I
Isca
Guest
I hope you won’t mind me sharing my thoughts on this blessed day.
I was received into the Church two years ago, at the age of 55. The church where I attended RCIA is the busiest parish in our town, with a wonderful, energetic, charismatic priest. For the first year, I continued to attend this church, got to know many people there and became involved in some of the charitable work they lead.
Then we moved to another part of the same town. There is another Catholic parish just a few minutes’ walk from our new house, so I decided to attend Mass there for a while, “just to see”. Interestingly, it’s a church I sometimes used to drop into when I was in my 20s and was first fascinated by Catholicism - although it took me another 30 years to make the move from the CofE.
The new parish isn’t anything like the first one. The priest is kind and friendly, but very different from the priest at my first parish. The services are not so well-attended, and folk aren’t so “well-heeled”. I mentioned to my first priest that I’d started to attend there, but I would probably return to my original church after a while.
Only I haven’t done that. Week after week, I have begun to love this church, with its less-polished ways and different feel. I resolved to attend the Triduum, and it’s been a wonderful experience for me - even if the church isn’t bursting at the seams.
Now the new church is “my” church, and although I’ve continued with my voluntary work at the old parish (and still go to confession there, because the priest really knows me well), I feel I belong at the other church.
We’ll soon be returning to Italy for a couple of months, where I attend yet another church with a completely different feel (and a different language)! But I don’t mind, because I’ve never felt so strongly that I’m a member of something which can bridge all times and all places.
Happy Easter to all here and thanks for your friendship.
I was received into the Church two years ago, at the age of 55. The church where I attended RCIA is the busiest parish in our town, with a wonderful, energetic, charismatic priest. For the first year, I continued to attend this church, got to know many people there and became involved in some of the charitable work they lead.
Then we moved to another part of the same town. There is another Catholic parish just a few minutes’ walk from our new house, so I decided to attend Mass there for a while, “just to see”. Interestingly, it’s a church I sometimes used to drop into when I was in my 20s and was first fascinated by Catholicism - although it took me another 30 years to make the move from the CofE.
The new parish isn’t anything like the first one. The priest is kind and friendly, but very different from the priest at my first parish. The services are not so well-attended, and folk aren’t so “well-heeled”. I mentioned to my first priest that I’d started to attend there, but I would probably return to my original church after a while.
Only I haven’t done that. Week after week, I have begun to love this church, with its less-polished ways and different feel. I resolved to attend the Triduum, and it’s been a wonderful experience for me - even if the church isn’t bursting at the seams.
Now the new church is “my” church, and although I’ve continued with my voluntary work at the old parish (and still go to confession there, because the priest really knows me well), I feel I belong at the other church.
We’ll soon be returning to Italy for a couple of months, where I attend yet another church with a completely different feel (and a different language)! But I don’t mind, because I’ve never felt so strongly that I’m a member of something which can bridge all times and all places.
Happy Easter to all here and thanks for your friendship.