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Gorgias
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Certainly. However, that doesn’t necessarily imply that we can fulfill the goals of sponsorship “long distance”, does it?We can have a relationship with people long distance.
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Certainly. However, that doesn’t necessarily imply that we can fulfill the goals of sponsorship “long distance”, does it?We can have a relationship with people long distance.
Again, yet another straw man. No one is suggesting that a person picks a person “who has no real relationship” with a confirmand. Rather, the parish simply seems to be pointing out that having the kind of relationship that the canons and the rituals envision is something that can take place “long distance” or “through FaceTime”.I would FAR rather my children have a sponsor who prays for them, who lives the Faith out loud, who my kids can trust to answer questions than a next door neighbor who has no real relationship with my child.
I can see this being easier to verify if the sponsor lives in the dioces, but could easily be done via other means.3/ be a Catholic who has been confirmed and has already received the most holy sacrament of the Eucharist and who leads a life of faith in keeping with the function to be taken on;
Never heard of this rule too. I am almost sure that nobody was requiered or asked from our sponsor.Sponsors outside of the parish are asked to provide a letter of good standing from their pastor, that is SOP.
And those are the only two choices?What would they prefer, a devout Catholic far away or a Catholic near her that don’t practice and have no relation with the confirmed?
We require verification of suitability from all sponsors. If they are members of our own parish we still require the form filled out and returned. Often, if we know the person well, I will take it to the priest to have it signed.Never heard of this rule too. I am almost sure that nobody was requiered or asked from our sponsor
Again: straw man. We’re not talking “canonical requirements”, we’re talking pastoral prudential judgment. The argument that they’re running afoul of canon law is missing the point. The claim of the parish, from what we’re being told, was never “you’re unaccaptable because you don’t meet canonical requirements”.Show me what parts of these, the Canonical Requirements, that require a person to be within a specific geographic proximity?
Wow. There must be something in the water – why does this irrelevant argument keep cropping up?What would they prefer, a devout Catholic far away or a Catholic near her that don’t practice and have no relation with the confirmed?
Yes. I know of sponsors who lived in other countries.We allow sponsors who live in another country as long as they meet the conditions set in canon law.
What you say is true and how it should be 100% of the time.Agnus-Dei:![]()
RCIA is for the unbaptized, people who are not Christians who need to learn about Christianity.Rcia classes for months, final exam now probably too.
When an already baptized Christian comes to the Church, they meet with pastor who determines how much that individual needs to learn about Catholicism, it might be months or it might be they are ready tomorrow.
I disagree with this.I think the sponsor is less than a God parent . It is someone who represent the Church as the Communion of the faithful. They’re not supposed to be friends or spiritual advisers to the person being confirmed.
In the RCC, yes. In the Eastern Catholic Churches of the Byzantine Tradition, we get confirmed when we’re babies (including yours trulyThe confirmandi is not a baby.
Of course, it is a cliché and we can in therory find a sponsor that is close and devout.But why would you assume the the distant sponsor is devout Catholic and anyone local wouldn’t be?
Where? in your parish?We require verification of suitability from all sponsors.
I was talking about this specific confirmandi.In the RCC, yes. In the Eastern Catholic Churches of the Byzantine Tradition, we get confirmed when we’re babies (including yours truly).