I begged my GF at the time to please read these scriptures and she did. After she had read them she began crying. Her statement affected me profoundly. She said that if all that she had just read was true, then everything she had read and been told all her life about God and her faith was a LIE.
Her reaction made me acutely aware of the difficulty it is for people to change their faith.
Things like that make me realize that I am all the more blessed to have received the graces (possibly bordering on charism) from our Lord to “follow the argument wherever it leads”, and to hold no belief that I know or can demonstrate to be false or inadequate at the time, with my limited knowledge (as I may abandon a belief and return to it, if increased knowledge makes it reasonable again, as I did with Theism several times: the difference between a philosophical atheist and a Theist, if anything, is either that the atheist is stubbornly blinded, or that the atheist believes himself to be at the pinnacle of intelligence/rhetoric/logic/argumentation, but in reality just can not see the occulted peak the Theist is standing on), when I first decided as a pre-teenager to leave secularism for Islam (although that probably was more one of societal pressure), back to secularism, all the way up through deism and every heresy preached and some I myself was the heresiarch of (although I’m not sure whether one can be a heretic at the time, if one has never been catechized and is not a Christian, as I was honestly searching for the “pure”, “earliest Christianity” from before the “proto-orthodox” “won” at the Council of Nicaea because of Constantine), through to Monophysite Orthodoxy, to Orthodox Orthodoxy, to Melkite Catholicism, and (hopefully) now on to Roman Catholicism.
…And if my religion ever be disproved, I shall leave it as surely again: but I have this time put my religion through “the wringer”, to disprove it, and is has shaken at times, but it has not budged, and, in the past, the more I learned, the more I leaned towards Christianity, and the more I learned of Christianity, I learned that only Orthodoxy or Catholicism could be valid.
A book I received for free for donating to the forum is
The Essential Catholic Survival Guide, which answers a lot of questions that non-JWs ask (also,
Answering Jehovah’s Witnesses) using Scripture (as they usually demand it) and basic high-school logic.
Also,
The Fathers Know Best (300 pages of excerpts from the 23,000 page 38 volume set
Early Christian Fathers, ANFI, NPNFI & NPNF2 with some additional quotations of Origen and with Catholic notes replacing the Protestant notes, demonstrating the “uniquely Catholic” understandings and doctrines out of the writings of the earliest Christians).
And many other resources that are either written for another time, with another audience in mind, or harder to use (like St Thomas Aquinas’ work), and the
Early Christian Fathers, ANFI, NPNFI & NPNF2 set itself (if you have the money and know enough about the faith to sift the ~25k pages of writing and refine it of the many Protestant footnotes that are an attempt to guide the reader away from Catholic/Orthodox interpretation: I think it’s available free on-line).