M
mouse333
Guest
I recently decided to believe what a priest taught me (believing what you believe is a good thing!) about baptism of desire. Because of my family, a disability that makes it difficult to be around people, and my location in a hostile environment, I have not had the opportunity to join RCIA classes. I am not baptized in any faith. Neither was my mother or her mother, so obviously she didn’t take care of getting her kids baptized and my father, tho baptized, didn’t take care of it either. After a lifetime of religious confusion and many years of listening to Christian pop rock on the car radio, I have become a confirmed believer in what I know of the holy apostolic church. I pray the rosary; I pray. I do no work on Sundays. I wear a cross. I pray constantly and efficaciously. I have recently sorted out a lifetime illness through faith.
The priest said that if you desire a sacrament you may ask God for it and he will give it to you. He also said that I should formalize the baptism when possible, but that time has not come. I am stating this because I am a trial member and I have called myself Catholic and don’t want to mislead. I truly believe what the Priest said in hope and faith. I have waited so long for the opportunity to formalize baptism that the time seems to have passed me by.
The priest said that if you desire a sacrament you may ask God for it and he will give it to you. He also said that I should formalize the baptism when possible, but that time has not come. I am stating this because I am a trial member and I have called myself Catholic and don’t want to mislead. I truly believe what the Priest said in hope and faith. I have waited so long for the opportunity to formalize baptism that the time seems to have passed me by.