W
WillyAL
Guest
For context: I am a non-Catholic with a Catholic spouse. I have attended Sunday Mass with my wife for as long as we’ve been married.
It has been my observation that like many religious traditions, Catholicism has many “rules,” some of which make perfect sense, some of which are just kind of neutral (from my perspective), and some of which leave me scratching my head. An example of a head-scratcher is the teaching regarding baptism. I often read that baptism “leaves and indelible mark on the soul” and that once someone is baptized in the Church, they are Catholic and there is nothing one can do to change that. I have a few friends who were raised Catholic but chose to leave the Church as adults. Some have joined other churches and some are not religious. While they obviously don’t concern themselves with how the Church regards them, I assume that a they at least know. My question concerns (a hypothetical) someone who was baptized as an infant, then due to circumstances beyond their control, never set foot in a church again. They have no memory or knowledge of their baptism. Would the Church consider such a person Catholic? Suppose this person grew up in another church and married in this other church. Would the Catholic Church consider this an invalid marriage? From a Catholic perspective, what would be the consequences for someone is such a situation? “God understands?” “No harm no foul?” “Skating on thin ice?” “One way ticket to Hell?”
Looking forward to your thoughts.
It has been my observation that like many religious traditions, Catholicism has many “rules,” some of which make perfect sense, some of which are just kind of neutral (from my perspective), and some of which leave me scratching my head. An example of a head-scratcher is the teaching regarding baptism. I often read that baptism “leaves and indelible mark on the soul” and that once someone is baptized in the Church, they are Catholic and there is nothing one can do to change that. I have a few friends who were raised Catholic but chose to leave the Church as adults. Some have joined other churches and some are not religious. While they obviously don’t concern themselves with how the Church regards them, I assume that a they at least know. My question concerns (a hypothetical) someone who was baptized as an infant, then due to circumstances beyond their control, never set foot in a church again. They have no memory or knowledge of their baptism. Would the Church consider such a person Catholic? Suppose this person grew up in another church and married in this other church. Would the Catholic Church consider this an invalid marriage? From a Catholic perspective, what would be the consequences for someone is such a situation? “God understands?” “No harm no foul?” “Skating on thin ice?” “One way ticket to Hell?”
Looking forward to your thoughts.