L
lumendelumine
Guest
I second MariaG that people who convert to Catholicism gain something more, something fuller, while people who go away are often angry because they “have been lied to” (if they become Protestants) or because “you can’t live like the Church wants you to live” (if you have embraced the worldly - contracepting, aborting, homosexual, you name it - lifestyle).
Well, it’s probably all about Catholicism being the “fulness of the truth”. If you become Catholic, from another background, you always gain something. If you become something else from a Catholic background, you always lose something.
I remember when I talked to a colleague once who was raised in a very devout Catholic family but lost her faith (partly due to a sinful lifestyle) in her early 20s. We were talking about the fact that her loss of faith was probably also a rebellion against her parents. But then she said to me: “But what you did (e. g. converted to Catholicism from an agnostic background) was also a rebellion against your parents!”
But well, it wasn’t. I have won something by becoming Catholic; I was not “rebelling”. I still appreciate many things my parents have taught me and I love them. But I’ve discovered a whole new world through (the Catholic) faith. That’s quite a different thing than rejecting part of your parents’ world (i. e. their faith) - whether angrily or without anger.
Well, it’s probably all about Catholicism being the “fulness of the truth”. If you become Catholic, from another background, you always gain something. If you become something else from a Catholic background, you always lose something.
I remember when I talked to a colleague once who was raised in a very devout Catholic family but lost her faith (partly due to a sinful lifestyle) in her early 20s. We were talking about the fact that her loss of faith was probably also a rebellion against her parents. But then she said to me: “But what you did (e. g. converted to Catholicism from an agnostic background) was also a rebellion against your parents!”
But well, it wasn’t. I have won something by becoming Catholic; I was not “rebelling”. I still appreciate many things my parents have taught me and I love them. But I’ve discovered a whole new world through (the Catholic) faith. That’s quite a different thing than rejecting part of your parents’ world (i. e. their faith) - whether angrily or without anger.