Hi Servant. Thanks for being objective in your post. I would always be encouraged to hear of life changing story of people’s conversion. Of course my experience is more on the Catholic Church where I have seen how the hands of God touched them and led them into repentance in their lives. I also have known some Protestants who have similar experience though I knew very little about Baha’is.
On your question of how to become Catholic. Usually a person who wants to do so may has some encounters in whatever form that prompts him to look into Catholicism. Sometimes in this search he may be convinced that the Catholic Church is the true Church. This is what I often heard of Catholic converts, especially from ex-Protestants.
One can makes his feeling known to any Church leaders in a Catholic Church, not necessarily a priest unless one wants something clarified that ordinary Church members unable to. For an adult, the usual process is to enroll with the RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation of Adult). This basically is to bring one through the Catholic faith by which at the end of it, it usually takes one year, one can make a decision whether to become Catholic or not.
RCIA is probably the most important one. Unless one is quite familiar with the Church teaching I would not advise praying meetings or other activities*, though these are helpful.
The Eucharist, and that I mean the Holy Communion, can only be partaken by a baptized Catholic. Thus before Baptism, one can attend the mass but not partake of the Communion. Usually the Catechumens (those intending to be Baptized) are given separate session during some part of the mass.
Once one is Baptized, then he will observe what any Catholic would do from day one. One does not have to wait six month, lol. As Catholic, one is expect to attend mass on day of obligation, that is Sundays and other days as specified by the Church, and to receive the Sacraments regularly, particularly the Sacraments of Confession and the Eucharist.
Hope that helps for starters. God bless.
Reuben
- It is good to join these activities but it is more ideal if someone perhaps from the RCIA to advise you or better still go with you at least initially. He/she may explain to you something which perhaps not yet covered in the RCIA.