For me it wasn’t one thing it was the fact that there was
SO MUCH to know about the church. It was overwhelming. I spent a year devouring huge books on Catholicism before I did RCIA and was advised by my RCIA instructor to stop. She said the only way to eat an elephant is one bite at a time.
The best advice I received from my RCIA instructor is that it is “
MY responsibility to fulfill my obligations as a Catholic in the future and not to overdo it, focus on the basics first. No-one is going to spoon feed you or hold your hand or force you to do anything.”
All the ingredients are provided for you. It was up to me. I decided I would not be a Sunday only participant or an observer vicariously participating by reading what was happening in the Parish every Sunday in the Newsletter. I WANTED to be a part of parish life.
I focussed on the essentials first, understanding the Sacraments and attending Mass.
Then I volunteered for our Diocese with Rosies food van for the homeless.
I also joined a parish Group who meet weekly to discuss/debate and give presentations with Q&A on the Catholic faith observed by our Priest or RCIA facilitator. This was the most rewarding and knowledge building activity for me as a new Catholic.
During this time I listened to the shows for non-Catholics on Catholic Answers Forum radio podcasts and learned so much. A lot of my own questions were answered by Jimmy Akin, Tim Staples or one of the other guests of the radio show.
I didn’t read the “heavy” stuff from the Catholic bookstores anymore because it was too much (for me). Information overload can be too much to process and detrimental. I mean I was reading Pope Benedicts books and most of it went over my head because of the Catholic theology and references.
Next year I intend to enroll at the Institute of Faith Education to do a Basic Theology Course.
My advice to new converts is become part of the parish life, don’t just attend Mass. Don’t overdo it like I did. Focus on basics first.