C
CB_Catholic
Guest
I guess I don’t understand how this happened. I am on the RCIA team in my parish, and we never, in the actual classes themselves, make the candidates or catechumens tell their religious backgrounds to the class. Most mention it in their introductions on the first day of class, but they do not have to. I think the most I would say is that I am from a non-Christian background and leave it at that. The rest is none of their business, only for the priest, deacon, or RCIA director to know.
And the rest of the questions that we discuss usually center on the topic on hand and what the Catholic Church teaches about it. If the Deacon perceives any tension, he does his best to smooth it out and bring things back to topic, but that is very rarely that he has to do that, and he allows no critcism of people’s former churches to take place. We are not about that. We don’t have outings or social events, except for a brunch after Mass to welcome the candidates and catechumens the first week, and then we ask them, if they can, to participate in some service projects.
I have never heard of anything like this going on in RCIA. I think I’d find another class somewhere.
And the rest of the questions that we discuss usually center on the topic on hand and what the Catholic Church teaches about it. If the Deacon perceives any tension, he does his best to smooth it out and bring things back to topic, but that is very rarely that he has to do that, and he allows no critcism of people’s former churches to take place. We are not about that. We don’t have outings or social events, except for a brunch after Mass to welcome the candidates and catechumens the first week, and then we ask them, if they can, to participate in some service projects.
I have never heard of anything like this going on in RCIA. I think I’d find another class somewhere.