Awakening to Christ and seeking out the Church
through the RCIA comes about in a variety of ways. The first step for some
is a sense that "something is
missing" -- a sense, perhaps provoked by some crisis, that there is
more to life than what they now have or a better way to live than how they
now live. For many others, the journey begins because of a relationship
with a Catholic -- a close friend or a potential spouse. Still others are
drawn by seeing the example of a Catholic life well lived, or by exposure
to a Catholic writer like St. Augustine, Thomas Merton or Dorothy Day.
Whatever the reason for the awakening and decision to seek, the RCIA
process is the first step on a lifelong journey of intellectual, emotional
and spiritual conversion.
In her book Turning: Reflections on the
Experience of Conversion, Emilie Griffin reflected that
"conversion" is the process of "turning over
one's life and energies to God." While we know that
the concept of "turning" is apt -- the root
image of conversion is the proverbial "one hundred eighty degree
change" -- we also know from our own lives and experience that
conversion is an ongoing, lifelong process of personal spiritual growth as
well as a social process in which we strengthen and draw strength from
others. The RCIA recognizes both the ongoing quality and the communal
nature of conversion, providing an intellectual and spiritual framework
and a faith community in which an individual's conversion experience can
be understood and supported. Caring for people in the midst of this
life-changing experience is the goal of the RCIA ministry.
Preparation: Awakening, Growth and Formation
The full RCIA process consists of four periods
of awakening, growth and formation marked by celebration of three major
rites involving the whole community.