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JimG
Guest
Confirmation is one of the sacraments which imprints an idelible character on your soul. Your soul will be eternally marked as Baptized and Confirmed.
I’m not sure about the reasoning of that one. One can receive it under duress, such as by pressure from parents.If you choose to receive it, you’re not totally rejecting it.
I would say you are an official member of the Catholic Church at baptism. Confirmation brings you deeper into the Church which you are already an official member of.Isn’t a confirmation suppose to reconfirm your life with Christ, when you become an official member of the church?
Still makes no sense if you don’t consent… you can’t force some to be a member of a church, or accept God if they don’t want too.Confirmation brings you deeper into the Church which you are already an official member of.
I was not making any comment on that. I was responding to the poster who said Confirmation makes one an official member of the Catholic Church.Still makes no sense if you don’t consent… you can’t force some to be a member of a church, or accept God if they don’t want too.
When you’re baptized as a baby your not consenting then either. You’re a baby, which is why I truly believed your Confirmation was so important, but if its valid without your consent, valid even with our a rebirth a change of your heart, what’s the point… you have what need from God when you were baptized as a baby, why do it again?
I kind of thought if at some point when the priest found out the person who was doing their Confirmation didn’t want too, was forced too, before or after he would do something about it, does he?
Confirmation only requires consent to be licit, but it does not impact validity. So the question is why?How can you still be the same person you were before your Confirmation, after your Confirmation without consenting to be born again?
I think I’m past times the parish priest would speak with each candidate ahead of time personally to determine if they were ready. It’s certainly not done anymore now.. I was just wondering if they’re supposed to if they do know about it. I and almost all the other kids I was getting confirmed with did not believe at all and I guess the priest probably didn’t know.
This is accurate. Consent is not required for validity of the sacrament. Consent only goes towards the licit (i.e. in accordance with the Church’s law) administration of Confirmation.I’m just wondering about the part that you don’t need to consent for the Sacrament to be valid.
No. You are reborn of water and the Spirit in baptism. Not Confirmation. A baptized person has already received the Holy Spirit and is 100% a Christian, a member of the Body of Christ.your Confirmation was what should have happen when you are baptized, you are dying to be reborn in Christ.
Confirmation is none of these things, per se. You already have the indwelling of the Holy Spirit received at baptism.Reconfirming your relationship with God, acknowledging Jesus as your Lord and Savior, receiving (or reactivating) the Holy Spirit you were gifted as a baby.
You don’t consent to be “born again” in Confirmation. That happens at baptism.How can you still be the same person you were before your Confirmation, after your Confirmation without consenting to be born again?
They already ARE a member of the Church by virtue of their baptism.Still makes no sense if you don’t consent… you can’t force some to be a member of a church, or accept God if they don’t want too.
The parents consent.When you’re baptized as a baby your not consenting then either. You’re a baby
Confirmation confirms your baptism. You can reject the graces, sure.but if its valid without your consent, valid even with our a rebirth a change of your heart, what’s the point… you have what need from God when you were baptized as a baby, why do it again?
The pastor would counsel the individual and possibly recommend delaying confirmation. If he found out after, no there isn’t anything to be done except encourage the person in their faith.I kind of thought if at some point when the priest found out the person who was doing their Confirmation didn’t want too, was forced too, before or after he would do something about it, does he?
This is done at every parish in my diocese and is a requirement prior to confirmation.I think I’m past times the parish priest would speak with each candidate ahead of time personally to determine if they were ready. It’s certainly not done anymore now.
I daresay I didn’t have a great handle on it myself. I knew it was a calling down of the Holy Spirit upon you to give you grace like the Apostles experienced at Pentecost. But I thought it was so you could take your place as an adult member of the Church, like you were consciously affirming your baptism because you couldn’t do that as a baby. Our confirmation prep was not great, and at age 13 I was more focused on my first pair of heeled strappy shoes I’d just gotten for the occasion and how I was going to walk up and down the church aisle in them without tripping.I was confirmed with students who had no idea what the sacrament meant.
I had never thought of it this way before. Up until fairly recently, I thought of it as a kind of “Catholic bar mitzvah”, where the young person publicly professes his faith, and takes on the responsibilities of an adult Catholic. The Eastern practice never quite made sense to me, until you explained confirmation in this way. Thank you.annad347:![]()
Confirmation is none of these things, per se. You already have the indwelling of the Holy Spirit received at baptism.Reconfirming your relationship with God, acknowledging Jesus as your Lord and Savior, receiving (or reactivating) the Holy Spirit you were gifted as a baby.
While you do affirm your baptismal promises during the Rite (and we all do that every Easter), Confirmation itself is the act of the Bishop confirming your baptism with the laying on of hands and anointing. You receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit.
I totally agree. I don’t think I did either, looking back.I daresay I didn’t have a great handle on it myself.