How
Do You Explain a Conversion?
by Geoffrey Biddulph
How do you
explain a conversion?
How do you
explain how a person can hold a long set of beliefs all of his life
and then over a relatively short period of time come to hold the
exact opposite beliefs?
Many secular
critics see the religious conversion process as something similar
to the character in George Orwell's 1984 who is finally convinced
through years of totalitarian brain-washing that he is really seeing
four fingers when there are in truth only three. According to this
line of thought, religious conversions are usually the acts of desperate,
emotional people trying to bring sense to a mad, difficult world.
For others,
the conversion process is simply a healthy paradigm shift, a change
in worldview that allows a person to see something that he or she
never saw before. In a way, this conversion can be compared to a
person getting a new "sense" that allows him or her to
see and experience things that are truly present in the world but
that the person simply never had the ability to perceive before.
And, in my
opinion, a true, positive conversion is impossible without some
miracles. They can be a series of small miracles over years or decades
leading to a final climatic breakthrough, or, in some cases, the
conversion can be triggered by one large, quick miracle in which
a person has a whole new world revealed to him or her like a curtain
rising before a play.
How Do You
Convince Somebody?
How do you convince somebody that your conversion was a positive,
life-affirming crescendo that turned the world from a blurry pastel
pallor to a portrait of sharp, clean crystal? And then, once they
agree with you that the conversion might have been a good thing
for YOU, how do make them see that this is something they could
absorb into their own lives?
All you can
do is tell your own story. You hope the listeners will agree without
necessarily saying, Wow, how great for YOU as if they
were talking to a young child who had learned to share his toys.
You hope they will really listen to the significance of the story
and catch the cosmic urgency of the event. If they can grasp that
urgency, you have found somebody who truly understands a conversion.
To take the next step and look at applying it to themselves, some
kind of miracle must take place.
Both my mother
and father were from long-time LDS families. After their divorce
when I was young, I did not attend any church regularly. I was raised
without in-depth reading of any scripture until I picked up a Bible
in my mid-thirties.
I had the politics
and worldview of most college-educated people of my generation:
I was generally liberal and viewed all religions with suspicion.
I was an agnostic who saw religious people, especially Mormon religious
people, as misguided. My constant refrain was: All extremism
is bad, meaning all people who were extremely religious in
any manner. In my personal behavior I was an ardent secularist.
It took an
outside event to begin to change my perspective. My stepson, only
14, began to have serious drug problems. He also had problems with
violence and was relentlessly drawn to the worst elements of society:
gangs, foul language, and pornography. I had never seen anything
wrong with the occasional swear word or the semi-pornographic magazines
in my house, but suddenly the situation changed when my stepson
became attracted to these influences.
Out of Control
The situation escalated until it was completely out of control:
my stepson Edgard started bringing drugs to the house and would
disappear for entire weekends while my wife, pregnant, would roam
the streets at night looking for him (while I watched our second
child). Edgard practically stopped going to school and would go
through violent periods of depression during which he would seriously
talk about suicide.
Although I
did not recognize it at the time, I was being brought face-to-face
with real evil. The denigrating effects of a life without the construction
of a true family morality of right and wrong had helped create a
situation where anything goes. I had built my house
on sand, and the foundation was being worn away by drugs, alcohol,
pornography and violence.
Desperate and
unable to sleep, I got out of bed one morning at 3:00 to surf the
Internet for possible solutions. What could we do with Edgard? Military
schools? No, he would run away or he would be kicked out. Check
him into a drug rehabilitation program? No, that was extremely expensive
and may not be effective in the long run. We needed a second home
to send him to with experts who could take care of him.
We found perhaps
a dozen different programs, and decided on one called Teen Help.
They had a school in Jamaica called Tranquility Bay where my stepson
would be well-treated and would have time to recover from his drug
dependency. How to get him there? I lied and told Edgard I had won
a vacation trip to Jamaica for two. His mother was pregnant and
couldnt come; would he like to take a break and
come with me? He reluctantly agreed to go.
His mother
packed his bags. As she did, I found myself taking a Bible off the
shelf and placing it in the bag. Why a Bible? I had never read it
myself, but it seemed good, something that would be
a good influence on him. Maybe it would help him turn his life around.
Edgard and
I got on the plane, and at the airport in Montego Bay, Jamaica,
I handed my stepson over to a security guard from the school and
took a plane right back to Miami. I got home, drank a half-liter
of whiskey and dissolved into a puddle of tears and self-pity.
The school
cost $2400 per month and I earned just about that after taxes. How
would I pay my mortgage, food and also pay for Edgards school,
not to mention buy anything for my daughter and the baby on the
way? I had no idea, but I knew I had done the right thing. I knew
that I had helped keep Edgard alive for a few more weeks, perhaps
months, and that was the right thing to do.
Something
Good
A few days later, I picked up a childrens Bible that was lying
in Edgards room. If there was something good in
it, maybe it would be inspiring to me. I certainly needed inspiration.
I remember
very clearly the first time I read the Sermon on the Mount. I kept
on thinking: This is really good stuff. Why dont more
people talk about this? This Jesus said some really cool things.
I then bought
a real Bible to replace the Childrens Bible. I read most of
it in a few weeks. I was fascinated. What was this book all about?
Did people believe that there was really an Adam & Eve? I became
very interested in what other churches had to say. I quizzed religious
friends of mine about their beliefs.
One friend
was going to the Congregational Church near my home, so I went several
Sundays. It was very interesting. I loved singing the Lords
Prayer. I went to a meeting for new members at the ministers
house, and I remember seeing everybody drinking wine. I said to
myself: What is a Minister doing drinking wine? Somehow,
it didnt seem right to me, but I didnt know why.
Habits
That made me wonder about my own habits with alcohol. I would drink
several beers a day and maybe more on the weekends depending on
if there was a football game. But I had been drinking more during
that time because of the stress related to my stepson, and I felt
bad about that. I felt like I should stop drinking, and I knew the
best thing to do would be to just stop all at once.
I remember
very clearly the day I decided to stop drinking. It was October
1998. I was making margaritas for myself, my wife and my mother-in-law,
and my two-year-old daughter toddled up and said, Daddy, I
want some. I said, No, this is not for little girls,
and she started crying. And the thought came into my mind very strongly:
Why are you putting in your body things that you are ashamed
of, things that you wouldnt give to your own daughter?
The next day
I made a strange kind of pact. It wasnt really a prayer because
I had never prayed, but it was kind of a deal I made with the forces
of the universe, which I was just beginning to define as God.
It went something like this: God, if you keep my daughters
safe, I will stop drinking. I have not drunk alcohol since
then, and my daughters are extremely healthy and happy.
At the same
time, my financial situation magically improved. I was in sales
at the time, and suddenly I began selling like crazy, and my income
tripled. It was just enough money to cover my suddenly huge expenses.
I ended up paying for nearly three years of Edgards school
at $2400 per month, and I never took on any additional debt.
Sister Baptized
A few months later, my sister called me out of the blue and told
me she was going to get baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints. Now this was a huge surprise to me. She and
I both had many family members in the church, but neither she nor
I had really had much interest in the church. I remember saying,
You know, there are a lot of other churches. Im going
to this Congregational Church. And she said, No, this
is the right church. Its our familys church. And
I said, Youre sure theyre not just after your
money? And she said no and asked me to come to her baptism.
Her two oldest children, 10 and eight, were also being baptized.
So I flew across
the country to go to her baptism at the San Rafael, California ward.
I distinctly remember as I walked into the church hoping the ceremony
would not be too boring. The chapel was old with ugly yellow-brown
stained carpet (it has since been remodeled). It certainly was not
as nice as my Congregational Church, which is a beautiful Old Spanish
style building near Miami.
The moment
my grandfather got up to offer the opening prayer, something happened
to me. It was as if a small cloud floated down onto my body. I was
suddenly infused with joy, pure joy. I remember looking around at
the people in the chapel and feeling nothing but love for them.
I felt a concentration of my senses and a keen reminder that I needed
to listen carefully to the service.
Family members
talked about the importance of baptism, and I found myself following
their words as if my very life depended upon it. At one point, a
speaker reminded people in the audience that everybody should be
baptized, and I had to literally stop myself from getting up and
declaring I wanted to be baptized.
The rest of
the day I walked around in a kind of a daze. I was so happy, so
at peace.
Rainbows
The next morning I went running by myself in the hills of northern
California. I was running along a trail that rode the top of a hill,
and there was a rainbow that went from the top of the hill I was
on to another nearby hill. As I ran along, another rainbow appeared
directly above me, a small rainbow inside the larger rainbow. I
literally ran underneath the two rainbows.
Now, I am more
than willing to be convinced that the rainbows were simply the coincidental
refraction of light from two sources. But I will not be convinced
that what I felt in that chapel was not special. Something happened
that had never taken place in my life before. And I liked it.
I flew back
to Miami wondering what had happened to me. I decided that it wouldnt
hurt to read the Book of Mormon, especially because I had read the
Bible and other religious books. So, I began to read it and got
a growing sense that I needed to be baptized. I took the discussions
with the missionaries and began going to the Flagler Ward in Miami.
I got baptized four months after my sister and her two children.
For me, the
crucial moment was the feeling of the Spirit in the chapel where
my sister was about to be baptized. That was the time that the curtain
was lifted and I saw a whole different play taking place. I have
never seen the world the same way since then.
The Fruits
What are the fruits? I have two beautiful daughters, six and
three years old. Edgard, my stepson, is healthy and alive and working
in Miami. I have a great job in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, one of the
most beautiful cities in the world. I have a wonderful relationship
with my extended family members, all of whom are ecstatic about
my conversion.
On a personal
level, people seem to like me better and seem to consider me more
sincere and honest than in the past. I have lost almost 20 pounds
and am in great physical shape. I am more positive and upbeat than
ever.
I am fascinated
by the history and the intellectual tradition of the Church. I have
read literally hundreds of books on church history, Latin American
and Middle Eastern archeology and religion in general. I cannot
get enough information; I have a constant need to absorb it.
It is increasingly
clear to me, as I gather more information from a wide variety of
sources, that logic as well as the Spirit dictates the Church is
true. All of the available, reliable evidence points to the fact
that Jesus Christ was the son of God and died for our sins; all
of the available, reliable evidence also points to the fact that
Joseph Smith was a prophet who restored the true church of God in
this dispensation. I am the first to admit that the Spirit had to
come first; but that does not diminish the factual evidence supporting
the Restoration.
Here in Brazil,
I have two tough callings: I am the Young Mens President and
also the Sunday School teacher for teenagers. I have discovered,
much to my surprise, that the person who learns the most in Sunday
School is the teacher, not the students. Sundays are my favorite
day of the week by far.
My wife and
I get along better than ever, but there are still many tensions.
She is Catholic and has not joined the church, and, frankly, she
has a lot of negative feelings about the church. She feels that
the time I dedicate to my church callings detracts from our family
life. It is a constant struggle to balance what I believe is the
right thing to do in my church callings with her desire that I put
her and the family first.
My life has
completely changed. I no longer go to R-rated movies, and I watch
virtually no television. I find myself turning my eyes away from
suggestively sexual advertisements, and I have cleaned up my language
noticeably. I make a strong effort to do positive, uplifting events
with my wife and children.
I am much more
hesitant to discuss politics in public than I used to be because
I think religious evangelizing is much more interesting and important
than political evangelizing. Still, my politics are much more conservative
than they used to be. I find myself turning more and more to politics
that emphasize helping the construction of a moral center in society,
a center based on time-honored values in the Bible and Book of Mormon.
A Paradigm
Shift
I believe it is a well-known fact that the major advancements in
human history have taken place because people were willing to make
a paradigm shift, a change in their basic worldview. Einstein did
not discover something small, some incremental change. He created
a huge revolution in science, and it happened because he was willing
to think differently. Every great innovation in the business world
happens because somebody is willing to make a change, try something
different, look at things from a new angle.
In the same
sense, I believe it was necessary for me to look at a paradigm shift
for my own life. The way I was living before was clearly making
me miserable. The changes I have made have brought true, lasting
happiness by any standard.
So, I have
had a conversion. To return to my original two examples in the beginning
of this article, am I the victim of a totalitarian cult-like brainwashing
or am I somebody who has been given a wonderful gift of a new sense?
Jesus said we would know true prophets from false prophets by their
fruits, and I believe that applies also to personal experience.
Are the fruits of my conversion positive or negative? If they are
positive, the experience must be true.
But I will
take this a step further. Why is it that we newly converted people
go around bothering others and trying to get THEM to convert? Ah,
theres the rub. Most people are willing to admit that I might
be happier and therefore, good for me, but relatively few whom I
have met are willing to take a look at their own lives. And they
certainly get tired of me bringing up religion all the time.
Heres
why I keep on bringing it up: you may have heard of the example
in Platos Allegory of the Cave. Plato gives the
comparison of people who have been chained in a cave all of their
lives. They do not see the sun, and their only light comes from
fires lit in the caves. The only reality they know if the reality
of shadow people and events playing on the walls around them. Plato
says if one of the people were to escape from the cave, he would
encounter our world in all its brightness and it would take him
time to adjust, but then he would see that our world its infinitely
better than the shadow world where he used to live.
A person who
had gone through a true conversion knows with unrestrained certainty
that there is a better world than the cave world before the conversion.
The converted person wants to go back to the others who are still
in the cave and make them break their chains and take a look at
this other world. Most of them will not, but weve got to keep
on trying with gentle, constant reminders. And maybe we will help
a few people have their own miracles.
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