Prior to the current RCIA programs converts were often given private instruction from the catechism then admitted to the sacraments in a small individual ceremony. RCIA introduced a heavy emphasis on drawing the catechumens into community both in the classes and in** the public nature of the admission ceremonies; the Community of the Faithful vs the Me and Jesus approach.**
:yup:
Also, the RCIA just slows down the process, and ensures that the candidate understands Catholicism before being received.
I was received into the church in 1981, in the manner you described. I performed my own research over several months and near the end started talking to a priest. One day I phoned him up and told him I was ready to be received into the Church and about a week later I made my first confession and we had a small ceremony with my family and several friends. The ceremony came as a surprise to me and I only picked a sponsor a day before.
In 1985 I was engaged to a Anglican woman and she chose to become a Catholic and, after a brief period of study, was received into the church in a similar way.
The essence of the ceremony was: A public profession of faith (“I believe and profess all that the Holy Catholic Church believes, teaches and proclaims to be revealed by God”), Confirmation, and the Eucharist.
My decision to be become a Catholic was well-informed and I stuck with it, however my fiance’s was not and she found it easy to reject Catholicism when it suited her, after our marriage.
I didn’t hear of RCIA in Australia until the mid 90’s. It seems to be a much better way of receiving people into the Church and might have saved myself and my ex-wife a lot of trouble.