C
CleverUserName
Guest
What a great story. I felt like you did, that this was what I’d been looking for all along. That moment when you were meditating…goosebumps!My story is rather long, but I’ll try to condense it as best as I can.
I was raised primarily Baptist, although I have vague memories of seeing my parents being baptized at an AoG church. We went to a few other churches, but I was too young to really remember.
My mom was VERY anti-Catholic. I was told that Catholics were not even Christians, and I was to have nothing to do with them so as not to be corrupted.
Well, as I got older, I started to question a lot of things. I dabbled a little in Wicca and stuff like that, that my friends were into. I never really got how church was related to what I read in the Bible, because to me, the sermons always seemed to contradict things I read. I decided to try and find answers, so I attended an nondenominational Bible school for one year. I wound up with more doubts than when I started.
I eventually moved to a larger city to attend University, and I tried a plethora of churches and denominations. I even wound up in a cult for a while (long story there). Eventually, I got sick of it all. No one could answer my doubts and questions, and most never even tried. So I gave up.
This is the where the weird part happens- I decided I wasn’t going to be a Christian anymore, and declared myself a neo-pagan. I practiced that for a while, until one day, out of nowhere, when I was meditating, I heard this voice. It told me to stop, before it was too late, and if I didn’t, there was no going back - and I was abruptly thrown out of a trance into full consciousness. It really freaked me out. I thought about God, and the church, and I felt full of despair. How could I go back to something that was meaningless to me. I tried a few churches, but it was all the same as before. I was ready to give up again, then a thought popped into my head “you might as well try the Catholic Church. It’s not like it can get any worse than that.”
So I went to the library and signed out Catholicism for Dummies and read it cover to cover. And I found the answers I was looking for. It hit me that the Catholic Church was what I had been searching for my whole life, I just didn’t know it until that moment.
Long story short, I was received into the Church Easter 2011, and it was the best decision I ever made.