I attended a pentecostal church of about 3,000 in the 80’s and 90’s that was about 80% former Catholics, including myself.
If you are truly interesting in learning some of the lessons that Cardinal was asking for, read on and I’ll try to share from my perspective.
So what drew us to a pentecostal church?
- Pentecostals are very well educated in the Word of God. Many like to mischaracterize them as being all emotional and simple-minded, but I found just the opposite to be true. They really wanted to know the meat of the Word of God. We got a 5 minute milk homily every Sunday morning from our priests in Catholic Church. If I heard one more sermon on the Good Samaritan, I was going to scream. When I arrived in the pentecostal church, we got 30-45 min in-depth sermons each week and everyone read their Bibles all the time. We brought them to church. We attended Bible studies outside of Church. We read lots of books explaining the Bible and listened to every program on TV or the radio that taught the Bible. The baptism in the Holy Spirit triggered an intense love for the Word and a desire to know it in-depth that was a need not being met in the Catholic Church. And here is a fact that’s tough for many to swallow, but the average pentecostal knows more about the Word, the Lord and their faith than the average Catholic by an order of magnitude. I’ve lived decades on both sides of this fence and find this to be universally true.
- Pentecostals love the Lord and each other. Most Catholics I knew were very uncomfortable talking about the Lord or sharing their faith because they really weren’t sure about it - and I came from Catholic parishes numbering the thousands. When it came to worship songs, few Catholics sing or express their love to the Lord and had very little love for each other. As soon as the Eucharists was done, everyone hit the parking lot and nearly run over each other trying to get out of there. Whereas pentecostals were overflowing in their love of God which poured out to each other as well. Pentecostals are at church and in a community all the time. We talk about the Lord to each other non-stop all the time. We spend 2-3 hours there on a Sunday morning compared to 30-45 minutes in the Catholic Church. We often return for several hours on Sunday night and again on Wed night. We usually have at least one a week social activity at the church as well. Most of these things involve more than half the church. People who get baptized in the Spirit need to be free to express their love for God and each other and it’s difficult to do in the Catholic Church where everyone would look at you like you were an alien. When I first stepped into a pentecostal church and joined in with several thousand people all pouring their heart out to God, I thought I’d died and gone to Heaven. I could not believe the night and day difference and being around people of like love and faith.
- When someone is baptized in the Spirit, they are given powerful gifts of the Spirit to operate in. How are they going to do that in the average Catholic Church? Is the parish open to a prophetic word or tongues and interpretation message from the Lord? Do they recognize the need for the gift of discerning of spirits and how that’s needed in a deliverance/exorcism ministry? Would they recognize and facilitate laying on of hands to heal? Not based on the parishes I knew in my 20 years. But they go to a pentecostal church and the gifts are taught, encouraged, recognized and empowered. Suddenly, if you have gifts of healing to share, the Spirit makes that known and you are praying for people to be healed as part of a team. The Catholic Church stifles the gifts of the Spirit. Pentecostal churches encourage them.
There is more, but that is a sampling of lessons that could be learned from those with hears to ear.