The Priest, also more than a little annoyed, turns to Ms Catholic and says…
…“why did he do
that? I didn’t tell him ‘you baptize validly’! I told him ‘bring the baby to church to be baptized!’”
(Simplistic thought experiments are
so fun to derail!)
But, for the sake of argument, it’s not “emergency”, it’s “in danger of death.” In this case, that’s not present. So, I can’t see why anyone (let alone a priest on a home visit) would – in the same breath – say “come and have your baby baptized, but you don’t really need to do so, since in danger of death, you can baptize him yourself.”
In other words… it’s a pretty implausible thought experiment.
But… even with
that caveat, we can take it a step further: the priest would invite the family to bring the baby to church, in order to supply the rest of the rites of baptism.
One issue is that according to Canon law someone like Mr. Atheist can only administer the rights if the baby’s life is in danger.
“should”, not “can only”. Well-meaning (but poorly catechized) Catholic grandparents do this all the time with their grandchildren.
Basically, the child should be conditionally baptised in order to ensure validity and the rest of the ceremonies supplied at the same time. Until then, the baptism should not be entered into the register but a note can be made of the relevant details.
Hmm… I was always under the impression that it
was presumed valid. And, in fact, the grandparent is to be advised to tell the parents what he did, and the child
should be entered into the register, since he’s a validly baptized person!
How do non-Catholic ecclesial communities validly baptize infants (and adults) who are not in danger of death?
They aren’t subject to canon law. So, they baptize validly by virtue of the act itself (with the usual caveats about matter, form, and intention).
Have I been wrong about this?
Yep; I’m of the same mind as you.