Religious zealotry is hard to stomach for many. Sorry but it is. And SO MANY of the pearl clutching Christians who are just "in disbelief" that these parents would be concerned about this would have an absolute stroke if their child were equally as committed to an different religion just saying |
I would ask him to consider it if he feels called to it. I could see someone moving from history into theology as an avenue of study, so maybe a scholar would be an option to. The benefit of this is that he would have his own congregation to preach to and be concerned with, which could alleviate his desire to proselytize to you. |
OP, this is good advice. I would add asking to join him at mass and meeting his parish priest. Find out what Catholic organizations he belongs to. Be cause if he doesn’t really belong to any, that’s a red flag. If he has been spending time with a priest or others, they may have thoughts about him that can help assess potential mental illness, or maybe he is just devout. The minute information provided here is not nearly enough to determine and it’s coming from one viewpoint. I was educated in catholic schools and am a practicing Christian. A guy I grew up with in church became extremely religious, constantly quoting Bible verses in our late 20s early 30s. After some time it became obvious that something was wrong and he wasn’t just devout. His family got him mental health help and he received a diagnosis. This is at a conservative Christian church, we knew something was wrong with him. His religious community and priest may as well. As has been mentioned already, the goal is not to become a saint, that is the opposite of Christian and Catholic teachings. Faith without works is dead, so sitting around doing nothing, red flag. If it isn’t mental illness, then his devotion maybe be well served in religious life. |
NP - A form of OCD called religious scrupulosity. Our family is religious, but we have a son with this, and it is over the top. |
That was mentioned above as well. |
| For all the religious folks here, just stop. 100% this is not about religion. It's about a marked change in behavior. Frankly, OP's description points to a mental health issue. Yes,sometimes religion is incorporated in many mental health concerns. |
This. My DH has a BS in History (yeah, go figure) and he is an exec in the IT industry. |
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I 100% sympathize, I find people who talk to me about their religion really irritating.
But at 22, I would try to just wait and let him work through it. It could be worse, it could be CrossFit. |
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The priest may be the one person your son trusts enough to listen to. I would have a sit down with him, as a parent respectful of religious faith but that has some concerns about the red flags you mentioned: the ruminations, obsessive thoughts. Would the priest be willing to ask your son to consider a mental health evaluation with a physician, at the very least to rule out disordered thinking? A person can be a devout, faithful, loving Catholic and yet also pursue mental health treatment - it isn’t either/or. Even better if the priest can help your son find a trusted Catholic psychologist.
Work WITH the people who care about your son - at the very least, they can keep a further eye on him. |
| Why don't you attend mass or the church events with him once in a while to get the inside skinny. As another poster indicated, the Catholic church is the least evangelical/cult-like religion out there. Maybe he's doubling down on the the Catholicism, bc he's dealing with the disappointment of having broken up with the person he has converted for (maybe he's not over it and searching for someone like her who has the same faith). Maybe he feels a calling and will become a priest. Maybe he just feels alone and the church fills a void. Get to know his church friends and encourage him to do some stuff with them outside the church as well. |
I'm muslim but I would reach out to the priest or chaplain or whomever of the church he belongs to and share my concern, they are best placed to address these concerns with your son in a way that he will understand. |
Completely untrue. Charismatic Catholics are absolutely as dogmatic or worse than any fundie in mainstream Christian denominations. I've seen several people over the years literally go off the deep end in extreme Catholic communities. |
| Another thought. Is there a possibility that he is struggling with sexuality and he's having more trouble accepting it than the girlfriend? And he's praying it away? |
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OP, your son sounds like my single cousin, though she is much older. Intelligent woman, a degree in nursing though she did not practice in the field more than a few years. Raised in a strict Catholic household, but then she joined a Latin Mass community as an adult and went off the deep end.
I would liken her current situation to being part of a cult. She is a nice person, but absolutely every single thing is focused on religion for her. It’s challenging to have a conversation with her, so I very seldom even communicate with her anymore. It’s just too much. If your son is part of a Latin Mass community or similar, I would be more concerned about that than a regular Catholic church. However, the parish in my area is known for being extremely conservative and insular. After my mother died, we stopped participating because the whole thing was completely over the top. As others have suggested, your son may eventually gravitate toward being a priest or working in the church. If it makes him happy and he is a contributing member of society, then there’s probably not much you can do. But I hear you. I have really hated to see what has happened to my cousin. I cannot imagine how I would feel if something like that happened to one of my children. Your concerns are valid. |
TBH I don’t totally trust OP’s spin on this. It sounds like any convo about religion is too much for her, and the stuff about him wanting to be a saint sounds like an exaggeration, frankly. |