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DignumEtJustum
Guest
Wow. If anything it should perhaps be done later. Even done in 7th grade, it seems most have hardly any knowledge of the Catholic faith. I wouldn’t expect one younger to be any better in this sense.
Not all parishes are the same. The year we went from Confirmation around the age of 12 to Confirmation before First Communion our Confirmation group included everyone older than 6 who had not been confirmed yet. The older group underwent a different preparation and IIRC, the Bishop imposed Confirmation at both the Saturday evening and Sunday morning Masses. We split the groups alphabetically by last name.Wouldn’t count on it. In my Catholic diocese growing up they changed the grade year that confirmation occurred from 8th to 7th the year I went from 7th to 8th. They did not include 8th graders in the confirmation classes to bridge the gap year. I ended up in a “remedial” confirmation class a few years later in high school at my parents request.
Don’t worry about it, the church keeps records and know who has been confirmed and who hasn’t been. No one has been forgotten on this. In the 19th Century it was my understanding that kids got confirmation at 7, but didn’t get communion until later.One thing that scares me is what about those kids that have received, first Communion in second grade a couple of years ago but have not received confirmation yet. How will they be confirmed when my local church has switched over to confirming kids right around the age of reason
Adult or child? If by adult you mean 18 years (or even 16) or older, it reflects a poor understanding of the sacrament IMO. The proper age specified by Canon law is the age of reason, this can be changed by a national Bishops conference, which shows that the Church does not see it as a matter of adulthood.Confirmation should be from the faith of the now adult child alone.
…which points out that grace is not the mere topic of theological ruminations, it is personal and real. The whole Christian life is personal (and no, not personal in an individualistic way, but personal in the Christian sense),Confirmation is not intended to be a point where the “confirmee” makes his own profession of faith after being baptized as an infant. It’s simply a strenghtening of the gifts of the Holy Spirit receieved at Baptism. There’s no theological reason to put it off. It’s more practical in some cases, maybe.
Of course any adult converting to the faith must have his own faith in order to receive both baptism and confirmation.
While I believe this happend, I fail to understand what the DRE was thinking!?!?Wouldn’t count on it. In my Catholic diocese growing up they changed the grade year that confirmation occurred from 8th to 7th the year I went from 7th to 8th. They did not include 8th graders in the confirmation classes to bridge the gap year. I ended up in a “remedial” confirmation class a few years later in high school at my parents request.
I agree there should be a reasonable expectation that the receiver of the sacrament will practice/be brought up in the faith. It is not a magical pill. But we should not deny that the sacrament confers real graces which, given a faithful disposition, can bear fruit.Wesrock:![]()
…which points out that grace is not the mere topic of theological ruminations, it is personal and real. The whole Christian life is personal (and no, not personal in an individualistic way, but personal in the Christian sense),Confirmation is not intended to be a point where the “confirmee” makes his own profession of faith after being baptized as an infant. It’s simply a strenghtening of the gifts of the Holy Spirit receieved at Baptism. There’s no theological reason to put it off. It’s more practical in some cases, maybe.
Of course any adult converting to the faith must have his own faith in order to receive both baptism and confirmation.
it is a personal response to the invitation of God’s personal offer of grace, through a relationship with Jesus Christ.
And that personal response or even the inclination to respond is absent to a large decree. The Church’s mission is to bring Christ to all people, and that is more than getting the sacraments.
While confirmation is not a reward, it is also not something trivial to be given to the radically indifferent.
Yes it is true that age is not the intrinsic factor.goout:![]()
I agree there should be a reasonable expectation that the receiver of the sacrament will practice/be brought up in the faith. It is not a magical pill. But we should not deny that the sacrament confers real graces which, given a faithful disposition, can bear fruit.Wesrock:![]()
…which points out that grace is not the mere topic of theological ruminations, it is personal and real. The whole Christian life is personal (and no, not personal in an individualistic way, but personal in the Christian sense),Confirmation is not intended to be a point where the “confirmee” makes his own profession of faith after being baptized as an infant. It’s simply a strenghtening of the gifts of the Holy Spirit receieved at Baptism. There’s no theological reason to put it off. It’s more practical in some cases, maybe.
Of course any adult converting to the faith must have his own faith in order to receive both baptism and confirmation.
it is a personal response to the invitation of God’s personal offer of grace, through a relationship with Jesus Christ.
And that personal response or even the inclination to respond is absent to a large decree. The Church’s mission is to bring Christ to all people, and that is more than getting the sacraments.
While confirmation is not a reward, it is also not something trivial to be given to the radically indifferent.
There may be practical and prudential arguments for withholding the sacrament until a later age, but it’s not a theological argument. Age is different than whether there’s a reasonable expectation the faith will be practiced.