During the Easter vigil Mass, in so many parishes, a moving moment comes when the faithful welcome new believers: catechumens (those who receive baptism, Communion and confirmation) and candidates (already baptized) who have typically completed the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults (RCIA).
According to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, tens of thousands of converts across the country joined the Church as full disciples of Christ this year.
In England and Wales, at Easter, some 900 members of the Church of England were received into the Catholic Church, including 61 former Church of England priests. They joined a new Catholic entity, called the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, created by Pope Benedict XVI so that former Anglicans in England and Wales can maintain aspects of their tradition.
The Anglican ordinariate is led by Father Keith Newton, a former Anglican bishop who converted to Catholicism and was ordained a Catholic priest earlier this year.
But what are the ingredients for a successful conversion?
To read more, click here.
The five steps outlined in this article are not particular to the Roman Catholic approach to making converts and have been used effectively by other faith traditions. The key is to invest in a personal relationship with the prospective convert.
1 comment:
Luther's still on the heretic list last I looked. This is an entre pot to many other (true) Catholic Churchmen of the Reformation. Has Rome ever lifted, officially, publicly, and widely the "bull"of excommunication against Queen Elizabeth 1?
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