What is this “journey of confirmation”?"Also, many undervalue or don’t understand the journey of confirmation.
Are you suggesting that for adults there are separate paths for confirmation and baptism?
What is this “journey of confirmation”?"Also, many undervalue or don’t understand the journey of confirmation.
What does this have to do with a 10-year-old? There will be a renunciation of sin, then baptism. The Confirmation promises are about 5-10 minutes later.While adults renounce sin at baptism, children, especially those who have not yet reached the age of reason (or consent), do not. It is done on their behalf by their parents and a commitment to raise the child in a Catholic manner is made.
Not according to the Church. A (normal) 10 year old is considered to be quite passed the age of reason.A 10 year old is approaching the Age of Reason.
No. A 10-year-old is well past the age of reason. And there are three initial sacraments, not four.A 10 year old is approaching the Age of Reason. So, it is likely the priest wants them to participate in the full journey of the initial 4 sacraments;
Let’s assume a child of normal mental capacity and start with this quote. Which is out of order completely.An unbaptized adult goes through 4 sacraments (and age-of-reason children follow suit):
- Baptism
- First Reconciliation (if the pastoral choice is made by those leading the confirmation group)
- First Communion (Eucharist)
- Confirmation
Indeed. Please start a new thread so that the person who wants to know about baptism for a 10 year old can actually find that info.At this point, since we aren’t even discussing the original post directly, this should be a new thread,
Excellent answers. The only thing I would add is that the Easter Vigil is when Baptism is celebrated. Not just “the sacrament is celebrated at 8pm on the first Sunday after a new moon in spring” (to use a mundane description) but celebrated in the sense of the waters are blessed, the fire for the candle is blessed, the history os water is read aloud, the death of Jesus is remembered as is the hope of our Resurrection with him.Can. 856 Although baptism can be celebrated on any day, it is nevertheless recommended that it be celebrated ordinarily on Sunday or, if possible, at the Easter Vigil.
Would you point me to these documents? From all of my understanding, there have been no Rites of Christian Initiation of Children developed.In the US, it is pretty standard that children over the age of reason are brought into the Church through RCIC.
This and subsequent “clarifying” statements seem to me to come together to form an excellent basis for the argument to routinely allow Catholics to receive Confirmation while they are still in grade school, if they are well-disposed.As a confirmation Catechist, I can tell you that there is no instructional requirement for the sacrament of baptism. If that is the only sacrament you wish your child to partake in due to parental choices regarding future sacraments, there should be nothing stopping a priest from baptizing.…[Petra G: !!!]
Also, many undervalue or don’t understand the journey of confirmation. This journey prepares any who have reached the age of reason to choose whether or not to first participate in the Rite of Acceptance acknowledging basic acceptance of teaching regarding salvation and next to give the Profession of Faith at confirmation. To truly understand what you are professing at confirmation takes time to learn those teachings and then a conscious choice whether or not to adhere to them. So many confirm and say the Profession of Faith without knowing what it is or believing what they say out of culturally going through the motions or because they feel pressured to by family. It’s important that anyone, child or adult, really means the Profession of Faith when they publicly declare it.
Yes. Just to clarify: I totally agree with those who hold that preparation for confirmation typically ought to include preparation seriously intended to dispose the confirmandi as well as possible. No sacrament reaches its maximum intended effect when it is entered into lightly or without appreciation. The Church over the centuries has not been in the habit of bapitizing catechumens immediately precisely for that reason. The graces of the sacraments are not earned, but they do require cooperation; they’re not magic.Yup. “Confirmare” is the verb “to strengthen, to reinforce, to make more solid.”
For example, Luke 22:32, when Jesus directs St. Peter to “strengthen your brothers,” it’s “confirma fratres tuos.”
In Confirmation, the Holy Spirit reinforces and strengthens the gifts of our Baptism. We are given our gifts more fully, strengthened against spiritual attack, and heartened to spread the faith.
It does not require that a baptized person be well-informed about the faith, because it’s the Holy Spirit doing the work. We are not confirming the Faith; we are being confirmed by the Faith’s Subject.
Obviously it is good for kids to know lots about the Faith. But there is no placement test or labor requirement for Sacraments. With a very few exceptions that are all about having the proper attitude – what was freely given to the Church, the Church must freely give. Anything else is the mortal sin called simony.
I agree that a kid over the age of reason is an adult in the eyes of canon law. But preparation for Baptism of an adult has to include preparation for Confirmation of an adult, because the two go together and happen at the same time.
I also agree that the parish should get on the stick a bit faster, though. A kid just starting out is a lot different from an adult with lots of hangups and holdups to work through. Like the eunuch said, “What hinders me from being baptized?” Tutor the kid, make sure the kid is willing, and get the kid safely baptized and confirmed and communicated.