By Marie Elena Giossi
BROOKLYN, N.Y. (CNS) — Christopher Monzon is now a member of the elect, and is one step closer to joining the Catholic Church that has been on the periphery of his life.
Despite bitter cold temperatures, Monzon gathered with those who will join the Catholic Church this Easter at the Feb. 14 Rite of Election and Call to Continuing Conversion.
The U.S. church will welcome thousands into the fold through the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults during the Easter Vigil March 26.
According to the 2015 Official Catholic Directory, there were 44,544 catechumens and 70,117 candidates in 2014, the most recent year for which data is available.
In the Diocese of Brooklyn, 1,125 adults and children will receive the sacraments at the Easter Vigil in their home parishes. That includes 458 catechumens; 531 Catholic candidates; 53 non-Catholic candidates, Protestants mostly; and 83 children who’ll be completing first sacraments.
Catechumens are people who were never baptized into any Christian faith. They wish to receive the sacraments of baptism, confirmation and first Communion. Candidates are people who are already baptized — in the Catholic Church or another Christian faith — and are seeking full communion with the Catholic Church.
These men and women have been preparing for this step in their faith journeys through weekly sessions over several months with sponsors and RCIA leaders on the parish level.
“You are on the verge of a major change in your life,” Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio told adult catechumens and candidates. “Your personal preparation … entails a conversion experience, a change in your lives, a turning from non-belief to belief, and for some of you, a turning from sin to holiness.
“We know that you are not taking this step lightly,” added the bishop, who welcomed the adult catechumens and candidates in an auditorium of a former Catholic high school in Brooklyn’s Park Slope neighborhood. The previous afternoon Brooklyn Auxiliary Bishop James Massa led a ceremony to welcome the children preparing for the sacraments.
In an interview with The Tablet, Brooklyn’s diocesan newspaper, Monzon said he has been thinking about becoming Catholic for years, and more seriously for at least a decade. Though born to Catholic parents, he was never initiated into any faith tradition. He’s attended Catholic liturgies but was always on the outside, having not been formed in the faith and being unable to receive the sacraments.
“This means a brand new life for me, for us,” said Monzon, standing beside his wife, Natalie. She came into full communion with the church last Easter at their parish of St. Mark’s in the neighborhood of Sheepshead Bay. The couple hopes to start a family soon and raise their children to “follow the path Jesus walks.”
In his homily, Bishop DiMarzio spoke about the day’s Gospel reading from St. Luke about the temptations Jesus faced in the desert after being baptized. The bishop said Jesus was tempted so He could give an example of how to deal with and overcome temptation against “the world, the flesh and the devil.”
In a special way, the bishop asked the catechumens and candidates not to lose their zeal — or slack off in their Mass attendance — after they receive the sacraments.
Candidate Jamie Ong has no intention of skipping Masses at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs in Forest Hills, especially if Brooklyn Auxiliary Bishop Paul R. Sanchez is the celebrant.
Born and baptized Catholic in her native Philippines, Ong said that for various reasons, she didn’t have access to the religious education she needed to receive the Eucharist and the sacrament of confirmation.
Though she attended weekly Mass with her parents as a child, her disconnect with the sacraments and lack of formation made it easy to pull away as she grew older.
When she moved to Forest Hills two years ago, she noticed Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church was a short walk from her front door.
At that point, she said, “I really felt out of touch with my religion and God. Nothing exceptional happened. I just woke up one Sunday and said, ‘I live two blocks away.'”
She went to Mass that Sunday, and many thereafter — drawn back each time by the community of people and the presence of Bishop Sanchez.
“You feel this love come across the entire church when he (Bishop Sanchez) celebrates Mass,” she said.
When she read a notice in the parish bulletin about the RCIA program last summer, she decided it was time.
“It’s a journey for them and for us,” said Glenda Harry, part of the RCIA team at St. Jude Church.
The catechumens and candidates bring new ideas and perspectives, she explained.
“You learn the challenges they face, and you try to encourage them on their journeys, to help them grow in the faith,” Harry said.
Growing up as a Protestant, Robert Blaise Lee of Bayside admitted he “was not too diligent with religion.” But he fell in love with a woman who is.
“My wife is a Catholic and she goes to church every week,” he said with pride.
Inspired by her faith and example, he has decided to take his own leap of faith.
“I don’t know what being Roman Catholic is all about yet,” Lee said. “I’m definitely learning more about God and Jesus. And there are more regulations. But so far, I feel at home.”