Podcasts about cradle catholics

  • 12PODCASTS
  • 25EPISODES
  • 1h 2mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • May 13, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about cradle catholics

Latest podcast episodes about cradle catholics

Trend Lightly
A Million Lives and Cradle Catholics

Trend Lightly

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2025 99:43


Author, podcaster, and Trendawg Nora McInerny joins Molls this week to talk about the DashCon of erotic book festivals, why the Cradle Catholics are beefing with the Catholic Clout Farmers, and how r/WeddingAttireApproval done goofed. Make sure you ⁠follow Nora's Substack, Feelings & Co.⁠ On The Afters: Millenial wedding cringe and the importance of checking teens for bad behavior GET TICKETS TO FRIENDS ONLY LIVE IN BOSTON ON JUNE 25TH WITH MOLLY MCPHERSON LINKS Trending with Nora Brick - Use code NORA for 10% off Trending with Molly Dr. Melaxin Peel Shot Moscow Murders Dateline episode A Million Lives - Baltimore Book Festival  Original video from percijay_fantasy author Perci Jay's website Catholic Drama Cradle Catholics vs converts - Sprucewoodboys video r/Weddingattireapproval Update! Kind of a miss  Follow us on TikTok, Instagram and Twitter Find more of Molly's stuff Find more of Tiffany's stuff

Locatora Radio [A Radiophonic Novela]
Capítulo 230: Cradle Catholics and Converts

Locatora Radio [A Radiophonic Novela]

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2025 51:09 Transcription Available


In this week's episode, Diosa and Mala discuss the differences between Cradle Catholics and Converts, Pope Francis' legacy, and why "being Catholic" can also be a cultural identity. Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/locatora_productionsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Fr. Mike Schmitz Catholic Podcast
A Message to Cradle Catholics

The Fr. Mike Schmitz Catholic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2024 5:57


A question to anyone who is thinking about rejecting Jesus (or has accepted him for that matter): have you even met him? Do you know who you are rejecting? You might think the answer is yes. The answer might even be yes. But Fr. Mike has something that every single one of us needs to consider before deciding whether or not to stick by Jesus and his Church.

The Prodigal Life
Ep70. Cradle Catholics | The Church Needs to do Better w/ Hector Molina

The Prodigal Life

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2023 51:02


Today we have the privilege of speaking with famous Catholic Evangelist and legendary head of hair, Hector Molina! Hector shares his story of being a cradle Catholic, becoming a rebellious teenager, the power of a beautiful girl, and KNOWING Jesus vs knowing about Jesus. Throughout this episode we discuss how parents can evangelize their children, the power of a personal testimony, why so many cradle Catholics leave the faith, and how the Church can do better. Join us as we address these topics of faith, hope, and love with one of the sexiest Latino Catholic Evangelists! Episode 70 SHOW HOSTS: Deacon Harold Burke Sivers Nick De La Torre Ellen Holmes Steeves LeBlanc SUPPORT our show: theprodigallife.com Hector Molina - Hectormolina.com SHOW PAGE: https://www.awakencatholic.org/the-prodigal-life/cradle-catholics-the-church-needs-to-do-better Catholic Gifts - https://catholic.store/collections/prodigal-life-deacon-dan-sivers-gift-guide Catholic SWAG - https://catholicmerch.store THE AWAKEN APP: http://theawakenapp.io Bring the AWAKEN MISSION to your parish! https://www.awakencatholic.church/mission

Why Did Peter Sink?
Unmoderning (part 2)

Why Did Peter Sink?

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2022 25:53


The “born this way” argument doesn't help you to resolve anything but just affirms your problem. If your “nature” is to drink or look at dirty websites, then that makes you helpless in combating it. If there is no stopping or altering this behavior because you were born a certain way, then you either accept the problem as final or pursue a science-based solution, like pharmaceuticals or a technique, to deal with the issue. What you will not try, if this is your worldview, is prayer or divine assistance. Why not? Because prayer appeals to magical nonsense that you don't believe in, and to engage in such an act would be admitting that a spiritual realm may exist, which is for gullible simpletons. I know this feeling well. The denial of the spirit or soul actually blocks you from accessing a treasure of knowledge that the mind and heart are capable of reaching, but not if you don't believe it. If we come to believe in the soul, or in something beyond ourselves, we open up a new possibility, and we can access something that hardly makes sense. In that worldview, you can have both free-will and rational thought and faith in mysteries, because in that worldview you are allowed the full range of mind, body, and soul. It's like a buy-one-get-two-free offer. If you allow belief in the soul or God, you automatically receive the other. If you allow an eternal soul, it can commune with a God who knows all outcomes. But the key twist here is that while God knows all the outcomes, we do not. We still have to make decisions here. This is an incredibly weird thing about human beings. To believe or not to believe makes a world of difference in how you live, and this is why the battleground for indoctrination spends so much time on this spiritual space, denying it or confirming it. The whole reason the various religions and “varieties of religious experience” exist is because we can access a kind of knowledge that science cannot explain, and never will explain. Spirits cannot be put into beakers or centrifuges or equations, so scientific papers about spirits cannot be submitted to journals for peer review without the submitting author sounding like a lunatic to other scientists. Any undergraduate student knows that science cannot co-mingle with any kind of mysticism. But mysticism can co-mingle with science. You can study the brain all you want and still retain mysticism, because science will help explain the physical processes and properties of what happens in the neurons during thought, but will never explain where thoughts come from, or what truly happens in prayer. No matter how many CAT Scans are done or electrodes placed on the forehead, this spirit world is impenetrable by nature, because it is not part of nature. Supernatural means beyond nature. Thus, whether thoughts are generated or received is answered by which side of this fence you sit upon. If spirits do not exist, then you internally create your thoughts. If spirits do exist, then your thoughts can be created externally. For the most part, the idea of thoughts being created in you can be proven, while the idea of yourself creating thoughts cannot be proven. Suggestion is a simple way to illustrate this. The power of suggestion is well-known by parents guiding children, or teachers guiding students, or salespeople working leads. One example of this is a salesperson planting a high price in your thoughts and then offering a discount shortly thereafter. Planting the high price first in the mind makes the second price after the discount believe you are getting a good deal, even though the salesperson was targeting the discount price the whole time. Another example is the loss leader, where a free item, say a box of delicious Cinnamon Toast Crunch cereal, is offered to get you to spend much more on a whole shopping cart full of other items. In both cases, the idea of saving money is planted in your brain, which brings about the action of commerce. Whether this planting of thoughts is done by a salesperson or by an advertisement doesn't really matter, because you receive these thought from external sources, via the portal of the ears or the eyes, and the decision is made in your head and heart on whether to buy or ignore the thought. This same power of suggestion happens continually in our day, in every waking hour, as you cannot drive down a highway without a bombardment of messaging and offerings from road signs, from billboards, from businesses, from your radio, from bumper stickers, and even from other drivers. Driving from home to work will result in hundreds of planted thoughts which you either choose to allow or reject. This sorting is so common that we do it unconsciously and in rapid succession. But we do not conjure the idea of a billboard. We receive an image through sight, and that image enters our mind. Then we have to determine what to do with the image, and quickly decide: What does a personal injury attorney have to do with me? Do I need a Coors Light? Do I like the candidate on that bumper sticker? Did that person just cut me off? Some images turn into sticky thoughts while others are discarded, and some that we think are discarded come back later, which is what the Coors Light company and attorneys are counting on. They are planting seeds for when the time is right, when thirst arrives or that fender bender happens. Planting “thought seeds” is the entire point of advertising so that when desire or need is perceived, you load the image from storage for re-processing. What's interesting about all of this is that you don't create these images, they are created in you by external inputs. The thought of a lawyer or a beer is just like any other thought, and just like advertisers and salespeople, ideologies and religions use the same power of suggestion to attract believers by telling and selling messages that mostly come through the ears and eyes. Jesus even speaks of a mustard seed as a metaphor for planting faith in minds, which is quite a different thought than planting seeds to sell beer or acquire clients, because the mustard seed grows into something glorious. The beer will get you drunk and the lawyer may get you rich. Faith, on the other hand, will likely make you sober and it certainly won't make you rich, yet it somehow appeals to billions of us. (Quick reminder here: I loathe the Prosperity Gospel.)This concept of where your thoughts come from is fundamental to understanding how your “personal” set of beliefs came into formation, as the formation did not come from yourself but from various influences, like teachers, parents, writers, coaches, actors, celebrities, pastors, preachers, siblings, friends, salespeople, admirers, heroes, and advertisers. Then there is the greatest source of modern thought planting: shows, books, billboards, ads, commercials, songs, podcasts, news, blogs, videos, and video games. All the things that come through screens present thoughts and at a far more rapid rate than say, looking at a tree, although a tree may provide much deeper and more meaningful thoughts. Examining even a single blade of grass may take you to far broader and deeper thoughts than anything on your phone, because the grass is simple, true, and real. The thoughts you hold are not as “personal” as you think, but is rather a confluence of thoughts received from your experiences, and from sounds poured into your ears, and from images painted before your eyes. These can be from natural sources in the world or from artificial sources on screens. Obviously, smell, touch, and taste factor in as well, but all of these feed thoughts to our minds. We don't create the thoughts ourselves. What we think of as thoughts generated from within are actually received from outside. We filter and interpret them, but we don't generate thoughts ourselves. This is where you can get to the high-minded places of the idea of Platonic forms or meditation or transcendentalism or the Holy Spirit or bad spirits. Since this could be a rabbit-hole that can never be fully explored, I'm going to steer away from it and focus on the idea that thoughts are either received or generated, and I am of the belief that they are received. Although our conscience somehow knows right and wrong, we do begin life as a mostly blank slate, like an empty apartment, where outside influences move a lot of furniture and knick-knacks into the space between our ears. Eventually, every few years or so, we have to clean house because it starts looking like an episode of Hoarders. Confusion reigns when conflicting doctrines and thoughts co-exist, to the point of it being a fire hazard. When you reach this point, you have to throw out certain “junk” thoughts and what you decide is junk are the thoughts that you were indoctrinated to dislike. They are the thoughts that go against what you were successfully indoctrinated into accepting. However, there are times along the path of life where you will look at the furniture you kept in the apartment and realize that you kept the wrong things, and that is when a potential flip of accepted doctrines can happen. This is one of the key elements that separates the various doctrines, and I use the word doctrine because to be indoctrinated there must be specific doctrines that are taught to you. For some doctrines, you must accept that thoughts are generated from within, and that there are no such thing as spirits. To believe these doctrines, you have to deny all things spiritual. This is a requirement, but moving all of the spiritual furniture out of the apartment is very difficult to do, if not impossible, so the doctrines that require spiritual denial must go to great efforts in order to stifle it. Some of this furniture is permanent, or can't fit through the doorway, so it has to stay in the apartment. It can only be removed if the apartment is destroyed. Because of this, indoctrination processes require covering this spiritual furniture up by burying it under piles of dirty laundry or using stacks of books to make it less obvious. My post-high school set of beliefs aligned incredibly well to the tenets of the Humanist Manifesto. This was the set of beliefs adopted by many people involved in education strategy of the 20th century, most notably, John Dewey, the philosopher who spent a lifetime writing about how to do a takedown of religion through the education system and replace it with secular humanism. “In the course of a long career, Dewey practically reinvented the American system of education from the bottom up.” (from Atheism for Dummies) To understand that I was indeed indoctrinated was a difficult thing to realize and even admit. But then that's the idea of indoctrination; the intention is to perform a total eclipse of the mind so that you don't realize that it's happening. While I was under the impression that I grew up with faith, I was actively being conditioned to recoil at all things religious and see God as something oppressive that I needed to shake off. The soul itself was excused from my worldview. Since ghosts were not real, neither was the soul. This conclusion was arrived at by design. The system was guiding me to this end. This isn't even hidden from us, although if the voting public actually knew about it, they would have objected and never voted for such a scheme. Those who fought against it were mocked and set aside as crackpots. But the plan was exactly to kill off God from public and private life, and as far back as the 1930s this was openly mentioned as part of the plan. Charles Francis Potter said, “Education is the most powerful ally of Humanism, and every American public school is a school of Humanism. What can the theistic Sunday Schools, meeting for an hour once a week, and teaching only a fraction of the children, do to stem the tide of a five-day program of humanistic teaching.” (from Humanism: A New Religion (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1930), p. 128.)The deck was stacked, and the funny thing is that many of us who were indoctrinated toward humanism, now point back at religion and that one hour a week we spent learning about Jesus as the malicious indoctrination program. In other words, this is very well-done indoctrination because we blame what did not successfully indoctrinate us as the thing that indoctrinated us. It's so rich in irony I can hardly stand it. But until the scales fall from you eyes, you can't see this. The bait-and-switch is performed on children and parents in an underhanded way, so that neither parent nor child realizes it has happened, and you blame the lamb as the lion. We blame the Church for an indoctrination that never even happened. This is also why so many fallen away Catholics have absolutely no idea what Catholicism even is, let alone teaches. But you will hear people blaming the Church for all of their adult maladies and mental issues. Cradle Catholics have long been considered clueless by converts to the faith, and we are. I was living proof. Most of us just get through Baptism, Reconciliation, First Communion, and Confirmation, and know next to nothing, especially in terms of doctrine, and head for the exits. That is not successful indoctrination. It's the opposite. How you live your life is how you are indoctrinated. You can find out easily. Just compare whether you are living your life more closely to the Ten Commandments or to the Fifteen Principles of the Humanist Manifesto. I would be willing to bet that if you are an American living today, and you honestly examine your conscience, you cannot get through the first three commandments. However, I bet you can nod blindly along through all of the Humanist principles because that is the dogma you actually live by. That is how we live, as we have been indoctrinated to live. The greatest bait and switch is how we came to blame the Church and parents for indoctrinating us when most fallen away Catholics had no concept of anything the Church stood for or against, but we were quick to name our “Catholic Guilt” as the cause of our depression and self-hatred, even though it was manufactured. Anyone that uses the phrase “Catholic Guilt” is guilty of never taking time to read the Catechism to realize that this is a concept that never had existed for two thousand years, but is rather the idea of a campaign to shudder the church as the enemy of the state. I challenge anyone to read the Catechism and find that idea. The label of Catholic Guilt is a lazy way to anoint oneself as a victim, and it is a direct outcome of brainwashing by the media and the public school system, not of the Church itself. Today, as always, the biggest threat to worldly power is Jesus Christ, as it was then, is now, and ever shall be, world without end, until He comes again. Now when I hear someone mention how they hate organized religion, I nod along because I was once programmed that way, in that same headspace of humanist indoctrination. The fact that I had any knowledge of the Bible is actually quite amazing given I was growing up in a Christian-in-name-only nation and taking part in the humanist public school curriculum of the 1980s and 1990s. The reality is that aside from my occasional experience of witnessing a devout person in active prayer at church, I had never lived a single day in a truly Christian culture. Nor had most Americans, as we had been nudged along a path to atheism, through sports and news and money and self-worship, while keeping God on our lips with no understanding of the word. We were craftily spun around to face away from God but taught to keep saying the word God. This explains the intense confusion in people today. We are trying to reconcile two worldviews that cannot be reconciled, ever. This is like fire and water trying to repeatedly burn and douse the same material over and over. You either have to pick one or the other, because to try and balance both is insane. What we do then, to maintain sanity, is to choose whatever suits our wants and desires at the time, and only turn to God when he will seem to satisfy our needs. Even then we pray for our will to be done, not God's will to be done. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.whydidpetersink.com

Beautiful Depths: The Podcast
Re-Evangelizing Cradle Catholics

Beautiful Depths: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2020 39:51


Special guest (and Josie’s brother!) John Paul Kuhlman joins the gals in chatting about how we can be a witness and evangelize to those who know the faith and grew up in it, but aren’t living it out. Resources Mentioned: (Book) Mere Christianity, by C.S. Lewis ; (Book) Forming Intentional Disciples, by Sherry Widdell ; (Book) Rome Sweet Home, by Scott Hahn ; (Website) Formed.org

evangelizing scott hahn cradle catholics
Mixing It Up With Pete and Maureen
EPISODE 8: WHY WE LEFT THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

Mixing It Up With Pete and Maureen

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2020 38:25


"Cradle Catholics" for 59 years, we decided it was time to go. We haven't looked back. This week we'll share our story. Write us at peteandmaureenpodcast@yahoo.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/peter-tauriello/message

Reinvention Radio
Who and what are the cradle Catholics?

Reinvention Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2017 13:02


Soul-full Sunday: Mary discusses Cradle Catholics with Steve... meaning, those who were born Catholic but stepped away from the religion. She shares stories of teaching others how to pray the rosary and the effect it has on their lives. Steve wonders if his strange ability to have premonitions is really more a premonition or fear?... Listen in as Steve, Mary, Rich and the crew… The post Who and what are the cradle Catholics? appeared first on Reinvention Radio.

Outside the Walls
#152: Steve the Missionary — Getting to Know Mary as our Mother

Outside the Walls

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2017 48:00


Catholic YouTube Superstar Steve the Missionary brings the Cradle vs Convert Smackdown: Mary our Mother edition. We talk about what Converts can learn from Cradle-Catholics regarding Marian Devotion. A reading on Meditating on the Life of Christ from St. Bernard Get extra segments and other perks at http://www.patreon.com/outsidethewalls.

Catholic Diocese of Lincoln Podcast
Holiness it's for Cradle Catholics Too

Catholic Diocese of Lincoln Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2017


Bruce looks at what scripture, church documents, and the saints say about our call to holiness and then shares his own moving story of conversion in the medical field.

holiness cradle catholics
Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Abuse Scandal

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2010 62:50


Fr. Riccardo discusses the Abuse Scandal in the Church in this installment for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series. 

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Catholic Schools

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2010 62:33


Fr. Riccardo discusses What Does it Mean to be a Catholic School? in this installment for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series. 

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
A Proposal for Our Lady of Good Counsel for 2010

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2010 82:36


In this talk for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series, Fr. Riccardo discusses what it means to be a prophet and addresses the role of the laity in evangelization. The St. Patrick prayer card referenced in this podcast may be downloaded here. The card was created by Jeanne Stevenson, owner of Card for His Glory.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Sacraments 7

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2009 79:13


Fr. Riccardo discusses The Eucharist in this seventh session of a series of talks on The Sacraments for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series. The outline referenced in this podcast may be downloaded here.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Sacraments 6

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2009 78:14


Fr. Riccardo discusses Marriage in this sixth session of a series of talks on The Sacraments for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Sacraments 5

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2009 73:20


Fr. Riccardo discusses Confirmation in this fifth session of a series of talks on The Sacraments for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series. The outline referenced in this podcast may be downloaded here.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Sacraments 4

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2009 90:29


Fr. Riccardo discusses Anointing of the Sick in this fourth session of a series of talks on The Sacraments for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series. The outline referenced in this podcast may be downloaded here.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Sacraments 3

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2009 87:24


Fr. Riccardo discusses Confession in this third session of a series of talks on The Sacraments for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series. The outline referenced in this podcast may be downloaded here.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Sacraments 2

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2009 96:27


Fr. Riccardo discusses Baptism in this second session of a series of talks on The Sacraments for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series. The outline referenced in this podcast may be downloaded here.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Sacraments 1

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2009 78:58


Fr. Riccardo addresses The Sacraments: What Difference Do They Really Make? in this first session of a series of talks on The Sacraments for the Catholicism for Cradle Catholics series.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Session 4

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2008 76:26


Fr. Riccardo shares photos of his recent pilgrimage to Lourdes, Loyola, Santiago de Compostela, and Fatima in this session of Catholicism for Cradle Catholics. This presentation is in video format, and should play within iTunes or QuickTime. This file is nearly 500 MB in size. Please be patient and wait for it to download. A broadband connection is highly recommended.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Session 3

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2008 63:12


Fr. Riccardo addresses the topic Praying With Our Lady in this third session of a series of talks titled Catholicism for Cradle Catholics.

catholicism riccardo cradle catholics
Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Session 2

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2008 88:40


Fr. Riccardo addresses the topic Praying With Scripture in this second session of a series of talks titled Catholicism for Cradle Catholics. The handouts referenced in this podcast may be downloaded here.

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts
Catholicism for Cradle Catholics-Session 1

Fr. John Riccardo's Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2008 79:24


Fr. Riccardo addresses the topic of Prayer-The One Thing Necessary in this first session of a new series of talks titled Catholicism for Cradle Catholics. The handouts referenced in this podcast may be downloaded here.

catholicism riccardo cradle catholics
Catholic Forum
Transformation in Christ

Catholic Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2006 28:50


Cradle Catholics, Dr. David Den Braber, O.D. & Shawn McDermott, discuss the need for deeper conversion.