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1ke
Guest
I’m not exactly sure what the “this” is you’ve never heard of.I’ve never heard this before.
Correct. And such a person could and should continue to receive the sacrament of Eucharist and prepare themselves for confirmation as an adult.It is entirely possible that an adult would have never been confirmed — perhaps spiritual instruction fell by the wayside somewhere in their youth, after their first communion, and they just never got around to it.
The issue in this thread has been wrongly framed as having to be confirmed first. That isn’t the case at all.Does the Church have some sort of “cut-off age” and after that, you may not receive the Eucharist unless you are confirmed first?
What is at issue in this post is a baptized non-Catholic who has not yet been received into the Church. That is a person who is, on the whole, not admitted to communion. Exceptions are noted in canon law in canon 844 regarding non-Catholics admission to the sacraments of penance, communion, and anointing.
What governs reception of a baptized adult into full communion is not Canon Law, but rather the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults, which came out of Vatican II. The Congregation for Divine Worship prepared the new Rite in 1972, Pope Paul VI approved it, then charged national bishops conferences to adapt from there. The one for the US was approved in 1986.
In the rite, baptized non-Catholics are to be received into the Church at Mass (normative). They are received into the Church by making a profession of faith, then they are confirmed, then then receive the Eucharist. This is because that is the order in the Mass (even in Catholic confirmation, it comes in the mass after the Liturgy of the Word and before the Liturgy of the Eucharist). If it is not the bishop who receives it is the priest delegated by the bishop. That priest has faculties to confirm the candidate within the rite of reception.
If the candidate is received into full communion outside of Mass, then a mass at which the candidate takes part (in communion) is to be “celebrated as soon as possible” to “make clear the connection between reception and Eucharistic communion”.
The Rite of Reception outside of Mass does not include confirmation. Confirmation would take place at a later date with the bishop, or delegated to the priest to confirm.
See No. 473-504 in the Rite book for these references.
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