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The Magnificent Experience that Brought This Ex-Protestant into the Church

“Hi, my name is Paul, and I’m an ex-Protestant.”

Telling my conversion story can sometimes feel as though I were attending some sort of “Church Anonymous”  meeting.

God and the Bible and prayer have been a part of my life for as long as I can remember. Growing up, we went to services every week (sometimes twice in one week), read the Bible regularly, went to Bible studies, listened to Christian music, and prayed before every meal and every night before going to sleep. I knew deeply that God was real, that He loved me, and that He sent His Son to die on the cross for my sins. I knew that the Bible is the Word of God and that it is important to read it, know it, memorize it, and live it out. These truths were foundational, intimately woven into the fiber of my being. These truths are still just as true for me today.

After spending quite a bit of time trying to figure out what I wanted to study, I found myself attending a private Christian university in Southern California and graduated with my degree in biblical studies and theology. I loved the Bible and had a special love for the Old Testament and Judaism. (Our Lord saw fit to have me marry a woman of Jewish descent.) During my time there, I read, studied, wrote, read more, wrote more, studied more. When I graduated, I had many theological views that were very different from when I had started the program just a few years earlier. I certainly felt as though I had this whole “biblical studies” thing figured out.

After getting married, starting a new job, moving a few times, and getting settled as an official adult, I found myself floundering. Those firmly held theological views I had graduated with seemed to be growing less and less firm. We searched for the perfect faith community to plant roots in and even spent long periods of time not going to any services at all. I started questioning certain beliefs, exploring other options, trying on different views like so many pairs of shoes. I still knew that God existed, and I still believed that He loved me and sent His Son to die on the cross for my sins. I still thought the Bible was important to read, know, study, and memorize. I still thought prayer was good. These things just seemed to be less and less important in my daily life.

Life continued, and marriage continued, and marriage is wonderful and beautiful but also hard and sometimes painful. At a certain point, we were both feeling weary and distant from each other and from God. Without going into the gritty details (which would be quite another long story), we both started reading a devotional based on the writings of St. John of the Cross. And then, in 2016, as Christmas was approaching, we made the decision to attend the midnight Mass at the local Catholic parish.

I’m still not quite sure why this idea would come into our heads. We had recently settled on a Protestant community to call “home” and had decided to really give it a go, but at 11:45 P.M. on Christmas Eve, we found ourselves parking and walking inside St. Paul the Apostle. St. Paul — the man I had read about my whole life, the man whom I was named after. The man who received quite a surprise one fateful day. The man whose name means “small.”

We expected this Mass to be all candles and pews and hymns and poinsettias but didn’t realize that 11:45 isn’t early enough to get a good seat, so instead of candles and pews, we found fluorescent lights and folding chairs after being directed to a side room since the main church was full. After seriously considering aborting the mission that we didn’t even fully understand, we took our seats toward the back, backs straight and minds buzzing. We had no clue what to do or what to expect. We were on guard because if all we had been taught about Catholics was true, we were probably going to be assaulted with some Mary stuff or some vain repetition, and we most certainly would be seeing some people trying to “work their way to Heaven.”

And then the entrance procession began. In walked the altar servers carrying the incense, and the deacon, and the priest, and for some reason, at that moment, something inside me cracked. For the briefest of moments, it seemed as if the ground had shifted or perhaps my heart shifted, and I felt as though I had lost my footing somehow — and then the singing and then incense overwhelmed me, and for the next hour and a half, I was bouncing around inside myself while at the same time being transfixed by all that was going on around me.

Three things happened internally during this Mass that still stand out to me today. I had three internal visions (what I would now describe as interior locutions). The first was an image of my wife and me standing on the bow of a great ship. The seas were calm; the weather was sunny and warm; and while we stood looking around, I became aware of a subtle breeze that shifted the direction of this ship.

Then, as we were kneeling in prayer, I saw us as if I were looking down on us from above. From our chests, I saw our hearts being drawn out toward the altar, bright glowing gold and flaming, almost artistically painted. Third, I was almost overwhelmed with how Jewish this all felt: the priest standing and representing God to the people while at the same time presenting the people to God, the altar, the Tabernacle, the incense. This was like the Judaism that I had always been so enamored of, yet so much more.

And then the priest was praying and saying words that I knew came from Scripture, and everyone was kneeling and had their heads bowed, but I couldn’t help watching him closely, because I knew that this part was important, and then…

“Behold the Lamb of God. Behold Him Who takes away the sins of the world.”

That small shift I had sensed earlier became like an earthquake. My heart broke open, and while I saw that it was still the same host being held in this man’s hands, it was no longer a piece of bread. I don’t know how, but I instantly knew more deeply and truly than I have ever known anything that this was, in fact, Jesus Christ. I have never wanted anything more fully in my life. I wanted to lie down flat on my face in that fluorescent-lit room. I wanted to bum-rush the altar and consume Him. I wanted to stare at this strange, flat piece of bread until my last breath, while at the same time, I felt as though I couldn’t bear to look a moment longer. It felt like an eternity, and during this eternity, I realized that this whole Catholic “it’s not bread; it’s Jesus” thing was true, and if this thing was true, then all of it was true. I knelt in awe as these Catholics streamed forward toward the altar, that place of sacrifice, to the priest-who-represents-God to receive Jesus, my Jesus. Echoing the words of the Prophet Isaiah, I was undone.

We left after Mass, and the next day was Christmas, so it was pretty busy and festive. It wasn’t until the following day that my wife and I had a chance to talk. I was nervous, knowing I was going to have to tell her that I thought God wanted us to be Catholic, so I was surprised to find out that she had had a similar experience during Mass.

After over four hours of talking and crying and talking more, we decided to go back to the same parish the following Sunday. And we did. And we started RCIA. And eight months later, just three days before the Feast of the Assumption, we were received into the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. We stood before friends, family, and strangers and professed our belief in all that the Catholic Church teaches. As that lovely oil ran down into our eyes, we walked toward the priest-who-represents-God and received the Creator of the Universe on our tongues.

We consumed Him Who had so consumed us.

This world is crazy and painful and scary and dark. The Church often seems similar. We can get caught up in debating and arguing and fighting uphill battles and get overwhelmed by confusing news and become discouraged at the current state of things. But in the midst of this chaos, God still speaks; priests still stand in persona Christi; Sacred Scripture remains; and lives are still changed by the overwhelming, never-ending, sacrificial love of God. This Church is the fullness of truth, beauty, and goodness, and amid scandal and heresy, it is still the bulwark and pillar of truth. May we never forget this. May we never forget the power of Our Lord in the Eucharist.

Blessed be God.
Blessed be His Holy Name.
Blessed be Jesus Christ, true God and true Man.
Blessed be the Name of Jesus.
Blessed be His Most Sacred Heart.
Blessed be His Most Precious Blood.
Blessed be Jesus in the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar.
Blessed be the Holy Spirit, the Paraclete.
Blessed be the great Mother of God, Mary most Holy.
Blessed be her Holy and Immaculate Conception.
Blessed be her Glorious Assumption.
Blessed be the name of Mary, Virgin and Mother.
Blessed be St. Joseph, her most chaste spouse.
Blessed be God in His Angels and in His Saints. Amen.

May the heart of Jesus, in the Most Blessed Sacrament, be praised, adored, and loved with grateful affection, at every moment, in all the tabernacles of the world, even to the end of time. Amen.

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