The Coming Home Network International

The Coming Home Network was established to help non-Catholic Christians, clergy and laity, discover the truth and beauty of the Catholic Church.

As a network of converts, reverts, and life-long Catholics, it is our goal to help each other and all Christians hear and answer the universal call ÔÇ£to the fullness of the Christian life and to the perfection of charityÔÇØ (LG 40). In doing this, we hope to assist the Catholic Church in fulfilling her mission of evangelization and ChristÔÇÖs call for Christian unity, as proclaimed by St. John Paul II in his encyclical, ÔÇ£That They May Be OneÔÇØ (Ut Unum Sint).

Website: https://chnetwork.org/

399 matches found for publisher 'The Coming Home Network International'
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Trusting God's will can be a scary thought - but it can also be an adventure of love and fulfillment, if we allow ourselves to freely submit to what the Lord wants for us.
When Nathaniel Hurd first told his parents he was interested in the Catholic faith, they were angry, disappointed and confused.
Seth Paine was a committed Christian his whole life, but was an adult before he ever attended his first Mass. And the first time he showed up, he was asked to present the gifts during the offertory!
As she was in the process of entering the Catholic Church, Sr. Theotokos of the Servants of the Lord thought that going to Confession was just a "part of the package," so she went along with it.
For Dr. Brent Robbins, who was raised Catholic and became an atheist, the problem of evil and suffering was a big reason why he stopped believing in God.
If Jesus promised the Holy Spirit would guide His Church into all truth, then why was there so much confusion?
Chris Reibold came back to his Catholic faith as an adult, but he left it as a teenager because he didn't think it was intellectually sound.
"My father and my mother both passed on their faith to me. My father was a very strong Baptist and my mother was a faithful Catholic. Both of them taught me to know the Lord, to know Jesus..."
Michael Cousineau discusses the desire for God that has been placed in the human heart. After being a born-again member of the Assemblies of God, Mike set out to rediscover whether or not Catholics were Christians.
"My quest to stump the Catholic Church turned into a desire to become a part of it."
Growing up in the Christian Reformed Church, Dr. John Bersgma remembers visiting Baptist churches and hearing elaborate and far-fetched explanations of the events in the book of Revelation. He thought they were extreme, but he decided to give his rap...
Dr. Ray Guarendi was raised Catholic, For a number of years, he followed Jesus as an Evangelical Christian, but his engineering background led him to apply practical logic to questions like the doctrine of "sola Scriptura" and "once sa...
When Sarah Christmyer first became interested in the Catholic Church as an Evangelical Christian, she viewed the teachings on Mary as a complicated list of propositions that she needed to decipher and accept.
Dr. Brent Robbins has a Ph. D, and is a respected academic in his area of study. In the field of psychology, some of his friends wondered if he was losing his mind when he told them he was becoming Catholic!
As a Catholic teen, Chris Reibold thought that the saints were just pious legends and fairytales along with all the other Catholic "stuff" like Virgin births and miracles.
Growing up Baptist, first in Canada and then at Liberty University, the Bible was the most important book in RJ Snell's life. He memorized passages, read it daily, and based his whole understanding of Christianity on it. However, as he began to e...
Deacon Joe Calvert came through a few different worldviews over the years, from Christian Science to atheism.
As a child, Michael Davis was scared of Jesus; the hellfire and brimstone preaching he was raised on as a Fundamentalist Baptist gave him a picture of an angry judge who needed to be appeased.
Marcus Peter was raised Catholic in Malaysia, but when he had tough questions about faith, he felt like he got inadequate answers from Catholics, and decided that atheism made more sense.




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