P
pristine2
Guest
I recently completed RCIA, was baptised and took communion as a new member of the Catholic Church.
I could not be more comfortable with the decision and my profession of faith.
I confess, though, that the most challenging aspects of Catholic doctrine for me are found in the old testament, and the story of Job is a salient case in point. I still find it difficult to swallow. I raised the issue in my RCIA classes, and was very frank about it. It was difficult to accept a God who wagered Job’s life and happiness with Satan, and who seemed so quick to wreak misery, death and destruction on the enemies of a particular tribe and its heroes.
Had I been instructed to accept the Old Testament narrative literally, I would never have become a Catholic.
Fortunately, with the help of my sponsor, I was able to see interpret the OT the in the light of the Gospel. For me, it’s the new covenant that matters. There are glimmers of the divine in the Old Testament, to be sure, but I don’t think being Catholic means that I must believe, in the literal sense, that a just God would send bears to murder children, turn Lot’s wife into a pillar of salt, or stand by and watch the appalling suffering and injustice visited upon Job.
I could not be more comfortable with the decision and my profession of faith.
I confess, though, that the most challenging aspects of Catholic doctrine for me are found in the old testament, and the story of Job is a salient case in point. I still find it difficult to swallow. I raised the issue in my RCIA classes, and was very frank about it. It was difficult to accept a God who wagered Job’s life and happiness with Satan, and who seemed so quick to wreak misery, death and destruction on the enemies of a particular tribe and its heroes.
Had I been instructed to accept the Old Testament narrative literally, I would never have become a Catholic.
Fortunately, with the help of my sponsor, I was able to see interpret the OT the in the light of the Gospel. For me, it’s the new covenant that matters. There are glimmers of the divine in the Old Testament, to be sure, but I don’t think being Catholic means that I must believe, in the literal sense, that a just God would send bears to murder children, turn Lot’s wife into a pillar of salt, or stand by and watch the appalling suffering and injustice visited upon Job.