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Why Did You Choose “Catholic? (Why do adults become Catholics?)
CE.com ^ | January 27th, 2012 | George Weigel

Posted on 01/27/2012 9:11:21 PM PST by Salvation

Why Did You Choose “Catholic?”

January 27th, 2012 by George Weigel

Why do adults become Catholics?

There are as many reasons for “converting” as there are converts. Evelyn Waugh became a Catholic with, by his own admission, “little emotion but clear conviction”: this was the truth; one ought to adhere to it. Cardinal Avery Dulles wrote that his journey into the Catholic Church began when, as an unbelieving Harvard undergraduate detached from his family’s staunch Presbyterianism, he noticed a leaf shimmering with raindrops while taking a walk along the Charles River in Cambridge, Mass.; such beauty could not be accidental, he thought—there must be a Creator. Thomas Merton found Catholicism aesthetically, as well as intellectually, attractive: once the former Columbia free-thinker and dabbler in communism and Hinduism found his way into a Trappist monastery and became a priest, he explained the Mass to his unconverted friend, poet Robert Lax, by analogy to a ballet. Until his death in 2007, Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger insisted that his conversion to Catholicism was not a rejection of, but a fulfillment of, the Judaism into which he was born; the cardinal could often be found at Holocaust memorial services reciting the names of the martyrs, including “Gisèle Lustiger, ma maman” (“my mother”).

Two of the great nineteenth-century converts were geniuses of the English language: theologian John Henry Newman and poet Gerard Manley Hopkins. This tradition of literary converts continued in the twentieth century, and included Waugh, Graham Greene, Edith Sitwell, Ronald Knox, and Walker Percy. Their heritage lives today at Our Savior’s Church on Park Avenue in New York, where convert author, wit, raconteur and amateur pugilist George William Rutler presides as pastor.

In early American Catholicism, the fifth archbishop of Baltimore (and de facto primate of the United States), Samuel Eccleston, was a convert from Anglicanism, as was the first native-born American saint and the precursor of the Catholic school system, Elizabeth Ann Seton. Mother Seton’s portrait in the offices of the archbishop of New York is somewhat incongruous, as the young widow Seton, with her children, was run out of New York by her unforgiving Anglican in-laws when she became a Catholic. On his deathbed, another great nineteenth-century convert, Henry Edward Manning of England, who might have become the Anglican archbishop of Canterbury but became the Catholic archbishop of Westminster instead, took his long-deceased wife’s prayer book from beneath his pillow and gave it to a friend, saying that it had been his spiritual inspiration throughout his life.

If there is a thread running through these diverse personalities, it may be this: that men and women of intellect, culture and accomplishment have found in Catholicism what Blessed John Paul II called the “symphony of truth.” That rich and complex symphony, and the harmonies it offers, is an attractive, compelling and persuasive alternative to the fragmentation of modern and post-modern intellectual and cultural life, where little fits together and much is cacophony. Catholicism, however, is not an accidental assembly of random truth-claims; the creed is not an arbitrary catalogue of propositions and neither is the Catechism of the Catholic Church. It all fits together, and in proposing that symphonic harmony, Catholicism helps fit all the aspects of our lives together, as it orders our loves and loyalties in the right direction.

You don’t have to be an intellectual to appreciate this “symphony of truth,” however. For Catholicism is, first of all, an encounter with a person, Jesus Christ, who is “the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6). And to meet that person is to meet the truth that makes all the other truths of our lives make sense. Indeed, the embrace of Catholic truth in full, as lives like Blessed John Henry Newman’s demonstrate, opens one up to the broadest possible range of intellectual encounters.

Viewed from outside, Catholicism can seem closed and unwelcoming. As Evelyn Waugh noted, though, it all seems so much more spacious and open from the inside. The Gothic, with its soaring vaults and buttresses and its luminous stained glass, is not a classic Catholic architectural form by accident. The full beauty of the light, however, washes over you when you come in.

 
George Weigel is author of the bestselling books The Courage to Be Catholic: Crisis, Reform, and the Future of the Church and Letters to a Young Catholic.

This column has been made available to Catholic Exchange courtesy of the
Denver Catholic Register.

 



TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; converts; saints
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Many personalities --

Many reasons for becoming Catholic --

1 posted on 01/27/2012 9:11:26 PM PST by Salvation
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To: nickcarraway; NYer; ELS; Pyro7480; livius; ArrogantBustard; Catholicguy; RobbyS; marshmallow; ...
Catholic Discussion Ping!

If you aren’t on this ping list NOW and would like to be on it, please Freepmail me.

2 posted on 01/27/2012 9:14:10 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Salvation

Biblically illiterate.


3 posted on 01/27/2012 9:23:22 PM PST by doc1019 (Romney will never get my vote!)
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To: doc1019

I’m Catholic because it’s true...

Without the Church Jesus founded, we wouldn’t have the New Testament. It’s a simple historical fact.


4 posted on 01/27/2012 9:26:10 PM PST by rwilson99 (Please tell me how the words "shall not perish and have everlasting life" would NOT apply to Mary.)
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To: rwilson99

OK.


5 posted on 01/27/2012 9:31:26 PM PST by doc1019 (Romney will never get my vote!)
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To: Salvation
I was raised Protestant/Jewish - now there is a mix for you!

When it was time for me to decide my faith, I leaned to the Anglican rite, though it was not terribly rewarding. Like many, I skipped church during my late teens and early 20s as “not relevent.”

Then I met a Chaplain while I was on active service. He was Catholic, though he did run non-denominational services. The Catholic faith gave me what I lacked. A sense of God in my daily life.

I am profoundly grateful to him.

The irony is, my wife was raised Catholic and is now Buddhist.

6 posted on 01/27/2012 9:48:03 PM PST by EnglishCon
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To: doc1019; Religion Moderator

I thought about making this an ecumenical thread to avoid comments such as yours, but couldn’t because of the different religions mentioned. For your information, Catholica do know the Bible. I lead two Bible studies amounting to about five hours in class each week.


7 posted on 01/27/2012 9:53:46 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: EnglishCon

**A sense of God in my daily life.**

Chaplains in the active service are so wonderful. Thanks for your special sharing.


8 posted on 01/27/2012 9:55:31 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Salvation

Didn’t see anything that mentioned in the title that suggested that it was an ecumenical restricted thread.


9 posted on 01/27/2012 10:00:23 PM PST by doc1019 (Romney will never get my vote!)
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To: Salvation

He was amazing. All military chaplains are, but he was very special indeed.

Still a wonderful friend 30 odd years later, though he has been called to higher things and now lives in Rome, where I see him maybe once a year.

One of the things he told me is “Do not profess your faith loudly. Live it daily, instead. Your faith should be like your bones - simply there at the core of you.”

May slip on my faith sometimes (as you know) but those are my guiding words.


10 posted on 01/27/2012 10:02:55 PM PST by EnglishCon
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To: Salvation

Ok Mods, what is your verdict?


11 posted on 01/27/2012 10:07:06 PM PST by doc1019 (Romney will never get my vote!)
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To: doc1019

I have to agree.


12 posted on 01/27/2012 10:10:56 PM PST by Bulwyf
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To: doc1019

As I said above, I could not make it an Ecumenical thread because of the different religions from whence all these adults came.


13 posted on 01/27/2012 10:13:32 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Bulwyf

I’m still looking for a pronouncement by the religious mods. There is nothing in the title of this article that would restrict any response.


14 posted on 01/27/2012 10:15:10 PM PST by doc1019 (Romney will never get my vote!)
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To: doc1019

The thread is fine. Don’t be anxious about it.


15 posted on 01/27/2012 10:15:22 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: doc1019

With respect, “biblically illiterate” does not bring much to the table. Reminds me of the one guy at the potluck lunch that brings a bag of ice.

Can you expand on your comment please? You had a reason for posting that - what is the reason?


16 posted on 01/27/2012 10:15:41 PM PST by EnglishCon
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To: doc1019

Indeed, you are.


17 posted on 01/27/2012 10:17:20 PM PST by A.A. Cunningham (Barry Soetoro is a Kenyan communist)
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To: doc1019

This is an “open” Religion Forum thread. Your post is acceptable.


18 posted on 01/27/2012 10:17:47 PM PST by Religion Moderator
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To: Religion Moderator

Thanks for cutting my dupe post, BTW. Search is a little buggy for me tonight.


19 posted on 01/27/2012 10:20:41 PM PST by EnglishCon
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To: Religion Moderator

Thank you.


20 posted on 01/27/2012 10:33:36 PM PST by doc1019 (Romney will never get my vote!)
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