Another thing that is important if you are going Catholic make sure you know what you are getting yourself into. I don’t mean that in a bad way just that the Catholic church isn’t as fluid as the protestant churches you are used to. The position of the Catholic church is that the church and God are indivisible. You have to take one with the other and agree 100% with everything the church teaches. This is probably the #1 problem for me. As far as faith goes I believe that one should question your churches motives for everything (hence I don’t think i would make a good Catholic, I don’t respond well to “because I said so” type laws).
Read not just the theology of the church but all it’s laws as well. If you are going to convert to Catholicism you have an added responsibility vs. someone born in the church. There are a lot of things that you have to be willing to accept because the church believes that it’s laws and Gods laws by design are the same. There are a lot of rules too so be aware of them, learn them and make sure you agree with them. Converting to Catholicism is not like switching between Baptist and any other Protestant church so while I won’t tell you it is bad to convert I will tell you it is bad to convert and not be fully aware of the decision you are making.
I believe no church is perfect, and the Catholic church is no exception. in reading your posts it sounds like you are having some difficulties with the idea that the Catholic church doesn’t differentiate itself from God. This is a big distinction from our perspective because we see the church as a gathering of believers, other than that it’s just a building.
Speaking from my perspective i found the Catholic church to be a bit cold. We all stood, say, gave the secret handshake (except me, they don’t tell protestants these things

) and read along in the misslete (sp?). I felt like I was reading a script and never interacting with God. Many Catholics find this a sense of comfort because you know every other Catholic is hearing pretty much the same thing everywhere. I fell like just another face in the crowd. I feel much more “in tune” at the services I grew up in. Sermons go more in depth and are longer, there is much more singing (more on this later) and the congregation is smaller.
In so far a s the music goes though I feel this is one of the few traditions i don’t see in the Catholic church. The Catholic church used to have such a great music tradition, I know I have sung many versions of “Ave Maria” and quite a few other Latin songs that originated in the church. Every time I have gone to a Catholic service all you have as far as music goes is someone on an acoustic Guitar and maybe a small chorus of 3-5 people. If you are lucky they will be close to in tune but the last service I went to this was not the case. For someone trained in choral music it’s like nails on a chalk board. :bigyikes: The last part isn’t so much a reason no to join but rather my own observation. So as not to hijack the thread I’ll start my own on it.
Anyways no to drag on too long but I felt the need to even out the Protestant / Catholic balance in the thread. May God guide you in your decision process and guide you down the path he has chosen for you to take, no matter where it leads.