I struggle with lingering doubts — arising from my own experiences — about whether it’s better for kids to be raised Catholic than not.
Stop! Don’t flame me before I explain myself.
- A significant number of people I know who love the Catholic faith, really love it, really know it, really try to live it, were not raised Catholic. They are converts, or they grew up relatively unchurched and "churched themselves" later.
- A significant number of people I know who were raised in apparently faithful Catholic households, are no longer practicing Catholics or lukewarm Catholics. They’ve converted to something else, or they’re just not all that interested anymore, or they attend rarely or not at all. This number is higher if you count people who might have turned out this way had they not fortuitously married someone described in the previous paragraph.
- I am of the unchurched, self-churching variety, so I lack a lived experience of being taught the Catholic faith as a child. OTOH, I have a lived experience of having come to love it on my own despite parental opposition.
This combination sometimes tempts me to wonder if statistically, here in the U. S., one has a better chance of coming out a lover of the Catholic faith if one is not actually raised Catholic.
More on this later, including an insight I’m chewing on today, when I get back to the computer. Feel free to comment though.