Wonderful! Please let us know how this turns out. Praying for you and your wife.
Thank you. I’ll let you all know how it goes. A little update on my situation:
Me abstaining from Protestant Communion has let to a discussion between Samantha and I by e-mail. I brought up a lot of things and provided my reasons why I disagreed with their belief that about “you and your wife are one. You have to talk over major decisions until they become one! If you feel called to become a missionary and your wife says no, then I am sorry but the Lord has not called you.” And with that reasoning, they tried to persuade me that they feel it’s not the Lord’s will because I don’t have the support of my wife----and I cannot convert to the Catholic Church because…of my son.
I told them that for now I won’t act but the day may come when I feel I need to move with or without my wife’s support—but for now, I am handling this situation delicately. They don’t seem to be so concerned now whether or not I convert but are concerned about my marriage and how my wife would feel. They don’t want to see our marriage situation become worse. This isn’t as bad as I expected to be honest. They’ve seem to take it pretty well but then again, they didn’t really respond much to what I said in my e-mails. Samantha admitted she didn’t thoroughly read my e-mail where I gave convincing reasons for my position. I shared my research with them and concluded that based on the bible commentaries of Protestant commentaries and protestant theologies they look up to as well as what the bible says, I still feel convicted that the Lord is calling me and this is a matter of conscious.
I provided links to Scott Hahn’s conversion story and Kimberly Hahn’s story as an audio but I am not confident they’ll actually listen to it. They did say they were open to reading something that had an influence on me, so tomorrow I plan to provide them “Rome Sweet Home” and “Crossing The Tiber”.
I’m trying to arrange for my spiritual director to visit my home and bless my residence. The previous owners had divorced and sold there home, so I am not sure if there is some kind of spiritual connection going on, but I’d like to root that out. Apparently one of them committed infidelity…
…Some of the protestants I’ve tried to reach out to with some of the things that have troubled my conscious has gone cold and stopped any kind of discussion with me. One guy, Joe, he is a charismatic preacher who spoke at my church’s summer retreat this year. He teaches very well and captivated his entire audience with messages that spoke to their heart. I didn’t get a chance to bring up some things that had troubled me then and what I had discovered about catholicism due to me being preoccupied with my family—and I wasn’t to be discreet about it and not draw attention to myself. So I asked for his notes. His sermon was “how to discern God’s will in your life.” I wrote to him how it didn’t address the topic of the Canon Of Scripture and I gave him my reasons for that. He wrote back and sent me a six-part podcast his church had done on the topic of the Bible and the Canon Of Scripture. He said the preacher was one of his mentors and it was the best he could provide me on the subject. I spent six hours listening to it all and took some notes. Now, I pondered how to respond because the preacher spent like three or four episodes just to build a foundation in order to talk about the Bible and Canon Of Scripture in the fifth and sixth episodes. They didn’t address several things and he made a snide remark how people with a brain can see the deuterocanon didn’t belong in the Bible—then said “Just joking!”. I felt really offended by that. He said how the New Testament didn’t quote it and Jesus and the apostles didn’t quote or reference it. I have to hand it to him though that he said the typical protestant quote for “All scripture is inspired by god…” was ONLY about the Old Testament. He got that right.
So, I did a quick google search and looked up references of the deterocanon in the New Testament, and boy, did I find a lot! I stumbled across Wisdom Chapter 2:12-24 and was blown away by it! It was amazing! Why hadn’t I ever heard of this before. I mean, wow, this apparently is a prophecy about the Passion of Our Lord here! Now wonder jews tried to distance themselves from books like Wisdom: The christians were using their own books to convert them. So I sent him an e-mail asking him if he could read Wisdom 2:12-24 and let me know what he thought. I wait five days and got no response, so I e-mailed him back asking if he read it. He replied quickly and said he was too busy and had a lot going on. And that was that.
There is another protestant I asked how he could reconcile being a calvinist-leaning christian using a John McArthur Bible when Calvinists persecuted the Anabaptists who were craedobaptists like he was. It’s been two weeks and no response from him even though he said he would get back to me.
Is it me or do protestants stonewall people who challenge their beliefs? I just really, really wish my friends could join me on my journey to the Catholic Church and my spiritual director has encouraged me to plant the healthy seeds of truth with people around me. I hope at least one or two people can join me on my journey—I don’t want to do it alone
I mean, one guy I know asked me to send him something I find interesting. I sent him the audio link for Scott Hahn’s Conversion. No response yet.
Do you guys face this kind of stonewalling too? As a protestant, I always hear how they want others to be open minded to their beliefs and not stonewall or shut them down, but I find they tend to do the same thing or have a fear of having their beliefs being challenged. I mean, the reason I actually READ my bible was because my brother and athiests challenged my faith…