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Mission, Ministry and 'The Journey Home' (1994)

March 11 issue In Person interview with EWTN's Marcus Grodi.

03/09/2012 Comments (11)

In 1992, Marcus Grodi, a former Presbyterian minister, was received into the Catholic Church. Not long afterwards, he founded The Coming Home Network International (CHNetwork) to help non-Catholic clergy and others come home to the Church.

For the last 15 years, Grodi has also served as host of EWTN’s popular show The Journey Home and for five years the Deep in Scripture radio program. The Register’s Dan Burke caught up with him in his Zanesville, Ohio, office recently to discuss his mission, ministry and the impact of the show.



What was the tipping point of your conversion to Catholicism?


It didn’t really happen in a particular moment; it was more a process of discovery. Various things opened my heart to the Church before we even considered Catholicism. Over about 10 years, I came to the realization that the cacophony of voices within Protestantism couldn’t agree on anything. I felt that, as an ordained minister, I was accountable before God to preach truth, and this led to my resignation from the ministry. The other major issue was confronting 1 Timothy 3:15 [But if I should be delayed, you should know how to behave in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of truth.”] through my seminary classmate Scott Hahn and realizing that the pillar and bulwark of truth is the Church.



What was the hardest part of your conversion process?


Certainly leaving the pastorate and losing friends was hard, but the most difficult challenges were doctrines such as the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist and praying to Mary and the saints. However, reading the early Church Fathers helped.



How did it affect your family? Was it difficult for them?


Fortunately, my wife, Marilyn, and I came into the Church together. We shared the journey all along, but it was the pro-life issues that most opened her heart. She was once a crisis-pregnancy center director and admired Catholics. My mother’s first reaction was tears: to think we were joining the Church of drinkers, gamblers and the mafia. Since then, however, she has come into the Church. Though my father was not active in his Protestant faith, he admired St. Thomas More and finally met with a priest on the day he died.



What prompted you to start The Coming Home Network?


Before I heard of Scott Hahn’s conversion, I had never heard of a Protestant minister becoming Catholic. After my journey began, I discovered others, such as Father Ray Ryland and Steve Wood. Over time, I began meeting many others. It was like going to a conference and discovering that we all came from the same place and could have carpooled. Many on the journey and converts admitted feeling very much alone — we couldn’t talk to Protestant friends and didn’t know any faithful Catholics. So CHNetwork, which began with a newsletter, was formed to provide fellowship and support.



How many people has the CHNetwork helped come home to the Church?


We purposely don’t count “scalps,” because it’s the Holy Spirit who brings people into the Church. Having said that, over 2,000 “primary” members (non-Catholic clergy or those whose conversion costs them their jobs) have contacted us over the years. Of those, about half have come home to the Church, while the other half are still somewhere on the journey.

Which of these stories tend to stand out in your mind?


All of them. I enjoy doing every single Journey Home show; the stories fascinate me. Of course, some stick out as particularly memorable or inspiring, but it’s hard to single any one out. Every firsthand testimony of the work of the Spirit in someone’s soul is in essence the theological virtue of faith coming alive.



How can people learn more about CHNetwork, and where can they find your shows and resources?


We invite everyone to become members of CHNetwork on our website at CHNetwork.org/members/. The newsletter is better than ever, and members receive it by mail or electronically. In addition, The Journey Home show’s website is found at EWTN.com/tv/live/journeyhome.asp.



What else are you up to these days?


Well, I’ve just completed my second novel, Pillar and Bulwark, the sequel to my first novel, How Firm a Foundation. Both this new book and a fully edited revision of the first are now available. The reason I ventured into Catholic fiction was to reach my father, who could not understand why Marilyn and I would leave the pastorate to become Catholic. Since he loved fiction, I decided to use that medium to get past his intransigence. The goal isn’t apologetics, but to show the psychological barriers, relational struggles and internal reasoning of conversion. I hope that both novels open the hearts of many people to the Church.

Dan Burke is the Register’s executive director.


Note: Pillar and Bulwark and How Firm a Foundation can be ordered on CHNetwork’s website at CHNetwork.org.


 

Filed under catholicism, conversion, ewtn, faith, marcus grodi, the journey home

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Even as a cradle Catholic I love listening to the conversion stories on Journey Home.  It has strengthened my own faith and I am always prodding my protestant friends to watch episodes that I think are particularly inspiring.  Marcus is wonderful.

I am a cradle catholic and I am a big fan of Mr. Marcus Grodi of EWTN’s The Journey Home. I love his present ministry and his story of conversion to the catholic faith. His story and all the stories of those people who found the way of going home to the Church made me realized how lucky I am that I have this faith and really proud (with all my humility)of it. Thank you NCR for featuring him. God bless!

I too a cradle Catholic have enjoyed watching ‘The Journey Home’ program which I’ve been watching for only about 1 year. Both conversion and revert stories has help me appreciate the Catholic faith by reading the bible, being a prayful man and the call to holiness, history of the church, learning more about the Popes and Saints and finally understanding what happens in the Holy Mass thanks to Dr. Scott Hahn’s book ‘The Lamb’s Supper: Heaven on Earth’. For many years as a cafeteria Catholic, I’ve felt that I too have been on a journey home.

I am another cradle Catholic who has learned more about my faith on this show then all of my years in parochial school (80s & 90s)! I often encourage others to watch it. My children know when they hear the opening intro music to The Journey Home- it’s “mama time” !

I love Marcus Grodi, his books, and the Journey Home show on EWTN. So often I have learned things from a different perspective that I never thought of before. The show always gives me food for thought and inspires me to practice my faith faithfully. I just finished reading How Firm a Foundation and highly recommend it. Can’t wait to get into the next book Pillar & Bullwark.

Marcus and The Journey Home were my faithful weekly companions as I converted from a Southern Baptist background to the one holy, catholic and apostolic Church in 2008. They still are! Marcus is such a gentleman and a skilled interviewer. He’s the Charley Rose of catholic TV.  Thank you, Marcus

As a life long Catholic I believe that God does have a plan for the Church that includes married men as priests.  People like Mr. Grodi would make good candidates.

I’m a lifelong Catholic who ‘fell away’ for a while, but I have to say I enjoy The Journey Home as my favorite show on TV. Marcus is a great host providing just the right ‘atmosphere’ in which his guests can unravel their testimonies of conversion…!!! And many of these testimonies are powerful witnesses of courage, selflessness, deep faith, perseverance, and even humour at times…!!!

Journey Home is the coolest show on EWTN.

Marcus’s guests give me ideas of how I can try and reach out to my brothers that are lapsed Catholics. I pray for them everyday but I’m always unsure what to say since they are over a decade older than me and will always see me as the kid. I’m hoping to find the one thing that will touch their hearts.

From Lutheranism to Catholicism.I was raised in the Lutheran Faith and was always in love with Jesus. However when I was a senior in High School we were to write a thesis on something we were interested in and I wrote about Luther and the Reformation. Learning about the Church I had been brought up in I also learned about the Catholic Faith and why Luther broke away and many things about his life. I went to see the Priest,joined the Church.I was faithful to the Church’s teaching and taught Catechism. But my journey has taken me much further into all the mysteries, through(Our Lady of Guadalupe (who appeared to me in a Vision) and praying the Rosary.Jesus transformed me thru the Blessed Sacrament. I am now a prayer worrier to save souls.

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