I was raised a Roman Catholic not at all in the strict sense. I greatly enjoy going to mass, find the structure of the liturgical year spiritually fulfilling, and am inspired by the religious life of various monastic and medicant orders especially the Benedictine family of orders, Franciscans, and Carmelites (I once considered either becoming a Trappist monk or a Carmelite friar but this life is not for me). One of the distinctively Catholic things I do strongly believe in is the devotion to Divine Mercy (despite some the Church Fathers believing in universal salvation, I do not see Divine Mercy as universal salvation at all); The diary of St. Faustina Kowalska is probably one of the most interesting books I've read. However, I do have some issues with the Catholic Church; Papal supremacy, papal infallibility, the factionalism in the Church (Traditionalists, Progressives, Charismatics, Moderates), Strict Observance Thomist's canonizing Thomism as the philosophia perennis of Catholicism and dare I say Christianity at large. I also have never been "a rosary guy." I have nothing against it but I have been more enriched by the Jesus Prayer, personally. Sometimes I attend a Byzantine Catholic parish, which is not the exact same as Orthodoxy but similar, as I find the "Eastern Rite" of Christianity very mystical. I went to a local Greek Orthodox cathedral for Agape Vespers in college and I was blown away by the service. Why haven't I converted? I just don't think I'm ready yet; Maybe someday. I like to jokingly identify as "Culturally Catholic" because I don't disagree with everything. Protestantism, while I respect the High Church camp, is off the table; It's too broad a term in America. Being exposed to Orthodoxy has deepened my faith as a Christian.