Do cradle Catholics know what they have?

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twosweetgirls

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I just came from Mass, and all I can say is, how can one NOT just absolutely love it?? I wish I could adequately explain how I feel; loving Jesus in the Catholic Church is just SO much more full than it ever was while I was a protestant. I tell everyone I talk to in church that I hope they, as cradle Catholics, know the fullness of their faith and understand what a treasure they have. 👍

Otay, carry on. . . :o

Tiber Swim Team, class of '06
 
First of all I want to say welcome HOME!!!🙂
I also want to say that we dont always appreciate what we have all the time. This can be the case with many things, but for me this was the case before I reverted back. When you realize it though it is incredible. So I know how you feel the complete joy and love you have for the mass.😃
It took many protestant converts to make me realize what beauty our Church is. Along with Catholic apologist. And alot of studying, prayer and discernment.
I think that many cradle Catholics are not catechized properly so there fore it is easy to leave and not fall madly in love with mass.😊
 
I, a fellow convert, feel very much the same way. If you want to be around people who appreciate this as much as you do, why not join a committee or help out with religious ed.?
 
Yeah we get it. We’re not all mindless idiots. Maybe that is why we stay around. As a cradle Catholic it gets old having new converts wonder if we understand the beauty of it all. Either we are accused of being cliquish or idiots who do not understand the beauty of what we have. I am glad you finally figured it out. Welcome.
 
Like in any community, there are those who just come because that’s what they’ve done all their lives, and those who come whole-heartedly, and everything in between. I am sorry if my post offended, as I only meant to corroborate the OP on the feelings of how amazing this privilege that we all have is.
 
I just came from Mass, and all I can say is, how can one NOT just absolutely love it?? I wish I could adequately explain how I feel; loving Jesus in the Catholic Church is just SO much more full than it ever was while I was a protestant. I tell everyone I talk to in church that I hope they, as cradle Catholics, know the fullness of their faith and understand what a treasure they have. 👍

Otay, carry on. . . :o

Tiber Swim Team, class of '06
I, a fellow convert, feel very much the same way. If you want to be around people who appreciate this as much as you do, why not join a committee or help out with religious ed.?
Welcome twosweetgirls and smithmikeg to CAF!!!

Thank you, twosweetgirls and smithmikeg, for sharing with us.
Yes, I used to take it for granted as a cradle Catholic, for the second half of my life, I had not attended daily mass although I never missed Sunday.

Now, I just can’t get enough of the Mass. I thank God for opening up my eyes and heart to love what He’s offering us - His Body and Blood. I am blessed to be able to go to daily mass.

God bless you both.
 
There are alot of Cradle Catholics who take the faith for granted… Many like myself who even with years of Catholic schooling under their belt still left the church…but thank God I came back!

I struggle alot with my faith… but recently I have come to realize upon reflecting why I get attacks of spiritual doubt and confusion which at times can very severe…is that the Devil knows once a cradle Catholic comes back to Holy Mother Church its hard for them to leave again and he doesn’t like it it one bit. 😛 So he will fight like heck in attacking such souls.

Bravo twosweetgirls on your seeing where you treasure is… 👍

God bless
 
I am a 31 year old cradle Catholic. I went to religious education, went to a Catholic school for a while, got first communion, confirmation, etcetera. I can honestly tell you that it did nothing to teach me about the faith. I knew how to do everything, like confession, communion, say the prayers, but didnt know what it all meant. Kinda like most people know how to use electricity, but most don’t know how it works and why etc…

It wasnt until i had a reconversion and started studying on my own that I truly started understanding what it means to be a Catholic. And I still learn something every day.

I think this is the same for most cradle Catholics of my generation. They know how to do on the surface but underneath they don’t understand at all.
 
Yeah we get it. We’re not all mindless idiots. Maybe that is why we stay around. As a cradle Catholic it gets old having new converts wonder if we understand the beauty of it all. Either we are accused of being cliquish or idiots who do not understand the beauty of what we have. I am glad you finally figured it out. Welcome.
mom2boyz, I said this to another poster before, and I’ll politely ask you: could you cock your flaming pistol AWAY from me, please? My OP was meant truly to share my blossoming love for the Catholic Church and for Jesus–not in any way, shape, or form to imply that you, or any other cradle Catholic, were a “mindless idiot” or any of the other derogatories in your reply. To the contrary–it’s to cradle catholics on this forum and IRL to whom I turn for education, advice and fellowship.

I truly meant nothing bad at all. . . :confused:
 
Sorry about that undeserved attack you had to sustain, some posters come off really harsh, I’m sure they might explain better next time round, I hope so.

Anyway I was Cathecised in the 60’s, I absolutely love to hear and read the Gospel stories, I couldn’t wait until my first Communion.
Every Communion for me now is like my first, it never fades, my mum was a Protestant, she converted to the Catholic faith before I was born.

My father didn’t go-to Mass at-all, I think he didn’t like the way some business people in the Church were treated like royalty and others weren’t, plus the death of my sister didn’t help.

But I always was attracted to Jesus in my childhood, mainly because I and my family were suffering at the hands of a drunken father. ( I always liked this Man called Jesus because He suffered so much, and I in a small way could identify with Him)

It would have been easy to accept the drinking, I would have loved if he had drank and came home quiet, but he usually smashed everything up.

Sometimes we had to sleep out at night until it was safe to go home, I often went to school and whole weekends without any food, because all the money was drank.
He did this for over 30 years or more, so It’s all I saw as a toddler, and a lot worse.
My mum went to Mass, but not always,( she was too emotionally drained ) my father never brought us, because he didn’t go himself.

I went very infrequently to Mass, at 17, I was confused and disillusioned with life.
One night at aged 17 I walked the 2 miles into town and bought myself a Bible, over time I read it in it’s entirety.

I used to listen to Bible preachers from the USA on SW radio, I through my reading of the Bible knew what they were saying, although I didn’t understand Scripture or what they were preaching.

I don’t fully understand scripture now either, who does ? but although this is long winded, I have to say I’ve failed many times in my life.
I’ve been lukewarm In my faith and red hot, I know what a treasure the Eucharist is, but it’s taken me years to realise this.

I may not be the best Catholic in the world, but I’ll never leave it, warts and all.

As my dear departed ex-Protestant mother used to tell me, " son, I’ve been both faiths, and the Catholic Church is the true one" I never forgot that, and I’ll be Catholic till the day I breathe my last.
 
Welcome to CA!!!

Yes, you are right… alot of us never understood how good we had it until many years later. I too was poorly catechized in the late 60’s early 70’s. It wasn’t until my ex-husband started trying to get me to stop going to mass that I really came to appreciate it.

After he failed, he left and I experienced a reconversion to my faith. My children have gone to Catholic Schools and I see a huge difference in how they were taught as opposed to how I was. It is awesome to see my teenagers love going to mass and get so much out of it. If I am sick and can’t go to mass they walk to mass by themselves, even in the winter. Now they can drive so it isn’t a big deal, but they refuse to miss mass even when they were pre-teen-ish.

A few years ago I remarried and dh is a convert too. Helping him through RCIA and answer all his questions has definitely kept me on my toes learning more and more about my faith. It is a much different relationship to be married to a devout man. I thank God every day for showing me a true sacramental marriage and a true Catholic husband. There is a world of difference in my life now as opposed to say, 15 yrs ago when I wasn’t as happy in my faith.
 
Another convert joining in to agree, most people do not know what they have until they lose it. My hubby was a revert at about the same time I converted, and he says the same thing. Thank God for the ones who do!
 
Mmm, I am thankful for my good fortune and for my good Catholic parents raising me Catholic so that I could start out in the one true faith and not have to spend years of my life looking for it (and possibly never finding it at all). It’s a shame not all have the good fortune I have had in this regard. I hope to pass on the same thing to my children if I ever have any.
 
Agree with stove above.

Us cradle types usually don’t see the light bulb go off until some major event occurs. The loss of a loved one, marriage, baptism of children, etc. It’s like a homecoming as we turn to our faith for comfort and wisdom through the tough times. Hopefully by then we learn to cherish it through good times also and come to know our gift of faith more fully. I thank my grandmother, mother, aunt, wife, and mother-in-law for keeping me active in my faith. Really - can 5 great women be wrong??? of course not.

Peace
 
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