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"If therefore the Son shall make you
free, you shall be free indeed." (John 8:36)
Having
taken the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience in a Roman
Catholic diocesan order, my steps were set in the logical
direction prepared by my youth. Raised in a strong Catholic
home, educated in Catholic schools for sixteen years, and
trained by six years of convent life, I lived with an
eagerness to serve God as a teacher. This desire did not
change when I left the convent in 1969. Two years later, I
married a man whose background was strikingly similar,
including four years in the seminary and a commitment to
teaching. Yet, despite these roots, God's Unsearchable ways
set me on a new path which brought me face to face with truth
in the Person of His Son, Jesus Christ.
Early Years
While God's ways are a mystery to me,
His grace is unmistakable as I reflect back on my life at age
fifty in the year 1995. The third in a family of four, I
shared a relatively stable home environment around the
alcoholism of my father. My mother worried continuously,
particularly about finances and my father's condition between
the two to three jobs he worked. Mass and Communion,
rosaries, novenas and other special devotions to Mary, the
Sacred Heart, the Infant of Prague, St. Joseph, St. Anthony,
St. Christopher and others were rituals of our daily life.
When our family home was honored by our parish with the
rotating statue of Mary, daily rosary on our knees and other
devotional prayers were intensified. My mother took church
rules seriously. Fasting and abstinence for Advent and Lent
and meatless Fridays were carefully observed. The fat of
bacon or gravy from meat was scrupulously avoided in meal
preparation during these times. Obtaining indulgences and
purchasing Masses for the deceased was performed as a means
of shortening time in purgatory. There was a heaviness in our
home, yet there was a stability regarding the life-long
commitment of marriage, attendance at church and association
with only Catholics as friends and even acquaintances. The
few extended family members that violated these patterns were
rarely seen, spoken of infrequently, and their marriage
ceremonies were not attended.
Religious Life
Until I was in my twenties, I was never
inside a non-Roman Catholic Church. Religious and priests
were held in high esteem, thought to be both holier and wiser
than the laity. A cousin, Vin, entered the Marianist
brotherhood at age 15, a decision held above the strong
marriage relationships in our family. Vin influenced his two
younger sisters, Sue and Peg, who later entered the Ursuline
convent. Two years after Vin's youngest sister entered the
convent, I made the same decision, to the delight of my
family. The diocesan order known as the Congregation of
Sisters of St. Joseph, which had taught me all through
elementary and high school, would enable me to fulfill my
dream of going to college and of becoming a teacher.
This decision to become a religious was
supported especially by my mother. It was a matter of pride
and honor for the family. At the time I entered in 1963, the
rule was that I would never return home. As a postulant,
communication with family was monitored (letters written home
and received from home were read) and strict rules were in
place for the years of training. After the first year, a
bridal ceremony followed by the cutting of my hair and
dressing in full restrictive habit ushered me into the
Novitiate. I was now Sister Mary Dolora. I spent a year away
from college for serious formation.
During this year, I was indoctrinated
in the proper manner of thought, speech and behavior for a
professed religious. Silence, limitations on who I could talk
with and when, and not being able to attend my sister Carol's
wedding began to raise questions regarding the purpose of
such restrictions. Learning obedience involved such practices
as falling on one's knees to ask for penance when there was
an infraction of the rules. On one occasion, I personally
struggled when this humiliating practice was imposed on me
because I had talked to a lonely older sister during
infirmary duty. By the end of the third year, massive change
was sweeping the Roman Catholic Church and some of it reached
our small diocesan order. The year before my class was to
begin self-flagellation as a means to higher spirituality,
the practice was discontinued. By my second year in the
novitiate, even my class was vested with the surprising
responsibility of designing a much less confining habit.
Rules were examined at a special congregation meeting of all
the superiors. Soon, the hated ban on visiting home was
lifted.
Arbitrary Change
With all of the change, questions about
the significance of arbitrary rules began to concern me. How
could these rules be so important one day and dismissed the
next? There were abuses during the changes that reimposed
some disciplines and older sisters in authority saw major
problems developing. An example occurred during my first full
year of teaching at a parish assignment. Word of "friendly"
parties involving priests and nuns, which included dancing
and frivolity, got back to the motherhouse and our local
parish convent was verbally chastised and watched.
In addition, permission I had been
given to visit a wonderful family in the parish was
withdrawn. I found this particularly troubling since the wife
had grown up on my street and her husband, George, had
multiple sclerosis that paralyzed him from the neck down. I
was able to share many things with them and their three
children, most importantly, a listening ear, laughter and
tears. The witness of love in this family left a great
impression on me. Being unable to visit made no sense. Later
that same year, when one of my sixth grade students, Jeff,
sustained a serious head injury, only plaintive pleas from
his mother enabled me to tutor him in the hospital during his
long recovery. At no time was there any clear basis for the
arbitrary rule changes, only a fear of serious infractions.
It was God's grace that enabled me to learn and move on from
the situations with George and Jeff. Rules intended to
produce holiness through behavior control were shallow in the
face of real life challenges.
A Leave of Absence
In 1969, near the end of my first full
year in a parish teaching assignment, I seriously considered
a leave of absence from religious life. Prior to this year,
leaving the convent after taking vows would have meant
failure or disgrace. However, now the request to take a year
to evaluate one's vocation was acceptable. While I was not
the only one thinking this way, I was the first from my class
of nine to solicit a meeting with the Mother Superior.
I know my family was disappointed, but
I did not focus on their approval. Instead, I determined to
move forward from the confinement of convent life to an
environment that would foster personal query. It was June of
1969. I had only the clothes on my back and a small savings
from high school employment that my parents kept in my name.
After two weeks at home, I attended Ohio State University
with another convent sister and then took a teaching position
in Chicago, moving into a large inner city home with a civil
rights leader, Margaret Ellen Traxler, also a nun. I shared a
room with a classmate from the convent and we lived in the
home with other nuns who worked with Margaret Ellen. After a
sheltered convent life, that summer of '69 and the year that
followed opened my eyes to all the "flavor" of the late
sixties--war protests, racial tensions, alcohol, drugs, free
sex, undisciplined hours, discussions of Eastern mystical
philosophies--in a volatile large city. Moral standards
learned in my home and the grace of God, which I didn't
recognize until much later, protected me both physically and
spiritually. Many around me from similar backgrounds were
choosing self-destructive life styles.
After seven months, I moved to an
apartment near the University of Chicago. At the Newman
Center, I met many former nuns and priests, some leaving
their orders in larger numbers, some remaining but studying
primarily at the various interpretations of "truth". Mass and
communion were performed around coffee tables, the social
gospel was prevalent, civil rights was a banner. People who
were clear about what they believed and where they were going
were not to be found. Causes were in, morality was out.
Through all of this, I knew I would never return to the
convent. I made the final break from my vows and order.
Marriage
When I recall the situations I was in
during these years in Chicago, I marvel at God's hand of
protection. His care for me included living in Hyde Park, a
racially mixed community, during a time of much racial
tension, and University of Chicago parties where free sex,
drugs, bazaar thinking with drugged or duped minds, and
generally loose living abounded. After dating a number of
relatively stable men in such an environment, I met my
husband, Bernie, an ex-seminarian. It was early in 1970 and I
was twenty-five. With comparable backgrounds giving us much
in common, we dated only a few weeks before talking of
marriage. However, we took a full year to become acquainted
with our families in Ohio and Wisconsin and to lay careful
plans for our wedding.
For our marriage ceremony, we choose
the church where I taught my last year in the convent rather
than my family parish. My Superior from that assignment was
there as well as George's widow and others I knew from my
teaching. Both Bernie and I were very family oriented and
decided to settle in Michigan, within a day's drive of our
parents. Here we began our family and lived as active members
of St. Peter's Parish for five and one half years.
Times of Testing
Our two children were ages two and four
months when my mother was diagnosed with an inoperable brain
tumor. Frequent travel from Michigan to Ohio during her rapid
decline required many arrangements and a doubling of duties
for my husband. She died less than six months after being
diagnosed. A year later, I was six weeks pregnant with our
third child when I received a call from my sister. She had
found my father dead in bed. He failed to show up for dinner
at her home. Throughout this difficult time, Bernie was the
Lord's provision of support.
Six months after my father's death, we
moved to the Milwaukee area. During the following six months,
Bernie's mother had open heart surgery during which she
experienced a partially disabling stroke, our third daughter
was born, and Bernie went through two difficult job changes.
It seemed as though our lives were in constant upheaval.
Among my part-time jobs was a position as religious education
director for a large parish in our suburban community. It was
here that I was introduced to values clarification, a move
away from the clear moral traditions and doctrines of Roman
Catholicism, and the diminished use of the sacrament of
confession. These practices and an introduction to
increasingly liberal teachings of men like Daniel Maguire of
Marquette University and Archbishop Rembert Weakland produced
growing confusion.
In some cases I seriously questioned
these new trends and in other cases I accepted them as a
positive new direction. It was "in" to be a part of the new
ideas. All three of our daughters were baptized, made their
first communion and were taught reconciliation (formerly the
sacrament of confession), although it was not practiced at
our parish. During the eleven years we were at this parish, I
taught and wrote curriculum for CCD classes and/or directed
religious education programs.
Uprooting
The last year and a half, Bernie and I
taught high school confirmation classes together in our home.
Ironically, God used this program and the man who directed it
to complete the groundwork that would dislodge our deep roots
in Roman Catholicism. When the director gave us and our
students each a Catholic Bible, he could not have known that
he had provided not simply a resource but a vehicle of
liberation. This was the beginning of our study of the Word
of God.
The Confirmation textbook given with
the Bible presented not doctrine, but the social gospel--a
system of works that were to be the sanctifying process for
the "Christian". Homilies were no better. Talks with our
pastor about concerns went nowhere. Serious moral situations
that surfaced in discussions with our students made it clear
there was no spiritual foundation for decision-making. Again
by God's grace, we were directed to turn to the Bible. A
growing discomfort with what appeared to be a course headed
for destruction fostered a desire in me for a much more
conservative position. Strong family values and the moral
foundation we hoped to pass on to our students as well as our
daughters was no longer sustained by our parish church.
Our oldest daughter, Laura, was in
confirmation classes this same year with another couple. She
too was experiencing great difficulty with the material,
particularly the way students ignored more traditional moral
positions. At the same time, the public schools where all
three of our daughters attended, proposed liberal sex
education curriculums. Concern about this material introduced
me to a whole new set of friends who were confident in their
beliefs and what they wanted for their children. Lowering
standards to "fit the times" was not in their thinking.
Working with this group of people in a difficult fight for
the welfare of our children brought Bernie and me into more
and more contact with the Word of God.
Unchangeable Truth
We were invited to join Bible studies
and prayer groups and Bernie and I became convicted of the
authority of the Word of God. Bernie proposed lessons based
on the Bible and the Nicene Creed for our confirmation group
and they were approved by the director. We offered
Bible-based curriculum to replace muddled thinking and
fruitless discussions with God's unchangeable principles.
When questions arose that we could not deal with, we found
experts through our new Christian friends. One spoke on the
authority of the Word of God and one addressed issues
regarding the occult and Satanism. These were not priests or
religious but lay persons who knew and stood on the truth of
Scripture.
Although I cannot point to one specific
day that I recognized and accepted Jesus Christ as my Savior,
the truth of His Word was taking root in my life by the
summer of 1989. In June, abiding by the sound advice of the
man who would be our first local church pastor, "wives be in
subjection to your own husbands that, if any obey not the
word, they also may without the word be won by the behavior
of their wives" ( 1Peter 3:1), I asked Bernie's permission to
attend worship service at a Bible-based church. He said yes!
Conviction
Our daughters were fifteen, thirteen,
and eleven at the time. I knew there would be questions and I
worried about the affect on our family unity. We attended
both Catholic and Christian churches for most of the summer.
Bernie tried the Christian church at my request for my
birthday in July. His permission for me and agreement to
attend with me were clear indications that God was involved
in the circumstances of our lives.
Another dramatic example was a Sunday
early in the summer when I suddenly could not receive
communion at a Catholic Mass. The stark realization that I
did not believe this could be the "real" body and blood as
taught by the Catholic Church was a startling and profound
faith conviction. To have gone forward would have been
hypocrisy. I realized that eating the body and blood
according to the Bible meant much more, an identification
with the Person of Jesus Christ. It did not make sense that
He would be present in me at communion and not there the rest
of the time. There was no magic or mystery. The words of the
priest said to have the power of transforming bread and wine
were a denial of the sufficiency of the work of the cross.
Jesus said, "It is finished" ( John 19:30). Communion is a
memorial of what He has accomplished. His command was to "Do
this in remembrance of Me" (Luke 22: 19).
The Mass prayers also stuck in my
throat. Why was sacrifice still necessary? "He is able also
to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by Him,
seeing He ever liveth to make intercession for them"; He "needeth
not daily ... to offer up sacrifice ... for this He did once
for all when He offered up Himself " (Hebrews 7: 25 & 27).
The "unbloody sacrifice", as the Mass was defined,
contradicted what both the Old and New Covenant taught,
"without shedding of blood there is no forgiveness" (Hebrews
9: 22). He had "offered one sacrifice for sins for all time"
and "by the one offering has perfected those who are
sanctified" (Hebrews 12 & 14). The veil of the Holy of Holies
has been torn in two. Man has access to the throne of God.
The revelation regarding communion
initiated one of many lively spiritual discussions in our
family during this time. This was completely out of the
ordinary, yet I know now that the power of the Word of God
was effecting a spiritual revolution in our lives regarding
the Roman Catholic teaching concerning the Person and the
power of the Lord Jesus Christ.
By August we were no longer attending
Mass, which we saw as a denial of the finished work of
Calvary. We missed the liturgical rituals, weekly
participation in communion, and familiar contacts. Neither
extended family nor Catholic friends understood what we were
doing; yet we were convicted. Much to our surprise, when we
told the religious education director at our now former
parish, he asked us to continue teaching our confirmation
group through their second year because "good teachers were
hard to find" and our class had been positively responsive.
At Christmas we wrote a letter to our
relatives and friends regarding our conversion. This
initiated distress, anger and painful distancing. The
significance of Matthew 19:29 which had been quoted so many
times in relation to religious life suddenly became clear:
"And every one that hath forsaken houses, or brethren, or
sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or
lands, for my sake, shall receive an hundredfold, and shall
inherit everlasting life."
In my own inadequacy to put into words
what it meant to be saved, I invited a Christian woman over
to explain salvation to our daughters. It was our youngest,
Allison's, first exposure to the Gospel. Our oldest, Laura,
showed me a journal entry she had made recording the day she
accepted Jesus Christ as her salvation more than a year
earlier. She had a circle of Christian friends at school and
was regularly studying the Bible. Our second daughter, Sarah,
later shared that she had first heard the Gospel at a summer
camp two years before. Although she believed what Jesus had
done for her, there was little impact in her life because she
had no training in the Word of God when camp was over.
Conversion
God's intervention leading the five of
us out of Roman Catholicism is nothing short of a miracle,
the miracle of conversion in the life of every believer. I
have since realized that the more than forty years I spent in
the Catholic Church, faithfully attending rituals and going
through extensive religious training, did not bring me to a
knowledge of the Gospel. I was a sinner hopelessly lost
without God's perfect provision. "Christ died for our sins
according to the scriptures;... was buried, and...rose again
the third day according to the Scriptures" (1Corinthians
15:3-4). This and this alone saved me. Nothing can be added
to the work of Jesus Christ nor can His work be re-enacted to
bring forgiveness and grace. God prepared and drew us to
Himself through His Word, the Bible, not through religious
traditions and institutions.
Believer's Baptism
Our family's continued spiritual
transformation brought us to seek baptism by immersion in May
of 1993. Knowing that baptism is not efficacious (i.e., it
does not wash away sin and establish relationship with God,
as taught by Catholicism), we initially did not think it
necessary to be baptized. The first Christian church we
attended baptized infants in the context of the a "covenant
family relationship". We questioned this practice because it
was not directed by Scripture. In 1993, Bernie and I met a
pastor from North Carolina who showed us from Scripture that
baptism was an important public witness and a matter of
obedience. Again, the Lord was teaching us apart from a local
church, establishing for us the authority of His Word. We
were "to examine the Scriptures daily", using the Word of God
as the authority in our lives (Acts 17:11). After presenting
what we had learned to our daughters, we discovered that our
oldest, Laura, who was at college in Pennsylvania, desired to
be baptized and was praying about it since her mission trip
the previous summer. Our younger daughters, Sarah and
Allison, after study and prayer also sought baptism. We
prepared as a family, writing our first testimonies for the
ceremony. Our family agreed that baptism was an important
public confirmation of our conversion and call by the Lord.
The Walk of Faith
And our story continues until the Lord
calls us home. God's impact in my life and on our family
stems from our commitment to prayer, study of the Word,
fellowship as believers, and our response to His daily
direction in our lives. However, the issue of eternal
salvation is settled. There is peace, hope and joy in this
certainty. The times of loneliness and estrangement after
leaving the Catholic Church have diminished with time, but
are not gone, especially because our extended families are
still Catholic. Knowing the truth, we long for salvation for
those we love. Sharing with relatives and others is often
sadly devoid of eternal perspective.
After we left our first Christian
church, we again went through a period of wilderness,
disappointment in relationships and concern for differences
of scriptural interpretation and application among believers.
However, the Lord never left us without His peace. Answers
were available. We understood that membership in the true
church was only possible by rebirth (John 3:5). Finding a
local church where we could be equipped to serve the Lord
would be accomplished in God's time as we found a pastor
committed to preaching the entire counsel of the Scriptures.
The Bible was given by God to be read and understood,
hindered only by our laziness or unwillingness to allow the
Holy Spirit to teach us all things (John 14:26). Believers
and pastors were put into our lives to encourage and support
us, and when they were removed Christ was always sufficient.
Distinguishing between the Word of God
and the traditions of men has become a way of life.
Recognizing that the standards of God do not change with the
times and that His truth is completely trustworthy did not
alleviate the challenges of our time. But it provided
stability, direction and hope. Jesus Christ is God's Word and
the Word is Truth. If I do not live the victorious life of a
Christian, it is because of my failure to live drawing upon
the resources continually available to me in Christ.
In Summary
The testimony of any Christian is the
finished work of Jesus in His death, burial and resurrection
accepted by faith as the only thing necessary for salvation.
Each story, however, is as unique as the individual because
it is always God reaching out to the individual, exactly
where each one is. I am grateful for the deep roots of Roman
Catholicism in my life, for my parents who gave me physical
life and the home and training that laid a strong moral
foundation. However, it is God in His infinite wisdom Who
"causes all things to work together for good to those who
love God, to those who are called according to His purpose"
(Romans 8:28). And His purpose is to choose, to call, to
justify and to sanctify--to conform to the image of His Son
(Romans 8:29-30). I marvel at the ways of our God who could
transform the first forty-four years of my life as a Roman
Catholic, releasing me from the bondage of a religious system
steeped in the traditions of men, and bringing me into the
freedom of relationship with Jesus Christ. It can only be
summarized simply by God's amazing grace, for by grace His
servant was saved through faith; and that not of myself, it
is the gift of God; not a result of works, that no one should
boast. For I am His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for
good works, which God prepared beforehand, that I should walk
in them (Ephesians 2:8-10).
An Addendum
Two years have passed since the writing
of this testimony. God's faithfulness and the need for
diligence in living according the Word of Truth are the
ongoing theme of life in relationship with Jesus Christ.
Being saved from the penalty of sin the moment one believes
and being accepted by the Father in Christ with His perfect
righteousness, does not remove the daily struggle to walk in
the Spirit so as not to fulfill the desires of the flesh
(Galatians 5:16). In times of temptation, trial, and testing,
the Holy Spirit will bring to remembrance Scripture we have
studied. God's grace and completely adequate provision in
every circumstance enables us by the power of the Spirit to
live according to His commands and grow in holiness. His
grace is always sufficient as He directs what is impossible
apart from Him: "Study to show thyself approved unto God, a
workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the
word of truth" (2 Timothy 2:15).
Personal study of the Word continues to
be a part of the lives of each family member. It is a
blessing of unity and strength as challenges increase. Our
daughters are now twenty-four, twenty-two, and nineteen. They
have stability because of God's unchangeable truth while so
much in society seems to be lost in a futility of self-focus
and "anything goes".
My husband, Bernie, is the spiritual
head of our home, seeking to direct us in wisdom gained from
biblical knowledge. He conducts a men's Bible study weekly
and coordinates monthly Bible study weekends with
pastor-teachers, an outreach ministry of Duluth Bible Church.
Daily decisions are made more and more in light of a growing
understanding of God's purposes and the need for a believer
to do all for His glory.
In my own life, I have been learning
the role of the woman in the home, being a helpmate to her
husband, providing a place of hospitality and times of
fellowship with believers as well as opportunities to share
with unbelievers. Even as our children have become adults,
employment outside the home has a clear second place to the
noble role that God intended for woman.
As I have grown in a knowledge of the
Word of God, opportunities to disciple others and more
recently participate in the Berean Beacon Ministry to Roman
Catholics have been special blessings. There is balance in
life as a believer that reflects joy, peace, and
fruitfulness, the "natural" result of living according to
God's purposes.
Knowing God's will and living according
to it is a daily challenge. Being faithful is dependent on
continual trust in His way, "Trust in the Lord with all thine
heart, and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy
ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths"
(Proverbs 3: 5-6). While my family and I have grown, times of
failing are just as clear. Failure and sinful choices are
very much a part of our lives. God's provision is confession
that will immediately put us back in the joy of His
fellowship, ready to begin again. "If we confess our sins, He
is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse
us from all unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9).
It is my prayer that all who read this
testimony will be drawn to a knowledge of Jesus Christ. He is
the Truth that sets every person free to live life abundantly
here on earth and for all eternity (John 10: 10). "Not that
we are sufficient of ourselves...but our sufficiency is of
God... And God is able to make all grace abound toward you,
that ye, always having all sufficiency in all things, may
abound to every good work" (2 Corinthians 3:5 and 9:8).
"Now unto Him that is able to keep
you from falling, and to present you faultless before the
presence of His glory with exceeding joy, to the only wise
God, our Savior, be glory and majesty, dominion and power,
both now and forever. Amen." (Jude 24-25)
If you wish to
contact Mary you can write to:
Mary Hertel
18320 Tilton Lane
Brookfield, WI 53045 USA
(Tel. 414-784-5998 Fax 414-784-5961)
e-mail her:
bernieh@execpc.com
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