Beaumont church”s “Catholic Connections” class helping Catholics understand Baptist doctrine

Demographic realities are bringing Catholics into Baptist churches. Are churches ready to help them understand with sensitivity and tact what Baptists consider biblical Christianity?

BEAUMONTā€”As the Hispanicā€”and traditionally Catholicā€”population of Texas continues to increase, so do opportunities for Southern Baptist churches to address the spiritual questions of Catholics. Calvary Baptist Church in Beaumont offers a Catholic Connection class to do just that, albeit in a French Catholic community.

Hispanics made up 38.1 percent of the population of Texas in 2011, the U.S. Census reports. This reflects a nearly 10 percent increase since 2006 when Hispanics accounted for 35.7 percent of all Texans, according to the Texas Comptroller of Public Accountsā€™ office. The Texas trend of growth is reflected nationally.

The SBTC has 193 affiliate churches listing Spanish as their primary or secondary language. Many of these congregants are former Catholics. Churches in southeast Texas such as Beaumontā€™s Calvary Baptist also attract people from French Catholic traditions much like their neighbors in Louisiana a few miles east.

In suburban areas with transplants from other parts of the country, Baptist churches are seeing some nominal Catholics enter their doors.

How can a Baptist church, with sensitivity and wisdom, integrate former Catholics into its body?

ā€œDiscipling former Catholics is a process, not a program,ā€ said Bruno Molina, SBTC language evangelism associate. Molina, a former Catholic, helps lead Hillcrest en Espanol, a Spanish fellowship at Hillcrest Baptist Church in Cedar Hill, just south of Dallas, do just that.

Integrating former Catholics into Baptist fellowships is ā€œnot a matter of going through so many lessonsā€ or simply helping them find their spiritual gifts, Molina said. ā€œIt must entail encouraging them to stay in the Word so they understand that everything flows from the Word, not just tradition.ā€

Part of the process must also involve letting former Catholics know what they can expect from the Baptist or Protestant church for support, Molina said.

Potential pitfalls occur when the old faith traditions collide with the new. Tension can arise as former Catholics relate to family members and friends.

ā€œItā€™s important to encourage former Catholics not to exclude themselves from previous relationships,ā€ said Molina, who recalled his own experience with his traditionally Catholic family after he had trusted Christ as Savior.

ā€œWhen I came home from the Army and was going to explain the gospel to my dad, I was so excited. I didnā€™t realize at the time that when I thought they heard that God loved them and had a plan for their salvation, what they really heard was that I was rejecting their culture and the way they had raised me,ā€ explained Molina. ā€œIt was as if I were rejecting being a Dominican because Dominicans are Catholic!ā€

Despite the tension, it is important for former Catholics to include Catholic family members in celebrations of faith, Molina said. For example, while asking Catholic family members to attend oneā€™s adult baptism may be awkward, it should be encouraged, Molina added.

ā€œThat is a great opportunity to testify and help the family understand and experience true Christian fellowship,ā€ Molina explained.Ā 

Catholics and Baptists differ in some essential doctrinal points.

Mike Gonzales, SBTC director of language ministries, recommends focusing on the nature of the salvation experience when discipling former Catholics.

ā€œA new believer who comes out of a Catholic background needs to understand that salvation is a spiritual experienceā€ and not the result of adherence to the sacraments, Gonzales said.

ā€œScripture makes it clear that Jesus is the only mediator to God,ā€ Gonzales added, citing 1 Timothy 2:5, John 14:6, John 10:9-10, Acts 4:12 and Hebrews 4:14-16.

Gonzales recommends discipling former Catholics with either Henry T. Blackabyā€™s ā€œExperiencing Godā€ or John MacArthurā€™s ā€œFundamentals of the Faith,ā€ in addition to the Baptist Faith and Message 2000 confessional statement, which is heavily referenced with Scripture.

But in many ways, discipling ex-Catholics is much like discipling any new believers, Gonzales said.

Calvary Baptist Church of Beaumont offers a Catholic Connection class twice annually. About 200 people have taken the four-week class since it began five years ago.

ā€œWe use the class to help people from a Catholic background understand the differences between the Catholic faith and the Protestant religion and our churchā€™s beliefsā€ said Cliff Ozmun, Calvary minister of education.

ā€œIt is not a formal pathway for new members,ā€ Ozmun said, ā€œbut almost every term we offer it, people do join the church and are baptized.ā€

The Catholic Connection class is not intentionally promoted in the wider Beaumont area. ā€œIt is aimed at the Calvary community,ā€ Ozmun emphasized. When enough from Calvary express interest, the class is offered.

ā€œThe class is not an evangelism tool for us. It is comparative theology,ā€ said Ozmun, who noted that the last time the Catholic Connection class was offered, four individuals from a local group of Catholic apologists attended for the purpose of, in their words, providing ā€œthe Catholic response.ā€

ā€œBy the fourth week, they commended us,ā€ Ozmun said. ā€œIt was not because we aligned with Catholic doctrine but because we taught the contrast in such a respectful way. They felt we were accurately presenting Catholicism.ā€

One person from the Catholic group even later approached Ozmun in a restaurant to say how much he had enjoyed the class.

Bill Morgan, Calvaryā€™s minister to median adults, wrote the Catholic Connection class curriculum. Jim Robichau, a lay leader and former Catholic, teaches the course.

ā€œWe focus on a handful of things,ā€ said Ozmun, including the authority of the Bible, the completeness of the canon, concepts of baptism, the purpose of communion, the doctrines of heaven and hell and the nature and role of confession.

Churches that wish to contact Ozmun may do so via email at cozmun@calvarybeaumont.com.

Most Read

Bradford appointed dean of Texas Baptist College

FORT WORTHā€”Carl J. Bradford, assistant professor of evangelism and occupant of the Malcolm R. and Melba L. McDow Chair of Evangelism, has been appointed dean of Texas Baptist College, the undergraduate school of Southwestern Baptist Theological …

Stay informed on the news that matters most.

Stay connected to quality news affecting the lives of southern baptists in Texas and worldwide. Get Texan news delivered straight to your home and digital device.