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giddyromilly
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That’d be great! Thank you.If you want I can private message you catholic sites for asking for prayer if that would help.
That’d be great! Thank you.If you want I can private message you catholic sites for asking for prayer if that would help.
I meant to say James and Paul, not Peter and Paul. In other words, the faith and works debate is not a matter of trusting the Bible; the Bible explicitly states that both justify.HopkinsReb:![]()
Thank you! I meant to pose them as separate, not necessarily that Paul and Peter disagreed on faith vs works. I was mostly referring to the incident at Antioch where Peter and Paul got into a fist fight? I’ve heard stories about it but was never sure if it was true.The Catholic Church holds that, in the “works vs faith debacle,” Peter and Paul are on the same side. As C.S. Lewis put it, asking whether faith or works are more important is like asking which blade of a pair of scissors is more important.
Paul says, I think in Galatians, that he rebuked Peter’s actions in regards to dining only with Jews, or something along those lines. In not trying to scandalize the Jews, Peter was perhaps scandalizing gentile converts.HopkinsReb:![]()
Thank you! I meant to pose them as separate, not necessarily that Paul and Peter disagreed on faith vs works. I was mostly referring to the incident at Antioch where Peter and Paul got into a fist fight? I’ve heard stories about it but was never sure if it was true.The Catholic Church holds that, in the “works vs faith debacle,” Peter and Paul are on the same side. As C.S. Lewis put it, asking whether faith or works are more important is like asking which blade of a pair of scissors is more important.
Truth is NOT about a feeling, massive or otherwise.I don’t have that massive spiritual feeling of “this is it”
This is important! I was very very reluctant to engage with a parish for years because of my Mormon baggage. I assumed that if I let those Catholics get too close to me they’ll start showing up to my house unannounced like the Mormons, “love bombing” me like the Mormons, and immediately pressuring me to convert… like the Mormons. I spent a couple years studying Catholicism by myself just through books and the internet, and then once I was sure I wanted to convert I found a parish. I was shocked to learn that I couldn’t just waltz in there and then immediately get baptized like you do in the LDS Church where the missionaries ask you to be baptized after their second discussion with you. I have to wait another whole year!?There is all kinds of resource with z.e.r.o. pressure. Talk with the RCIA director if you are so inclined to in the fall.
Also important!Truth is NOT about a feeling, massive or otherwise.
Try to tell get away from the idea of “feeling” and look more to “discerning truth”
There are several Formons here (Formon = Former Mormon). As a Formon myself, I can relate.I feel very unsure, but miss my connection to God that I lost when I left Mormonism.
I had EXACTLY the same experience. I figured I would just show up to church, tell the priest that I wanted to be a Catholic, and boom, it’s done. What the heck was RCIA and why did nobody tell me about it?I was shocked to learn that I couldn’t just waltz in there and then immediately get baptized like you do in the LDS Church where the missionaries ask you to be baptized after their second discussion with you.
Absolutely disagree. You should NOT avoid the hard parts. Just make sure that you are fully studying them, not just looking at the surface. I recommend reading “Hard Sayings” by Trent Horn, and there are many other similar books available.But again, stay away from any in-depth study of the OT, focus on the good stuff they teach you in RCIA, read/learn/love/live the Catechism, and Catholicism might just be the home you’re looking for.
DITTO. In fact, after all the time I had put into studying Catholicism prior to me contacting the parish, I was stunned, even a bit put off that I was going to have to go thru RCIA prior to my coming into full Communion with the Church. I was baptized Catholic, but not raised.I was shocked to learn that I couldn’t just waltz in there and then immediately get baptized
Worst advice you could give. In RCIA they want you to ask the tough questions. They encourage it. They want you to know what you’re getting into. No bait and switch like there is with Mormonism.But again, stay away from any in-depth study of the OT, focus on the good stuff they teach you in RCIA, read/learn/love/live the Catechism, and Catholicism might just be the home you’re looking for.