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Loud-living-dogma
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When parents have kids in their parish school, it’s not so easy to just find a new parish when the pastor makes strange rules. Maybe that’s the case for you?
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It is a very similar situation to this. I think I’m just going to meet with pastor and ask for special permission for a Lenten baptism. The worst that can happen is he’s annoyed I wasted his time, since his secretary has already told me “no.” And then if he says “yes” the office personelle (whom I all know personally) will all be annoyed because I will have gone around them after they said no. Ugh. I hate conflict. But this seems worth some conflict to me…When parents have kids in their parish school, it’s not so easy to just find a new parish when the pastor makes strange rules. Maybe that’s the case for you?
Ash Wednesday is more than three months away. Fifteen weeks, to be precise. No doctor can foresee the exact day of birth so far ahead. He is giving you an approximate date only.My baby is due on Ash Wednesday.
It’s tempting! But we want a fully-baked babe if possible, so I’m not going to go quite that far!Start praying that the baby comes early!
Oh, I know. But my babies don’t tend to come early… so Ash Wednesday is actually a pretty reasonable guess.Ash Wednesday is more than three months away. Fifteen weeks, to be precise. No doctor can foresee the exact day of birth so far ahead. He is giving you an approximate date only.
That is different than having a blanket policy that no baptisms can take place during a 40-day period of time. Usually, baptismal preparation can be taken care of before birth.In many parishes, baptismal prep is required of parents (and sometimes, godparents) before the baptism can occur. Scheduling and completing this step alone could take 40+ days.
No, Sundays are not technically outside of Lent. We have first Sunday of Lent, the second Sunday of Lent, Etc. The priest wears purple. Sundays are not days of fast and abstinence, but they are definitely part of Lent.In my parish, baptisms are usually on Sunday, after the last Mass. Sundays are technically outside Lent, right? So why not baptize on Sundays during Lent?
A. It might be more accurate to say that there is the “forty day fast within Lent.” Historically, Lent has varied from a week to three weeks to the present configuration of 46 days. The forty day fast, however, has been more stable. The Sundays of Lent are certainly part of the Time of Lent, but they are not prescribed days of fast and abstinence.
I’d call that about 10 weeks available to get everything in place so that a baptism can be done as soon as possible after the birth. Doing things differently takes longer to arrange than just going according to the usual protocol. It can usually be done, given enough time, but it takes legwork, especially if the OP is also trying to keep her relationship with her pastor on the best terms (which I think we all want).Ash Wednesday is more than three months away. Fifteen weeks, to be precise. No doctor can foresee the exact day of birth so far ahead. He is giving you an approximate date only.
Baptism is especially entrusted to the pastor. The proper pastor is determined by the territory you live in or personal parish.Vico:![]()
But what when my church isn’t permitting this due to Lent?Can. 867 §1. Parents are obliged to take care that infants are baptized in the first few weeks;
It’s interesting to look at old records and see how early babies were baptized in the early 20th century. When I look at the published records for my baptismal parish I see babies having been baptized at a day or two old quite frequently. Once the hospital became the place where births took place the timing became a bit longer but you can generally deduce that they took place on the first Sunday after mom & babe came home from the hospital. They didn’t have to do preparation back then, the assumption being that if they were asking for Baptism they knew what it was about.In the Notre Dame archives there is an entry where Bishop Penlaver tells his priests that when they visit the different families they are to admonish them on the importance of bringing their babies to the church to be baptized within the week of the babies birth.
Aww, that’s a beautiful tradition!The tradition was that on your way home you would stop at the church to have your child baptized. Then sometime in the '60s all that changed.
On your way home from where? Weren’t most babies born at home back then?The tradition was that on your way home you would stop at the church to have your child baptized. Then sometime in the '60s all that changed.