n. 204-207.Where can I find the part about catechumens and thier status?
n. 204-207.Where can I find the part about catechumens and thier status?
Ah thanks. Found it on Vatican website. Terms are important and the candidate is not a catechumen.n. 204-207.
The law addresses that. Children below the age of reason, while part of the faithful, are not bound to the law either.Ah thanks. Found it on Vatican website. Terms are important and the candidate is not a catechumen.
So aside from the obvious that one week before joining the church the op decided to hit snooze is not a prudent decision. I am confused as to why my children who are baptized but not confirmed are held to church law but a baptized person one week away from full confirmation is not…
Children who have been baptised in the Catholic Church are Catholic. Candidates are not Catholic – until, through the prescribed liturgical rite, they are received into the Catholic Church.Ah thanks. Found it on Vatican website. Terms are important and the candidate is not a catechumen.
So aside from the obvious that one week before joining the church the op decided to hit snooze is not a prudent decision. I am confused as to why my children who are baptized but not confirmed are held to church law but a baptized person one week away from full confirmation is not…
NeedImprovement,
Deacon Jeff beat me to the punch!
(I’d still quibble a little, and change #1 to address the fact that one deliberately skips Mass when he has been excused from the obligation!)
therefore…
(This speaks to your assertion about ‘standards’ – objectively speaking, when all these subjective considerations have been met (i.e., full knowledge, deliberate consent, lack of being excused from the obligation), then one is in a state of mortal sin. Your claim seems to be that objectivity in standards implies a lack of subjectivity in evaluating the situation. That has me scratching my head. Yes, there is an objective standard; yet, one meets (or fails to meet) that objective standard by virtue of his subjective engagement in a situation. To call this an ‘objective situation’ seems to deny that (subjective!) circumstances matter!)
- Objectively speaking, deliberately not attending Mass when one otherwise could have attended is a mortal sin.
A 14 year old baptized but unconfirmed child is bound by church law but a baptized 35 year old-person who has received catechisis and is being confirmed next week is not, but they can recieve another sacrament ( confession)The law addresses that. Children below the age of reason, while part of the faithful, are not bound to the law either.
A baptized person a week away from full reception is not Catholic because, again, the law is clear: those who were baptized into the Catholic Church or received into it. If one has not yet been received into it, then the law does not bind.
CIC 11 pretty much has all this covered.
Yes, it makes sense.A 14 year old baptized but unconfirmed child is bound by church law but a baptized 35 year old-person who has received catechisis and is being confirmed next week is not, but they can recieve another sacrament ( confession)
It just does not make sense.
A 14 year old Catholic is bound by Church law.A 14 year old baptized but unconfirmed child is bound by church law but a baptized 35 year old-person who has received catechisis and is being confirmed next week is not, but they can recieve another sacrament ( confession)
It just does not make sense.
No.Does the op have to fast and abstain on good Friday? Hmmmm.
Interesting…
Reception into the Church is what does. If you look at the rites, candidates are formally received into the Church before they are Confirmed. It’s not the Confirmation that makes them Catholic, it’s the reception.Interesting…
It’s hard to understand how something is ok one day and damnable the next. Confirmation itself does not bind in this way so what does?
Baptism into the Catholic Church.Interesting…
It’s hard to understand how something is ok one day and damnable the next. Confirmation itself does not bind in this way so what does?
Of course if the op were baptized Catholic that would not apply…Baptism into the Catholic Church.
or
Reception into the Catholic Church.
Confirmation is irrelevant to the question.
Confession is irrelevant to the question.
Correct. But then, all he would need to do is confess and be done with it. He would not be in RCIA.Of course if the op were baptized Catholic that would not apply…
Many parishes can run a person who was baptized but not confirmed Catholic through an RCIA program. This happens often in our parish.Correct. But then, all he would need to do is confess and be done with it. He would not be in RCIA.
The OP is not baptized Catholic though. So no ecclesiastical laws currently bind him.
That’s just for catechesis. It does not affect his status as a Catholic.Many parishes can run a person who was baptized but not confirmed Catholic through an RCIA program. This happens often in our parish.
That was true for me. I was baptized Catholic as an infant but never raised in the Faith. When I decided to “convert” and discovered I was already a Catholic, they ran me through the RCIA program for education, but the pastor worked with me and my family one on one in order to make sure I received the sacraments in the right order.Many parishes can run a person who was baptized but not confirmed Catholic through an RCIA program. This happens often in our parish.
The candidate is validly baptised. Baptism is the gateway to the other sacraments and anyone who is validly baptised could validly receive the other sacraments. Whether it is licit or illicit is a separate issue.I don’t understand the confession part either.