The Portal April 2019 | Page 9

THE P RTAL April 2019 Page 9 Catholic Social Teaching Conversion Fr Ashley Beck ‘ Protect them from vain reliance on self and defend them from the power of Satan. Free them from the spirit of deceit, so that, admitting the wrong they have done, they may attain purity of heart…’(Scrutiny 1) ‘Free these elect from the false values that surround and blind them...free those who are enslaved by the father of lies.’ (Scrutiny 2) ‘Free these elect from the death-dealing power of the spirit of evil, so that they may bear witness to their new life in the risen Christ’ (Scrutiny 3)  These words are extracts from prayers said at the three ‘Scrutinies’ – special ceremonies designed to support adults preparing during Lent for their baptism at the Easter Vigil. As you read this in early April, these catechumens will be very near this great event in their lives. All over our country and the rest of the world large numbers of adults are going through this process which we call the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA). One of the most important ways in which the Church’s liturgy has been renewed since the reforms called for by the Second Vatican Council has been the restoration of this public process, culminating in the most solemn act of worship of the Christian Year, the Easter Vigil. geared to our needs and our past life in the Anglican Communion, recognising the graces we received before we became Catholics. But we should not lose sight of the fact that although it’s not the same as what happens with those who have not been baptised, it is still a real process of conversion and change. If we weren’t going to change then there would be no point in the process. If we try to invite others – perhaps our brothers and sisters who are still in the Church of England – to become Catholics, it’s a great mistake to minimise this step, or make it appear to be easy, a means of access to cheap grace. Becoming a Catholic is always a big step in our lives, to be taken seriously; and that means that for all of us who have done this, it It has done so much to renew our parishes and to involves a turning away from what is flawed and sinful deepen our experience of Lent. While it has had an in our past lives. immense effect in the life of the Catholic Church, the RCIA has also influenced similar programmes in the If we look at the language of the scrutiny prayers Church of England and other communities, such as the quoted above, the tradition of Catholic Social Emmaus programme. Conversion is seen not simply Teaching helps us understand what this means. The as a private affair between the prospective convert and moral teaching of Catholicism makes demands of us, the priest, but rather as a process of joining and being by asserting that our faith has to be about the whole affirmed by the local Catholic community in its public of our lives: as the Catholic Bishops put in their 1996 liturgy in Lent.  document on social teaching, The Common Good, ‘Nothing is beyond the scope of faith.’ Becoming a These extracts are not simply prayers – they are part Catholic means embracing all that the Church teaches of a rite of exorcism, when we ask God to keep those about society, about God’s preferential love for the preparing to become Christians safe from evil (just we poor, about peace in the world, the sanctity of life, the pray in the same way before a baby is baptised). This rights of workers, care for creation and so on. insistence, which perhaps we often avoid thinking about, reiterates that any process of conversion is about This is particularly important for ex-Anglicans, since turning away from things in our lives which are sinful the Church of England historically has always been and flawed and turning to God, the source of all truth, identified with the powerful and the rich in society, whom we encounter in the life of the Catholic Church.  with the ‘establishment’ in British society – although of course the Anglo Catholic movement has been Scrutinies are for those seeking baptism. In most marked in many places by a tremendous concern for of our parishes and groups adults seeking baptism the poor.  So this Easter, this April, those becoming are joined by Christians baptised in other churches, Catholics will be turning away from evil in our society, including the Church of England. Most of us reading including ways of living which oppress those who are this P ortal have been through a similar process ... continued at the foot of the next page Ø