From Evangelical minister to Catholic seminarian -- unusual spiritual journey for Chicago native

(POSTED: 1/18/10) Gregg Bronsema came from a pretty committed Protestant household.
Born in Chicago and raised, for part of his childhood, in Evergreen Park and Oak Lawn, his family belonged to the Christian Reformed Church, before becoming Baptist and moving out West, to Oregon.
Years later, Bronsema became an Evangelical minister.
But, it turns out, his spiritual journey was not finished. He ended up in an unlikely place given his background -- the Roman Catholic Church -- studying for an unlikely calling: the Catholic priesthood.
"It was a little difficult, I'd have to say," Bronsema, 53 and single, said of his decision to convert to Catholicism and enter the seminary, where he is today, studying at Mount Angel in Oregon.
As he told ChicagoCatholicNews.com, it was the "last thing in the world" he imagined himself doing.
In an open letter to a parish he's been affiliated with, Bronsema recounted his journey away from Protestantism, saying he started asking questions like: "Why are there so many churches when our Lord stressed so much of us being one?"
"Rather than seeing the Reformation as glorious, I began to view it more like a bad divorce, and I happened to be the kid of the divorce with no say," he wrote. ". . . I acquired books to delve deeper into the Early Church fathers. Those books showed me that the Church right from the beginning believed and died martyrs' deaths for their belief in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist."
"I didn't exactly come running to the Catholic Church. I had a lot of stereotypes and misconceptions about the Church that had to be broken down. Finally I got enough guts to enter into a Catholic Church all by myself for the first time."
In recent times, it seems, Evangelical churches have had more luck in attracting Catholics than the other way around. As such, his story has gotten some ink, including from Portland's archdiocesan publication.
Bronsema, who still has relatives in the Chicago area, said he looks forward to completing his studies -- although there's a long way to go. He's in the first of what could be seven years of training.
By ChicagoCatholicNews.com
Contact: info@chicagocatholicnews.com
0 comments: