Blog Archives - The Coming Home Network https://chnetwork.org/category/blog/ A network of inquirers, converts, and reverts to the Catholic Church, as well as life-long Catholics, all on a journey of continual conversion to Jesus Christ. Wed, 10 Jul 2024 18:46:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 On the Journey, Episode 148: What is Divine Revelation? Dei Verbum, Part I https://chnetwork.org/on-the-journey/on-the-journey-episode-148-what-is-divine-revelation-dei-verbum-part-i/ https://chnetwork.org/on-the-journey/on-the-journey-episode-148-what-is-divine-revelation-dei-verbum-part-i/#respond Wed, 10 Jul 2024 18:46:48 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?post_type=on-the-journey&p=115041 Many are familiar with the fact that the Catholic Church does not hold to the Reformation doctrine of sola Scriptura. But what does the Catholic Church teach about God’s Word?

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Many are familiar with the fact that the Catholic Church does not hold to the Reformation doctrine of sola Scriptura.

But what does the Catholic Church teach about God’s Word?

Matt Swaim, Ken Hensley and Kenny Burchard begin a new series unpacking Dei Verbum, the Catholic Church’s official document on Divine Revelation from the Second Vatican Council. They begin by looking at the historical climate leading up to the council in the early 1960’s, and how that provided a new opportunity for the Church to re-articulate its understanding of how God speaks to His people.

As former Evangelical pastors, Ken and Kenny share how reflecting on this period in Catholic history has helped them to better appreciate what the Church has to say about the Bible and the nature of divine revelation.

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The Way of God More Fully: In the Footsteps of Sts. Priscilla and Aquila https://chnetwork.org/2024/07/08/the-way-of-god-more-fully-in-the-footsteps-of-sts-priscilla-and-aquila/ https://chnetwork.org/2024/07/08/the-way-of-god-more-fully-in-the-footsteps-of-sts-priscilla-and-aquila/#respond Mon, 08 Jul 2024 21:04:08 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?p=115028 When he discovered I had become Catholic, one of the men whom I had pastored for several years called me. In a distraught voice, he asked, “Pastor Kenny, didn’t you

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When he discovered I had become Catholic, one of the men whom I had pastored for several years called me.

In a distraught voice, he asked, “Pastor Kenny, didn’t you think you were a Christian before? Didn’t you think I was? Do you think I am one now?”

Initially, I didn’t understand the question, but as the conversation unfolded, I discovered that since he didn’t believe Catholics were true Christians, he assumed Catholics believed the same in reverse. Nothing could be further from the truth! (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 817-819).

When I assured my friend that I thought both he and I really were Christians while I was his pastor, he asked, “Then why would you become Catholic?” The answer came flying out of my mouth: “Because being a Catholic is the difference between ‘something’ and ‘everything,’ and that’s a big difference.” I would later learn the phrase “the fullness of the faith” to explain what I meant.

The “difference between something and everything” is illustrated in Acts 18:24-28 when, while ministering in the church in Ephesus, Priscilla and Aquila come upon an eloquent itinerant Alexandrian preacher named Apollos. From what they could tell, he “had been instructed in the way of the Lord; and being fervent in spirit, he spoke and taught accurately the things concerning Jesus, though he knew only the baptism of John” (v. 25).

Notice that it was not the impulse of Priscilla and Aquila to call Apollos’ salvation into question. No! His was a real, vibrant, genuine—though not fully formed—faith in Jesus. Priscilla and Aquila realized that Apollos needed “the difference between something and everything,” so “…when Priscilla and Aquila heard him, they took him and expounded to him the way of God more accurately.” (Some translations read “more fully.”) To use the phrase I learned later, they brought Apol- los into “the fullness of the Catholic faith.”

Commenting on this text, a 4th century Alexandrian preacher, St. Didymus the Blind, said: “[Apollos] was speaking in the Spirit, and he was teaching in the synagogues what he knew about Jesus. Being students of the apostle Paul, Priscilla and Aquila take him, being full of eagerness, aside in order to pass on to him the entire way of the gospel.”

When we say that our mission at the Coming Home Network is to “help non-Catholic clergy and laity discover the truth and beauty of the Catholic Church, and make the journey home,” we are assuming the same thing about them that Priscilla and Aquila assumed about Apollos. Many of them have a genuine faith in Christ, and unlike Apollos, a valid baptism! (CCC 818, 1256, 1306). They have real spiritual gifts, effective ministries, evidence of God’s grace in their lives, and passion to follow Jesus wherever he leads them. Like Apollos, they are serving Christ with all their hearts and faithfully walking in all the light they have.

In His providence, the Lord is leading many of these dear men and women into the company of Catholics and Catholic apostolates to help them see that while they truly do have “something,” there is a unity and fullness of faith—an “everything”—still available to them, which subsists only in the Catholic Church. (CCC 816, 830, 870).

Let us, then, take up this call to follow in the footsteps of Saints Priscilla and Aquila, and to prayerfully, lovingly, patiently, and gently, introduce them to the everything—the way of God more fully—to be found only in the true and beautiful Catholic Church.

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The CHNetwork Weekly Roundup #412 https://chnetwork.org/2024/07/05/the-chnetwork-weekly-roundup-412/ https://chnetwork.org/2024/07/05/the-chnetwork-weekly-roundup-412/#respond Fri, 05 Jul 2024 12:59:43 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?p=115021 Got a question about the Catholic Faith, or need assistance on your journey? Consider joining our Online Community, or feel free to contact us for support. The Coming Home Network

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Got a question about the Catholic Faith, or need assistance on your journey? Consider joining our Online Community, or feel free to contact us for support. The Coming Home Network exists to help converts, “reverts,” those on the journey, and those who are just curious – we’d love to hear from you!

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The latest from CHNetwork

This week’s episode of The Journey Home was a great conversation with Fr. Ken Geraci, who left faith behind to pursue worldly success before a friend challenged him to reconsider his priorities.

We shared an article explaining why storytelling is such a big part of our work at the Coming Home Network.

In a featured written testimony, Christy Kellner shared how her appreciation for George Washington and the Founding Fathers helped lead her to the Catholic Church.

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CONVERTS AND CONVERSION

Detroit Catholic interviewed a woman who was inspired by the late Al Kresta to return to the Church and start a Bible study that’s lasted 20 years.

Msgr. Thomas Guarino reflected on the Evangelicals and Catholics Together movement 30 years later.

Catholic World Report revisited the story of the Prime Minister of China who became a Benedictine monk.

Gigi Duncan looked at the rise of the Catholic population in South Carolina.

And Angelus News looked at the story of CHNetwork member Michael Cardona, a former Hindu guru who entered the Catholic Church this year.

APOLOGETICS PICKS OF THE WEEK

ChurchPOP shared 9 patron saints of athletes ahead of this year’s Summer Olympics.

The Purposeful Lab podcast pondered whether Catholicism is compatible with the existence of extraterrestrial life.

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A member who’s excited to finally start OCIA this Fall after years of exploring the Catholic Faith, another member whose health difficulties are making it hard for them to meet regularly with their parish about beocming Catholic, and all our members who are hoping to become Catholic in countries where it is difficult to become a Christian  — these are just a few of the people we are praying for and working with at The Coming Home Network. Please help us continue to support those on the journey by visiting chnetwork.org/donate today!

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“Indeed, faith and hope will end when we die, whereas love, that is, charity, will last for eternity.”

Bl. Pier Giorgio Frassati

Feast Day: July 4th

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The Power of a Good Story https://chnetwork.org/2024/07/02/the-power-of-a-good-story/ https://chnetwork.org/2024/07/02/the-power-of-a-good-story/#respond Tue, 02 Jul 2024 19:15:15 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?p=115011 There is a reason the Bible is known as the “greatest story ever told.” Long before the printing press and the availability of the written word for all to access,

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There is a reason the Bible is known as the “greatest story ever told.”

Long before the printing press and the availability of the written word for all to access, our ancestors in faith passed down the truth of God’s beauty, wisdom, love, and mercy toward us through their own stories of encounter.

We know of our family history through the lived experience of those who wandered through the desert with Moses, who boarded the ark Noah built, who heard about the promise made to Abraham and told their stories through the generations. We know of God’s fidelity and redemption through the stories of the prophets who didn’t sugarcoat the infidelity of man. Yes, we know the facts—the number of cubits and thread counts and all the materials that went into the creating the ark and priestly vestments. More importantly, though, these stories reveal to us the heart of God the Father, who patiently and persistently calls His children home to Himself through the ages.

We hear Jesus use stories and parables to explain and unveil the Kingdom of God to his disciples and all who would listen. Even after the Resurrection, we see Jesus continue to patiently reveal the Father’s plan to those who, having witnessed the crucifixion, still couldn’t see the fulfillment of God’s promise through the risen Christ. More than this, we begin to know the heart of Christ, the promise of mercy, and the power of the Holy Spirit, through the stories of the Gospel writers and the first apostles. We witness the fulfillment of God’s promise through the experiences of those who walked with Christ on earth and continued to preach the Gospel following his passion, death, resurrection, and ascension— often to their own earthly demise.

The story doesn’t end there, though. Through the centuries, we have the stories of countless men and women who have continued to show us what it means to live out the Gospel, what it means to love God and neighbor, what it means to pursue a life of heroic virtue in imitation of Christ. We know the everlasting power of the saving grace that lies in Christ through His Church empowered by the Holy Spirit because of the stories of the saints throughout the last two millennia. We know the truth of the faith through their experiences and testimony. And yet, that, too, is not the end.

The story continues with each of us. The goodness of God continues to be proclaimed in the movement of our own lives. The fruit of Christ’s sacrifice for us—His tender mercy and compassion and love—continues to be revealed in our encounters with the steadfast sacramental life of the Church despite (or perhaps through) our suffering and wandering.

No story is insignificant. Each one is another chapter— however long or short—in the overarching story of God, the only story worth sharing again and again.

We would love to hear YOUR story of conversion. Visit chnetwork.org/submissions to see our submission guidelines, or email us at info@chnetwork.org.

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The CHNetwork Weekly Roundup #411 https://chnetwork.org/2024/06/28/the-chnetwork-weekly-roundup-411/ https://chnetwork.org/2024/06/28/the-chnetwork-weekly-roundup-411/#respond Fri, 28 Jun 2024 10:57:40 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?p=115003 Got a question about the Catholic Faith, or need assistance on your journey? Consider joining our Online Community, or feel free to contact us for support. The Coming Home Network

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Got a question about the Catholic Faith, or need assistance on your journey? Consider joining our Online Community, or feel free to contact us for support. The Coming Home Network exists to help converts, “reverts,” those on the journey, and those who are just curious – we’d love to hear from you!

*****

The latest from CHNetwork

This week’s episode of The Journey Home was an awesome conversation with Lee and Valiree Sondeno, former Pentecostal music ministers whose experience of COVID led them to begin exploring the Catholic Church.

On the latest Deep in Christ, JonMarc Grodi and Matt Swaim discussed how the Coming Home Network responds when a well-known public figure becomes Catholic.

In a featured written testimony, Chris Kellam talked about how being fair to the Catholic Church led to him falling in love with it.

And on a new Insights, former Evangelical pastor Justin Hibbard shared an insight about the Ark of the Covenant that helped him better understand Catholic teaching on the Eucharist.

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CONVERTS AND CONVERSION

Catholic World Report profiled Bishop John Barres, whose parents were converts and had him baptized by Archbishop Fulton Sheen.

Agnes Aineah shared the story of how a Nigerian priest’s commitment to the Rosary helped convert a man out of a lifestyle of witchcraft and immorality.

Jueken Wen talked about growing up atheist in China before coming home to the Catholic Church.

Courtney Mares reflected on the addiction, recovery and conversion of Venerable Matt Talbot.

And a former Anglican priest has been consecrated as a bishop in the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham.

APOLOGETICS PICKS OF THE WEEK

Recent Journey Home guest Derek Rotty discussed some top Catholic pilgrimage sites in Washington, DC.

Jordan Haddad explored the concept of the development of doctrine through the eyes of St. Bonaventure.

And Dave Armstrong explained why the Catholic understanding of the connection between Baptism and justification is more Biblical than many Protestants realize.

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A member pondering leaving their job as a pastor to become Catholic, another member whose interest in the Church has been damaging their work in ecumenical ministry, and all our members who have officially become Catholic over the past several weeks — these are just a few of the people we are praying for and working with at The Coming Home Network. Please help us continue to support those on the journey by visiting chnetwork.org/donate today!

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“What, then? If there should be a dispute over some kind of question, ought we not to have recourse to the most ancient Churches in which the Apostles were familiar, and draw from them what is clear and certain in regard to that question? What if the Apostles had not in fact left writings to us? Would it not be necessary to follow the order of tradition, which was handed down to those to whom they entrusted the Churches?”

St. Irenaeus of Lyons

Feast Day: June 28th

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Communion and the Ark of the Covenant – Justin Hibbard https://chnetwork.org/insights/communion-and-the-ark-of-the-covenant-justin-hibbard/ https://chnetwork.org/insights/communion-and-the-ark-of-the-covenant-justin-hibbard/#respond Fri, 28 Jun 2024 09:32:14 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?post_type=insights&p=115000 Justin Hibbard was an Evangelical pastor who believed he should be taking the idea of the Lord’s Supper more seriously, but wasn’t exactly sure how to do that. He shares

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Justin Hibbard was an Evangelical pastor who believed he should be taking the idea of the Lord’s Supper more seriously, but wasn’t exactly sure how to do that.

He shares how a comment during a Bible study in regard to the Ark of the Covenant got him to rethink his concept of symbolism, and helped him unlock a new way of looking at how God mediates spiritual realities to us through physical signs.

Watch Justin on The Journey Home

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The CHNetwork Weekly Roundup #410 https://chnetwork.org/2024/06/19/the-chnetwork-weekly-roundup-410/ https://chnetwork.org/2024/06/19/the-chnetwork-weekly-roundup-410/#respond Wed, 19 Jun 2024 10:50:09 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?p=114947 Got a question about the Catholic Faith, or need assistance on your journey? Consider joining our Online Community, or feel free to contact us for support. The Coming Home Network

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Got a question about the Catholic Faith, or need assistance on your journey? Consider joining our Online Community, or feel free to contact us for support. The Coming Home Network exists to help converts, “reverts,” those on the journey, and those who are just curious – we’d love to hear from you!

*****

The latest from CHNetwork

This week’s episode of The Journey Home was a great conversation with Monica Anyango about how her experience of single motherhood led her to return to the Church.

The CHNetwork family reflected on the conversion and witness of Al Kresta, who passed away last weekend from liver cancer.

On the latest Deep in Christ, JonMarc Grodi and Kenny Burchard reflected on the tangible spirituality of the Catholic Faith.

And on a new Insights, Alicia Baker shared how she found healing in Christ after experiencing abuse.

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CONVERTS AND CONVERSION

Remembrances of Al Kresta were posted by numerous friends this week, including Steve Ray, Matthew Bunson, Jonah McKeown, and Kathy Schiffer.

And champion cyclist Justin Koelbl shared how the witness of his father inspired his own return to faith.

APOLOGETICS PICKS OF THE WEEK

Bishop Daniel Flores reflected on hunger, poverty, and the Eucharist.

And Fr. Samuel Keyes reflected on why gardening is such a prevalent theme in the teachings of Jesus.

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A convert member whose adult children have begun to consider Catholicism, another member who is trying to reinvent themselves professionally now that they’re exploring the Church, and all our members who have officially become Catholic over the past several weeks — these are just a few of the people we are praying for and working with at The Coming Home Network. Please help us continue to support those on the journey by visiting chnetwork.org/donate today!

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“It is better to be a child of God than king of the whole world.”

St. Aloysius Gonzaga

Feast Day: June 21st

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The CHNetwork Family Remembers Al Kresta https://chnetwork.org/2024/06/19/the-chnetwork-family-remembers-al-kresta/ https://chnetwork.org/2024/06/19/the-chnetwork-family-remembers-al-kresta/#respond Wed, 19 Jun 2024 10:36:59 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?p=114960 As tributes pour in for the late Al Kresta, founder of Ave Maria Radio and host of Kresta in the Afternoon, the Coming Home Network family remembers him in a

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As tributes pour in for the late Al Kresta, founder of Ave Maria Radio and host of Kresta in the Afternoon, the Coming Home Network family remembers him in a special way, because of his identification with CHNetwork’s core mission of working with and sharing the stories of Protestant clergy who are seeking a home in the Catholic Church.

Raised Catholic, Kresta left the faith of his youth as a young man in the 1960’s. As he told CHNetwork in a 2019 interview, “My parents’ generation had extolled the virtues of wine, women, and song. And my generation didn’t mind that; but we preferred drugs, sex, and rock and roll.”

In the Spring of 1969, Kresta had a series of what he called “pseudo-mystical” experiences while using LSD. Beyond the recreational highs he’d been accustomed to seeking, he began to sense a supernatural reality that existed but was somehow inaccessible to him. During the last of these experiences, in May of that year, he felt a presence that he would later describe as Marian, and that caused him to take a fresh look at the world of faith and spirituality he’d abandoned.

Kresta’s search took him into conversations with New Age thinkers, and he regained an appreciation for Jesus, but only saw Christ as one enlightened teacher among many “ascended masters.” It wasn’t until his time at Michigan State University that he began reading the Bible on his own for the first time, and the picture of Jesus that began to emerge from the Gospels stood in sharp contrast to Al’s concept of Him as a mere sage. Al found himself bewildered, and unsure of what to do next.

One day, while walking down Grand River Ave toward the center of town, he met a man handing out Christian tracts. He took one, and was struck by the first line of it: “Do you want to know why some people have trouble understanding the Bible?” It was as though God was speaking directly to the question in his heart. As Kresta put it, that was the day that he went “from believing in the Jesus of the New Age, to believing in the Jesus of the New Testament.”

Kresta spent the next eighteen years in various capacities of Evangelical ministry, serving for five of those years as a pastor. But questions that arose about authority, the interpretation of Scripture, and a host of other issues eventually led him back to the Catholic Faith he’d walked away from decades before, and he returned to full communion with the Church in 1992.

However, as a former Protestant pastor becoming Catholic, he faced many of the issues that are common to clergy seeking a home in the Church, such as difficulty explaining the decision to leave Protestant ministry, experiencing the reality of being a member of a congregation rather than a leader of one, and wondering how to use the gifts and talents of a Protestant ministry background in a Catholic context.

Al shared his experience of journeying from cradle Catholicism through agnosticism, the New Age, and Evangelical ministry back to the Catholic Faith on CHNetwork’s flagship program, The Journey Home, which airs on EWTN television and radio and for many years was hosted by Marcus Grodi, who had also been a Protestant pastor before entering the Catholic Church. Al appeared on the show in 2004 and 2007, and also joined the program in 2017 for the show’s 20th anniversary special. He also appeared as a guest on Marcus Grodi’s radio program, Deep in Scripture.

In the weeks since Kresta’s initial diagnosis, the radio show that bears his name has continued, with Marcus Peter of Ave Maria Radio filling in as host. Peter, who was a guest on The Journey Home in 2021, shares a number of things in common with Kresta; he too went from cradle Catholic to unbeliever to born-again Christian and Protestant preacher before returning to the Catholic Faith. As such, he identifies with Al’s journey in a special way. “He and I shared such similar journeys, albeit in different ways. Having his influence was invaluable to me,” said Peter.

Peter also noted that Kresta’s mentorship helped him, as a convert with Protestant leadership experience, to see the world through a more thoroughly Catholic lens: “He challenged me to expand my capacities. I used to focus only on preaching the truths of Scripture for the salvation of souls. Al showed me how applying those same truths to history, art, politics, science, and current events had an equally powerful salvific effect in the lives of Christians.”

Please join the Coming Home Network in giving thanks for the extraordinary life and witness of Al Kresta, and praying for the repose of his soul and the consolation of his family.

May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, Rest in Peace.

*****

The following is a video testimony that Al recorded for CHNetwork’s Signposts series in 2019:





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Finding Healing After Abuse – Alicia Baker https://chnetwork.org/insights/finding-healing-after-abuse-alicia-baker/ https://chnetwork.org/insights/finding-healing-after-abuse-alicia-baker/#respond Tue, 18 Jun 2024 20:33:19 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?post_type=insights&p=114956 When Alicia Baker found herself the victim of an assault, the shame and pain from it initially made her feel like any connection she still had to faith had been

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When Alicia Baker found herself the victim of an assault, the shame and pain from it initially made her feel like any connection she still had to faith had been broken.

She shares how the negative view she developed of herself in its aftermath was a distorted and damaging lie, and how the unconditional love of God eventually helped her to see the reality of her true dignity in Him.

Watch Alicia’s episode of The Journey Home

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Can Physical Things Be Spiritual? – Episode 79 https://chnetwork.org/deep-in-christ/can-physical-things-be-spiritual-episode-79/ https://chnetwork.org/deep-in-christ/can-physical-things-be-spiritual-episode-79/#respond Tue, 18 Jun 2024 13:54:05 +0000 https://chnetwork.org/?post_type=deep-in-christ&p=114943 Because faith involves engaging with unseen realities, it can be easy to forget that if it the supernatural world is real, then its truths have implications for the natural world

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Because faith involves engaging with unseen realities, it can be easy to forget that if it the supernatural world is real, then its truths have implications for the natural world as well.

JonMarc Grodi and Kenny Burchard look at what it means to have a Christian worldview that takes seriously the goodness of the physical world, and how God uses it to show us who He truly is, from creation to the incarnation, as well as through the sacraments.

Subscribe on YouTube

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