P
PaulDupre1
Guest
It doesn’t keep me from praying to God Our Father “through Christ Our Lord”, as we do at mass. The mass is my template for prayer.Same for me, until I prayed in our Blessed Sacrament chapel.
The Father reveals the Son, just as the Son reveals the Father.
Don’t let old Mormon stuff keep you from Our Father.
I just need to be careful of things that remind me of Mormonism. I am sometimes dismayed that it still hurts after 28 years; but then again, I still have LDS family members who treat me as an outcast because I am an apostate - a “son of perdition”. So the wounds never quite get the time to heal between emotional beatings from my LDS sibs and occasionally from their TBM children.
Interesting that the less active those nieces and nephews are in “the church”, the more kind they are to me.
At my Catholic father’s funeral several years ago, my LDS brother never missed an opportunity to make fun of the funeral mass, the priest, the “vain and repetitious” prayers at the graveside and Catholicism in general, spouting the kind of distortions and untruths that you usually hear from Mormons, SDAs and JWs.
My LDS sister’s only comment was “at least they didn’t make us say the rosary!”.
It was a long weekend.
With all the LDS misconceptions my sibs have about Catholicism, it is hard to believe that they grew up with very kind and devout Catholic parents and attended Catholic schools from Grade 1 through High School.
What is it that Mormonism does to people to make them so ignorant and hateful? My brother was always a bit of a jerk, but my sister was among the kindest and most considerate people I had ever known - until she became a Mormon; then it was like she was possessed by some dark thing that turned her into what she is today.
I wasn’t too surprised that all of my “friends” turned on me when I left the LDS church - I had been LDS long enough to be prepared for that. But what really crushed me is the treatment I get from my own family members - those who have known me from childhood. I thought they loved me, but I discovered that LDS love is highly conditional, and I don’t meet their conditions.
BTW, I live a very moral and upright life. They have no reason to treat me this way.
So if I occasionally seem bitter (and I’m sure I do), please know that I come by it honestly.
Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)