
Mom’s Gift From Pope [Heidi Sierras]

The Journey Home - April 27 @ 8pm - Doug Grandon former Episcopal clergyman
EWTN - The Journey Home - April 20 - Msgr. Keith Barltrop, former Baptist
Journey Home - Monday April 6 - Kenneth Howell, Former Presbyterian minister
Newt Gingrich on his conversion to Catholicism
Gingrich Keeps Quiet on Catholic Conversion (received into Church over the past weekend)
Exclusive: Newt Gingrich conversion details; plans release of JP2 documentary
“150,000 new or returning Catholics”
Catholic Church prepares for tens of thousands of U.S. converts
Gingrich to Become Catholic During Easter Season
Faith Journey Leads United Methodist from Pastorate to Catholic Priesthood

From Atheist to Catholic (‘Unshakable’ Rationalist Blogged Her Way Into the Church) [Jennifer Fulwiler]
Former Episcopal bishop discusses his new life as Catholic priest [Father Jeffrey N. Steenson]
The Newt Evangelization: Gingrich to become Catholic
Conservative Episcopal bishop resigned to become Roman Catholic priest (New Mexico) Rev. Jeffrey Steenson
Converted Muslim Tells Story Behind Papal Baptism
EWTN - The Journey Home - December 1 - Dr. Steven C. Smith (former Willow Creek)
Former Socialist senator who converted to Catholicism calls for end to abortion [Mercedes Aroz]
Young New Yorker leaves police force to become priest [Nicholas Fernandez]
Interesting Deathbed Converts
Hollywood screenwriter returns to Cleveland, turns life over to God [Joe Eszterhas]

A Journey in Prayer {Randy Hain} [Ecumenical]
ECUMENIC] Our Conversion Experience (SDA to Catholic) [Brandon and Tara Ogden]
An open letter to Mr. Stephen A. Baldwin, Actor, and “born again” Christian [ Victor R. Claveau, MJ "
Sick person who suffered accident recounts conversion after traveling to Lourdes [Ecumenical] [Antonio Escobedo Garcia]
Welcome Home! Anglo-Catholic Sisters on the Road to Rome [Ecumenical]
Former Anglican Bishop, Catholic Convert, Jeffrey Steenson on Anglocatholicism [Ecumenical]
Jeffrey Steenson: Why I Became Catholic [Address to Anglican Use Conference]
Tony Snow Dead at 53, A Tribute to a Catholic Journalist [Tony Snow - Catholic Convert]
A Sexual Revolution (One woman's journey from pro-choice atheist to pro-life Catholic) [Jennifer Fulwiler]
C of E bishop will defect to Rome

Assyrian bishop explains his journey into communion with the Catholic Church
Virginia Tech tragedy leads bereaved mother on journey back to faith [Marian Hammaren]
Journey Home - EWTN at 8pm - Dr. William Bales, former Presbyterian Minister [Ecumenical]
First the Protestants, Now the Cults: Will We (the Catholic Church) Be Ready? [Open]
Six Million African Muslims Convert to Christianity Each Year [OPEN]
EWTN - The Journey Home - May 19 - Tom Cabeen, former Jehovah's Witness [Ecumenic]
A TRIUMPH AND A TRAGEDY [James Akin]
Alex Jones: the evangelical who became a Catholic deacon
Mary and the Problem of Christian Unity [Kenneth J. Howell, Ph. D.}
How the Saints Helped Lead Me Home [Chris Findley]

Who is Mary of Nazareth? [Kenneth J. Howell, Ph. D.}
A story of conversion at the Lamb of God Shrine
EWTN - Journey Home - 4/7/08 - Rosalind Moss - Former Jew & Evangelical Christian
Our Lady’s Gentle Call to Peace [Joan Tussing]
Coming Out of Sodom (Reversion Experience of Once-Active Homosexual) [Eric Hess]
Our Journey Home [Larry and Joetta Lewis]
Book on Mary turns runaway youngster immersed in drugs and crime into a priest
Dr. Robert C. Koons (former Lutheran) - Journey Home - Monday 3/31 - Conversion Story
The Story of a Convert from Islam – Baptized by the Pope at St. Peter's [Magdi Cristiano Allam]
How Do We Know It’s the True Church? - Twelve Things to Look For [Fr. Dwight Longenecker]

"Have you not read?" The Authority behind Biblical Interpretation [Robert Sungenis]
New Catholics ‘ on fire’ for faith
New faith pulls Hot Springs family together (Baptists join Catholic Church at Easter Vigil) [Danny Morrison and family
SciFi Writer, John C. Wright, Enters Catholic Church at Easter Vigil (conversion story)[John C. Wright]
"What is Truth?" An Examination of Sola Scriptura [Dwight Longenecker’family]
LOGIC AND THE FOUNDATIONS OF PROTESTANTISM [Fr. Brian Harrison]
Pope baptizes prominent Italian Muslim [Magdi Allam]
My Journey of Faith [Marco Fallon]
My (Imminent) Reception into the Roman Catholic Church [Robert Koons]
Thousands in U.S. to Join (Catholic) Church - Many Feel They Have Found a Home

TURN ABOUT (Carl Olson, former Evangelical and Monday's guest on EWTN's Journey Home)
Former Southern Baptist Pastor Now a Traveling Crusader for the Catholic Church [Michael Cumbie]
All Roads Lead To Rome (A Southern Baptist's Journey into the Catholic Church)[John David Young]
Allen Hunt, Methodist Minister ...Journeys Home (Catholic, Re: Real Presence)/a>
The Challenges and Graces of Conversion [Chris Findley]
An Open Letter...from Bishop John Lipscomb [Another TEC Bishop Goes Papist]
Unlocking the Convert's Heart [Marcus Grodi]
His Open Arms Welcomed Me [ Paul Thigpen}
Why I'm Catholic (Sola Scriptura leads atheist to Catholic Church)
From Calvinist to Catholic (another powerful conversion story) Rodney Beason

Good-bye To All That (Another Episcopalian gets ready to swim the Tiber)
Bp. Steenson's Letter to his clergy on his conversion to the Catholic Church
Bishop Steenson’s Statement to the House [of Bishops: Episcopal (TEC) to Catholic]
Bp. Steenson's Letter to his clergy on his conversion to the Catholic Church
Bishop Steenson Will Become a Roman Catholic
Married man considers turn as Catholic priest
Pavarotti returns to the Catholic faith before dying
Searching For Authority (A Methodist minister finds himself surprised by Truth!)
Why I Returned to the Catholic Church. Part VI: The Biblical Reality (Al Kresta)
Why I Returned to the Catholic Church. Part V: The Catholics and the Pope(Al Kresta)

The Hail Mary of a Protestant (A true story)
Why I Returned to the Catholic Church. Part IV: Crucifix and Altar(Al Kresta)
Why I Returned to the Catholic Church. Part III: Tradition and Church (Al Kresta)
Why I Returned to the Catholic Church. Part II: Doubts (Al Kresta)
Conversion Story - Rusty Tisdale (former Pentecostal)
Why I Returned to the Catholic Church. Part I: Darkness(Al Kresta)
Conversion Story - Matt Enloe (former Baptist) [prepare to be amazed!]
THE ORTHODOX REVIVAL IN RUSSIA
Conversion Story - David Finkelstein (former Jew)
Conversion Story - John Weidner (former Evangelical)

12 Reasons I Joined the Catholic Church
Conversion Story - Tom Hunt
The Tide Is Turning Toward Catholicism: The Converts
John Calvin Made Me Catholic
Journey Home - May 21 - Neil Babcox (former Presbyterian) - A minister encounters Mary
Going Catholic - Six journeys to Rome
My (Imminent) Reception into the Roman Catholic Church
A Convert's Pilgrimage [Christopher Cuddy]
From Pastor to Parishioner: My Love for Christ Led Me Home (to the Catholic Church) [Drake McCalister]
Lutheran professor of philosophy prepares to enter Catholic Church

Patty Bonds (former Baptist and sister of Dr. James White) to appear on The Journey Home - May 7
Pastor and Flock Become Catholics
Why Converts Choose Catholicism
From Calvinist to Catholic
The journey back - Dr. Beckwith explains his reasons for returning to the Catholic Church
Famous Homosexual Italian Author Returned to the Church Before Dying of AIDS
Dr. Francis Beckwith Returns To Full Communion With The Church
laetare (commentary on ordination of married Anglican convert to the Archdiocese of Los Angeles) Father Bill Lowe
Catholic Converts - Stephen K. Ray (former Evangelical)
Catholic Converts - Malcolm Muggeridge

Catholic Converts - Richard John Neuhaus
Catholic Converts - Avery Cardinal Dulles
Catholic Converts - Israel (Eugenio) Zolli - Chief Rabbi of Rome
Catholic Converts - Robert H. Bork , American Jurist (Catholic Caucus)
Catholic Converts - Marcus Grodi
He Was an Evangelical Christian Until He Read Aquinas [Rob Evans]
The Scott Hahn Conversion Story
FORMER PENTECOSTAL RELATES MIRACLE THAT OCCURRED WITH THE PRECIOUS BLOOD
Interview with Roy Schoeman - A Jewish Convert
Church Is Still Attracting Converts [Jim Anderson]

12 posted on 03/22/2010 5:11:42 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: Salvation; netmilsmom; thefrankbaum; Tax-chick; GregB; saradippity; Berlin_Freeper; Litany; ...

Matt Swaim will be the guest tonight on EWTN's The Journey Home.

LIVE - Mondays 8 PM ET

Encore – Tuesday 1 AM ET & 9 AM ET, Thursday 2 PM ET, Saturday 11 PM ET

13 posted on 03/14/2011 4:00:52 PM PDT by NYer ("Be kind to every person you meet. For every person is fighting a great battle." St. Ephraim)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson