Thank you for making our drive successful!
newest posts
|
Welcome to Catholic Answers Forums, the largest Catholic Community on the Web.
Here you can join over 300,000 members from around the world discussing all things Catholic. Membership is open to all, Catholic and non-Catholic alike, who seek the Truth with Charity.
To gain full access, you must register for a FREE account. Registered members are able to:
- Submit questions about the faith to experts from Catholic Answers
- Participate in all forum discussions
- Communicate privately with Catholics from around the world
- Plus join a prayer group, read with the Book Club, and much more.
Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free. So join our community today!
Have a question about registration or your account log-in? Just contact our Support Hotline.
|
 |
|

Mar 16, '12, 8:33 pm
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Join Date: November 22, 2011
Posts: 92
Religion: Discerning...
|
|
To protestant converts:
What, intellectually, brought you to Catholicism? Was there something that you learned made you go, "huh..." and started the gradual movement towards the Catholic Church? (I ask those in any step of moving towards Catholicism, not just fully converted) Mine was the communion of Saints. John 3:16 = "Oh yeah... They aren't dead... Duh..."
edit: I assume this is as appropriate of a sub forum as any. If not, please re-place it.
__________________
Layman is my name. This should be proof that God has a sense of humor!
|

Mar 16, '12, 8:48 pm
|
 |
Regular Member
|
|
Join Date: April 11, 2011
Posts: 2,521
Religion: Yes
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Layman F
What, intellectually, brought you to Catholicism? Was there something that you learned made you go, "huh..." and started the gradual movement towards the Catholic Church? (I ask those in any step of moving towards Catholicism, not just fully converted) Mine was the communion of Saints. John 3:16 = "Oh yeah... They aren't dead... Duh..."
edit: I assume this is as appropriate of a sub forum as any. If not, please re-place it.
|
After 20 years or more in Fundamentalism I think I can say I'm similar to a Protestant convert. I was raised Catholic and went up till 6th grade in their schools.
I railed against the CC. I threw all the talking points out there. "Whore of Babylon", "Peter not the Rock", etc. for a long time. The purity of apostolic tradition and the clear realization that sacrad tradition has extreme relevance lead me home among other things.
For those who never had a prior Catholic exposure, I welcome you into the true church and can only say your conversion experience, from a human standpoint, seems greater than my return. I'm looking forward to hearing true Protestant conversion stories.
__________________
He stretched out the north over the empty space, and hangeth the earth upon nothing.
|

Mar 16, '12, 9:27 pm
|
 |
Regular Member
Prayer Warrior
|
|
Join Date: May 23, 2011
Posts: 3,127
Religion: Roman Catholic
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
You said intellectually, but I have to preface by saying that I simply knew this is where God wanted me. I knew this for years, but it didn't make much sense to me at the time. I even slept with a rosary of my Great Aunt's for 15 years before coming to a final decision. There are other important factors, but they are personal.
Anyway, you've asked for intellectual ones.
Let's see,
- It never made sense to me why we didn't have certain books of the Bible.
- The services seemed to have too many football and fishing analogies which could have been omitted.
- The Bible says to confess your sins to one another yet, no one seemed to do this. The only example I could think of was Catholics going to confession.
- I saw our constitution being changed after hundreds of years only to suit the needs of four or five people. They went so far as to call an "emergency" deacon's meeting regarding one issue and they made certain anyone who would have a disenting vote wasn't available at the last minute to push it through and others out. (who were they to have the final word anyway?)
- More changes. They called an open member meeting this time. The majority of people were against these changes and they had an open meeting of members to vote. Only one person stood to vote no - even though all these people disagreed with what was being done, knew it would not be a positive change, complained about, etc. None of them were willing to stand and fight for what they believed was right. (yeah, I was the lone vote)
- I brought in new ways to engage the children with learning which had many positive results. I felt there were times when it was okay for children to be children, but I did not feel our sanctuary (chapel ) was an appropriate place or time for this. Some things should be left with the respect and reverence they deserve. This is not an area for children to play.
- The Catholic Church allows for some change as times, but also leaves things sacred and very few changes. ( in comparison to what I've witnessed) I felt many Protestants were on a slippery slope with all the changes, but sadly many weren't aware or vocal.
- The devil is very real. Therefore - these saints and angels must play an important role.
- (too many changes)I believe there is a need to adjust and relate to youth, but that is why we have youth departments. Changing the way we worship our Lord is sacred and should be treated as such.
- A desire for something where people think more - if that makes sense?
- A desire for stability and tradition.
I could list a dozen more, but won't bore you.
__________________
I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my fortress: my God; in Him will I trust.
(Psalms 91:2)
|

Mar 16, '12, 10:02 pm
|
 |
Observing Member
Prayer Warrior
|
|
Join Date: September 3, 2011
Posts: 4
Religion: Catholic
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
That was an awesom response.
|

Mar 16, '12, 10:35 pm
|
|
Regular Member
|
|
Join Date: May 23, 2008
Posts: 2,284
Religion: Catholic
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Layman F
What, intellectually, brought you to Catholicism? Was there something that you learned made you go, "huh..." and started the gradual movement towards the Catholic Church? (I ask those in any step of moving towards Catholicism, not just fully converted) Mine was the communion of Saints. John 3:16 = "Oh yeah... They aren't dead... Duh..."
edit: I assume this is as appropriate of a sub forum as any. If not, please re-place it.
|
In a word....history.
In more than a word...the origins of the Bible, the ECFs, the primacy of Peter, and the realization that God is not the author of confusion nor division (two character traits of Protestantism).
__________________
"Can a mortal ask questions which God finds unanswerable? Quite easily, I should think. All nonsense questions are unanswerable."
C.S. Lewis
|

Mar 16, '12, 10:41 pm
|
 |
Senior Member
Prayer Warrior
|
|
Join Date: February 14, 2009
Posts: 7,770
Religion: Catholic, "and loving it."
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
My journey was longer than I originally thought.
I grew up as a "low" Anglican -- very protestant.
In university a couple of Anglican friends introduced me to a new idea of what 'church' means. I had always thought the church was simply the body of all believers. These Anglicans spoke of a church that was a divine institution and that it had an earthly organization involving Bishops, etc.
Jump ahead a couple of decades. I had been attending Catholic Mass with my wife and kids as well as the occasional Anglican service.
Here's what eventually brought me home: A Catholic friend gave me a small book, "Confessions of a Roman Catholic". At the same time I was becoming increasingly aware of a key intellectual difference between the Catholic Church and the Anglican community. I could not find any 'official' teaching from the Anglicans. The Church, however, had the Pope and the Magisterium, along with the Catechism. The booklet I referred to above helped me realize that the Church that Jesus established is a teaching Church, and one that teaches with authority. I could find no such thing in any protestant community.
It comes down to this. I knew I had to come to the Church: 1) that Jesus established,
2) the Church with clear teachings on faith and morals and
3) the (only) Church that teaches with divine authority.
__________________
“Experience teaches that the man who exercises a frequent and rigid censorship over his thoughts, words and actions, is better capable of hating and avoiding evil and of cultivating earnestly what is good”
- St Pius X
|

Mar 17, '12, 1:51 am
|
|
New Member
|
|
Join Date: September 30, 2011
Posts: 25
Religion: Catholic (newly minted!)
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
I've been a Christian for 30 years within the Evangelical spectrum. What brought me to Catholicism: I finally read the Bible for myself & felt like I couldn't reconcile things like Calvin's TULIP or Once Saved Always Saved. After sifting through tons of denominations, the closest expression I could see that mirrored what the Bible actually taught was Catholicism. That brought me to the writings of the early church fathers. When I compared the history & longevity of the Catholic church to the ill-effects of the Protestant Reformation & my own experience, I knew there was no other logical choice. It scared me, really, to be faced with Catholicism. It was the last place I ever thought I'd end up! I didn't just jump on the bandwagon... I tried to gloss over it... took my time... but almost a decade later, I know this is where God has been leading me all along. I'll be confirmed this Easter Vigil!
|

Mar 17, '12, 1:53 am
|
|
New Member
|
|
Join Date: January 13, 2012
Posts: 89
Religion: Episcopalian
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
I've been seriously thinking about becoming Catholic and while I still have a few issues with the Church there are many more things I like about it.
I've always felt that worship should have dignity about it and many Protestant churches do not. I like the idea of communion every Sunday as well as saying the creeds and such. It makes me feel like I'm actively participating in the service as opposed to filling a seat.
On another note, I like the Church's teachings on many day to day things. Also, the Catholics I've met seem to be much better people than many Protestants. I'm not from a Christian family (though I am one) and it's caused me some problems with other Christians (my high school, a Christian one, initially rejected me because of that and, once I got in, was essentially told that people with my background were undesirable and would likely cause problems). Whereas no Catholic I've talked to cares about where you came from or your family, they only care about you and where you are now.
|

Mar 17, '12, 10:02 pm
|
 |
Senior Member
Prayer Warrior
|
|
Join Date: February 14, 2009
Posts: 7,770
Religion: Catholic, "and loving it."
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
Quote:
Originally Posted by faithtrekker
i've been a christian for 30 years within the evangelical spectrum. What brought me to catholicism: I finally read the bible for myself & felt like i couldn't reconcile things like calvin's tulip or once saved always saved. After sifting through tons of denominations, the closest expression i could see that mirrored what the bible actually taught was catholicism. That brought me to the writings of the early church fathers. When i compared the history & longevity of the catholic church to the ill-effects of the protestant reformation & my own experience, i knew there was no other logical choice. It scared me, really, to be faced with catholicism. It was the last place i ever thought i'd end up! I didn't just jump on the bandwagon... I tried to gloss over it... Took my time... But almost a decade later, i know this is where god has been leading me all along. I'll be confirmed this easter vigil! 
|
Welcome Home!!
__________________
“Experience teaches that the man who exercises a frequent and rigid censorship over his thoughts, words and actions, is better capable of hating and avoiding evil and of cultivating earnestly what is good”
- St Pius X
|

Mar 18, '12, 4:29 pm
|
|
Trial Membership
|
|
Join Date: March 18, 2012
Posts: 2
Religion: Catholic
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
I'm sure there a thousands of reasons why people convert or leave. For me, I felt called to do so. For 9 months friends, family, church folks have been asking the question why like there was something I needed to justify.
Layman, don't look at conversion as an intellectual decision. Should be a spiritual one. I never thought I would be converting faith at 36. I have just 3 weeks till the big day  and feeling the holy spirit within me.
|

Mar 18, '12, 8:20 pm
|
 |
Senior Member
Prayer Warrior
|
|
Join Date: February 14, 2009
Posts: 7,770
Religion: Catholic, "and loving it."
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
Quote:
Originally Posted by trinityleaders
I'm sure there a thousands of reasons why people convert or leave. For me, I felt called to do so. For 9 months friends, family, church folks have been asking the question why like there was something I needed to justify.
Layman, don't look at conversion as an intellectual decision. Should be a spiritual one. I never thought I would be converting faith at 36. I have just 3 weeks till the big day and feeling the holy spirit within me.
|
You're awful young to be converting doncha think? I waited until I was 38! 
Welcome home trinityleaders.
I'll offer this prayer up for you:
A Prayer for Catechumens
Father of love and power,
it is your will to establish everything in Christ
and to draw us into his all-embracing love.
Guide these chosen ones:
strengthen them in their vocation,
build them into the kingdom of your Son,
and seal them with the Spirit of your promise.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.
__________________
“Experience teaches that the man who exercises a frequent and rigid censorship over his thoughts, words and actions, is better capable of hating and avoiding evil and of cultivating earnestly what is good”
- St Pius X
|

Mar 18, '12, 9:01 pm
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Join Date: November 22, 2011
Posts: 92
Religion: Discerning...
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
Quote:
Originally Posted by trinityleaders
Layman, don't look at conversion as an intellectual decision.
|
Oh the irony... 5-10 minutes after originally posting this I read 1 Corinthians 2:4-5...
__________________
Layman is my name. This should be proof that God has a sense of humor!
|

Mar 18, '12, 9:20 pm
|
 |
Regular Member
Prayer Warrior
|
|
Join Date: May 23, 2011
Posts: 3,127
Religion: Roman Catholic
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
Quote:
Originally Posted by trinityleaders
I'm sure there a thousands of reasons why people convert or leave. For me, I felt called to do so. For 9 months friends, family, church folks have been asking the question why like there was something I needed to justify.
Layman, don't look at conversion as an intellectual decision. Should be a spiritual one. I never thought I would be converting faith at 36. I have just 3 weeks till the big day  and feeling the holy spirit within me.
|
LOL~ Everyone asked me the same thing! Especially at the church and other Catholics. All the time! It was a little off putting as many asked this in such a scrutinizing manner. It was as if I was some anomaly or they wanted some secret word to be said.
__________________
I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my fortress: my God; in Him will I trust.
(Psalms 91:2)
|

Mar 18, '12, 9:38 pm
|
|
Forum Master
|
|
Join Date: May 18, 2004
Posts: 12,059
Religion: Catholic
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
For me it was finally understanding Mary's place within the life of the Church. The second was discovering that the Bible was a product (so to speak) of the Church not vice versa. After that, it was the Church's authority given to it by Christ. I suppose it should have been the 3rd reason first, but God works with us where we are (for which I will be eternally grateful). If he had waited for me to "get" authority ahead of my other concerns I may not have been reconciled to the Church. Still, who can say what other ways he would have drawn me to the truth? For first and foremost we must be open to hearing the truth before it can penetrate our biases, preconceptions, and misinformation.
__________________
The external deserts in the world are growing, because the internal deserts have become so vast. -- Pope Benedict XVI
Tiber Swim Team, Class of '87.
Inklings!
"Sanctum erit, facere bonum" Della's blog: http://dellakmg.blogspot.com/
|

Mar 19, '12, 4:20 pm
|
 |
Regular Member
Prayer Warrior
|
|
Join Date: February 21, 2012
Posts: 926
Religion: Catholic
|
|
Re: To protestant converts:
I've been searching for MANY years but didn't know what it was I was searching for. My faith never wavered through the years, although my prayer life left a lot to be desired. Oh, I would pray for this person or that situation, but nothing regular. I considered many churches (denominations, traditions, whatever you want to call them) and nothing, nothing drew me. My sister-in-law and brother-in-law (devout Catholics) graciously invited me to go to Spain with them in 2010, and while there we visited a number of cathedrals. Oh. My. Talk about being drawn in! I didn't want to leave any of them. The presence of God in those beautiful places was palpable. Right after that trip to Spain I began chemotherapy to treat breast cancer and really began to examine my life. Yep, it was the 2x4 between the eyes LOL. Fast forward a year. One day I just had a thought to read the Catholic catechism, but I have to admit it was more to disprove than to prove anything. When I began to read I looked for something, anything, to disagree with. I haven't found it yet. About halfway through the catechism at vatican.va I realized that this was what I had been search for all these years. Each morning I get up, fix my cuppa coffee, and go directly to my prayers, my Magnificat of the month, my Little Black Book for Lent, my beautiful rosary, and whatever else I have to read.
I have read "Rome Sweet Home" by Dr. Scott Hahn and his beautiful wife Kimberly Hahn. What a powerful testimony. If you haven't read it, I HIGHLY recommend it.
Words cannot express how much I want to be received into the Catholic Church. I will begin RCIA in September--Hey, Reginator and trinityleaders -- I have you both beat! I will be 63 when I'm received during the Easter Vigil in 2013.
|
| Thread Tools |
Search Thread |
|
|
|
| Display |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
|
advertise with us
|