W
whichwaytogo47
Guest
When do children have their own free-will? As parents, we’re supposed to do what’s best for them even if it’s something they oppose. I think as long as they’re baptized that they’re supposed to receive the sacraments, especially Eucharist and Reconciliation as well as Confirmation. But by the time a child is “ready” for confirmation around age 13 or age 16, they have enough free-will to assert their willingness or lack of willingness to participate in the sacrament. Am I a sinner to allow them to be the prodigal son and refuse to go to Confirmation as long as I tell them that the idea is to receive the Holy Spirit as an adult in the Catholic Church hoping that the Holy Spirit will touch their heart and their decision to get confirmed will be genuine? As a parent, I do believe however that as long as they live under our roof, they’re obligated to go to Sunday mass.
But how can we be sure that our child is participating in the sacraments with the proper disposition (i.e. because they’re walking with God or an attempt to receive the Holy Spirit) and not simply doing it to bring us pleasure or if they’re not seeking to receive a sacrament that we can know that the Holy Spirit will bring them towards rather than away from the church? In other words, I don’t want my child to go to the sacraments in a merely superstitious way whether it is their desireor it’s my pushing for them to receive the sacrament.
I have been blessed to bring people thru RCIA and there’s just something about a person making a personal choice that makes me feel that was somehow God’s will for that person. If I would have to do it over again, I would have certainly waited to age 25 to have been received into the Church thru confirmation. I had been a deist in college, believing that as long as I believed in God that I didn’t have to go to Mass but I found myself fall away and found it necessary to return. I’d 4-5 years later have an encounter with Christ. I want my child(ren) to genuinely have this experience and practice their Christianity as adults, preferably as a Catholic so they can receive the Eucharist and be able to go to Reconciliation. I definitely want there to be a foundation in charity and belief that God died for their forgiveness of sins and thus we’re supposed to be obedient.
But how can we be sure that our child is participating in the sacraments with the proper disposition (i.e. because they’re walking with God or an attempt to receive the Holy Spirit) and not simply doing it to bring us pleasure or if they’re not seeking to receive a sacrament that we can know that the Holy Spirit will bring them towards rather than away from the church? In other words, I don’t want my child to go to the sacraments in a merely superstitious way whether it is their desireor it’s my pushing for them to receive the sacrament.
I have been blessed to bring people thru RCIA and there’s just something about a person making a personal choice that makes me feel that was somehow God’s will for that person. If I would have to do it over again, I would have certainly waited to age 25 to have been received into the Church thru confirmation. I had been a deist in college, believing that as long as I believed in God that I didn’t have to go to Mass but I found myself fall away and found it necessary to return. I’d 4-5 years later have an encounter with Christ. I want my child(ren) to genuinely have this experience and practice their Christianity as adults, preferably as a Catholic so they can receive the Eucharist and be able to go to Reconciliation. I definitely want there to be a foundation in charity and belief that God died for their forgiveness of sins and thus we’re supposed to be obedient.
Last edited: