U
Usige
Guest
Baptism and Confirmation serve two separate purposes. In baptism we are reborn into eternal life. it is in baptism that Adam and Eve’s turning away from God is reversed and we return to God’s embrace.If so, why wouldn’t the Holy Spirit grant these Graces in Baptism? If He doesn’t, then wouldn’t it be more convenient to grant all the “Evangelization equipment” when the chrisian is more mature? (A teenager).
Confirmation on the other hand strengthens us to live in the presently fallen world. While the anointing confirms us in our role as apostles, it also provides us with the gifts of the Holy Spirit. Now think about what those gifts are.
How much better do you think young people would understand their religious formation with the gift of Understanding that is meant to help us view the mysteries of the faith in the light of Christ, just as the men on the road to Emmaus had their minds opened? How do you think it would help to have the gifts of Wisdom and Counsel to make correct judgments when facing peer pressure that says right is wrong, good is bad, et cetera? What about the fear of the lord and fortitude while kids are being maligned for their faith and lured to turn away from it?
Today, kids need Confirmation more as society tries to twist their minds at an earlier and earlier age. Waiting until they are 15, 18, 20 is just leaving them on a battlefield without the very gifts God offers so freely.
Why aren’t the gifts conferred in a single sacrament? You’ll have to ask the big guy when you get to Heaven. It might also be why they used to be conferred together instead on the current practice of separating them by decades.
While I agree that we should strengthen opportunities for post-confirmation catechesis, that really has no bearing on the age of reception. In fact, holding confirmation up as some type of coming of age ceremony that is “earned” after enough study has the opposite effect. Kids are conditioned to think of confirmation as something that indicates that they have “graduated” from their formation when in fact it is Confirmation (and the gifts of the Holy Spirit) that makes formation so much more fruitful.I think we are looking at the wrong solution for the right problem. If people doesn’t currently continue having formation after Confirmation, (in my opinion) we should strenghten our post-confirmation catechesis, not move Confirmation.
Last edited: