
For me, the Catholic Church was a mystery. The Catholicism of my grandmother was never talked about, as she had died over thirty years before I was born. I saw it as a way that some people chose to live and believe, though one that I knew little about. On matters of religion, a child sees differences but is taught not to question. Raised by loving parents, taught by caring pastors and Sunday School teachers, I was brought to an “understanding” of God, if not truly a belief and faith.
I converted to the Catholic faith well into adulthood. For me and probably for many like me, especially if they practiced their prior faith with any devotion, there is a recurring sense of a need for reconciliation of the new life with the old understanding. A desire for a peaceful harmony of time past and time present. Where the old is not rejected, but merely assimilated and built upon.
Recently, I had occasion to visit St. Anthony of Padua. Not this time to pass by those doors, but to open them and enter. This time as a convert of twenty-plus years. As one who had, over time, fallen in love with the Mass. As one who looked forward to celebrating it in the cathedral-like atmosphere of this beautiful church.
Entering, I had a combined sense of being both a visitor and being at home, as in the restless mingling of our flesh and spirit, the former always conscious of the passage of time, the latter knowing only the present.
But to those who did accept him he gave power to become children of God, to those who believe in his name, who were born not by natural generation nor by human choice nor by a man's decision but by God. John 1:12-13
But to those who did accept him he gave power to become children of God, to those who believe in his name, who were born not by natural generation nor by human choice nor by a man's decision but by God. John 1:12-13