Terrie:
I teach PSR. A grandma told me that her 13 year old grandson requested to be baptized 2 weeks ago. Her rather unorthodox priest baptized him and then said that since he was “of age” he might as well confirm him too. The boy has received no catechesis, has not gone to confession, nor has he received his First Holy Communion. Does a priest have the authority to arbitrarily Confirm him? The bishop will be here in a month to confirm others his age. The literature from our diocese states that a priest may confirm at the Easter vigil without prior approval from the bishop. At all other times prior approval is required. Does this priest have the authority to confirm? The grandma said that the priest did not request prior permission from the bishop. Thank you so much and God bless. Terrie
According to the Code of Canon Law canon 882: “The ordinary minister of confirmation is the bishop; a presbyter who has this faculty by virtue of either the common law or a special concession of competent authority also confers this sacrament validly.”
This suggests to me that there may not have been a valid confirmation, so there could be a problem that needs to be fixed by the bishop.
If the 13 year old was in “danger of death” any priest can confirm him.
Canon 883 seems to give the priest who baptizes the authority to confirm: “with regard to the person in question, the presbyter who by reason of office or mandate of the diocesan bishop baptizes one who is no longer an infant …”.
A 13 year old is not an infant. He would be in the group of “children who have reached catechetical age”. Thus the procedure for his baptism and confirmation are found in the USA’s RCIA, Part II, “Christian Initiation of Children who have Reached Catechetical Age”.
So the process should be: “253. … Accordingly, as with adults, their initation is to be extended over several years, if need be, before they receive the sacraments. Also as with adults, their initiation is marked by several steps, the liturgical rites of acceptance into the order of catechumens (nos. 260-276) the optional rite of election (nos. 277-290), penitential rites or scrutiniites (nos. 291-303), and the celebration of the sacraments of initiation (nos. 304-329); corresponding to the periods of adult initiation are the periods of the children’s catechetical formation that lead up to and follow the steps of their initation.”
(From The Rites Volume One, Liturgical Press, 1990, ISBN 0-8146-6015-0, page 170).
If this process was not followed in this case then it calls into question that the priest had the bishop’s mandate for the baptism and confirmation.
If someone was going to write to the bishop about this then it would make sense to check the parish records of the baptism and confirmation.