In reply to Duane
Some questions for those who think that RCIA is too long.
- In the early Church we see that some were accepted and baptized into Christianity in one day, do we know how many turned around and abandoned the faith the next?
How many cradle Catholics have abandoned the faith? Many. We’re sinful and have short attention spans. A long RCIA process isn’t a guarantee of anything, even a guarantee that the catechumens and candidates will learn anything much about the faith.
Also, are the sacraments God’s gift of grace to us, a special help that give us better understanding, stronger faith, resistance to temptation, etc? If so, don’t new believers need those sacraments as much or more than someone who is a practiced Catholic? Could the lack of that grace, lack of the sacraments, be the reason some weren’t strong enough to complete the RCIA process.
- Do you think it is an advantage for Protestant churches to accept someone as a member the first service they go to, even if that person is going to switch to another denomination within a month?
I’ve never attended a Protestant church that allowed membership without the prospective member taking a class (some a one-day class, others months-long classes) and giving their testimony to the pastor/elders/deacons. I’m sure there must be churches that allow someone to join with no preparation, but I don’t know of any personally. I think it is critical to understand what your church believes and to share those beliefs before joining.
3.In light of the above paragraph, is that healthy for the members of that congregation, to get a buffet of Scripture, where you only pick and choose what you like?
I haven’t attended that type of church with poorly educated clergy. There are certainly plenty of resources for pastors to research, but I’ve also never attended a church where the pastor didn’t have a doctorate. More often than not, at my churches that didn’t use a common lectionary system of readings (or whatever you’d call that), the pastors did a series, going through one book of the Bible at a time or through certain doctrines over the course of several weeks or months. Nobody ever seemed to skip the difficult or boring passages.
- In light of the above paragraph, for acceptance into the Faith, who has a better model?
My own personal experience has been that the Protestants have a better model in practice, but the Catholics probably have a better model in theory. By that I mean the Protestant Inquirers classes (multiple different denominations) I have attended had a group of pastors, elders and deacons explain in a very clear and concise manner exactly what the church believes and what expectations they had for me as a member. They then interviewed me, after I had learned about them and chosen to seek membership, to find out my background and beliefs and decided whether to accept me or not. The RCIA program in practice does not do that. Volunteers willy nilly choose to tell you any sort of random things that may or may not be church teaching, they treat everyone from devout mature baptized Christians to Muslims in fear of their lives for converting to completely ignorant pagans exactly the same. The process must take at least a year (or 9 months if that’s more convenient for them) regardless of your level of knowledge or your spirituality. Everyone must join the church on the same day of the year, Christian or not. That may not be the theory of RCIA, but it is the reality.
5.Finally, church hopping
Does anyone really think that this is
acceptable to Jesus?
I’m 47 years old and I’ve moved to new towns or states 24 times in my life. I’ve church hopped a lot. I also spend 12 to 21 days traveling each month. For a year, I lived in Texas and attended church in Hawaii because I was always in Honolulu on Sundays. My practice when I move is not to look for the nearest (insert denomination name here) church. It is to look for a relatively conservative church with well-educated clergy. In the past, that’s been Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, non-denominational, Lutheran, Calvary Chapel, and a few others I’m sure I’m forgetting. Mostly I want to know, are they pro-life? Do they feed and care for the less fortunate? Are there good, meaty Bible studies and small groups? Are the senior pastors male? Do they prohibit gay clergy and gay marriage? Do they prohibit divorced/living together people from positions of church leadership? And yes, I prefer a pastor who is an interesting and informative speaker over one who puts me to sleep or spouts platitudes. Do they offer services at some time I can possibly attend?
I’ve found this in my local church in all of these denominations. Is it acceptable to Jesus? You’d have to ask Him. I move a lot. I go to a new church each time I move.
I’m looking at over a year in RCIA ahead of me. I’ve already lived here 2 years. I can’t fathom I’ll still be living in the same town when the church will allow me to join. I know for a fact a future Catholic church won’t let me join without going through their whole RCIA process. I’m also quite certain I will miss more than half of the RCIA processes (I’ve called them programs, classes and meetings in the past and each time been emphatically corrected that this is a process not a program or class, so I’ll call the weekly class a process) since I’ll be out of town, meaning I’ll have to spend at least another year trying to make up the missed processes.