Parish Priest says he won’t baptize them unless mother agrees. Dad wants them to be full Catholics and the kids do too. My son knows I baptized them myself. Don’t even know if this is legit. The kids want to know why they aren’t good enough to receive Communion. I try to explain without blaming the parent who refuses. The kids are observing Lent. I teach them about Catholic Sacraments and traditions.
The other side of this is, the kids are 13, 11, and 9. This isn’t a “new thing”, it has obviously been going on for…13, 11, and 9 years respectively (…this strongly suggests that dad maybe wasn’t all into this Catholic stuff until
after the divorce, otherwise the baptism thing would’ve been handled 13, 11, and 9 years ago). So there’s a possibility here that there has always been an undercurrent between the mom and the mother-in-law…and that the divorce is allowing the kids to be dumped in the middle of what ought to be a grown-up decision between JUST the legal guardians, mom & dad. If the priest says NO (and he has, apparently) then for the sake of the children’s healthy relationships with
everyone, it’s time to stop pushing for sacraments that the priest has rightly refused. The message I’m hearing is, “C’mon, kids, we’ll do this behind mom’s back.”
It seems the priest does not recognize the illegal baptism, therefore the kids have no RC obligation to attend services every week. If they
are going, using that as a wedge to make them feel bad is just not a charitable path forward. By all means, teach them about Christianity…but not to the extent that you’re dropping them in direct opposition to their mother. Also, kids are SMART. Don’t think they won’t tell you what you want to hear about your church, and then go home to mom and give her a ‘rundown’ of everything you said and did in opposition to mom’s wishes, and declare their allegiance to her.
Many divorce decrees specify custodial rights including religious education/decision matters. That’s the first proper path forward. It may be possible to mediate some agreement with the custodial parent. (But not if you keep trying to sneak behind her back, and basically brainwash her kids…because that’s the framework in place today, whatever the topic of opposition - religion, education, dating, etc.) The parents could agree to use a family mediator or family counselor to resolve the conflict. And finally, it could go back to court for further orders. There are LOTS of ways to address the conflict that do NOT involve putting the kids in the middle. For the sake of well-adjusted, confident kids, please remove them from the conflict now, and let dad work on the issue
without putting the kids in the middle.