W
whichwaytogo47
Guest
The sacraments bestow grace and thus make it easier to live a holy life. That said, I am in an interfaith marriage that believes in salvation by faith alone and believer baptism not family infant baptism. We attend both a Dallas Theological Seminary non-denominational & Catholic Church every Sunday. An infant or child before the age of reason shall be baptized because of the stain of original sin. The Bible clearly states you must be born of the water & the spirit and are judged by your works and thus must be baptized. You must walk in the faith and be repentant of your sins to be saved. That said, I did have an encounter with God in a Protestant DTS Church that truly made me value my Catholic faith and not take it for granted anymore.
When I received the sacrament of confirmation at 17 years old, I didn’t receive the sacrament with the correct disposition and thus have always wished that I went thru RCIA. I stopped going to church a year after getting confirmed and didn’t make going to mass a priority in my life from age 18 to 25. I don’t remember my confirmation saint so I have adopted St Michael as my patron saint. I brought Patrick thru RCIA into the Catholic Church in 2013 (his patron saint is St Christopher) to receive Eucharist, Reconciliation, and Confirmation.
I also am aware that my children are validly baptized as Catholics whether they’re baptized in a Catholic Church or baptized in a Protestant Church and than received into the church. I think it’s critically important for them to get the religious formation (CCD) whether they receive the sacraments or not because I want them to have the instruction / disposition to choose the Catholic faith. In other words, I want to raise them Catholic. But if they believe the Eucharist is a symbol, than they should receive communion in the Protestant Church not the Catholic Church. If they believe that the body & blood of Jesus (at their age appropriate level) is in the Eucharist than they are instead to receive communion in the Catholic Church not the Protestant Church.
Thanks so much!
When I received the sacrament of confirmation at 17 years old, I didn’t receive the sacrament with the correct disposition and thus have always wished that I went thru RCIA. I stopped going to church a year after getting confirmed and didn’t make going to mass a priority in my life from age 18 to 25. I don’t remember my confirmation saint so I have adopted St Michael as my patron saint. I brought Patrick thru RCIA into the Catholic Church in 2013 (his patron saint is St Christopher) to receive Eucharist, Reconciliation, and Confirmation.
I also am aware that my children are validly baptized as Catholics whether they’re baptized in a Catholic Church or baptized in a Protestant Church and than received into the church. I think it’s critically important for them to get the religious formation (CCD) whether they receive the sacraments or not because I want them to have the instruction / disposition to choose the Catholic faith. In other words, I want to raise them Catholic. But if they believe the Eucharist is a symbol, than they should receive communion in the Protestant Church not the Catholic Church. If they believe that the body & blood of Jesus (at their age appropriate level) is in the Eucharist than they are instead to receive communion in the Catholic Church not the Protestant Church.
Thanks so much!
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