N
nat_c1990
Guest
I apologize that this is a bit long but please read. About a month or so ago, my husband and I stopped attending the church that we were going to (it was a non denominational church) and started going to a Catholic church. We live in an area where there are more Protestants than Catholics. In fact, I don’t think I had ever personally known anyone who was Catholic. Where I from, if you ask someone their opinion on Catholicism, the majority will tell you that its like a cult, that Catholics worship Mary and statues and nonsense like that. Unfortunately, we believed that and never really started doing our own research on it until recently.
My husband had some personal issues going on and decided to start seeing a psychologist a couple years ago. His psychologist is Catholic, so the subject of Catholicism would sometimes come up at their appointments. The more that his psychologist talked about it, the more interested in it that my husband became. He began asking questions about it, and his psychologist told him that if he was interested in learning about it, that it was something that he would need to research on his own. So, thats exactly what my husband did. He bought several books on Catholicism and for a while there, it seemed like all he ever talked about what Catholicism.
At first, I wasn’t really interested. I thought to myself “great, this guy has brainwashed my husband into becoming a Catholic.” But it wasn’t like that at all. I mean sure, his doctor had some influence over him because my husband views him as a very intelligent man and he highly values his opinion. But, when he would ask his doctor questions about Catholicism, his doctor didn’t try to convince him that Catholicism is right. He told him to learn about it on his own.
After hearing my husband talk about Catholicism nonstop for months and months on end, I decided to look into it myself. To my surprise, just about everything I’d been taught about it was a lie. When I started reading more about it, I started realizing that I actually agreed more with the Catholic teaching than what Protestants teach.
So my husband and I left our previous church and started attending the Catholic church. When my husband told the news to one of his friends from church that we were going to be leaving, his friend asked if there was a particular church that we were going to be attending. My husband told him that we were going to be going to a Catholic church and his friend responded how I expected that he would. He said something like “Well I don’t know much about Catholics but I haven’t heard good stuff about them”.
I still keep in contact with some of our old church friends through facebook. Since we haven’t been attending the Catholic church for very long, we don’t have any Catholic friends on facebook. Pretty much all of our friends are Protestant. However, despite the risk of receiving backlash from some of my Protestant friends, today I decided to share a couple of posts on facebook.
One of them said “We never give more honor to Jesus than when we honor his mother, and we honor her simply and solely to honor him all the more perfectly. We go to her only as a way leading to the soul we seek- Jesus, her son- St Louis Marie de Montfort”. The other post was a quote from Mother Teresa which said “If you ever feel distressed during the day, Call upon our Lady. Just say this simple prayer: ‘Mary mother of Jesus, Please be a mother to be now.’ This Prayer has never failed me.”
A lady from our old church replied to the post saying “She was an amazing young person willing to be used by God, but she was human. Not sinless. Only her son was. And we are to pray to the Father, through the son by the power of the Holy spirit. Mary is not in there any more than any other creation is”.
Firstly, I agree that she was human, I do not agree that she wasn’t sinless. The angel Gabriel says to Mary “Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee”. I agree with the Catholic teaching on this. How could someone who is full of grace be sinful? It’s also hard for me to believe that Jesus, the sinless, purest Son of God, could be conceived and carried in the womb of a woman who was a sinner. I didn’t want to get into an argument with my friend about this because I knew it was pointless. So I basically just told her that we would have to agree to disagree and that I used to have the same views as her until I started doing my own research. I also explained to her that I do not pray TO Mary, but I ask Mary to pray with me and for me. I guarantee my friend has asked a family member, friend or pastor to pray for her before and yet she sees no problem with that so I don’t see why its a problem to ask our Blessed Mother to pray for us.
I told my husband about all of this and his response was something like “Well, you really have to be careful with what you post on facebook because you know that we don’t have any Catholic friends on there. You don’t want to be too in their face about it or you might turn them away from the idea of Catholicism”. I told him that thats what facebook is for. People share quotes, pictures, and things that they like. I wasn’t doing anything different than what anyone else does. I guess I’m just passionate about it and I don’t want to hide it solely out of fear of being criticized by my Protestant friends. I’m hoping that we will eventually start making new friends at the Catholic church so that we will have a better support group. In the meantime, how should I respond when a Protestant friend opposes my views? Should I just take my husband’s advice and try not to talk too much about my beliefs around them?
My husband had some personal issues going on and decided to start seeing a psychologist a couple years ago. His psychologist is Catholic, so the subject of Catholicism would sometimes come up at their appointments. The more that his psychologist talked about it, the more interested in it that my husband became. He began asking questions about it, and his psychologist told him that if he was interested in learning about it, that it was something that he would need to research on his own. So, thats exactly what my husband did. He bought several books on Catholicism and for a while there, it seemed like all he ever talked about what Catholicism.
At first, I wasn’t really interested. I thought to myself “great, this guy has brainwashed my husband into becoming a Catholic.” But it wasn’t like that at all. I mean sure, his doctor had some influence over him because my husband views him as a very intelligent man and he highly values his opinion. But, when he would ask his doctor questions about Catholicism, his doctor didn’t try to convince him that Catholicism is right. He told him to learn about it on his own.
After hearing my husband talk about Catholicism nonstop for months and months on end, I decided to look into it myself. To my surprise, just about everything I’d been taught about it was a lie. When I started reading more about it, I started realizing that I actually agreed more with the Catholic teaching than what Protestants teach.
So my husband and I left our previous church and started attending the Catholic church. When my husband told the news to one of his friends from church that we were going to be leaving, his friend asked if there was a particular church that we were going to be attending. My husband told him that we were going to be going to a Catholic church and his friend responded how I expected that he would. He said something like “Well I don’t know much about Catholics but I haven’t heard good stuff about them”.
I still keep in contact with some of our old church friends through facebook. Since we haven’t been attending the Catholic church for very long, we don’t have any Catholic friends on facebook. Pretty much all of our friends are Protestant. However, despite the risk of receiving backlash from some of my Protestant friends, today I decided to share a couple of posts on facebook.
One of them said “We never give more honor to Jesus than when we honor his mother, and we honor her simply and solely to honor him all the more perfectly. We go to her only as a way leading to the soul we seek- Jesus, her son- St Louis Marie de Montfort”. The other post was a quote from Mother Teresa which said “If you ever feel distressed during the day, Call upon our Lady. Just say this simple prayer: ‘Mary mother of Jesus, Please be a mother to be now.’ This Prayer has never failed me.”
A lady from our old church replied to the post saying “She was an amazing young person willing to be used by God, but she was human. Not sinless. Only her son was. And we are to pray to the Father, through the son by the power of the Holy spirit. Mary is not in there any more than any other creation is”.
Firstly, I agree that she was human, I do not agree that she wasn’t sinless. The angel Gabriel says to Mary “Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee”. I agree with the Catholic teaching on this. How could someone who is full of grace be sinful? It’s also hard for me to believe that Jesus, the sinless, purest Son of God, could be conceived and carried in the womb of a woman who was a sinner. I didn’t want to get into an argument with my friend about this because I knew it was pointless. So I basically just told her that we would have to agree to disagree and that I used to have the same views as her until I started doing my own research. I also explained to her that I do not pray TO Mary, but I ask Mary to pray with me and for me. I guarantee my friend has asked a family member, friend or pastor to pray for her before and yet she sees no problem with that so I don’t see why its a problem to ask our Blessed Mother to pray for us.
I told my husband about all of this and his response was something like “Well, you really have to be careful with what you post on facebook because you know that we don’t have any Catholic friends on there. You don’t want to be too in their face about it or you might turn them away from the idea of Catholicism”. I told him that thats what facebook is for. People share quotes, pictures, and things that they like. I wasn’t doing anything different than what anyone else does. I guess I’m just passionate about it and I don’t want to hide it solely out of fear of being criticized by my Protestant friends. I’m hoping that we will eventually start making new friends at the Catholic church so that we will have a better support group. In the meantime, how should I respond when a Protestant friend opposes my views? Should I just take my husband’s advice and try not to talk too much about my beliefs around them?