Discerning catholicism

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Cambrius

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I have been raised as an evangelical lutheran christian. I have lived my life pretty secularly (please note that I am 16 at the time of writing this), but I have always accepted Jesus as my Lord and Savior (mostly subconciously and sometimes conciously). I never strived to be more holy in my life as I have been taught that salvation can be achieved trough faith only. Sometimes I flirted with catholic tought, but I was always repulsed by the tought of purgatory and the greater meaning of sin.
This continued until the first week of quarantine in my country. I was doing my religion exam and I stumbled across a fact that stated that the catholic church is the biggest charitable organisation in the world. For some reason I decided to research the church’s teachings more in depth instead of just scrolling trough the wikipedia article, so I went to read the cathechism on the internet. I obviously didn’t read the entire thing. The part I read was the part on the ten commandments and how they correlate with catholic living in the modern world. Based on that read something woke in me. Something that I didn’t know was in me. Something just fell in place and my view of my faith was completely changed somehow. It was if something had shattered in my mind. I began researching catholic doctorine more deeply than ever before and no longer was I deterred by concepts of purgatory or mortal sin. I felt uneasy when I contemplated my findings afterwards. I no longer enjoyed things like video games (which I used to like alot). Something just felt off when I played. I felt as if I was letting my Lord and Saviour down. I felt physically weak. I began praying daily. Some days I even prayed 5+ times.
After some days this calmed down and I could enjoy my passtimes again (not as fully as before all of this), but something was still off. It’s very hard to explain, but ever since that something fell onto place that day, there has been a weight on my mind. I do not know what it is. It doesn’t bother me too much, but I can’t just ignore it. After a lot of research on the catholic faith, I basically decided to live a catholic lifestyle and renounce all sin in my life and I plan on going to RCIA next autumn, but there is something in me that is fighting back. Something that stops me from commiting fully. It manifests as a feeling in my heart like a storm in my chest. Sometimes it is completely unbearable and I feel like dropping my faith completely and sometimes it is gone and when it is gone, I feel an inner peace. It’s the strongest when I am imagining my possible future as a catholic. I have started to read the Bible on a daily basis and my prayer routine has stayed strong.
I do not know where to go from here. All I ask is guidance. I want to follow the Lord, but something just feels off. I am a lost lamb without his sheperd. I would go to a catholic priest, but the closest is in the capital which may not be far, but with the quarantine and corona, this may not be the wisest move. My grandfather is a (evangelical lutheran) priest and I have thought of contacting him on the phone, but I am unsure how I would unpack all of this during a call.
 
Hello! It sounds like you have been reading and thinking a great deal. I feel like maybe you are trying to commit yourself too fast. You don’t have to commit to attending RCIA quite yet. Why not call your grandfather, or some other Lutheran person that you trust, and ask them some of your questions? Will your parents object to your becoming Catholic?
I myself was baptized Lutheran and joined the Church eleven years ago. I am so thankful and have never looked back!
I also felt hesitant at one point, and I ended up choosing St. Brigid of Sweden to be my patron saint.
 
Will your parents object to your becoming Catholic?
That may be the operative question, given your age. All things in good time.

Something you might want to read (since any RCIA most likely would not beginning before the fall) is The Fathers of the Church, or the book Ministers and Martyrs, both by Mike Aquilina.
 
Or a number of other books by Mike Aquilina, like Good Pope, Bad Pope or The Church and the Roman Empire. He’s a wonderful writer. I also like How Christianity Saved Civilization–And Must Do So Again.
 
Another book to add to the list, A Father Who Keeps His Promises by Scott Hahn.
 
Hello and thank you all for the replies. My father will not object to me becoming a catholic and as far as I am aware he is my only legal guardian. I will have a look at the books you guys recommended when this corona situation is over. I have to admit that I propably am going too fast with this. I will continue discerning untill I can say for sure what I believe in. I thank you all for your advice, God bless.
 
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Question: Do you live in the US or somewhere else?

Your post really touched me. I’m almost 14 and am starting to explore Catholicism as well. I was baptized in the Catholic Church, but my parents have since left and have raised me as a Methodist. Do you know what’s holding you back from your faith?
 
Question: Do you live in the US or somewhere else?
Answer: I hail from the northern realm of Finland.
Your post really touched me. I’m almost 14 and am starting to explore Catholicism as well. I was baptized in the Catholic Church, but my parents have since left and have raised me as a Methodist. Do you know what’s holding you back from your faith?
I’m glad to hear that I’m not the only one, but I do not know for certain what is holding me back. The possibilites are endless at this point. I mostly think that it has something to do with psychology. For example it could be just plain stress and tiredness that for some reason holds me back from fully embracing my faith or it could be just doubt in general.
 
Please don’t let doubts hold you back. The enemy certainly doesn’t want you to pursue your faith.
I wish i had sought the truth as you are doing at a young age. I was saved at 27, but I could have avoided a lot of sin if I had become serious sooner.
 
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