R
redcatholic
Guest
How is what I said not an easy way to handle it? Did you try it?
It’s not really a pass or fail thing, but if there is a good RCIA team and good sponsors, a person who is not doing this for the right reason would be noticed early and addressed. .
As a volunteer member of my parish RCIA team (also for 25+ years) and the interim director on several occasions, I most definitely concur with the comments above. RCIA is not simply an instruction program or a series of classes on Catholic beliefs and practices. Rather it is meant to be a period of preparation for the reception of the sacraments and entrance into membership in the Church. A sharing of the fundamentals of the faith is an important part but equally important and perhaps more important is the spiritual preparation of the participant.As to the question of the OP: I have been involved with RCIA for over 25 years. Each catechumen and candidate is normally (in my parishes, always) assigned a sponsor, and it is the duty of three people - the sponsor, the RCIA team leader (in my case, who was a certified catechist) and the pastor to meet individually and inquire (gently; not the third degree) at least once or more during the period of RCIA how the process is going, what questions the individual might have, and do an assessment.
It is not a matter of “pass/fail”. :The information has to come from the individual, not the sponsor, not the team leader, not the pastor: is that individual still interested in pursuing this faith walk.
I would say that at least half of our RCIA newbies do not go on to practice the faith. They are entering the Church for other reasons.I understand RCIA is not a course you need to pass to become Catholic, but that was the most succinct way I could think of to ask this question.
Can someone be rejected or not administered the sacraments after completing the RCIA classes?
A friend recently reached out to me saying she wanted to be baptized Catholic. I was very happy and started talking to her about RCIA. I am concerned she just wants to be baptized but not actually practice the faith. I did not want to discourage her, because it would be great for her to become a practicing Catholic but I also know the church doesn’t baptize people who have no intention of practicing the faith. Before anyone asks “why would she want to be baptized then at all?”, she is engaged to a fallen away Catholic who does not practice his faith but still “identifies” as a Catholic.
I suspect that what @Nik was referring to is not the objective physical difficulty of the act itself, but the emotional difficulty some have with “cold calling” people, even for important things. I have a certain amount of it and my daughter has a very strong aversion to calling even people she already knows. I can usually force myself for important things, and she is working on the issue because she is aware that it can have a negative impact on her overall well-being that outweighs temporary discomfort. But it is still decidedly not “easy”.How is what I said not an easy way to handle it?
I concur, and I have this same kind of aversion to phone calls even amongst people I know. That said, I really don’t see a better alternative unless you’re willing to drop by in person. That’s probably no less intimidating.I suspect that what @Nik was referring to is not the objective physical difficulty of the act itself, but the emotional difficulty some have with “cold calling” people, even for important things. I have a certain amount of it and my daughter has a very strong aversion to calling even people she already knows. I can usually force myself for important things, and she is working on the issue because she is aware that it can have a negative impact on her overall well-being that outweighs temporary discomfort. But it is still decidedly not “easy”.
Again ignoring the fact that many people have issues with dropping in to a new place or emailing out of the blue as well. One size never fits all, and easy for one may be near impossible for another.Which is why email and drop ins are also easy ways to find out.
Because a sizeable number of participants in my parish’s RCIA program are college students or from military families who leave the area, sometimes within a month or two of their initiation, I can’t speak to percentages, but otherwise my observations are pretty much the same.I would say that at least half of our RCIA newbies do not go on to practice the faith. They are entering the Church for other reasons.
Those that do practice the faith tend to have very strong and exemplary faith.
I don’t think so. I got the impression that they just thought it was difficult. It’s no more difficult to find which parish you are in than it is to order a pizza. But if the poster has some sort of social issue that prevents them from using a phone then I understand that could be difficult. Which is why email and drop ins are also easy ways to find out.
You are dismissing a real problem for not just one person but for a lot of people. I have no real “issues” and if I had asked on CAF how to go about joining the Church and all I got was to call my priest, that would have been the last anyone would have heard from me.If that is the posters issue then you are right. I don’t think it is.
This is how I’ve always understood it. When I inquired about RCIA a couple of years ago I made it clear I did not intend to become Catholic but was not discouraged from taking the classes. I never did but was led to believe I’d be welcome attend at any time.RCIA is for those seeking information about the Catholic faith
If you don’t mind my asking, what gives you this impression? What do you think her real motive is?I am concerned she just wants to be baptized but not actually practice the faith.
A good RCIA process should see folk do just what you did. Having done some courses with RCIA, it annoys me, even saddens me, that people are told, “We start in September and you’ll be baptized at Easter.” No, nobody should be told that.You can indeed “fail” RCIA - I flunked it this year
To be fair, it was at my instigation that I stepped back after having a conversation with the RCIA coordinator where we both agreed that I shouldn’t be going near any sacraments yet.