B
babochka
Guest
It is interesting that there is such a wide variety of requirement for Confirmation prep out there. I’ve seen parishes that have a 6-week program focused on the Sacrament, culminating in a retreat, but there is a general assumption that the kids have been involved in ongoing catechesis and living the faith within the family. If that is the reality, it seems about right to me. I think that your program is excessive and puts an undue burden on families. Do you also have a required component for parents, no matter the family circumstances (number of children, practicing the faith)? I’ve also seen parishes that have that. It also creates the unintended perception that confirmation is a reward, or a graduation from the 2-year program.Every Archbishop here has insisted that we give teens the best catechesis we can, with a full 2 years of prep, mandatory spiritual retreats, and personal interaction with the pastor. Our kids do hours of community service as well. This serves to put into their hearts and schedules a place for helping others. A time for praying independently, and a love for learning about the church.
What are the requirements in your archdiocese for baptized, catechized and practicing Catholic adults who are seeking the sacrament? Are they required to attend a 2-year program, mandatory retreat and do community service?
We who chrismate or confirm at baptism don’t just “cover it” as infants, as if it something to get over with. We believe that the grace of the Sacrament and the gifts of the Holy Spirit will work throughout an individual’s life, imparting spiritual strength when it is needed. And we do catechize our children and teens. I think that the grace of the sacrament should be available to our children well before they enter the difficult teen years. It seems almost cruel to withhold it until they have “proven” themselves through a rigorous program.THAT is why we do it. If we return to simply covering it as infants, we do a disservice to the kids who are being catechized by the press, the television, the internet, and yes, by parents who hardly know what the church teaches either in some cases.
The question of how to catechize our young people is complex and difficult. I don’t deny that at all. We need the grace of the sacrament and proper, lifelong catechesis in order to become fully formed Christians. It is true that many people “drop out” of religious education classes, unless they get something out of it, like a sacrament. The sacraments make a good carrot, but maybe the dropping out mentality has been created by the system of classes and then “graduation” sacraments. I get that it might be your only opportunity to reach these kids and I applaud you and your archdiocese for working hard to give the kids a quality, meaty program I just have serious misgivings about withholding the grace of confirmation in particular for so long. I also think that it seriously misleads people in their understanding of the sacrament. No wonder it is so often believed that Confirmation is one’s “adult acceptance of the faith”, which is a thoroughly Protestant understanding of Confirmation.
Why does this necessarily follow if we confirm as infants, or at the age of reason? Are we as adults, as Catechists, only able to offer quality programs within the context of sacramental preparation? Most every Eastern Catholic parish of any substantial size has a religious education program, as do most Orthodox parishes. We do not leave our teens and children simply to wander out of Church, simply because they have no sacraments to wait for.There’s a lack of vocations? I hardly think that leaving the teens to simply wander out of church because no one wants to work with them will boost vocations.
As an aside, and perhaps this is a question for a new thread, I have a question, just out of curiosity. If a teen was confirmed as an infant, whether because of having been in danger of death, or perhaps having grown up in a country in which infant confirmation sometimes happens in the Latin Rite (Mexico, for example), or perhaps because he or she is an Eastern Rite Catholic with only Latin Churches available, or maybe the person has moved from a diocese that confirms earlier: what is available to him or her in your parish for catechesis, other than a Confirmation Preparation program? Is there a different path? I realize this probably doesn’t come up often, but it is still a possibility. Would the person just be included in the Confirmation program, but not allowed to -]graduate/-] be confirmed? I ask because I have seen such a situation and it was not handled particularly well. A relative of mine was confirmed as an infant, but was attending Catholic school in 8th grade, so she received religious education with her class. At the time of Confirmation, she went through the motions with her class, but received a blessing from the Bishop, instead of Confirmation. This happened when I was 18 and I was her “sponsor”. I remember feeling like they were treating her confirmation as if it didn’t count and being rather uncomfortable with the whole process. It was as if she still needed a ceremony with the bishop to make it real. I know that they were just trying to include her, but it was awkward. I was just wondering if it ever comes up in your parish.