Denver's Archbishop Aquila restores sacraments to original order [CNA]

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I love AB Aquila and believe him truly anointed. I believe this decision was inspired, not of his own initiative, but by the movement of the Spirit. So glad to hear other bishops are following suit. May this action place grace in the hearts of youth to strengthen them when most necessary.
 
So glad to hear Archbishop Aquila doing this. My wife and I were talking about it a couple weeks ago and wondering when/if he would make the change like he did in Fargo. I wonder how this might flow into the Diocese of Colorado Springs since about a third of the diocese population is only 15 miles from the border with the Archdiocese of Denver. Bishop Sheridan had already lowered the age from 10th to 8th grade a few years back. I wonder if he’ll move it earlier now.
 
Clare,

You know I respect your views. So this is just an alternative view.

I work with our adult confirmation program. This is for people past high school age who were never confirmed. The first week of class I always ask why they’ve decided to seek confirmation now. And the single most common answer is that back when they were teens, refusing to be confirmed was a bit of power they had. Just teenage rebellion, but in trying to assert themselves they ended up hurting themselves spiritually. And now that they’re 10 years or 20 years or more older, they know what they’re missing. In some cases they have teens themselves who are fighting confirmation class, and if mom or dad makes the effort, maybe the teen will see that it really is important.

We definitely need programs for teens. We also need programs for young adults, families, seniors, and just plain adults. We need to find ways to help people grow spiritually throughout their lives. We need to find ways to make God as much a priority in people’s lives as soccer practice. And I sure don’t know the answers.
Excellent point…but we’ve have little or no refusal if they’re actually in classes. And it’s that refusal to participate in religious ed that I’m speaking of.
We also have Adult Confirmation classes, and either their parents never enrolled them, or they just let it slip by. But it’s never too late. Grace comes to us in all of the Sacraments. If you go to daily Mass…wow!
The problem is not that the Sacrament is late, but that people place little priority on their spiritual lives. And that is the responsibility of the parents. We even see people waiting fro 2 or 3 years to Baptize! An getting worse all the time.
 
Maybe not. There are other ways to bring young people together besides the common experience of Confirmation, though this works very well in my parish. I know of another parish that has an active LifeTeen ministry that brings this age together and helps them internalize their faith. In areas where confirmation is moved, this will be the challenge, but it is a challenge with solutions. This is why I would hope the bishop would see how his diocese is meeting this challenge.
I hope you’re right.
But if our Archdiocese is any indication, it will be a disaster for our youth.
There’s going to have to be a MASSIVE re-education of parents.
They already have a punch-my-card and get out of here attitude.
😦
 
pianistclare, while I understand where your concerns and where you are comming from I think you yourself point out the problem. If a kid’s family is not living the faith then using confirmation as a cookie to keep them in religious ed isn’t of much value. It should not be used as a reward for perseverance. One to two hours of religious ed is not going to override 120+ hours of secular influences. On the otherhand if they receive the very sacrament that strengthens them in their christian faith then it is possible they will have the graces to continue to grow in their faith despite secular influences.

Is it not possible that delaying confirmation is actually detramental to their faith? By leaving the second half of baptism incomplete for the years when kids are most vulnerable is a little like building a bridge but saying you’ll only add supports after running a couple thousand fully loaded semi trucks across it.

As was mentioned before, many protestants have vibrant youth ministries without some “reward” at the end of it. I was raised Presbyterian and was in the youth group from 8th-12th grades. What drew me in? Mission trips, discussing difficulties in school with older kids and how our faith could help, eventually mentoring younger students through the same struggles. In other words it was having a place where I could practice christian virtues.

If the only reason kids are in class or doing service projects is because it’s required to be confirmed, then it is no wonder we lose so many. Moving confirmation means nothing if we, as a community, are not building the faith of those around us from the beginning and living those values everyday.
 
pianistclare, while I understand where your concerns and where you are comming from I think you yourself point out the problem. If a kid’s family is not living the faith then using confirmation as a cookie to keep them in religious ed isn’t of much value. It should not be used as a reward for perseverance. One to two hours of religious ed is not going to override 120+ hours of secular influences. On the otherhand if they receive the very sacrament that strengthens them in their christian faith then it is possible they will have the graces to continue to grow in their faith despite secular influences.

Is it not possible that delaying confirmation is actually detramental to their faith? By leaving the second half of baptism incomplete for the years when kids are most vulnerable is a little like building a bridge but saying you’ll only add supports after running a couple thousand fully loaded semi trucks across it.

As was mentioned before, many protestants have vibrant youth ministries without some “reward” at the end of it. I was raised Presbyterian and was in the youth group from 8th-12th grades. What drew me in? Mission trips, discussing difficulties in school with older kids and how our faith could help, eventually mentoring younger students through the same struggles. In other words it was having a place where I could practice christian virtues.

If the only reason kids are in class or doing service projects is because it’s required to be confirmed, then it is no wonder we lose so many. Moving confirmation means nothing if we, as a community, are not building the faith of those around us from the beginning and living those values everyday.
Oh I get what you’re saying…we don’t push it as a reward. We just teach. You have to have students show up to teach. That’s what I’m talking about. None of these kids would have ever returned for ongoing formation otherwise. They don’t leave immediately afterward, like they do for First Communion. Teen classes are over 75 hours of regular formation, which they are required to have to be eligible for Confirmation class which are another 25 hours plus a 3 day retreat. They leave on fire for the faith, eager to return and do more. This past year our Confirmation class of 43 kids did almost 2000 hours of community service. You don’t do that kind of work and not come away changed, and eager to keep service as part of your life. Many of their parents don’t do any service work, but these children are learning that it’s also a part of their life’s work, like continuing ed in their faith. We’ve had many seeking vocations as a result.
At a time when people are lamenting how bad things are in the church, giving people an excuse to opt out after First Holy Communion is, well, unfortunate. People talk about needing all the grace they can get…should remember how hard the teen years are. When parents don’t see much of what you do, and don’t have the time to spend with you.

I hear you. I REALLY do. In theory it sounds great. In practice…I’ll have to see the results in 15 years. We only have to look at how most teens already have been indoctrinated on redefining marriage, chastity, and Mass attendance to see that the ki9ds really need instruction and parents really need help.
As I said before, it’s going to take a massive re-education of the parents fro this to really be the effective tool that people desire it to be.
We have to cooperate with God’s grace, not just grab it and run.
But I hear you.
If we go back to the days of 7 kids in formation, well…that would be a real bad development for the church. And the world.
Peace everyone.
 
The points of discussion on this thread are exactly the sorts of discussions being held by people in our parish right now. And it’s wonderful to see people actually asking questions about things they’ve just taken for granted for all these years.

I think just about every point brought up here is valid and has some truth in it:

When families live their faith at home, the children are – statistically – more likely to remain in the faith.

Some young people only come to mass and religious education for the year or two required for each sacrament.

Some people will leave the practice of the faith after confirmation – regardless of when they receive the sacrament.

Some parishes will see an uptick in teen involvement.

Some parishes will see teen involvement decline.

I think it’s interesting as a musician who has been deeply involved in a number of parishes over recent years, to see the wide variety of what people are absolutely convinced is not only the best way to reach youth, but sometimes even the only way to reach youth.

One pastor required confirmation students to attend the LifeTeen mass – even though some of them sang in the choir or were lectors at a different mass, because they hated the performance-style music and the emphasis on the horizontal rather than the vertical nature of the LifeTeen mass (the number of these kids was small but significant). So many of the kids in that parish DID stick around after confirmation (whether they liked LifeTeen or not) and continued to be involved and grow in their faith 👍

At my current parish, the confirmation students are required to attend the mass I play at – with seven altar servers (mostly teenage boys) in cassock and surplice, incense, Latin chants, ;polyphony, traditional hymns. The other masses are much more contemporary in nature, but this very traditional mass is the required one. 🤷 Our middle and high school programs are awesome, and we’ve had several young men and women try their vocations to the priesthood and religious life.

Of course, the order and timing of sacraments is not our decision. We will be obedient.

The main thing, I think, is that the folks in charge run with this new way of doing things – setting up powerful programs of sacramental preparation, and setting up powerful programs for children and families AFTER confirmation. But I guarantee that if we all focus on how this is going to fail, we’ll be a major factor in that failure by our own attitudes. :sad_yes:

And as I am completely on board with the upcoming changes, I guess it’s time to put my name in as a catechist 😃

God bless you all!

Gertie
 
Re. volunteering. I only deal with this in the secular realm since we have no such requirement for our youth to be confirmed.

In my province, high school students are required to have performed 40 hours of volunteer work in order to graduate. Some end grade 12 with 200+ under their belt and some are still struggling to get their 40 a month from the cut-off date.

It annoys me to no end to take calls from the parent of a 12th grader asking if their darling offspring could possibility pick up a few hours by ushering in our venue “in the next 2 weeks.” It’s particularly galling when the kid can’t even be bothered to come see us him/herself when our venue is attached to the high school and they’re free to come and go between buildings without even setting foot outside.

I’ve rarely seen a kid who is forced to volunteer actually keep doing it once the obligation is met. OTOH, I regularly deal with a bunch of kids, none of whom are in any way religious, who volunteer all the time.
 
We reap what we sow.

Denominational schools went the way of the dodo in my province back in 1998, a year or so after I moved here. Suddenly, the parishes were responsible for teaching religious education. Our diocese failed to put anything in place beyond sacramental preparation and, at the same time, returned the sacraments of initiation to their original order, celebrated at the age of reason. That first year we prepared about 80 kids for Confirmation and First Communion + a handful for Confirmation only.

The program (I’d get my knuckles rapped for that using that word, “It’s a process, not a program!”) we used for the combined preparation involved at least one parent with the child, as well as the Confirmation sponsor if possible. It was surprising the number of adults who told us how much they hadn’t known and how much they had learned by the end of the 7 weeks. I taught the first class and sat in on my son’s late Confirmation class (he was 15 at the time and had not been confirmed due to the timing of moves and such). What I came to see was that the younger children wanted to be there and were much more receptive of the teachings than the teens who, including my son, often attended under protest.

Sadly, there has not been ongoing catechesis in my part of the diocese since 1998. We have a generation of young people who are now in their 20s and have had NOTHING beyond their sacramental preparation in grade 1 & 2.

Around the same time, a few people were hand-picked to lead baptismal preparation. What criteria they used to choose them is unknown, but one of them was notorious for not attending Mass at all during the hockey season. Her sons’ games were at the same time as both Sunday Masses and there was no way she was going to be anywhere but at the rink. I was shocked to hear her tell parents that you had to set priorities and that it was OK if your priority was something other than Mass because sometimes you have to compromise.
 
The points of discussion on this thread are exactly the sorts of discussions being held by people in our parish right now. And it’s wonderful to see people actually asking questions about things they’ve just taken for granted for all these years.

I think just about every point brought up here is valid and has some truth in it:

When families live their faith at home, the children are – statistically – more likely to remain in the faith.

Some young people only come to mass and religious education for the year or two required for each sacrament.

Some people will leave the practice of the faith after confirmation – regardless of when they receive the sacrament.

Some parishes will see an uptick in teen involvement.

Some parishes will see teen involvement decline.

I think it’s interesting as a musician who has been deeply involved in a number of parishes over recent years, to see the wide variety of what people are absolutely convinced is not only the best way to reach youth, but sometimes even the only way to reach youth.

One pastor required confirmation students to attend the LifeTeen mass – even though some of them sang in the choir or were lectors at a different mass, because they hated the performance-style music and the emphasis on the horizontal rather than the vertical nature of the LifeTeen mass (the number of these kids was small but significant). So many of the kids in that parish DID stick around after confirmation (whether they liked LifeTeen or not) and continued to be involved and grow in their faith 👍

At my current parish, the confirmation students are required to attend the mass I play at – with seven altar servers (mostly teenage boys) in cassock and surplice, incense, Latin chants, ;polyphony, traditional hymns. The other masses are much more contemporary in nature, but this very traditional mass is the required one. 🤷 Our middle and high school programs are awesome, and we’ve had several young men and women try their vocations to the priesthood and religious life.

Of course, the order and timing of sacraments is not our decision. We will be obedient.

The main thing, I think, is that the folks in charge run with this new way of doing things – setting up powerful programs of sacramental preparation, and setting up powerful programs for children and families AFTER confirmation. But I guarantee that if we all focus on how this is going to fail, we’ll be a major factor in that failure by our own attitudes. :sad_yes:

And as I am completely on board with the upcoming changes, I guess it’s time to put my name in as a catechist 😃

God bless you all!

Gertie
First. There in no such thing as a “LifeTeen Mass”.
That is a leadership and Music Director assumption and error.
The Mass is, and stands on its own. Now, if a parish desires contemporary Catholic music in a Mass thinking that teens will embrace it…well…good luck with that. That is actually contrary to the LifeTeen curriculum, which has strong emphasis on Mass and Adoration.
There are music suggestions, absolutely, but that in no way is meant to hamstring a liturgy committee or make it appear that the only way to have teens at any liturgy is give them contemporary music. Nor do those works by Catholic composers fit every situation.
Places that have failed with teen programs look for an “easy fix” sometimes.
The truth and an un apologetic method of doing Mass well and reverently has more impact on teens and everyone else.
We don’t have “elderly” Masses. (well, not officially, LOL) We don’t have Pre-School Masses.
Catholic catechesis should be a priority, not just a warm body and a tick mark on a piece of paper saying “well, we’re doing the best we can”.
Kids are smart they know the difference.
 
First. There in no such thing as a “LifeTeen Mass”.
That is a leadership and Music Director assumption and error.
The Mass is, and stands on its own. Now, if a parish desires contemporary Catholic music in a Mass thinking that teens will embrace it…well…good luck with that. That is actually contrary to the LifeTeen curriculum, which has strong emphasis on Mass and Adoration.
There are music suggestions, absolutely, but that in no way is meant to hamstring a liturgy committee or make it appear that the only way to have teens at any liturgy is give them contemporary music. Nor do those works by Catholic composers fit every situation.
Places that have failed with teen programs look for an “easy fix” sometimes.
The truth and an un apologetic method of doing Mass well and reverently has more impact on teens and everyone else.
We don’t have “elderly” Masses. (well, not officially, LOL) We don’t have Pre-School Masses.
Catholic catechesis should be a priority, not just a warm body and a tick mark on a piece of paper saying “well, we’re doing the best we can”.
Kids are smart they know the difference.
Exactly!

We’ll need to keep in touch on this topic in the coming years. Your experience and passion could be an excellent sounding board as we work this all out.

Gertie
 
I am glad that bishops are doing this and wish it would be the norm in the Western world.

Our children are suffering from a lack of grace to strengthen them for what the world is throwing at them. Sealing them in confirmation with the Gifts of the Holy Spirit will provide them with much grace.

I taught confirmation 2 to high school students for four years. The problem with today’s youth is that their parents are not catechizing them at all. Most do not even know the basic prayers much less their faith. How exactly are catechists supposed to correct everything and prepare them for confirmation? If the parents are not taking their responsibility seriously then the children need the sacrament early in their lives. This will increase the chance that the fullness of the Holy Spirit will be at work in their lives.
 
I love AB Aquila and believe him truly anointed.
That is interesting. Are there validly ordained Catholic bishops whom you do not consider “truly anointed”?
First. There in no such thing as a “LifeTeen Mass”.
That is a leadership and Music Director assumption and error.
Actually, back in the day, Life Teen Masses came packaged with all their own little signature abuses, like the one where the faithful were encouraged to contradict the minister who says “the Mass is ended…” naturally, these were all reprobated eventually, and I don’t know the current state of things, but not much would surprise me.
 
Without getting into the whole “Life Teen” debate, or whether we should use the word program or process, the point remains, if we take away Confirmation as a frame around which we try to transition young people into adult faith, then something needs to take its place. A vibrant youth program is critical to parish growth.
 
Without getting into the whole “Life Teen” debate, or whether we should use the word program or process, the point remains, if we take away Confirmation as a frame around which we try to transition young people into adult faith, then something needs to take its place. A vibrant youth program is critical to parish growth.
In Francophone Canada, until the late 60s, Confirmation was often celebrated in 2nd or 3rd grade. Five or six years later, after much more catechesis, we made our “Solemn Communion,” a tradition that started in France shortly after Pope Pius X allowed First Communion at the age of reason. In my diocese Solemn Communion disappeared around the time Confirmation was pushed back to the teen years.
 
Without getting into the whole “Life Teen” debate, or whether we should use the word program or process, the point remains, if we take away Confirmation as a frame around which we try to transition young people into adult faith, then something needs to take its place. A vibrant youth program is critical to parish growth.
How about vocational discernment? The time between age of reason and age of majority is best spent trying to hear that call which will shape the rest of their lives. They would benefit from talks on chastity, priestly ministry, the consecrated life, marriage preparation.
 
My one concern is that I have seen a great deal of good come from the teenage confirmation classes, where teens are brought together for this sacrament. I think it is easier to implement a life changing experience nearer the end of graduation. I would hope that this AB will track this as an experiment and see if it bears more, or less fruit.

That being said, it may well be worth trying, as long as he is willing to retract it if it proves less prudent.
I have never understood having the sacrament of confirmation done at baptism as an infant. The Easter Rite church does this (as far as I know). I don’t understand why the sacrament would be done when the individual can better understand the faith. If it is done at baptism, what exactly is being confirmed?

Ishii
 
I have never understood having the sacrament of confirmation done at baptism as an infant. The Easter Rite church does this (as far as I know). I don’t understand why the sacrament would be done when the individual can better understand the faith. If it is done at baptism, what exactly is being confirmed?

Ishii
That is one of the problems with having confirmation during the teen years. People believe it is about them confirming their belief. It has become something like a rite of passage or has become something like a Catholic version of bar/bat mitzvah. That is not what confirmation is. Confirmation is not about us confirming our beliefs or become adults in the faith.

Think of when a federal judge is nominated. The do not confirm their belief in law, but rather Congress confirms their appointment. The same way with the sacrament. A candidate doesn’t confirm their belief in Church teaching, but rather the Church (through Her bishops) confirms them. Confirmation completes and perfect Baptism. It is not about confirming (or affirming) our belief.
 
That is one of the problems with having confirmation during the teen years. People believe it is about them confirming their belief. It has become something like a rite of passage or has become something like a Catholic version of bar/bat mitzvah. That is not what confirmation is. Confirmation is not about us confirming our beliefs or become adults in the faith.

Think of when a federal judge is nominated. The do not confirm their belief in law, but rather Congress confirms their appointment. The same way with the sacrament. A candidate doesn’t confirm their belief in Church teaching, but rather the Church (through Her bishops) confirms them. Confirmation completes and perfect Baptism. It is not about confirming (or affirming) our belief.
Hello Usige. Thank you for the explanation. However, regarding the federal judge analogy: if a judge has no knowledge of the law, and if asked questions about law, etc. could not provide any answers, would congress confirm them? I would think they wouldn’t. In baptism, the god parents vouch for the child and commit to helping education the child in the faith (along with the parents and the rest of the community). But what meaning does confirmation have when done at baptism? What does it add?

Ishii
 
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