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  March 21, 2005 VOL. 43, NO. 6Oakland, CA

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articles list
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Pope’s role in Holy Week uncertain
as doctors advise limitations of speech

Berkeley professor wins $1.5 million for science-theology dialogue

Church official urges Congress to help
eradicate ‘scourge’ of human trafficking

New Catholic chronicles his labored journey to faith

San Pablo man’s journey to Church began in Rome

Bishop Cummins honored

Priest offers behind-the-scenes guide
to Gibson’s ‘Passion of the Christ’

EWTN to air Holy Week liturgies

Meditation brings peace to women in prison

Prayer has reached
to harshest prisons

Martyred nun remembered as ‘mother’ of the Amazon

Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit shows oldest biblical fragments

Parochial administrator named for Walnut Creek parish

Prominent Catholics join in support of Schiavo

Presentation Sisters to mark 150 years
with April 10 celebration in Berkeley

Fremont priest returns from delivering tsunami aid

Religious educator says faith is best served family style

 

COMMENTARY
Tips for turning travel into pilgrimage

OBITUARY
Sister Mary Ann Whittman, SHF

placeholder New Catholic chronicles his labored journey to faith

“Body of Christ,” said the celebrant
“Thank you,” replied the man.
The priest looked startled. The man’s wife gasped.

This incident took place more than a decade ago when Steve McCoy-Thompson, a combination Zen Buddhist/ Gnostic but nonetheless cheerfully willing Catholic churchgoer, accompanied his wife, Meri, to Mass. Instead of crossing his arms over his chest and receiving the priest’s blessing as he usually did, Steve decided he, too, would receive Communion.

As his turn came, though, Steve suddenly realized he didn’t know what to say, so he tried, “thank you.” Result: a humiliating ecclesiastical error that has made its way into his new book, “Journey Into Belief: Finding God through the Creed.”(Ligouri Press, 2004).

“Journey” traces the organizational development consultant’s doubt-filled journey towards Catholicism, finally culminating in his nine-month walk through the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults (RCIA) at the Catholic Community of Pleasanton.

With personal stories, poetic language, and witty twists of phrases, “Journey” is the handy little companion-book Steve wishes he could have used five years ago during his faith fence-sitting, when he struggled with hard questions for which there didn’t always seem to be obvious answers.

“I wrote it as a catharsis, as a way of coming to terms with all the changes I went through,” he explained during a recent interview.
His journey was a twisty, rocky one, beginning when he met his future wife, Meri McCoy, at the Fletcher School of International Affairs at Tufts University in Boston nearly 20 years ago. The two fell in love, but there was one very large complication.

As he recalls in the book, “One day we looked at each other. I thought to myself, I love this woman dearly, but she’s Catholic.” As he was to learn later on in their courtship, his beloved was having similar reservations. “I love this man dearly, but he’s not a Catholic,” she sighed.

This son of an ex-Baptist dad and an ex-Catholic mom from Pasadena and this daughter of staunchly Catholic parents from San Jose got married anyway. He went to Mass with her for all the years they lived and worked in Washington, Boston, and Togo, West Africa, where Meri served a stint with Catholic Relief Services and Steve worked with a Korean-owned textile factory.

Wherever they were located, says Steve, “I really enjoyed going to church. It was the one time I could sit back and reflect.”

When the couple moved back to California in 1996 with their two young children, Meri joined the Catholic Community of Pleasanton. She served as a coordinator for the family faith program there, helping to organize the “Holy Chaos” family groups, which meet in one another’s homes.

Steve credits “Holy Chaos” for playing a key role in his conversion. “They allowed me to see a church filled with real people with real lives, not just an institution.” But he still felt isolated “even though I felt surrounded by faith.” Five years ago, he said, “I decided to get off this island of myself” by joining the parish RCIA group.

At the outset, Steve felt overwhelmed by the weekly commitment. “I don’t have time for all this intensity,” he thought. But somehow, the time miraculously stretched before him each week.

He would go home and talk to Meri. Some of their conversations are recounted in “Journey.”

In the charming chapter, “Faith Based Insanity and the Spiritual Fence,” he recalled the time their first child, Matthias, was very sick. “He wouldn’t eat. And he would cry long hours. Yet, when company would come to the house, or we took him to the doctor’s, he would be joyous. In short, he was driving us
crazy, and we still loved him madly.”

One night, after sharing his thoughts with Meri, she answered, “That must be how God feels about us.”

Her reply got him to thinking further about their divine parent.

“In God’s eyes, we are children who screw up – a lot. We do dreadful things, like drive our parents crazy and start wars, and we may still be forgiven. And it dawned on me; finally, that maybe this wellspring of love is the foundation of faith-based insanity, for such undying forgiveness… and defines any sane measure of logic. Faith-based insanity is captured, I think, in our abiding love for our children. This faith allows us to raise a child… to open our arms when we know they may be broken, along with our hearts.”

Steve, however, struggled every inch of the way during RCIA, even in the scant weeks before the Easter Vigil, when he would be officially welcomed into the Church.

He writes about the evening when his class was scheduled to participate in the Book of the Elect ritual, a symbolic “sign up” for future Catholics. He had a panic attack in the church parking lot. “I don’t think I can go through with it,” he told Meri.

“Then, don’t,” she said.

Steve writes of that moment, “She is not angry, only exasperated. And then the tears come. She says that no one is forcing me; not her; not God…So what is it that makes me hesitate? …Meri asked if I would like to pray. I can think of nothing better. In the evening light, with my head bowed over the steering wheel, I ask God for a little help.

“Strangely, I picture a vase in my mind…. the vase is full of cracks, and I can tell, just by looking at it, that it won’t hold water. My first instinct is to smooth out the cracks and make the surface perfect. The image, of course, is my faith life. It’s not perfect…but I am a little surprised the symbol appears so easily, as if God had simply been waiting all this time for me to commission the painting. I open my eyes to the car dashboard and think I understand. Meri reaches for my hand. ‘We should go in,’ she says.”

Steve writes appreciatively about his wife’s unpressured support, how throughout their married life, “through dating, engagement, and marriage, life in Africa, on either side of the U.S., two children and nine different jobs between us, she never pushed farther than I could go.”

During an interview, Meri explained her restraint. “Trusting has always been a big part of our life together. From my perspective, it was very important only that Steve go on a spiritual journey, no matter where he ended up. It was only important that he take his trip seriously. Up until the last few weeks of the RCIA, it was never clear whether he would go through with it.”

Metaphorically speaking, Meri never grabbed the steering wheel. “Trying to control another person’s faith life, by telling them ‘if only you…’ can end up harming his or her relationship with God. It’s a good way to make God look bad,” she said.

“Journey” is filled with touching, powerful moments, but the best is found in one of the final chapters, where Steve remembers how Karen Miller, the RCIA coordinator, asked the group to write their own epitaphs in preparation for Lent.

“Mine came out of the blue,” wrote Steve. “like that cracked vase in the car, and I entered it quickly into my faith journal. But now the words have a whole different meaning – as if they were written not for a gravestone, but for a birthstone on an Easter weekend. ‘My work is done; I’m all drawn in.
God found me. He lies herein.’”

Steve is now working on another book, tentatively entitled “What to Expect When You’re Expecting Faith.” It will be his third.
His first book is a children’s story titled “Weather Boy,” a piece of historical fiction about D-Day for seven through 11-year-olds.
His two kids – Matthias, 12, and Marie, 10, “still like that one best,” he said.


Steve and Meri McCoy-Thompson with their children, Matthias, 12, and Marie, 10.

 

 

Cover of Steve McCoy-Thompson’s book

 


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