D
dominikus28
Guest
I recently watched a film (The Rosary Murders) in which a priest refuses to baptise a child because it is out of wedlock. Does church law prohibit the baptism of a child out of wedlock?
Your answer may be a little misleading. The Church does have the obligation not to baptize infants indiscriminately where a well-founded hope that the child will not be raised Catholic, which is something the parent(s) and sponsors promise to do at baptism. One indication that such hope may not exist would be if neither parent is actively practicing the Catholic faith, one symptom of which may be non-obedience to the marriage laws of the Church.Yes. Our parish has told family members no to baptism.
My brother-in-law and his wife were not married in the church.
Really some people are just doing it because it is just tradition. Not because baptism is salvic.
Good thing too!
It made them have their marriage blessed by the church!
Marriage in the church is forever. I guess they weren’t sure about it until they had kids?!![]()
I goofed, then missed the window to edit my post. I meant to type…The Church does have the obligation not to baptize infants indiscriminately where a well-founded hope that the child will not be raised Catholic, which is something the parent(s) and sponsors promise to do at baptism…
The 50’s tooNo, although the priest may delay baptism if the parents do not give evidence of intent to raise the child Catholic, which is a canon law requirement.
the movie is fiction, based on a fictional book series about a Catholic priest who also solves murders. the writer of the book (a former priest) had it right, the movie was not very true to the book. Just because a priest or any Catholic does something in a work of fiction, does not mean that action is in accord with Church law.
In general the writer of the book (he is now deceased, William Kienzele) was very accurate in describing Catholic law and practice, although through a liberal lens, as he was writing about events in a liberal diocese in very liberal years, 70s & 80s.
Many years ago I too witnessed a mass baptism at a Catholic Church in Mexico. Most of the parents were not married, but yes, the godparents were, which I found ironic.I was witness to a “mass baptism” of eleven children (most of them newborns) all at one time in Mexico City. Most of the parents were not married. Most of the godparents were (go figure!).![]()
I’m a mystery book aficionada & loved his. It was in them that I first leaned what a sacrarium was & the impediment to ordination presented by illegitimacy in the 1917 Code of Canon Law.No, although the priest may delay baptism if the parents do not give evidence of intent to raise the child Catholic, which is a canon law requirement.
the movie is fiction, based on a fictional book series about a Catholic priest who also solves murders. the writer of the book (a former priest) had it right, the movie was not very true to the book. Just because a priest or any Catholic does something in a work of fiction, does not mean that action is in accord with Church law.
In general the writer of the book (he is now deceased, William Kienzele) was very accurate in describing Catholic law and practice, although through a liberal lens, as he was writing about events in a liberal diocese in very liberal years, 70s & 80s.
don’t know why this old thread was resurrected, but the reason the godparents, if married, are married in the Church is because that is a canon law requirement for godparents. It is not a canon law requirement for the parents, although well founded assurance (in the prudential judgement of the pastor) that the child will be raised Catholic, is required.Many years ago I too witnessed a mass baptism at a Catholic Church in Mexico. Most of the parents were not married, but yes, the godparents were, which I found ironic.
The way it was explained to me by the priest is that they do not wish to forbid anyone in such a situation to be baptized because, perhaps later down the line, they will return to the Church and not feel abandoned.