I just prayed An Act of Consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus prayer that I found in my 1930 edition of A Manual of Prayers for the use of the Catholic Laity.
To Thee, O Sacred Heart of Jesus, do I devote my and offer up my life, my thoughts, my words, my actions, and my sufferings. May my whole being be no longer employed but in loving and serving and glorifying Thee. O Sacred Heart, be Thou henceforth the sole object of my love, the protector of my life, and pledge of my salvation, and my refuge at the our of my death. Please for me, O blessed and adorable Heart, at the bar of Divine Justice, and screen me from the anger which my sins deserve. Imprint Thyself like a seal upon my heart, that I may never be separated from Thee. May my name also be ever engraven upon Thee, and may I ever be consecrated to Thy Glory, ever burning with the flames of Thy Love, and entirely penetrated with it for all eternity. This is all my desire, to live in Thee. One thing have I sought of the Lord, and this will I seek, that I may dwell in the Heart of my Lord all the days of my life.
I realized this is like a fancy Catholic version of "The Sinner's Prayer," the prayer we prayed as evangelicals when we accepted Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior.
Evangelicals would argue that the focus should be on Jesus, Himself, and not the veneration of a body part of Jesus, and they would balk at the misquoted Scripture at the end, saying it should be House of the Lord, not Heart of the Lord, but otherwise, it's pretty much checks the boxes of The Sinner's Prayer.
No other thoughts. I just found that parallel interesting. Sometimes I think we are closer than we think we are and what separates us is a lot of semantics.