“This is not a curriculum, it’s a pattern of life.” Gomer and Dave dive into the heart of the catechumenate: what it is, why it matters, and how it’s meant to form not just informed Catholics, but transformed ones.
Shownotes
Key Themes
1. What is the Catechumenate?
More than a class or curriculum, the catechumenate is a way of life. It’s a period of deep formation, spiritual, relational, and practical, not just intellectual learning.
2. The Four Pillars (Acts 2:42)
The early Church gives us the blueprint:
- Apostles’ teaching
- Fellowship
- Breaking of the bread (liturgy)
- Prayer
Without all four, we risk forming a “malformed Catholic.”
3. Formation > Information
OCIA often leans too heavily on classroom-style learning. True formation draws people into:
- A real relationship with Jesus
- A consistent prayer life
- Participation in the sacramental and communal life of the Church
4. Start with the Gospels
Practical tip: begin with the Gospel of Mark
- Read it quickly (2 chapters/day)
- Then slow down and pray with it
- Let it shape your understanding of Jesus
Common Pitfalls in OCIA
- Treating it as a checklist or timeline
- Rushing people toward sacraments without true conversion
- Avoiding personal, “messy” discipleship
- Neglecting community and lived experience
The Power of Slow Conversion
Spiritual growth is not instant.
- Healing takes time
- Grace works quietly
- Patience is essential
As Francis de Sales reminds us:
“Have patience with all things, but chiefly have patience with yourself.”
Final Takeaway
The Church isn’t in a rush to initiate people, it’s in a rush to evangelize.
Once the Gospel takes root, formation must be slow, intentional, and real.
This isn’t about education.
It’s about transformation.
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