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What I Wish I’d Known About Catholics (And Why I’m Becoming One Now That I Do)
The Cordial Catholic ^ | March 19, 2015 | Albert Little

Posted on 03/20/2015 9:46:29 AM PDT by NYer

Photo Credit: Michael Caven.

Photo Credit: Michael Caven.

This Easter I become a Catholic.

It’s been a strange, unexpected journey. Something I often think about, and reflect on, is what I would’ve thought of myself, today, if I’d met me ten years ago. What if, by some miracle of space and time, the twenty year old me was able to visit the thirty year old me, today. What would the younger me think?

Becoming a Catholic is something I never could’ve imagined or envisioned.

I became a Christian at the age of about fifteen. I found an incredible local Pentecostal church, and incredible youth group, and was welcomed into a group of fantastic, devout young Christians. It’s hard to imagine all the grace I received through the friends I found and the experiences I had.

Then, at a time when so many Christians lose their faith and their identity, by the grace of God I was plugged into an incredible campus ministry in my university years. There I met lifelong friends, and my beautiful wife.

I fellowshipped, alongside my wife and our best friends, at a non-denominational church for many years. We still attend. It’s been an incredible place of grow, grace, and meeting God.

But the trajectory of my faith life—which impacts, of course, the whole of my life—changed one day when a Protestant pastor asked me what’s more important, the Bible or tradition. I didn’t have an answer, and that stumped me. And when I dug for answers, I was even more stumped, and unsatisfied. This began a long journey of searching, prayer, and unexpected discoveries.

A journey which will culminate at Easter, and continue for the rest of my life, in an entirely new direction.

What I know now, I didn’t know then. I’m becoming Catholic because of what I’ve learned—and I’ve learned it, I believe, by grace of God.

St. Francis de Sales is a favourite saint of mine. In the 16th century, as the Reformation split apart the Christian Church in Europe he wrote, preached, and worked tirelessly to explain the Catholic faith, and bring Protestants back into the fold. He was incredibly successful and something in his mission of cordially explaining his faith resonates deeply with me.

To paraphrase St. Francis de Sales to the early Protestants: If you’d known what the Catholic Church really taught you’d never have left.

In my case, if I’d known what the Catholic Church really taught, I’d have become Catholic much sooner.

Catholics Don’t Worship Mary

The Catholic Church doesn’t teach the worship of Mary. Worship (and adoration) are for God alone.

As a Protestant I thought, for a long time, that Catholics worshipped Mary alongside her son, Jesus. There are plenty of churches named in her honoured, Catholics seemed obsessed with statues of the Virgin, and the Rosary, of all things, seemed to be nothing more than vain repetition of praise for Jesus’s mother.

The reality, I’ve learned, is much different. Catholics don’t worship Mary but, because of her special role in salvation history, she is venerated. How is that different? In Catholic theology, which, remember, was the theology of the whole Christian Church for 1,500 years, we ask Mary to pray for us.

Like Mary’s request to Jesus at the wedding at Cana, Catholics believe that Mary has the ear of Jesus in a special way. This is also reflected in biblical typology—the same kind of exegesis that Jesus used to explain His role in salvation to the apostles on the road to Emmaus. In the same way I can ask my best friend—a living, breathing Christian—to pray for my intentions, the Catholic Church teaches that Mary can be asked for prayer in the same way. When Catholics say they pray, “to Mary,” they don’t mean that Mary will answer our prayers. When we “pray to” Mary, we ask for her to pray for us, to Christ.

Jesus answers all prayers. We ask Mary to pray on our behalf.

Catholics Don’t Worship the Saints

In the same way, the Catholic Church believes that holy men and women (more women than men, for the record) are, presently, in the presence of God. We call these people saints and, like the Virgin Mary, we can ask for their prayers.

As pictured in Revelation, the prayers of the saints gathered around the altar float up like incense before God. That’s why, since the very beginning of the Christian Church, there has been a strong belief in ability of the dead to pray for us—and the practice of us asking them for their prayers. This is why the earliest Christian Churches were built on sites where holy men and women were killed.

The beautiful theology of the Catholic Church says that the Church, as a body of believers, is made up of all past, present, and future Christians. We’re all one and the same and just because I pass away doesn’t mean I cease to be a part of that active body. The saints, as Christians, continue their role in the body, only now in the presence of God.

Jesus is Present in the Eucharist

For all the different Protestant branches and denominations I’ve learned that no one in Protestantism takes Jesus’s words more literally than the Catholic Church.

When Jesus said, “This is my body; this is my blood,” the Catholic Church—and the whole of Christianity for 1,500 years—takes Him at His word.

Incredibly, the Catholic theology of transubstantiation says that when the priest consecrates the elements (the bread and the wine) they become the actual body and blood of Jesus through a mysterious, miraculous process. The fact that we can’t see, touch, or taste these elements are real flesh and blood is part of the miracle.

This bold claim is backed up not only by a thousand and a half years of Church history but by solid exegesis of the gospels.

Jesus, from Bethlehem (which means “the house of bread”), who was laid into a manger (which is a feeding trough) when He was born is the actual manna from Heaven.

If I had known that I can actually receive Jesus in the Eucharist, I would’ve stormed the doors of my local Catholic Church a decade ago.

There’s Only One Mass

What strikes me as even more incredible is the Catholic theology of the act of the Eucharist itself: There’s only one.

Jesus’s sacrifice on the cross was once and for all, final, and this is something that all Protestants can get behind. The brilliant, beauty of the Mass and the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharistic elements is that it links us up with all of Christian history—past, present, and future.

Jesus only died once. When the priest prayers the Eucharistic Prayers and says, “This is my body; this is my blood,” we are, as a church community, reliving the Last Supper and Jesus’s death on the cross. We are linking up, together, with all of the other Christians who have ever, and will ever, celebrate the Eucharist. And we’re linking up with the saints, angels, the Virgin Mary, and God Himself in Heaven as we see this same celebration taking place in Revelation.

As a Catholic, then, when I go to Mass I am experiencing something universal: Jesus’s death re-presented before my eyes.

The Priest Acts as Jesus

In a similar way, I never understood the importance of the priest in Catholic theology. As a young Protestant the priest, like Mary and the saints, stood in the way of my personal relationship with Jesus. But I had it all wrong.

The priest, as understood by Catholic theology, acts as Christ. The priest is a stand-in, if you will.

In the Mass, the priests acts in the place of Jesus, as he consecrates the bread and the wine. In the blessing of people, in Baptism, in prayer, and in the healing of the sick the priest, based on the authority that Jesus gives His apostles in the New Testament, is acting in His place. Where Jesus is not tangibly, physically with us, the priest is here in His place.

In confession, the priest, based on the direct charge from Jesus, “whoever’s sins you forgive they are forgiven,” represents Christ in forgiving our sins for us.

We don’t have to imagine God among us: there He is.

God Gave Us a Real, Tangible Church

Perhaps the greatest, most incredible thing I’ve learned, and wish that I knew a long, long time ago, is that Jesus left us with a real, tangible Church.

As a Protestant, I thought of the Church as a non-physical, spiritual union of Christians all over the world. But this isn’t how Jesus meant it, I’m convinced. Because this isn’t the Church as conceived by the apostles, the fathers of the Church (who were taught by the apostles), and all Christians for more than fifteen hundred years.

As I become Catholic perhaps the greatest gift I’m to receive is union with a real, tangible Church founded by Christ.

A Church with bishops and priests who can trace their authority, historically, all the way back to the apostles. Authority that we see manifest in the New Testament as the ability to forgive sins, drive out demons, and define an understanding of doctrine. These authoritative charges, according to the Catholic Church, remain with today’s bishops and priests through Apostolic Succession.

That’s why when the priest says, “You’re forgiven,” he means it. Because Christ said he’d have that power.

Rather than having to “feel” or “know” it on our own, God gave us the beauty and the blessing of a physical, tangible Church to be His hands and feet on earth. I don’t need to pray and ask for God to give me a sense of His grace, although I certainly could, and do. But in the Eucharist, in confession, and in the knowledge that God gave us the Church, we can be certain of His grace. This, in my experience, has been the most powerful aspect of the Catholic Church—and something I wish I knew years ago.

The most beautiful gift that Jesus gave us, beyond His sacrificial offering, was the establishment of a Church to proclaim, celebrate, and safeguard truth.

There’s a lot—a lot!—I wish I’d known about the Catholic Church a long time ago. I would’ve become a Catholic. And, of course, now that I know I can’t help but do anything else. At Easter I’ll turn in a new direction, take a new path, but I suppose, really, it’s the path I’ve always been on: A slow road to Rome. But I’m finally getting there. My new orientation, then, will be to continue to explain and champion this incredible faith I’ve found. And to be a cordial Catholic.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; cordialcatholic; protestantbashing; willconvertforfood
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To: ADSUM
>>at least we are following God’s will as servants of God<<

Um, no, Catholics claim to give dulia (Greek dulos) to saints and Mary.

Greek - doulos - properly, someone who belongs to another; a bond-slave, without any ownership rights of their own.

Rather than being servants of Christ.

Romans 1:1 Paul, a servant (doulos) of Christ Jesus, called to be an apostle and set apart for the gospel of God--

Catholics give that dulia (dulos) to their so called saints and Mary don't they?

81 posted on 03/20/2015 3:01:48 PM PDT by CynicalBear (For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus)
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To: verga
>>I have told you the truth<<

You have told me the Catholic spin on truth.

82 posted on 03/20/2015 3:02:59 PM PDT by CynicalBear (For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus)
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To: ealgeone
Please elaborate.

Like I said it has been done before.

83 posted on 03/20/2015 3:38:56 PM PDT by verga (I might as well be playing chess with pigeons,.)
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To: verga; lurked_for_a_decade

Your post #69: It’s like Bush derangement syndrome. He was too stupid to be president, but was smart enough to mastermind 9/11 to get us into war. Does the Westboro Wing of the Free Republic Evangelical Dispensationlist Causcus of the Free Repubulic Religious Forum (hat tip to lurked) have Catholic derangement syndrome?


84 posted on 03/20/2015 3:40:43 PM PDT by goodwithagun (My gun has killed fewer people than Ted Kennedy's car.)
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To: verga

You’ve got nothing then.


85 posted on 03/20/2015 4:00:29 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: ealgeone

Not going to be baited, but thank you for asking, have a good day.


86 posted on 03/20/2015 4:06:29 PM PDT by verga (I might as well be playing chess with pigeons,.)
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To: goodwithagun
Does the Westboro Wing of the Free Republic Evangelical Dispensationlist Causcus of the Free Repubulic Religious Forum (hat tip to lurked) have Catholic derangement syndrome?

Since I am Catholic I can't speak for our separated brethren.

87 posted on 03/20/2015 4:08:00 PM PDT by verga (I might as well be playing chess with pigeons,.)
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To: verga

Fine with me. You still got nothing though.


88 posted on 03/20/2015 4:19:08 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: St_Thomas_Aquinas
Marcus Grodi’s “The Journey Home,” on EWTN, Mondays, is one of my favorites. Every story is different and fascinating. The converts are uniformly articulate, and I appreciate that Marcus rarely interrupts.

Have been watching his program for many years and cherish some of these conversion stories more than others. Roy Schoeman, former Jew, for example. There was the former Hindu who is now a priest (his Hindu family attended the ordination and chipped in to purchase the chalice), the biker whose conversion came via the Gideon bible in the motel room; he is now a Ruthenian monk. Too many to count. You can read many of these stories and/or watch the Journey Home videos at Grodi's web site: Coming Home Network.

89 posted on 03/20/2015 4:34:50 PM PDT by NYer (Without justice - what else is the State but a great band of robbers? - St. Augustine)
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To: NYer

Was the author’s name Nicodemus?


90 posted on 03/20/2015 5:26:23 PM PDT by Old Yeller (Civil rights are for civilized people.)
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To: USS Alaska
It is not an easy religion and it puts a strain on the believer, but if you have found the Faith, work to keep it.

Works based religions are very difficult. Plus you can never have assurance of salvation because you never know how many points are enough to get you in.
91 posted on 03/20/2015 5:27:59 PM PDT by Old Yeller (Civil rights are for civilized people.)
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To: verga

I was raised in a Catholic family. Catholics worship Mary no matter how much Freepers here deny it.


92 posted on 03/20/2015 5:29:47 PM PDT by Old Yeller (Civil rights are for civilized people.)
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To: Old Yeller
I was raised in a Catholic family. Catholics worship Mary no matter how much Freepers here deny it

Same questions I ask all the others specifically: 1) Who taught you that Marry is divine/ God?

2) Who taught you to worship Mary as God?

3) What does the Catechism, the official teaching of the Catholic Church say about Mary?

4) Where does the Catechism say that Mary is Divine/ God, cite the paragraph?

5) Specifically what members of your family taught you to worship Mary?

6) What members of your family believe that Mary is divine?

7) What members of your family worship Mary as they do God?

93 posted on 03/20/2015 6:07:06 PM PDT by verga (I might as well be playing chess with pigeons,.)
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To: NYer

I believe in the Bible which is the Word of God:

Exodus 20:4-6 King James Version

4 “You shall not make for yourself a carved image—any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; 5 you shall not bow down to them nor serve them. For I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generations of those who hate Me, 6 but showing mercy to thousands, to those who love Me and keep My commandments.


94 posted on 03/20/2015 8:33:36 PM PDT by JohnT416
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To: Campion

The serpent on Moses’ staff so that those who had been bitten by serpents, yet looked upon the staff, would be cured.


95 posted on 03/20/2015 8:42:14 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Old Yeller

And I was raised in a Catholic family, and we did not. In my parish Mary is rarely mentioned, and then only as to request prayer to God.

God is the Father Almighty, Jesus the Son and the Holy Spirit.

Mary is not God, and the Church does not teach that she is.


96 posted on 03/20/2015 8:48:44 PM PDT by AbnSarge
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To: Boogieman
Let’s see, Jan Hus, John Knox, and Menno Simons were all Catholic priests. Luther was a priest and theology professor, Thomas Cranmer was a Catholic archbishop and had degrees in theology and a doctorate of divinity. Martin Bucer was a Catholic priest, and a Dominican friar, having studied theology under the Dominicans.

I did not ask about priests. I asked about your assertion that some of the first Protestants were actually Catholic Theologians. Jan Hus was not a Protestant and predated the early reformers by a century or more. For minor theologians, by virtue of their university degrees, I grant you the notorius antisemite Luther, as well as King Henry VIII's man, Cranmer.

97 posted on 03/20/2015 8:50:28 PM PDT by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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To: Old Yeller

Same here.

I was raised Catholic.
Catholics worship Mary. Pray to Mary. Ask Mary for everything under the sun.

If the Catholic Church doesn’t want Mary worshipping to go on, then the Pope better tell all the Catholics to stop the worshipping. Because it is happening, no matter how much it is denied.


98 posted on 03/20/2015 9:18:17 PM PDT by Aurorales (I will not be ridiculed into silence!)
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To: CynicalBear

You spend an awful lot of time on here in a very negative way.


99 posted on 03/20/2015 9:22:59 PM PDT by ImaGraftedBranch (If you haven't figured it out, there is a great falling away...happening before your eyes.)
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To: NYer

I find these articles interesting to read. I just never have wanted to post about the ex-Catholics that are very happy in my Baptist church. Know and love many of them. The absolute best workers in the church. I guess it is up to the believer where they go.


100 posted on 03/20/2015 9:29:37 PM PDT by ladyellen
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