H
HagiaSophia
Guest
Per the news clip below Confrmation is going to happen sooner in the Phoenix diocese—What age does Confirmation take place in other dioceses I wonder - is this going to be the norm?
"…Too many Catholic teens are slipping into adulthood without undergoing the central sacrament of confirmation, a formal acceptance into the church, complete with a special anointing of the Holy Spirit.
It is one of the seven sacraments of the Roman Catholic Church and, with baptism and Holy Eucharist, is part of the bedrock Sacraments of Initiation for the faithful.
With data showing as many as 60 percent of teens not being confirmed, the Catholic Diocese of Phoenix has announced it is lowering the age for confirmation, now typically 16, to third grade (ages 8 and 9) in a gradual process that will take three years to implement.
“We have thousands of adults attempting to face the challenges of the modern world without the grace of confirmation to help them,” states the newly released policy, Gift From on High. Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted recently introduced the changes to parishes through a video produced by the diocese…"
“For 100 years, we had baptism, then first Eucharist and then confirmation,” said John Meyer, director of catechetical ministry. This diocese had made age 16 the standard age for confirmation. But by that age, parishes find that many Catholic teens are not interested or are no longer actively engaged in parish life.
“We are preparing to restore the ancient order of the sacrament within the diocese,” Olmsted says in the video, noting that the changes came about after consulting with a task force created to study the appropriate age for confirmation and his 16-pastor Presbyteral Council. Under the changes, children who have been baptized and who reach the age of discretion (7) will be invited to prepare for the sacrament of reconciliation in second grade and prepare for and celebrate the sacrament of confirmation and Eucharist in the same ceremony in the third grade.
Children in Catholic homes who were never baptized but are at least 7 years old may prepare to celebrate all three sacraments in one ceremony.
Confirmation, Olmsted said, allows the Holy Spirit “to root us more deeply as sons and daughters of the Father and prepares us to receive Jesus’ body and blood. Conferring the sacrament of confirmation on younger children means that they will possess these gifts at an earlier age…”
eastvalleytribune.com/index.php?sty=44018
"…Too many Catholic teens are slipping into adulthood without undergoing the central sacrament of confirmation, a formal acceptance into the church, complete with a special anointing of the Holy Spirit.
It is one of the seven sacraments of the Roman Catholic Church and, with baptism and Holy Eucharist, is part of the bedrock Sacraments of Initiation for the faithful.
With data showing as many as 60 percent of teens not being confirmed, the Catholic Diocese of Phoenix has announced it is lowering the age for confirmation, now typically 16, to third grade (ages 8 and 9) in a gradual process that will take three years to implement.
“We have thousands of adults attempting to face the challenges of the modern world without the grace of confirmation to help them,” states the newly released policy, Gift From on High. Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted recently introduced the changes to parishes through a video produced by the diocese…"
“For 100 years, we had baptism, then first Eucharist and then confirmation,” said John Meyer, director of catechetical ministry. This diocese had made age 16 the standard age for confirmation. But by that age, parishes find that many Catholic teens are not interested or are no longer actively engaged in parish life.
“We are preparing to restore the ancient order of the sacrament within the diocese,” Olmsted says in the video, noting that the changes came about after consulting with a task force created to study the appropriate age for confirmation and his 16-pastor Presbyteral Council. Under the changes, children who have been baptized and who reach the age of discretion (7) will be invited to prepare for the sacrament of reconciliation in second grade and prepare for and celebrate the sacrament of confirmation and Eucharist in the same ceremony in the third grade.
Children in Catholic homes who were never baptized but are at least 7 years old may prepare to celebrate all three sacraments in one ceremony.
Confirmation, Olmsted said, allows the Holy Spirit “to root us more deeply as sons and daughters of the Father and prepares us to receive Jesus’ body and blood. Conferring the sacrament of confirmation on younger children means that they will possess these gifts at an earlier age…”
eastvalleytribune.com/index.php?sty=44018