The fear of rejection caused me to isolate myself in early 2005 after Rich was received into the Catholic Church. By the following year, that fear had become a cautious timidity. I warily explored the Mass and Catholic Christianity, trying to ignore the cultural cautions of my Protestant roots. Yet even as I found Jesus so real in the Eucharist, I was plagued by the anxious whirring of the stress of being different – something I was reminded of each Sunday.
Why was I so bothered by this reality? I didn’t know. However, I was constantly reminded that no matter how often I attended Mass or met with the members of the home Bible study, I was forever out of step. I realized I would never quite be accepted within the Catholic culture. I would always feel alien.
It was an uncomfortable place to be.
Yet all the while, Jesus tried to point me toward Himself and His peace.
As I read the devotional book, My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers, I came across this entry, “Is the grace of His ministering life being worked out through you in your home, your business, and in your circle of friends? Have you been wondering why you are going through certain circumstances? In fact, it is not that you have to go through them. It is because of your relationship with the Son of God who comes, through the providential will of His Father, into your life. You must allow Him to have His way with you, staying in perfect oneness with Him.”
Anxiety, like the little foxes that spoil the vines, had turned my heart from the graces of Christ’s love to a self-ward dwelling on my difficulties.
Even when the Holy Spirit pointed me aright with whispers that the journey of faith often leads through difficult times, I ignored Him. I let the social and cultural stresses I experienced tempt me to be full of worry. Yet, despite my negative responses to Christ’s gentle call, somehow He used my anxiety to prod me toward His loving embrace.
During the following few months, it slowly dawned on me that my sense of alienation was rooted not in my present, but in my past. I had thought I’d left those long forgotten days of alienation behind.
In the summer of 1952, before I turned five, I discovered what it meant to be a social oddity. My sister had several episodes of epileptic seizures which often left her unresponsive, and sometimes without respirations for extended periods. I remember my mother frantically calling the fire department (who acted also as paramedics) each time Jan had an episode. Meanwhile, I was sent across the street to stay out of the firemen’s way. From there I would watch our living room window hoping to see the men who were trying to revive my sister. Standing around me were neighbors from the other apartment houses who, for reasons I still do not understand, berated my mother and accused her of calling the fire department so often because she was seeking attention for herself. Even my best friend’s mother found fault with us. She was a Christian Scientist and did not believe in sickness. When my parents rejected her idea that Jan was not really ill, and that they should stop seeking medical help for her, my friend’s mother would not let her play with me again.
Thus in 2006, as I attended the Catholic Church with Rich, I felt myself alienated once more. The experience was like jumping into the deep end of a swimming pool filled with snakes. So devastating were my memories, I panicked. Yet, Jesus was there with me in the pool among those snakes. His strong arms held onto me, as He gently encouraged me to open my eyes to His reassuring presence there with me. And slowly I realized that He was not going to leave me. He was going to help me.
I discovered later that He would do so though a series of unexpected events.
One Sunday afternoon, I was stressing over some event (which I cannot remember) from that morning’s Mass, mulling over how different I was from the rest of the congregation. I sat at our computer, trying to avoid those nagging thoughts of how useless it was to continue to attend services with Rich.
As I absently surfed the web, looking at nothing in particular, I remembered a comment someone made about Mother Angelica, the founder of Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN). I had listened to Mother Angelica sometimes on the radio. I found the EWTN web address and clicked the link to the opening page. That was when I discovered Mother Angelica was recovering from a stroke. I was saddened by this and I followed the links to the prayer response page—joyful to know there was something I could do for her: I could pray. The site did not ask me if I was Protestant or Catholic. It just asked me to choose the number of prayers I would say for Mother Angelica’s healing. I typed a number and then noticed there was an option to pray a rosary.
For several months prior to this, I had been using rosary beads only to meditate on the various Mysteries (Joyful, Sorrowful, Glorious, and Light). I had found this practice to be very worthwhile and spiritually fulfilling. But when I saw the option to pray a full rosary for Mother Angelica, I wondered how I would be able to do so the “Catholic” way, since much of the rosary includes the Hail Mary and other Marian prayers, which were alien to my experience as a Protestant Christian.
However, I continued to sense the Holy Spirit’s prompting to pray a rosary’s length of prayers for Mother Angelica, and I felt overwhelmed with a surety that, no matter what others might think of me, I was not a misfit, that my place with Rich in the Catholic Church was part of God’s plan for my faith journey. And in a split-second, I decided that if Catholics could say rosaries, I could too. With the click of the mouse, I committed myself to saying 365 rosaries for Mother Angelica’s health.
A moment later, anxiety gripped me. I was assaulted with any number of “what ifs” – such as, What if I am doing something terrible, using a rosary to pray? What if Catholics find out and scoff at me? What if this type of prayer is only for Catholics? What if this turns me into a Roman Catholic?
Fear can generate a long list of reasons why we should not seek to follow Christ’s leading. I ignored the “what ifs. I knew our Father in heaven is pleased when we dedicate ourselves to communicating with Him. So I set out to keep my promised prayers . . . .
Ancient Boundary
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*“Do not move the ancient boundary which your fathers have set.”* Proverbs
22:28
God‘s word is a fence. It’s a boundary. God designed it that way to set th...
3 years ago
4 comments:
My computer has been down for awhile, so I have been catching up on your posts.
You have an extraordinary gift for writing as well as your other artistic talents. Two writers in the family ...Whooo hooo!
Although I spent most of my life in a variety of Protestant churches (happily ... but slowly disengaging after college) I could never have imagined myself as RC ... for any reason. Yet I did make this huge leap.
I think your writing really gives voice to the depths of the division between RCs and Protestants better than any thing else I have read. And, you point out that many of these divisions are based on misunderstandings. It is the gift of your writing that you can, in love, explore and bridge some of those divides.
God bless you,
Susan (sister of Kirsten) :)
I disagree with Susan and anyone else who's been too afraid to be so honest that they can't be "nice" in a response. This drama of Nancy's is just childish and ridiculous; using religious or spiritual excuses for this attention-getting behavior is a sheer waste of time. I'm glad it at least doesn't appear to be too popular. Nancy, you are not in a traumatic situation, and you need to stop writing like you are. You give no honest, straightforward message of current or past abuse of any kind, physical, verbal, emotional or even spiritual; and even for people who have suffered in the past, in our society, people have come a long way in encouraging and praising successes in the area of counseling so that it makes it so much easier for people to act a lot less victim-like and drop their baggages. Therefore, Nancy, without any "spiritual", or relational excuses for why you go on like you do, the only thing you *honestly* *have* to do is grow up and get over yourself. And one of the first, best steps you can take in doing that is to just *stop* the childish drama that you call a blog.
Nancy -
Thank God for your gifts -- and thank you for sharing them with us so abundantly.
Please don't be discouraged by venom-filled comments like the one posted on 8/15. That individual obviously has his or her own cross to bear and has completely misunderstood the point of your writing.
The rest of us are blessed by it.
Anna
Dear Nan, this blog entry was a long time ago... I'm not even certain if you will see my response; religious differences are a very heavy issue... lives have been lost, and people damaged severely (as you so correctly note elsewhere). These need processing, and because you ended this blog eventually--I'm guessing you have worked through the issues that started your writing. This process was not an ongoing, therefore, "stuck" problem... So many become enmeshed with their "issues"--never going beyond them; maintaining bitterness and rage... not learning the "forgiveness" necessary for healing (both of ourselves and others). Your thoughts delineate the thoughts of other Protestants (I was formerly Methodist), and help clarify for Catholics what their exclusive behaviors do to other Christians--continuing the alienation brought by the Reformation/Counter-Reformation. For us to "all be at the banquet table together as one"; this kind of processing need happen. We each need to be enriched by the faith journeys of others--because that is how unity will occur, if it does. With the current attacks on Christianity, we need each other even more. I, myself, have been sustained in my faith journey to vowed life by the prayers of good Protestants, as well as Catholics. God is generous--we humans often are not.
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