M
Minishecat
Guest
Please can anyone tell me if a Non Catholic can stand as a godparent to catholic babies if they have not been baptised and have only had a ‘Thanksgiving’ service themselves as a child?
Can. 873 One sponsor, male or female, is sufficient; but there may be two, one of each sex.
teeCan. 874 §1 To be admitted to undertake the office of sponsor, a person must:
1° be appointed by the candidate for baptism, or by the parents or whoever stands in their place, or failing these, by the parish priest or the minister; to be appointed the person must be suitable for this role and have the intention of fulfilling it;
2° be not less than sixteen years of age, unless a different age has been stipulated by the diocesan Bishop, or unless the parish priest or the minister considers that there is a just reason for an exception to be made;
3° be a catholic who has been confirmed and has received the blessed Eucharist, and who lives a life of faith which befits the role to be undertaken;
4° not labour under a canonical penalty, whether imposed or declared;
5° not be either the father or the mother of the person to be baptised.
§2 A baptised person who belongs to a non-catholic ecclesial community may be admitted only in company with a catholic sponsor, and then simply as a witness to the baptism.
Here in Cleveland, even a Christian Witness needs to present a sponsor certificate.Yes, they can and did, as long as one is a Good practicing Catholic. The other can be anything,like the person I know a Divorced, ex-Catholic, now non-practicing Jew. Whatever, I was surprised over this but it did happen, The one Godparent handed in all info–Note from Pastor, all Sacarmental Certifcates, the other person handed nothing, no questions were asked. Yet both names appear on the Baptismal CertifcateI feel its wrong, personally.
This person didn’t and the only reason the baby was allowed to be Bapitised was because one Godparent was a “Good Standing” Catholic in that Parish, who Recieved all his Sacarments. I was against this but was told, there is nothing you can do about as long as one Godparent is a Good Catholic. This person I refering to is my Grandaughter’s Godmother so I know its true. And this is a Conservative ParishHere in Cleveland, even a Christian Witness needs to present a sponsor certificate.
NO a non-Catholic cannot stand as a Godparent. To be a Godparent one must be a Catholic who has been Confirmed and received First Communion, is a practicing Catholic in good standing with the Church.Please can anyone tell me if a Non Catholic can stand as a godparent to catholic babies if they have not been baptised and have only had a ‘Thanksgiving’ service themselves as a child?
Seriously, how was this allowed see my posts above(#6 and # 8), because in 2003 it happened, My son is Godfather, he attends Mass regularly, Recieved all Sacraments and is a Good Standing Member of our Parish where my Grandaughter was Baptised. The other is an Aunt of my son-in-law’s who is a divored non-Catholic never attends Mass and is marry to a Man who is a non-practicing Jew. She was not at the Baptism, it was by proxy of her equally non-Catholic sister standing in.???Is my grandaughter’s Baptism invalid then? Please Note in Post #6 I wrote “ex Catholic” and just realized it-she was never a Catholic. Sorry for the mistake. Please if anyone knows please reply, this really has me nervous.NO a non-Catholic cannot stand as a Godparent. To be a Godparent one must be a Catholic who has been Confirmed and received First Communion, is a practicing Catholic in good standing with the Church.
To be a “Christian Witness” the person MUST be a validly Baptized Christian in good standing with their Christian Community.
A non-Baptized person cannot be a witness at all.
Only one godparent is necessary. Assuming your granddaughter was properly baptized with Trinitarian formula, everything should be fine.Seriously, how was this allowed see my posts above(#6 and # 8), because in 2003 it happened, My son is Godfather, he attends Mass regularly, Recieved all Sacraments and is a Good Standing Member of our Parish where my Grandaughter was Baptised. The other is an Aunt of my son-in-law’s who is a divored non-Catholic never attends Mass and is marry to a Man who is a non-practicing Jew. She was not at the Baptism, it was by proxy of her equally non-Catholic sister standing in.???Is my grandaughter’s Baptism invalid then? Please Note in Post #6 I wrote “ex Catholic” and just realized it-she was never a Catholic. Sorry for the mistake. Please if anyone knows please reply, this really has me nervous.
Naturally, I am only guessing, but perhaps the certificates were filled out in advance, perhaps by someone who did not understand the circumstance? Even if the priest or deacon filled them out in the company of all present, he might only have done so to avoid causing friction.Seriously, how was this allowed see my posts above(#6 and # 8), because in 2003 it happened, My son is Godfather, he attends Mass regularly, Recieved all Sacraments and is a Good Standing Member of our Parish where my Grandaughter was Baptised. The other is an Aunt of my son-in-law’s who is a divored non-Catholic never attends Mass and is marry to a Man who is a non-practicing Jew. She was not at the Baptism, it was by proxy of her equally non-Catholic sister standing in.???Is my grandaughter’s Baptism invalid then? Please Note in Post #6 I wrote “ex Catholic” and just realized it-she was never a Catholic. Sorry for the mistake. Please if anyone knows please reply, this really has me nervous.
This in no way invalidates the Baptism.Seriously, how was this allowed see my posts above(#6 and # 8), because in 2003 it happened, My son is Godfather, he attends Mass regularly, Recieved all Sacraments and is a Good Standing Member of our Parish where my Grandaughter was Baptised. The other is an Aunt of my son-in-law’s who is a divored non-Catholic never attends Mass and is marry to a Man who is a non-practicing Jew. She was not at the Baptism, it was by proxy of her equally non-Catholic sister standing in.???Is my grandaughter’s Baptism invalid then? Please Note in Post #6 I wrote “ex Catholic” and just realized it-she was never a Catholic. Sorry for the mistake. Please if anyone knows please reply, this really has me nervous.
Thank you so much for your response I feel a lot better, it truly got me upset after reading this thread, thinking my grandaughter’s Baptism was possibly invaid. I never agreed with the choice of a Godmother, actually it was my son-in-law’s doing to “please” his wealthy Aunt.This in no way invalidates the Baptism.
However in reality your granddaughter has one Godparent and only one Godparent.
So many choose Godparents for all the wrong reasons, even when they are qualified certain people may not be the best choice.Thank you so much for your response I feel a lot better, it truly got me upset after reading this thread, thinking my grandaughter’s Baptism was possibly invaid. I never agreed with the choice of a Godmother, actually it was my son-in-law’s doing to “please” his wealthy Aunt.