Posted on 10/03/2013 3:57:50 AM PDT by NYer
By CHARLIE ESS
With pain comes perfection, Christ taught. Thanks to the gift of the Catholic Church we are able to reach this perfection through a glorious journey. But for too many years this was not the way for me.
My parents planted the hope of salvation and the reality of heaven within me during the impressionable years of adolescence. Practice in faith and good works as a cradle Catholic included a few years as an altar boy and a strong sense of compassion as I worked my way through the lower grades in a Catholic school.
Five decades later, however, Im looking back with envy at that child in terms of purity, the quest to embrace the sacraments which included the possibility of holy orders and good works as a way of strengthening my spiritual life. How simple it seemed then to keep my soul spotlessly clean with the belief that in the event of sudden death the Kingdom of God was unquestionably at hand.
Now, I face the reality that, like everybody else, I must one day die. Moreover, I have some catching up to do after a hiatus of nearly 30 years from the Catholic Church.
I moved to Alaska in 1978, and though there was ample opportunity to continue attending Mass and receiving the sacraments, I lived life on the beaches, the mountains and on boats. Though I believed in God as the Creator, I did not live the life of a religious hermit as I had originally intended. Instead I embraced wide ranging religious ideologies. I gravitated toward secular thinking and found plenty of camaraderie. What didnt come in the form of worldly ways during my life as a commercial fisherman surely befell me when I entered a licentious period as a writer. I had joined the national subculture of some 20 million baptized Catholics who no longer practice their faith. I had become a fallen away Catholic, as my grandfather used to call those who left the church either in quest of liberties granted by other forms of theology or those who walked away from any sort of Christly tethers altogether.
My departure from the Catholic Church left me with an uneasiness whenever I contemplated my journey with God. I knew too much about the Catechism and caught myself trying to arrive at various checkpoints in the journey through a feigned innocence. Not that other churches I had attended condoned my immorality, but I had drifted away from a discipline, an essential way of thinking, of praying, of examining conscience and of confessing.
Most tangible among the triggers would be the periodic discovery of one of my rosaries out among books or other trinkets in a storage shed. Though the familiarity of its beads would bring pangs of a guilt that I would later associate with a nudging of the conscience to grow closer to God, it was divine intervention and the intuition of my wife Cheryl that eventually lead me back to the Catholic Church.
Like many couples, we struggled in our marriage, and though we knew God must be at its center, we so often got caught up within ourselves. Cheryl, meanwhile, had begun watching EWTN and had a growing curiosity about the magnitude of Mary in Catholicism. This occurred shortly after we moved to the Palmer side of the Matanuska Valley.
At the same time, as parents we had started church hopping in our desire to provide some Godly roots for our kids. For several months we were unable to reach consensus in joining churches of this or that denomination, and we settled the matter by rotating among individual choices each Sunday. On a particular weekend, when it seemed we had tried them all, it was my turn, and I suggested attending Mass at St. Michael Catholic Church in Palmer. I prepared myself for our awkward genuflections and kneeling during the consecration.
While the kids had questions about incense, holy water and other rituals after Mass, Cheryl experienced an epiphany of sorts and shortly thereafter enrolled in the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults (RCIA), by which adults come into the Catholic Church. A year later, on the eve of her confirmation and first Holy Communion Father Tom Brundage asserted our marital vows this time they were sacramental.
As for me, the return to the faith has been blissful as I rediscover the purpose of spiritual tools that were given to me when I was young. In a sense I have arrived, broken, but back at the threshold of a great workshop that Ive had access to since I was a kid. At its center, like some great lathe or milling machine, is Christs passion, replete with the original manual on how to accept pain and create selflessness, and the periphery has been festooned with the seven sacraments, with Sacred Scripture, Holy Mass, adoration, the daily recitation of the Rosary and countless chaplets and prayers. Practicing one aspect of the faith, I have discovered, leads to a desire to practice others.
I still struggle with sin, the reality of death and the endlessness of eternity like I imagine anyone whos bothered contemplating such matters might. With my return to Catholic discipline, however, I find hope in reaching for perfection as each day ticks toward the end of my tenure here on earth. And hope fuels my journey toward eternity, one day at a time.
The writer is a freelance journalist and a parishioner at St. Michael Church in Palmer, Alaska.
Ping!
WELCOME Home!
I did not return to the Catholic church, as I was raised as an Episcopalian, and senior warden of my church in Tennessee.
The Episcopal church, however, has been co-opted and taken over by gays and perverts.
When I started life as an expat, I had no choice but RC, starting in Slovakia, and now in the Philippines, where everything is Roman Catholic.
Don't forget a violent Muslim minority of between 5 and 10%
Beautiful image. Thanks for posting.
“Don’t forget a violent Muslim minority of between 5 and 10%”
_______________________________________________
Sorry to disappoint you, but in my five years here I have yet to see a Muslim.
There are a few dogs in a manger on FR that are dying for some Muzie to row 300 miles in a canoe to come chop my head off, hahaha. Yes, I know, as in America, there are some Muzies scattered among the 7107 islands. The country remains strongly Catholic. I would be more worried about all the Muzies in Detroit :P
Why return to a religion that supports amnesty by the millions for illegal aliens and sides with pro-abortionists to achieve its goals? Well...the illegals are mostly catholic, that I understand. But, pro-abortion? Huh?
The Catholic faith does not support what you described, sinners do.
2) My only experience of AK is a few hours at Anchorage Airport in 1979, but I am surprised that someone looking for a deeper experience of Christ through discipline and liturgical practice wouldn't have turned first to the Russian Orthodox Church, which has been established in AK for a few centuries longer than the Catholics--but that may simply be my ignorance of the Alaskan experience today.
Well good. I know wikipedia specifies which islands the Moros are concentrated. Probably right about Detroit.
Good luck and enjoy the Baluts.
I’m a convert to this faith. Everyone always says “welcome home”. Funny no one ever said that when I was forced to be in the Baptist church as a child. I truly believe that it was more than I was not “home” but because I was just not “welcome”.
“enjoy the Baluts.”
____________________________________
Surely you are kidding. That is probably the last thing on Earth that I would want :P
I have arrived, broken, but back at the threshold of a great workshop that Ive had access to since I was a kid. At its center, like some great lathe or milling machine, is Christs passion, replete with the original manual on how to accept pain and create selflessness, and the periphery has been festooned with the seven sacraments, with Sacred Scripture, Holy Mass, adoration, the daily recitation of the Rosary and countless chaplets and prayers. Practicing one aspect of the faith, I have discovered, leads to a desire to practice others.
God has richly blessed you, Charlie. Nice to have you come home.
Nyer, thank you for this post. I’ve seen his life and partly lived it of drifting away from going to church and active participation. Living a few years as a CINO (Christian in Name Only), where I may not have done really bad things, but I paid only ‘lip service’ to my religious upbringing and initial baptism. Although it is hard to do ‘bad things’ and still remain in the Army, :-).
Having a family and/or aging does bring one back to one’s religious roots and seeking a deeper faith/understanding of what one learned as a child and teenager. And then our faith blossoms.
For me it was making peace with the fact that the Church was run by men who are just as flawed and sinful as I am.
We all want to be forgiven and to be cut a break when we screw-up. Well, if we want to receive that, we have to be willing to extend that as well.
Granted this can be difficult when you get a bunch of arrogant, haughty men in red hats stomping around and claiming to be infallible.
No organization run by men, including churches, will ever be flawless. You could leave for some other denomination but there you will just find a different set of shortcomings. The good things about the Church far outweigh the bad IMO. Jesus directly told Peter he would be his rock, and that mission is one worth sticking around for.
You were forgiven. And cut a break 2000 years ago. When Christ died for those "screw-ups". It is His FINISHED WORK for you that ensures you are "cut a break".
And you're right, no organization run by men, including churches, will ever be flawless. Only God is flawless. Which is why we can never be saved outside His own perfect flawlessness. And even more incredible is the fact that He DESIRES to be reconciled to us. He reached out to us. 2 Cor. 5:14-21. Instead of writing mankind off as hopeless, He reached down and saved us from ourselves. He gives us a new life, a new identity, and a new purpose: ambassadors for Him. To proclaim His mercy and grace to those who have not met Him face to face. But there is only one way to be reconciled: the finished work of Christ. Not my demand. God's demand. And I thank God every day for His demand, for there is no other way I could ever please Him and His flawlessness.
Why do you think you were not welcome in the Baptist church?
You mean as a child,,,, of your parents?
There are several Filipino families in our parish. Their deep and abiding faith is an inspiration to me.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.