This is not theology. It's testimony reframed as investigation. One man — a serious Protestant who had taught others — started pulling on a thread he'd never examined. Follow the questions he asked. See where they led. You might find they're the same questions you haven't let yourself ask yet.
Start the PathIt didn't start with curiosity about Mary or the Pope. It started with a crack in the foundation — a suspicion that one of the things he'd never questioned was the thing most worth questioning. What makes someone who has been a serious, educated Protestant for decades stop cold and start over?
"What if the thing you've never questioned is the thing most worth questioning?"Here's the catch-22 nobody mentions in Sunday school: if the Bible is your only authority, who decided what goes in the Bible? Not the Bible. The canon wasn't settled until nearly 400 years after Christ — by councils of the very Church that Protestants say they don't trust. You can't borrow the foundation and reject the builder.
"If the Church assembled the Bible, what does that say about the Church?"There were men who learned directly from the Apostles. They wrote letters. Those letters survived. When you read what they believed — about the Eucharist, about the Church, about bishops and baptism — something shifts. Nobody in your tradition ever mentioned them. That turns out to be worth asking about.
"If the students of the Apostles believed this, when exactly did the Church get it wrong?"Visible. Hierarchical. Sacramental. Bishops. Real presence in the Eucharist. Confession. Unity of doctrine. This is what the earliest Christian writings describe as normal Christianity — not as innovations, not as corruptions, but as what Jesus left behind. It doesn't look like anything you'd find in your average American church.
"Does the church you attend look like the church they describe?"In John 6, Jesus said "unless you eat my flesh and drink my blood, you have no life in you." People walked away. He didn't call them back to explain it was a metaphor. The symbolic view of communion traces to one man — Ulrich Zwingli — in 1524. For the fifteen centuries before that, the entire Church believed Christ was actually present. What changed, and who changed it?
"If the first Christians believed the bread became Christ's body, what changed — and who changed it?"On Easter Vigil 2024, after months of reading, praying, and pushing back against his own conclusions, he entered the Catholic Church. Not because it was comfortable. Because the evidence led there, and he had decided at the outset to follow the evidence wherever it went — even when the destination surprised him. Following truth has a cost. Not following it costs more.
"What would you do if you found out it was true?"These six lessons draw from a first-person account written right after conversion — eight chapters covering the Eucharist, Peter and the Church, Christian unity, the Reformation, sanctification, and what it costs to follow truth wherever it leads. Raw, honest, and direct from the source.
Ready to go deeper?
Continue to Foundations →Path I: The Apostles' Creed, phrase by phrase, illuminated by the earliest Christian witnesses.