Deacon Nathan grew up in Japan. His parents were Evangelical Protestant missionaries in that country. He was a strong believer in Christ but desired more in his faith life. For
Carol was raised in the Southern Baptist Church until she was 12. At that time her family began attending a Non-denominational Charismatic congregation. Carol’s journey to the Catholic Church began
Steve grew up in the Catholic Church but moved further away from the Church in high school. A girl he met caused him to question his Catholic beliefs and introduced
Karl was baptized and confirmed in the Lutheran Church. Later he drifted from his faith but found it again when he read the Scripture passage, “Come follow Me” Matt. 4:19.
Stunned when a leader in his evangelical church announced that he was returning to the Catholic Church of his youth, Dow Escalante began to study Catholicism to see where his friend went wrong. Little did he know, that Church history and Scripture would bring him Home, too.
Guy grew up in the Congregational Church in Minnesota. When he was in seventh grade he went to a Billy Graham movie where he accepted Christ in his heart. He
Rob, better known as The Donut Man, grew up in the Presbyterian Church. And when my parents divorced, when he was 6, they stopped going to church. When he was
Two Former Presbyterian Ministers and One Former Evangelical gather to discuss the Bread of Life Discourse, John 6:25-69.
Beth was born in an active Episcopal family but she didn’t know why she was in church or what it meant. After she graduated from high school she stopped attended
Marcus and Shawn answer open-line questions from the audience. Shawn’s father was Protestant and his mother Catholic. As a child he was allowed to decide his own faith. He chose
Marcus Grodi and Jim Anderson are joined by Rosalind Moss to discuss Ephesians 2: 8-10 and the topic of salvation by faith and works.
Marcus & Curtis answer open-line questions in this episode. Curtis was brought up in a devoted Catholic family. He experienced all the rites of passage as other Catholic children, but