Showing posts with label Testimonies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Testimonies. Show all posts

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Taylor Marshall's Testimony

Dr. Taylor Marshall was an Episcopal priest in Fort Worth, Texas before being received with his wife into the Catholic Church by Bishop Kevin Vann of Fort Worth on May 23, 2006.

Taylor received a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Dallas. He is a graduate of Texas A&M University (BA, Philosophy) Westminster Theological Seminary (MAR, Systematic Theology), Nashotah Theological House (Certificate in Anglican Studies), and the University of Dallas (MA, Philosophy).

Taylor and his wife live in Dallas, Texas with their six children. He blogs at: www.taylormarshall.com.

Watch this video:


Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Misty's Testimony


Pro-Choice Atheist writer and editor becomes Catholic.

Ten years ago Misty was a pro-choice atheist living out her dream of being a writer and editor outside of Washington, D.C. Then her husband convinced her to join him in a spiritual journey through investigations of Buddhism, Hinduism, Mormonism, Judaism, and Christianity.


Through God's grace, they're now both practicing Catholics blessed with faith, hope, and love--and five beautiful children! She now lives in Alaska and spend her days educating our children at home.

This is her story:

Why I Became Catholic (and Not Buddhist)
One of the questions I get most often when people hear I’m a convert is, “Why did you choose to become Catholic?” I’ve been asked this question by Jews, Baptists, Mormons, atheists, and even Jehovah’s Witnesses. The person who asks the question never says the rest of it, which is, “Why did you choose to become a Catholic INSTEAD of what I am?” These are people of genuine faith, who believe they have found and are living by The Truth. So naturally they want to understand how someone educated and sane could believe so differently.
It’s always a hard question to answer, because I’m sensitive to that unspoken part. I don’t want to insinuate–even accidentally–that they are less intelligent, less holy, or inferior to me as a Catholic. I usually give the “safe” answer, and talk about how my husband and I were drawn continuously to Jesus in the Eucharist. But part of me always yearns to say what G.K. Chesterton said so beautifully:
The difficulty of explaining “why I am Catholic” is that there are 10,000
reasons all amounting to one reason: that Catholicism is true.
I never wanted to be a Catholic. I never even wanted to be a Christian. When my husband convinced me to join him on a quest through major and minor religions nearly 15 years ago, I did it mostly to humor him. I had lived as an avowed atheist for more than a decade and couldn’t imagine that The Truth even existed, much less it could be found. Especially when I couldn’t even accept that God was real.
Fortunately, God literally changed my mind about Him with a thunderbolt. One day, I was reading an article about the human genome project (I was a technical writer), when I was drawn to look at my own hand. What had before been a clever machine of flesh and bone was suddenly revealed to me as a pure miracle of creation. It was truly that instant; one second I was an atheist, and the next I was a believer. I knew with absolute certainty that only an intelligent designer–God–could have created something as incredible as me!
But accepting God’s existence didn’t solve anything; in fact, it created new problems. I’ve had friends who are Deists, who believe God created the universe (including humanity) and then left it alone…much like a clockmaker might create a masterful clock he sets into motion and then ignores. To me, it was simply unthinkable that God would create the glorious universe–including all the amazing people such as my husband–and then just walk away. I realized that the beauty that had brought tears to my eyes even as an atheist could only be interpreted as the uniquely personal stamp of a loving God who delighted in His creation. If God created the majestic earth, gave us the joy of music, and gave me the mind to appreciate it, then it made no sense that he’d create all that just to turn His back on it.
So my agnostic husband and I started questioning the people who claimed to know something about God: the believers. All believers. Every time we encountered someone of faith, we invited them to dinner and then respectfully grilled them on their beliefs. We visited their churches and temples, went to services with them, and read ad nauseum about what and why they believed and how they lived out their beliefs.


I wanted to be cool, but God made me Catholic instead. Le sigh.
We were initially most attracted to Buddhism, no doubt because its adoption by prominent Hollywood celebrities made it a “cool” religion. But despite our best efforts, we just couldn’t accept that Buddhism was true. For one, we found it too morally fuzzy. We had both come around to the pro-life position a few years earlier; even as an atheist I could see it was a human rights issue. So we were disturbed to hear a Buddhist woman who claimed to respect all life describe assisting in an abortion.
When we talked to Buddhists about morality, their answers were relativistic: “It’s only wrong if it’s wrong for YOU.” This never set well with us; either abortion is wrong in all cases because it takes a human life or it’s never wrong. The idea of basing the morality of an action on whether I want it to be right or wrong just seemed ridiculously self-serving. We shuddered to imagine a world where people get to decide for themselves whether lying, stealing, or killing are right or wrong.
There also was the problem of access. When the local Buddhist temple brought in a Buddhist master for a few days, the temple charged several hundred dollars for a guided retreat. While the temple likely would not have turned away a person who couldn’t afford to pay, the wisdom of their living saints ordinarily came with a hefty price tag. My husband simply couldn’t accept this. “So the poor get Truth at the charity of the wealthy?” he asked. This became an insurmountable barrier to him.
For me, it was what Buddhism said was our ultimate destiny that proved the real stumbling block. The end goal of Buddhism is extermination of the self, to annihilate your consciousness by entering “Nirvana.” You’re reincarnated again and again until you learn to eliminate all desire from your soul, at which point your “consciousness” diffuses and becomes one with the universe. Unlike in Christianity, where the goal is union with God (but you are still, in essence, an individual named Susan or Richard), Buddhism’s goal is to destroy the self.
When I considered the people I loved, I found it terrifying to think that what makes them who they truly are–the soul–would just disappear. As atheist convert Jeff Miller (the Curt Jester) said in his conversion story, “Facing death, I found that I did not really believe that if I had been killed that my existence would have winked out of the universe. The soul is not just some metaphysical idea.” Even for myself, I could never understand how spiritual extermination was a palatable goal.


My coffee addiction would have caused serious problems for me as a Mormon.
So we stopped going to Buddhist temples and asking Buddhists to dinner. And it was nice, because I could now serve meat to our guests again. But it was actually a Mormon who made us realize Jesus of Nazareth was the key. One night we had dinner with a faithful Mormon family. The father spoke about Jesus so tenderly that his love for Him was almost palpable.
I can only describe what happened to both my husband and I at that dinner as “Love testified to The Truth.” We knew that Jesus was not just real, but that He was–inexplicably–ALIVE and that this man had a relationship with Him. It was like reading about Abraham Lincoln your whole life and finding out he was actually still alive. And that there were people among you who were friends with him!
While we were strongly attracted to the Church of Latter Day Saints because of its emphasis on family values and strong sense of community, we’d done enough research to know we did not accept Joseph Smith’s claim to divine authority. So we went looking for Jesus in the only other place we’d seen His friends congregate: Protestant churches.
Why not the Catholic churches? Because most Catholics we knew believed more in Luke Skywalker than Jesus. Even those who participated externally in the faith, such as the coworker who went to Mass each week and never failed to show up with her annual ashen cross, told me she didn’t need to believe “all that stuff about Jesus” to be Catholic. “I just like the idea that God came down to live with us,” she said. “But I don’t care whether it actually happened.”
We knew just two young Catholics who practiced their faith, but their quiet reverence was eclipsed by the Protestants we knew, who unabashedly talked about their love for Jesus and whose churches were vibrant and welcoming. When you showed up at their services, they were on you like white on rice and never failed to invite you to their spiritual family. We’d attended several Catholic Masses to learn more about Catholicism, but we’d never once been approached by a welcoming Catholic. In fact, when we’d asked one priest if he’d meet with us to answer questions about the faith, he gruffly told us, “Call the diocese.” Catholics seemed to worship more as individuals, even in Mass.
I’ll never forget our first Easter in a Christian church. We attended Truro Church in Fairfax, Virginia, an on-fire congregation that has since left the Episcopal Church. The line to get in wrapped around the block, with so many children you’d swear there was an orphanage on grounds. In front of us, a little boy played with action figures. Not of wrestlers or superheros, but of Jesus and the apostles. When the priest entered the church and processed down the aisle shouting, “Christ is risen!” the place erupted with so much excitement you felt like you were at a rock concert. These were people truly joyful to be Christian.
But for us, it wasn’t just about which group of believers impressed us. After all, we had been most impressed by the Mormons, but the teachings of Mormonism were a showstopper. The same thing happened with Protestantism. We’d call up churches and ask the pastor to meet for lunch. We’d meet, interview him about the church’s beliefs, then attend services the following Sunday. And we just could not accept that everyone gets to discern for himself what the truth is in the Bible. Everyone claimed their church was “Biblically-based,” yet every one taught something different. Even within the same traditions: Episcopalian Pastor A told us that abortion was always wrong while Episcopalian Pastor B told us it was sometimes acceptable. So remarriage is wrong in this church but not in that church? Women can be priests here but not there?


How can the Holy Spirit be leading so many people to different and even conflicting truths?
The more we read about Christian history, the more we realized that Protestant churches had changed “The Truth” to whatever was culturally acceptable at the time. Far from being immutable, Protestantism teachings were only true for as long as the congregants said they were. And if Truth really existed, we intuitively knew it wasn’t decided by committee.
That’s when we began seriously researching the teachings of the Catholic Church and discovered that the teachings of Catholicism today are the same as taught by the earliest Christians. We read that early Catholics—people who lived just a century or two after Jesus—believed in the Eucharist as the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Jesus. They believed in infant baptism. They believed in Confession. Purgatory. Hell. They were against abortion and yes, even contraception. That the Bible canon was compiled because the books supported the oral traditions of the Church and not the other way around.
For us, it was the historical consistency of the Catholic Church—that the teachings are the same today as they were in the first centuries after Christ—that led us to it despite the poor experiences we’d had with individual Catholics. We believed firmly in objective truth: that was what morally true thousands of years ago for humanity is still true today. If the nature of marriage and sex made contraception wrong 2,000 years ago, then it’s still wrong, because the essential nature of sex and marriage is the same.
So Catholicism is true after all. Crap.
It’s one thing to intellectually accept a religious institution has divine authority. It’s another thing to live that out. We’d decided at the beginning of our quest, though, that if we ever found Truth, we intended to live by it. Integrity, for some strange reason, was critically important to us both. If Buddhism was true, then we’d shave our heads and wear robes to work. If Mormonism was true, we’d give up coffee and Coke and wear sacred underwear. Probably even move to Utah.
But then there was Catholicism…and we realized that being faithful to Catholic teachings was the hardest path to follow as far as religions go. The bar is set very, very high for a person who wants to be a genuine Catholic—it’s not that there are so many rules about what you can’t do, but the call to holiness in Catholicism demands more of you spiritually than any other faith. C.S. Lewis called this the “weight of glory.” Were we ready to never tell a lie again? To avoid gossiping? To attend Mass every weekend after years of sleeping in? To eschew contraception for NFP even when we didn’t want to abstain?


By the time we were done RCIA, we were beating down the doors to become members of the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church.
We realized that if we believed the Church spoke with the voice of Christ—and we did—then we had to submit to all her teachings, not just the ones we found convenient or easy. We realized that if we decided, for example, the Church was wrong about remarriage, then we were undermining the Real Presence. If the Church is wrong about contraception, then how can we have faith it’s right about baptism taking away sin or about God or even heaven? We had rejected, over and over, faiths that taught we could define morality on our own. But with that Truth facing us, it was a frightening prospect to submit our whole lives to it.
In the end, we did. We became Catholic together, surrendering our wills to the Church because we knew it was the same as surrendering them to Christ. That alone made it possible for us to accept all the teachings of Catholicism. And all along this hard road to sanctification, we’ve relied on our love for Him–and more importantly, His love for us–to live out the gift of faith He gave us.
Some people are amazed we were so resolute in our search for truth. But really, we did not choose Him–He chose us. Like Aslan in The Horse and His Boy, Jesus was there the entire time, nudging us this way and that, ensuring we had the grace to find the truth, accept it, and live by it.
Thank you, Jesus, for loving me even in my sin and for calling me home to You. What a gift it is to be Catholic!


Source: Catholic Sistas

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Monday, May 14, 2012

Todd Meade's Testimony

Every spiritual life is a journey. Mine began in Warner Robins, Georgia in 1971. I was born into a good Methodist family and had a strong Christian foundation laid for me in childhood. Unfortunately, as is all too common, during my teenage years I drifted away somewhat from this good foundation and was lukewarm, at best, towards Christianity. I still attended weekly church services and youth group activities, but my interests were mainly in having fun with my friends. Having a spiritual life was far from my mind.




At the age of 17, I had a profound conversion experience that impressed upon me the reality and urgency of Christianity. I gave my heart and life to Jesus and experienced a great sense of meaning and purpose in life. Around this time, my family and I became Southern Baptists, which matched well with my new fervency and devotion.
I ended up attending Jerry Falwell’s well-known Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia, which proved to be an ideal place to deepen my devotion and learn more about the faith. College was a great time of spiritual development for me, and by the time I graduated in 1995, I felt energized and excited about where the Lord would lead me and what He would do through me.
Struggling to Re-connect with God
After college, without the support and security of a self-contained Christian environment and, thus, being thrust into “the real world,” I found myself depressed, lonely, and struggling to find my place. I had moved back to Georgia, but I could not find a church where I truly felt at home. The usual format of singing a few praise and worship songs and listening to a preacher for 30 to 40 minutes no longer fulfilled my spiritual hunger the way it had before. Even my own private devotions of Bible reading and prayer also left me feeling empty. Talking with God became more and more of a struggle and trying to maintain that prior tangible sense of fervent devotion became an oppressive burden. It was a crisis moment in my life.
I was not aware of it at the time, because it was not a teaching that I had come across in my Protestant circles, but what I was going through is a common stage in spiritual development.
After an initial period of zeal and sensible delight in the spiritual life, a period of dryness and seeming darkness often comes as Our Lord draws souls closer to Him and away from self-seeking in pleasurable spiritual consolations. He leads souls through this to teach them to rely on trust and love, and not on good feelings.
But I knew none of this at the time. I only felt like my Christianity was dismantling around me and that there was nothing I could do about it. No matter what I did, I could not find those familiar, sensory indicators, which had previously told me I was close to God. God seemed very distant — even absent — and my cries to Him seemed to be ignored. I felt lost in barren darkness.
Finding Solidarity in the Saints
After many months, a new light did finally pierced the darkness. Oddly enough, this light shown through the writings of some medieval Catholics such as St. John of the Cross and St. Teresa of Avila. St. John’s Dark Night of the Soul and St. Teresa’sInterior Castle, provided me with new spiritual insights and made some sense of what I was going through; they gave me hope.
Their writings also ignited a strange new sweetness of intimacy with Our Lord that was quite unlike anything I had experienced before — profound and deep, but simple, quiet, and peaceful. I discovered that a relationship with God was not always a matter of me thinking about what to say in prayer, or always studying biblical texts for applicable truths. These laudable activities are only the means to reach the ultimate goal, which is a real loving experience with the living God. I learned about something called “contemplation,” which was the name given to the simple, serene, loving intimacy with God for which my soul had been craving, but had been unknowingly fighting against by trying to regain some perceivable feeling.
I began to embrace this new quietude and sweetness, but after a few months I was again plunged into a deep darkness of spirit, which frightened me greatly. A depressing weight seemed to descend upon me. I felt like I was suffocating and I was desperate to get out from under it. I felt as though I needed to expand my horizons and renew my outlook on life. I decided that moving away from my hometown would be the sort of stimulating change of setting that I needed to regain that peace.
Searching for God’s Peace
My foray into the wide world took me next to New England. One night, I stayed at a Benedictine retreat house in Still River, Massachusetts. I still considered myself firmly Protestant, despite the fact that my reading material was at that time mostly written by medieval, Catholic saints. I also felt drawn to monastic settings for some reason, and had a handful of retreat houses picked out prior to my trip that were close to where I would be traveling. At St. Benedict Abbey, after a friendly dinnertime debate with some of the monks about Catholic beliefs, a fellow guest gave me a copy of Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholic by David Currie. She said that she would be praying that I would one day become Catholic. I thought to myself that she could pray all she wanted, but that I would never become Catholic. I tucked the book into my things and moved on the next morning.
I eventually settled in Louisville, Kentucky where I had friends from college. Over the months that followed, I was unable to find a Protestant church that suited me. I knew that I needed more than what I was being offered in the typical Baptist service. Occasionally, in my private time of prayer, I would still enter into moments of that certain deep contemplative peace. Upon going to a Baptist church service, though, I found I was pulled into something much more superficial, with all the songs and preaching and giddy exuberance. On one occasion, I managed through the songs at the beginning of the service, trying unsuccessfully to get into the spirit of the singing. But then, as we sat down and the pastor got up to preach I felt compelled to get up and bolt out of the door, which is exactly what I did. I decided that I could not sit there anymore and listen to another lengthy sermon.
Christian worship had to be more than that. But where would I go? I had experienced in years past the extremes of Pentecostalism and I knew that was not what I wanted. On the other side, the more “reverent” liturgical churches, in recent decades, seemed to have softened into a shapeless liberalism, so I steered clear of them as well. I looked objectively at all the different types of Christian groups, and I became very disenchanted with the fractured nature of Protestantism. There were so many competing groups, all claiming to be following the same Jesus and reading the same Bible. If the Bible was the authority, why did all these Christians disagree on doctrine and practice?
I read more on the histories of various denominations and competing theologies and, in the process, my eyes were opened to the fundamental fallacy of the doctrine of sola scriptura, the idea that the Bible alone is the sole authority for Christian belief. As I later discovered, so many people who end up becoming Catholic realized that the belief that all Christian teachings must be found in the Bible is not itself taught in the Bible!
When the paradoxical truth of that statement settled into my heart and mind, I realized that I could no longer remain Protestant. Protestantism was illogical at its very foundation. However, I also felt that I could not become Catholic either, since I still felt that doctrines like transubstantiation, “worshipping” Mary, praying to saints, the infallibility of the pope, and the belief in purgatory made it a gravely misled religion.
Not Protestant. Not Catholic.
I spent many months in this odd limbo between worlds, with the frustrated feeling that I was at an impasse. After wrestling with it from all angles, I decided to “just live” and not agonize over it. At least I still believed in Jesus, even though He seemed so distant to me. He was real to me by faith and I would trust Him to sort all these things out for me in time. Since I did not know which group to associate with, I actually stopped going to church services for a while, but I did not stop reading the Bible and trying to pray. Praying, at least with words, was like trying to swim upstream, but I tried not to worry too much about it. I eventually gave up trying to pray words at all and would just allot a certain portion of time each day to kneel quietly before Our Lord.
I began making weekly day-trips to the nearby Abbey of Gethsemane in Bardstown, Kentucky (where Thomas Merton had lived) for more intense quiet time with God. These peaceful retreats were the most nourishing times to me during this period, and it was the closest that I felt to a spiritual home. I would often attend Compline (Night Prayer) in the chapel.
Being there with the monks chanting the Psalms was a peaceful and prayerful experience, which made my spirit soar. The peaceful time at the Abbey of Gethsemane resonated with the longing of my spirit and I had a strong sense that I had been brought there by my search for God. I stopped trying to make everything fit together and make sense. For the time, I could gain nourishment from these Catholic resources and places without actually being Catholic. Besides, I was not Protestant anymore. I was not sure exactly what I was except a follower of Jesus, but I was neither a Protestant nor a Catholic. It was a strange time.
Drawn by the Mass
My apartment in Louisville was very close to Holy Spirit Catholic Church and I passed by it daily. Trying to find more avenues of spiritual nourishment, I decided to attend Mass one Sunday evening. I sat there alone, spiritually burdened, and exhausted. As the liturgy started, I was struck with something new: a worship service that answered the unnamed longing. There was music and singing, but it was peaceful and reverent worship, with a subdued and beautiful joy. There were non-embellished prayers and readings from Scripture, followed by a short sermon.
As the priest began the Eucharistic prayers, I was prepared to endure some strangeness, some glaring vestiges of ancient pagan rituals. However, I was pleasantly surprised. The Eucharistic prayers sounded scriptural, Christ-centered, and quite rich and meaningful. There was no strangeness, no invoking of pagan deities. The priest was expounding on the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross, which I wholeheartedly believed in. Above the altar in that particular church, there was a life-size, realistic depiction of Jesus hanging on the cross. I found myself gazing up throughout Mass at His outstretched arms. He seemed to be reaching out to embrace me, to draw me close to Him — there in that place. I did not quite understand everything that happened at that first Mass, but I knew I would return the following week.
I started to feel very much at home at Mass. I still felt strongly that many of the underlying doctrines of the Catholic Church were wrong, but I was finding nourishment there that I had not found elsewhere. I felt confident that I could glean spiritual nourishment by coming there and still not become Catholic. Therefore, I continued to go to Mass.
A “gravely, misguided religion”?
Eventually, I was moved to begin reading that book given to me so many months before. Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholicactually made me angry the first time through! The author seemed to me to be somewhat arrogant in his absolute certainty of the truths of the Catholic Faith. How could he be so sure? I continued to make the weekly trips to the Abbey of Gethsemane and I read the book again. In addition, I read the writings of the early Church Fathers. I quietly knelt before our Lord daily in prayer, like a mute beggar.
Then, through continued prayer, reading, study, and attending Mass, a great miracle took place. Nothing else except a miracle could explain the melting away of so many barriers and long-held misconceptions I had about the Catholic Faith. The first doctrine I accepted was that of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. I saw anew the sixth chapter of St. John’s Gospel in which Jesus speaks so clearly of the necessity of eating His Body and drinking His Blood. This was confirmed in the writings of the early Church that spoke of the Eucharist in ways consistent with the Catholic teaching. The Lord’s Supper in the Baptist church always seemed to lack something, and now I saw that Baptist teaching on the Eucharist did not match up with either Scripture or early Church practice.
Papal authority and apostolic succession closed the authority gap that Protestants had unsuccessfully sought to fill with sola scriptura. Again I found confirmation in the early Church writings of the authoritative role of the successors of the Apostles and that of the local bishops. After the authority question was settled, the other “problem” doctrines fell into place: purgatory, Mary and the saints, indulgences, and so on. Catholic doctrines and practices are so beautifully woven together that once one begins to accept some of the Church’s teachings, the entire theological system eventually falls into place.
I joined the RCIA program at Holy Spirit Parish and, at long last, I was received into full communion with the Catholic Church on February 18th, 1999. Words cannot express the fire that Christ ignited in me through union with His one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic Church — truly a treasure of treasures. I could go on for pages and pages about the Eucharist alone, as well as the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Communion of Saints, the rosary, the Divine Office, the feasts and liturgical seasons, the myriad of precious devotions, the 2000 years of Christ’s Church on earth, and the increased love for our Lord that He has instilled within me! New vistas and vast oceans of boundless and unspeakable riches have opened up before my eyes as the clear and brilliant light of Truth — O Glorious Truth! — shining brightly from the bosom of Holy Mother Church, in the Bride and Body of Christ dispersed, yet one throughout the whole earth!
Yes, I knew Jesus Christ as a Protestant. But the crumbs and morsels of Him I previously tasted and cherished I now find laid out in fullness before me upon the richest and most glorious banquet table — the Catholic Church! Praised be God forever!

Source: The Coming Home Network International

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