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My Story
Catholic Converts ^ | January 26, 2007 | Chris

Posted on 04/22/2008 2:00:13 PM PDT by annalex

My story: Part 1

I have decided to tell my conversion story. I plan to tell it in two (*) parts. Check back soon for the rest of the story.

When I was a young child my mother was a member of the Church of Christ (not to be confused with the United Church of Christ). For several years I went to church with her every Sunday. At this time my father did not attend church. As I got older I decided that I wanted to stay home with my dad on Sunday mornings. This became the practice for a few years. During this time I started to think about God and my relationship with him. Also during this time something happened at my mom’s church that caused her to leave. To this day I still don’t know exactly what happened. Mom started going to a Southern Baptists church where my dad’s mother and his sister and sister-in-laws were members. At some point I started going to church with my mom and sister again. For a while we visited another Church of Christ but ended up staying at the Southern Baptist one. When I was about fourteen years old I “walked the aisle” and was “saved.” However, the pastor was not comfortable “baptizing me into the Southern Baptist church” given my mom’s situation of not yet being settled on a church. About a year later I was baptized and in the few years that followed my mom, sister, and dad (along with my grandfather and three uncles) were all baptized and joined the Southern Baptist church. The Southern Baptists church’s insistence that my mom be “re-baptized” to show her agreement with its teachings was a major reason that she took several years to join.

After graduating high school I went off to college. I went to University Baptist Church, a Southern Baptist affiliated church, a few times but didn’t go to church regularly while at school. My dorm roommate was Catholic. This was something totally foreign to me. I was a senior in high school before I knew anyone Catholic. Well actually, I had known this person since kindergarten. I just didn’t know she was Catholic. That was also when I found out that my hometown (population 1,200) had a Catholic Church right across the street from the high school. It is a small mission parish and nothing outside the building except a very small sign suggest that it is a Catholic Church. Anyway, my roommate and I had a few discussions about Christianity and he tried to give me a book to read that would help explain some of the teachings of the Catholic Church. I didn’t read it. At the time I was a music education major and having trouble in my ear training classes. To help with this I joined the University Choir. I ended up spending two or three spring semesters singing with the choir. During that time we sang the Gloria from one of Mozart’s Mass settings and performed Faure’s Requiem in its entirety. Looking back now I can see that this was an important step in my introduction to the Catholic Church. I understood music and my interest in the Church was in some way stimulated by its music.

During my junior year of college I started getting into religious discussions with another Catholic friend. We often argued about differences in Catholic and Southern Baptists teachings. At this time I was already starting to have doubts about some Southern Baptists doctrines. My friend had been to Baptists churches with other friends growing up. This gave him some advantage in attacking my arguments, since I had no idea what I was talking about when it came to the Catholic Faith. One day he suggested that attend Mass with him to see for myself. Finally, I agreed and attended a Sunday morning Mass at St. Joseph’s . . .

My story: Part 2

I got to Mass at St. Joseph’s that Sunday morning not having a clue what I was doing. My friend had given me a basic run down of what to expect. One thing that I remember from that Mass is that the priest was rather elderly and I couldn’t understand much of what he was saying, turns out that pastor of the parish was away that Sunday. I was struck by the “ritualistic” nature of the Mass. To be honest it was a bit unsettling. However, something stuck with me about that day. I didn’t attend another Mass for quite some time. But, I kept thinking about it. A few months went by and I went again. Another few months went by and I went again. During this time some things about the Southern Baptists church (well my particular church back home) had started to bother me. There had been a lot of fighting in the congregation that ended in the pastor and several members left and for some time formed their won church in someone’s living room. I didn’t think about it at the time but later would come to realize that this was a real life example of why the protestant tradition was losing its appeal with me. After all, you can’t have protestant without protest. However, at this time I wasn’t working with a Catholic vs. protestant attitude. My thought was it doesn’t matter what the name on the sign out front is just as long as I’m trying to serve God.

For a couple of years I continued going to Mass once every few months and doing a little bit of research online. During this time I was working for the athletic department at my university. During my last year as an undergraduate the department hired a graduate assistant who was also named Chris. I think we spoke twice that year. After graduating I stayed at the university to attend grad school. I also was hired as a graduate assistant in the athletic department. About a week before I started my first summer session graduate class I went to Mass at St. Josephs. I took my normal place near the back. A few minutes later a lady set down beside me and then Chris (see that wasn’t a completely random reference above) came in and set on the other side of this lady. After Mass he came up to me and said, “I didn’t know you were Catholic!” I told him that I wasn’t and he asked what I was doing there. In the course of this conversation it came out that I was baptized as a Southern Baptist but had been sporadically going to Mass for a few years.

We ended having the same class that summer and he was eager to talk to me about the Catholic Church. He told me that he normally attended St. Thomas Aquinas, the university parish, and invited me to go to Mass there sometime. During the next couple of month’s Chris and I continued to discuss Catholicism and I finally decided to give St. Thomas a try. I believe this was around the last week of September. We were working at a fall softball tournament and I told him I had decided to go to Mass at St. Thomas that evening, since they had Mass at 5:00 pm and 8:00 pm for the sleepy college students who didn’t get out of bed before noon on weekends. So after going home and changing clothes I went to my first Mass at St. Thomas Aquinas. . .

My story: Part 3

I can’t remember why but Chris didn’t make it to Mass at St. Thomas. So as per my custom I took a seat near the back. As this was a university parish most of the people there were closer to my own age. This immediately made me feel more comfortable. The music was also more upbeat and “younger”. I liked this at the time. However, I have now grown to not be so fond of it. But I remember something just felt right…I finally felt like I was some place where I could start to grow. The next week I was out of town and didn’t go to Mass. However, upon getting back from my trip I started going to Mass every Sunday at St. Thomas Aquinas. I didn’t miss a Sunday for well over a year. During this time I continued talking with Chris almost daily. He answered several of my questions and raised new ones. It was about this time that he gave me a copy of Patrick Madrid’s Surprised by Truth. I absorbed the conversion stories it contained, reading nearly cover to cover without stopping. I also started doing a lot of online research and came across the Defenders of the Catholic Faith Forum. The message board gave me a wonderful resource. Many of the poster’s are very knowledgeable and serious about their faith. I also emailed the priest at St. Thomas and asked him to recommend some reading material. Thus my collection of Catholic books began. I also discovered EWTN on my cable box. I spent hours watching Mother Angelica, Life on the Rock, the daily Masses, and just about anything else the aired.

Over the next year I became a sponge. Yet, I still had serious reservations. I wasn’t so sure about Mary and the saints, the True Presence in the Eucharist, papal infallibility, and a whole list of other things. The more I learned about Church history the more I started to feel that I would not be able to deny these things much longer. One night I was watching a show on EWTN when one of the guest priests mentioned the Road to Emmaus story in Luke 24. I pulled out my Bible and read the story of how Jesus appeared to the disciples who did not recognize them and how He was made known to them through the breaking of the bread. At that moment I knew in my heart that Christ was truly present, Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity, in the Eucharist. From there all of my objections to the teachings of the Catholic Church began to crumble.

At some point during this time I was home for a weekend visit when my mom told me that she had noticed that I had brought my Bible home with me and asked if I was going to church again. I told her yes, I was going to a Catholic church. This caught her a bit by surprise. I had a brief conversation with my parents about this. I expected much more. They asked little more than, “You still believe in Jesus right?” You have to remember that Catholics are few and far between where I grew up so few people know anything about the Catholic Faith. My mother also wanted to be assured that Catholic didn’t worship Mary.

As the Easter season approached I found myself questioning the option of converting. Even though I had come to accept the Church’s teachings and authority I wasn’t quite ready to make that commitment. On Holy Thursday I went to Mass at St. Joseph’s. While everyone was receiving communion I knelt and prayed to God that he direct me. I gave myself over, telling God that if the Catholic Church was where he wanted me then that was where I would go. Before the end of the communion procession I had my answer. I knew in my heart that I could no longer fight it and must become Catholic.

That spring, Chris talked me into taking a mission trip to Southeast Arkansas. St. Thomas usually sends missions to Honduras during spring break and Southeast Arkansas the week after spring classes ended. However, that particular year spring break coincided with Holy Week so both missions were planned for the week after classes ended. There ended up only being four of us who made the trip to Southeast Arkansas while the rest went to Honduras. We spent the week living in an old Franciscan Friary on the grounds of St. Mary’s church in McGehee, Arkansas. We spent the week helping out with several projects and spending time with Father Eric and Sister Sarah. We attended Mass each day and had Evening Prayer together each night. We also got into several conversations many of which concerned my conversion. For some reason I had still not shared my decision to join RCIA the following fall with anyone. Near the end of the trip, I did tell the others that I was planning to convert.

An interesting tangent to this story, the running joke the entire week was that I was destined to go to the seminary to become a priest. As per tradition of the mission trip we made up a song to describe all the people involved in the trip. The verse that was written for me was, “Then there's Chris / our Baptist missionary / next to become Catholic / then to the seminary.” This half-joking suggestion went on for the entire week and largely stemmed from Chris’ long insistence that he was convinced that I would convert and one day become a priest. I of course denied these charges. I will confess now that I was not entirely honest. This possibility had been on my mind for several months. I still remember vividly the first time a few months before Chris said to me, “You know what? I think you will be priest someday.” I was shaken by his comment. I had considered the possibility several times already and the fact that someone else would suggest it was unsettling. Until now this is something that I have kept mostly to myself. So, Chris if you read this I hope you are happy now! For the most part I have come to believe that this is not the path that God has laid out before me. However, I will not say that the possibility is not there. I’m still searching for that path and pray that I will have the strength and wisdom to answer God’s will whatever it turns out to be.

Okay, back to the story. I continued to go to Mass at St. Thomas during the summer and told my parents that I had decided to enroll in RCIA classes to prepare for reception into the Catholic Church. In September of 2005 I joined RCIA. I enjoyed the classes and continued to read as much about the Faith as I could get my hands on. As all humans are apt to do I had my ups and down, my moment’s of doubt, and sense of confusion. However, God had called me home to His one true holy, catholic, and apostolic church and I trusted him to lead me. I was confirmed in the Catholic Church at the 2006 Easter Vigil at St. Bernard’s in Bella Vista, Arkansas. Since then I have moved to Kansas where I have been blessed with a wonderful parish. I continue to have my ups and downs but I put my trust in God to lead me in all things.


Do you have a conversion story you would like to share on this blog? If so, please email me at catholicconverts@gmail.com and please consider adding your blog to the Catholic Converts blogroll.


TOPICS: Catholic; Ecumenism
KEYWORDS: catholic
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To: thefrankbaum

“And there lies the rub. Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus. Who is a “believing Baptized Christian?” Are Mormons? Jehovah’s Witnesses? Are Jews saved if they do not recognize Christ? Is it impossible for a Muslim to go to Heaven, if they never really hear the Gospel?”

I don’t think that is a “rub” with any major Christian denomination.


21 posted on 04/22/2008 4:10:25 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan (Kol Hakavod Mossad!)
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To: RJR_fan

So, in your opinion, God leads people to sin and damnation, and the Mother of God has inspired a cult?


22 posted on 04/22/2008 4:12:37 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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To: MeanWestTexan

By which I mean, all major denominations deem a Baptism to be with water, in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

(Even Baptists (who like to dunk) recognize that their dunking practice is a denominational quirk and not a “saving grace” requirement.)


23 posted on 04/22/2008 4:13:53 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan (Kol Hakavod Mossad!)
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To: annalex; RJR_fan

Exactly the kind of bickering that is not constructive.

Shhh.


24 posted on 04/22/2008 4:14:56 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan (Kol Hakavod Mossad!)
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To: MeanWestTexan
I don’t think that is a “rub” with any major Christian denomination.

But that is exactly what it is - who is a Christian? There are almost 13 million Mormons in the world. Obviously they have very different beliefs than most Christian denominations. I just get so confused when people say a "believing Baptised Christian" will go to Heaven.

25 posted on 04/22/2008 4:15:22 PM PDT by thefrankbaum (Ad maiorem Dei gloriam)
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To: MeanWestTexan

I do think that anyone who is willing to study the Holy Scripture without preconditioning will end up Catholic or Orthodox. However, we are not capable of abstracting the scripture from our own cultural lens, unless we read it with the fathers of the Church. What usually happens when people read the scripture thinking it is “just them and the Holy Spirit” is that they remain what they are: middle class Americans, while the scripture was written for 1 century “Greeks” and Jews.


26 posted on 04/22/2008 4:19:49 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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To: MeanWestTexan

He started it...


27 posted on 04/22/2008 4:20:35 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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To: annalex; Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...
One day he suggested that attend Mass with him to see for myself.

Right up there with Dr. Scott Hahn's experience.


Scott Hahn’s The Lamb's Supper - The Mass as Heaven on Earth.
Foreword by Fr. Benedict Groeschel.
Part One - The Gift of the Mass


Hahn begins by describing the first mass he ever attended.

"There I stood, a man incognito, a Protestant minister in plainclothes, slipping into the back of a Catholic chapel in Milwaukee to witness my first Mass. Curiosity had driven me there, and I still didn't feel sure that it was healthy curiosity. Studying the writings of the earliest Christians, I'd found countless references to "the liturgy," "the Eucharist," "the sacrifice." For those first Christians, the Bible - the book I loved above all - was incomprehensible apart from the event that today's Catholics called "the Mass."

"I wanted to understand the early Christians; yet I'd had no experience of liturgy. So I persuaded myself to go and see, as a sort of academic exercise, but vowing all along that I would neither kneel nor take part in idolatry."

I took my seat in the shadows, in a pew at the very back of that basement chapel. Before me were a goodly number of worshipers, men and women of all ages. Their genuflections impressed me, as did their apparent concentration in prayer. Then a bell rang, and they all stood as the priest emerged from a door beside the altar.

Unsure of myself, I remained seated. For years, as an evangelical Calvinist, I'd been trained to believe that the Mass was the ultimate sacrilege a human could commit. The Mass, I had been taught, was a ritual that purported to "resacrifice Jesus Christ." So I would remain an observer. I would stay seated, with my Bible open beside me.

As the Mass moved on, however, something hit me. My Bible wasn't just beside me. It was before me - in the words of the Mass! One line was from Isaiah, another from Psalms, another from Paul. The experience was overwhelming. I wanted to stop everything and shout, "Hey, can I explain what's happening from Scripture? This is great!" Still, I maintained my observer status. I remained on the sidelines until I heard the priest pronounce the words of consecration: "This is My body . . . This is the cup of My blood."

Then I felt all my doubt drain away. As I saw the priest raise that white host, I felt a prayer surge from my heart in a whisper: "My Lord and my God. That's really you!"

I was what you might call a basket case from that point. I couldn't imagine a greater excitement than what those words had worked upon me. Yet the experience was intensified just a moment later, when I heard the congregation recite: "Lamb of God . . . Lamb of God . . . Lamb of God," and the priest respond, "This is the Lamb of God . . ." as he raised the host. In less than a minute, the phrase "Lamb of God" had rung out four times. From long years of studying the Bible, I immediately knew where I was. I was in the Book of Revelation, where Jesus is called the Lamb no less than twenty-eight times in twenty-two chapters. I was at the marriage feast that John describes at the end of that very last book of the Bible. I was before the throne of heaven, where Jesus is hailed forever as the Lamb. I wasn't ready for this, though - I was at Mass!

28 posted on 04/22/2008 4:31:33 PM PDT by NYer (!)
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To: NYer

Yup. This underscores one typically Catholic thing: while to an Evangelical faith is what he thinks, to a Catholic faith is what he does.


29 posted on 04/22/2008 5:36:15 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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To: NYer
Having read this, I was made to recall exactly upon what occasion I first read this book, and how instrumental it was in removing the scales from my eyes.

A great memory.

30 posted on 04/22/2008 5:43:58 PM PDT by the invisib1e hand (media is now a double-edged sword; it's no longer a billy-club in the hands of the big goons.)
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To: NYer
From long years of studying the Bible, I immediately knew where I was. I was in the Book of Revelation, where Jesus is called the Lamb no less than twenty-eight times in twenty-two chapters. I was at the marriage feast that John describes at the end of that very last book of the Bible. I was before the throne of heaven, where Jesus is hailed forever as the Lamb. I wasn't ready for this, though - I was at Mass!

********************

Thank goodness I have a box of tissues nearby.

31 posted on 04/22/2008 5:48:50 PM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: annalex
Dear annalex,

“This underscores one typically Catholic thing: while to an Evangelical faith is what he thinks, to a Catholic faith is what he does.”

That's why to Catholics, the dichotomization of faith and works is false.


sitetest

32 posted on 04/22/2008 7:55:39 PM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: annalex

“For example, a conversion to Catholicism should be treated like a sincere journey of faith of an intelligent human being, not like an impressionable youth being fooled by bells and smells. “

Should a conversion from Catholicism to Evangelical Christianity also be treated like a sincere journey of faith of an intelligent human being, not like an impressionable dolt who converts simply out of ignorance of his Catholic faith?


33 posted on 04/22/2008 8:08:16 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: MeanWestTexan; annalex; RJR_fan

“Exactly the kind of bickering that is not constructive.

Shhh.”

Hey, MeanWestTexan, you don’t happen to be selling sheet music versions of “Kumbaya” - do ya?


34 posted on 04/22/2008 8:12:34 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: NYer

“As I saw the priest raise that white host, I felt a prayer surge from my heart in a whisper: “My Lord and my God. That’s really you!””

I’ve been reading and studying the Bible, as a Christian, for 25 years. And I mean this without a desire to provoke, but the above statement sounds utterly alien in concept to the Scripture I’ve learned. Nowhere in all of Scripture does anyone ever point to any inanimate object and call it “God”. The most radical event in the Scripture is when people called a man “God”.

The disciple said, “And he became flesh, and dwelt among us”. They didn’t say, “and he became bread and dwelt among us.”


35 posted on 04/22/2008 8:21:06 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: sitetest; annalex

“That’s why to Catholics, the dichotomization of faith and works is false.”

Are you referring to forensic justification?


36 posted on 04/22/2008 8:22:45 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus

Eiher you believe it, or you don’t believe it.

No one can MAKE you believe it. Belief in the Eucharistic Body and Blood of Jesus Christ is an article of Faith.

Only God can give you that faith.

We can’t.


37 posted on 04/22/2008 8:23:57 PM PDT by Palladin (Pennsylvania: guns, religion, and liberty.)
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To: Palladin

“Eiher you believe it, or you don’t believe it. No one can MAKE you believe it. Belief in the Eucharistic Body and Blood of Jesus Christ is an article of Faith. Only God can give you that faith.”

I would believe it if I found it in the Scriptures. I know that Jesus refers to the elements and “his body”, but he also refers to himself as “the door” - yet the Scripture doesn’t want us to believe he’s made of wood.

Paul, when speaking to the Bereans, counseled them to go and search the Scriptures to see if what he said was true. He wasn’t expecting to Divine act to suddenly cause them to believe whatever he said.

You seem to treat faith as if it is some Kierkegaardian leap in the dark. Faith is a product of hearing and understanding the Scriptures.


38 posted on 04/22/2008 8:32:16 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus

And you seem to worship a book, rather than the living God whom the book was written about.


39 posted on 04/22/2008 8:33:42 PM PDT by Palladin (Pennsylvania: guns, religion, and liberty.)
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To: Palladin

“And you seem to worship a book, rather than the living God whom the book was written about.”

What gives you that impression?


40 posted on 04/22/2008 8:37:21 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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