A
amcintosh
Guest
Hello, I am new to this forum although I’ve browsed a little bit before.
My name is Aidan McIntosh and I am a sophomore at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., originally from Massachusetts. I am currently in RCIA (Rites of Christian Initiation for Adults) and have been since September; I will be baptized into the Catholic Church, then receive Confirmation and First Communion on April 11 of this year. It’s hard to believe that it’s really only 60 days away, and I hope it goes quickly!
Everyone else in my RCIA group (luckily my extremely Catholic school has a great program) either grew up Catholic but never received Confirmation, or they are converts from various denominations of Protestantism. As for me, my parents stopped practicing years before I was born, so I never received baptism, religious education, and was raised without religion being a part of my life for 17 years. I can go into great depth about my reasons for finding Christianity and specifically converting to Catholicism at a later time - I hope to eventually write a book about it - but alas, forums are not the places to form essays!
I am mainly posting here to hear advice on how to keep developing in my faith every single day up until I am received by the Church and how to continue being faithful to the Holy See after that wonderful day. In the past two weeks, I have decided to integrate one major act of faith development a day: Mass, Eucharistic Adoration, volunteer service, or if I can’t do one of those three, then to do at least an hour of intense and serious prayer (not narrow because I can conduct prayer in different, wide-reaching ways). I have also started to pray before bed each night, usually in a spot in my dorm or in the Chapel in my residence hall, and last week decided to stop making excuses to not do Morning Prayer, so that’s another thing I’m working on.
I feel like this is helping, but obviously for one who has suddenly transitioned into a radically different life (secular vs. traditionally Catholic), it is a lot to work on and there are definitely some times where I feel like I am praying but not feeling natural or called to prayer; ex: it doesn’t feel like part of my routine or schedule yet, and I understand the goal of prayer should be to feel natural, authentic, and not burdensome.
Please, keep me in your prayers that I may stay safe now until I am received and cleansed of original sin and give advice on ways of healthy and consistent development in my faith!
My name is Aidan McIntosh and I am a sophomore at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., originally from Massachusetts. I am currently in RCIA (Rites of Christian Initiation for Adults) and have been since September; I will be baptized into the Catholic Church, then receive Confirmation and First Communion on April 11 of this year. It’s hard to believe that it’s really only 60 days away, and I hope it goes quickly!
Everyone else in my RCIA group (luckily my extremely Catholic school has a great program) either grew up Catholic but never received Confirmation, or they are converts from various denominations of Protestantism. As for me, my parents stopped practicing years before I was born, so I never received baptism, religious education, and was raised without religion being a part of my life for 17 years. I can go into great depth about my reasons for finding Christianity and specifically converting to Catholicism at a later time - I hope to eventually write a book about it - but alas, forums are not the places to form essays!
I am mainly posting here to hear advice on how to keep developing in my faith every single day up until I am received by the Church and how to continue being faithful to the Holy See after that wonderful day. In the past two weeks, I have decided to integrate one major act of faith development a day: Mass, Eucharistic Adoration, volunteer service, or if I can’t do one of those three, then to do at least an hour of intense and serious prayer (not narrow because I can conduct prayer in different, wide-reaching ways). I have also started to pray before bed each night, usually in a spot in my dorm or in the Chapel in my residence hall, and last week decided to stop making excuses to not do Morning Prayer, so that’s another thing I’m working on.
I feel like this is helping, but obviously for one who has suddenly transitioned into a radically different life (secular vs. traditionally Catholic), it is a lot to work on and there are definitely some times where I feel like I am praying but not feeling natural or called to prayer; ex: it doesn’t feel like part of my routine or schedule yet, and I understand the goal of prayer should be to feel natural, authentic, and not burdensome.
Please, keep me in your prayers that I may stay safe now until I am received and cleansed of original sin and give advice on ways of healthy and consistent development in my faith!
Last edited: