WASHINGTON, D.C. — By entering the Catholic Church, catechumens and candidates are joining the history of God’s plan to redeem the world from sin, Detroit Archbishop Allen H. Vigneron said as the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults process began in February.

“It is by communion with Jesus Christ that God’s history becomes our history,” Vigneron told the congregation in his homily Feb. 18 during the first milestone in RCIA — the Rite of Election.

“In this communion, your baptism becomes a marriage between yourself and God and the Church. In his midst, Jesus gives himself to be owned by the Church,” he said. Everything Jesus has belongs to the Church. And the Church has nothing but what Jesus gives her.”

Now this RCIA process, carried out in parishes and dioceses across the United States, comes full circle as the U.S. Church welcomes thousands of new Catholics at Easter Vigil Masses March 31.

“As the culmination of the Easter Triduum, the vigil celebrates the passion, death and resurrection of Jesus,” said a news release from the U.S. Conference of Catholics Bishops in Washington.

“While people can become Catholic at any time of the year, the Easter Vigil is a particularly appropriate moment for adult catechumens to be baptized and for already-baptized Christians to be received into full communion with the Catholic Church,” it said.

About 85 of the nearly 200 dioceses across the nation reported their numbers of catechumens and candidates for full communion to the USCCB. Based on these numbers, more than 30,000 people are expected to be welcomed into the Church.

Catechumens, who have never been baptized, will receive baptism, confirmation and first Communion at the Easter Vigil. Candidates, who have already been baptized in another Christian tradition, will enter the Church through a profession of faith, being confirmed and receiving the Eucharist.

The U.S. archdiocese with the largest Catholic population in the country — the Archdiocese of Los Angeles — will welcome 1,700 catechumens and 1,127 candidates.

Among them will be catechumen Tina Robinson. Raised in a Baptist church, Robinson eventually started attending a nondenominational church. After she married a cradle Catholic, she prayed to God for guidance. A few days later on the front door of the couple’s house, she received an invitation to attend St. Bernard’s Church. “That was my calling,” Robinson said.

The Archdiocese of San Francisco will welcome 173 catechumens and 169 candidates. In the group will be Tina Wok, who had been a nominal member of a non-Christian religion, and Kent Iglehart, whose wife Jacqueline inspired his conversion.

Other archdioceses reporting their number of catechumens and candidates, respectively, included: New York, 400 and 468; Galveston-Houston, 1,536 and 618; Atlanta: 708 and 1,280; Seattle, 664 and 429; Hartford, 59 and 55; Philadelphia, 254 and 236; Anchorage, 36 and 32; Washington, 576 and 237; Newark, 416 and 657; Oklahoma City, 239 and 327; Dubuque, 72 and 120; and St. Paul and Minneapolis, 228 and 386.

In the Diocese of San Diego, a combined 1,091 catechumens and candidates will be welcomed into the Church. They include Karrie Johnson. After regular attendance in a Christian church for a number of years, Johnson felt that God might be guiding her toward the Catholic Church. Open to the possibility, she attended Mass for the first time and had the “profound feeling” that she was truly home.

Other dioceses reporting their numbers included: Charleston, South Carolina, 155 catechumens and 337 candidates; Dallas, 1,139 and 300; Charlotte, North Carolina, 214 and 401; Venice, Florida, 193 and 205; Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 154 and 194; Portland, Maine, 71 and 62; Albany, New York, 44 and 84; Manchester, New Hampshire, 71 and 95; Springfield, Massachusetts, 43 and 76; Fresno, California, 527 and 322; Reno, Nevada, 57 and 171; Pueblo, Colorado, 76 and 43; Honolulu, 208 and 41; Salt Lake City, 225 and 98; Pittsburgh, 144 and 309; Wilmington, Delaware, 81 and 82; Springfield, Illinois, 109 and 165; Arlington, Virginia, 198 and 461; Trenton, New Jersey, 188 and 460; and Brooklyn, New York, 548 (of whom 127 are children) and 468.

Just as each person’s conversion story is unique, Vigneron said in his February homily, the Rite of Election and the Easter Vigil are very much public acts in which one’s personal history is joined with the history and gifts of the Catholic Church.