I was visiting my local Catholic bookstore here in Omaha,
Nebraska to look for some reading on a subject for one of my papers this
semester. As I was checking out I found Confessions
of a Mega Church Pastor by Allen Hunt and immediately recognized the
Dynamic Catholic logo. It was reasonably priced so I added it to my purchase
and went home.
What interested me about this book immediately is that I am
a convert from the mega church scene as well. It is a topic I have written and
blogged about before as well. In my conversion the problems in the mega church
scene permeated my convictions and added to the need to find something
different. I might have discovered reasons against baseline Protestantism, but
the rising mega church scene added to my level of discomfort and disconnect in
my faith at the time. You can ask my wife, I swore to the idea of finding a
small church, even going so far as to provoke the thought of starting my own
house-church. Well, it’s funny how things happen when you say “I will never” to
God; I ended up joining the biggest Church there is – the Catholic Church.
That’s a story from another day but it fits well with this
review. Adam Hunt is the former pastor of one of the largest Methodist congregations
in the U.S. His story is inviting and personal, but also one of teaching and
examination of the real treasures and genius found in the Catholic Church.
Allen opens the book in an interesting way – he builds a picture, chapter by
chapter, of a house. Each with different rooms and scenes, from the kitchen to
the front porch, Allen takes the reader on a narrative journey through his
conversion process. Throughout this house the narrative pastorally browses the
challenges he faced personally and doctrinally while providing lively ways he
was convinced of the Catholic faith. He tells of personal trial in details that
only friends give to each other. In detail, he tells of his struggle with
colitis while at the same time takes on a study for his PhD. with Yale University.
Incidentally to that, Allen befriends a Catholic priest who aids him in prayer
and the friendship blossoms.
He confesses his main fears and ignorance about the Catholic
Church as well. Meeting a group of nuns for the first time, he was assigned to
teach them but ended up learning about the tougher teachings of the Real Presence
in the Holy Communion and how our devotion to Mary or other Saints is not
cultic and idolatrous. Of seemingly most important to his conversion story was
the moral ground the Catholic Church stands on. In his “Family Cemetery” chapter
he drives by an abortion cemetery and begins to question the moral relativity
that his Methodist faith stands in. He might personally stand against abortion
but his denomination could say
otherwise. He discusses the inner workings of the democratic system his church
uses to determine its position, relative to the stalwart and steadfast moral
philosophy of the Catholic Church, whose position on life and social issues is
immutable and unchanged.
The read is easy and can be finished quite quickly for the avid
reader. At about 150 pages, the chapters are a breeze and I finished it going
one chapter a day for a week. At the end he provides an appendix with challenges
and choices for the lay Catholic and the non-Catholic as well. Overall, I
really suggest this book to all. I do not easily give that sort of recommendation
for a book, but this one makes the cut. It is thoughtful and engaging with an
added dose of apologetics. I would compare it with Hahn’s Rome Sweet Home but slightly less rigorous apologetic explanations.
It truly captures the pastoral love of Allen’s previous experience, and his
thoughtful conversion to the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church.
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