L
Lenten_ashes
Guest
Welcome home. The bolded part sounds a lot like my story.I was raised pentecostal and my family are still pentecostal. Both my brothers, their wives and parents as well as extended family. Quite a few pastors in the family including a brother, two cousins and my late grand father.
My experience is that most do not consider us Christian. I was raised that Catholics were not Christian. The belief is that we pray (read: worship) saints. We worship Mary. The Eucharist is sacrilege. We follow the Pope and not Jesus. Those are the big things that ensure we are not Christian.
I converted in 2009. At the time I got a very mixed response. No one was happy. Some refused to come to the Easter Vigil. Others came despite their opposition. The general belief at that point is that if I am Christian it is despite the fact that I am Catholic not because my Catholic faith is actually Christian. I think the hope was that they would ‘pray me out’. As the years have passed, that view has changed. Those who attended will now openly say that Catholics are Christian. My brother that was most strongly opposed (not the pastor interestingly) recently told me that whilst he “disagrees with a lot of the Catholic
doctrines, the Catholic Church does not deny the fundamentals and are Christian”. That is a huge change from 5 years ago when Catholics were not Christian and I was actively excluded from the religious discussions that the family had.
What I found interesting then, and still now, is that none of them have ever asked me why I converted. If they were converting to something they were taught, and believed, for a long time wasn’t Christian, I would wonder why. Yet no body ever asked.
Absolutely. I was scripturally grounded and I see the Word all over the Mass and don’t get these folks who cant see it - they must not be looking, imoInteresting story, thanks for sharing. It is interesting how we sometimes judge harshly the things we don’t understand. And we don’t ask questions about things we don’t understand. It’s easier to assume something and not have to actually LOVE each other! Love is not easy.
When I converted (from E-Free/Non-denom) my mother said, “…but we raised you Christian!” But that was the worst of everything. I think it was more intimidation than not believing Catholics were Christian. It’s also just plain not knowing about the faith.
I think if every Christian would simply go to Mass for several months, a whole lot of people would realize how Christ centered and Scripture filled the faith really is!
P.S. So why did you convert?![]()