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SalusaSecondus
Guest
I have three kids. The first two were baptized in the RC. My third was baptized in a Lutheran church. Are their statuses different in regards to the RC or are their baptisms counted the same?
They are all validly baptized.I have three kids. The first two were baptized in the RC. My third was baptized in a Lutheran church. Are their statuses different in regards to the RC or are their baptisms counted the same?
The Catholic Church considers Lutheran baptisms as valid because Lutherans use the correct (Trinitarian) form and matter.I have three kids. The first two were baptized in the RC. My third was baptized in a Lutheran church. Are their statuses different in regards to the RC or are their baptisms counted the same?
I am raising them all as Lutheran.The Catholic Church considers Lutheran baptisms as valid because Lutherans use the correct (Trinitarian) form and matter.
The larger question is how you are raising the children. The parent(s) made promises to God at each of those baptisms. Are you raising two as Catholic and one as Lutheran? How will you reconcile the different teachings?
I was told by someone that my kids who were baptized RC are in a better position vis a vis the church than my kid who was baptized Lutheran. That didn’t seem right to me. Thanks for your response.I was baptised in some little Protestant church as a baby, when we joined the Catholic Church many years later I didn’t need another baptism so they are the same.
Catechism.I was told by someone that my kids who were baptized RC are in a better position vis a vis the church than my kid who was baptized Lutheran. That didn’t seem right to me. Thanks for your response.
If you are not raising them in the Catholic faith, the only advantage to them (with respect to Catholicism) is that a Catholic parish has their baptismal certificate, which would only make it perhaps insignificantly easier for them to receive the sacraments if they later decide to return to the faith of their baptism. That is not a significant concern since I would assume that Lutheran parishes keep good sacramental records. Someone could also make arguments about the difference in prayers between the two rites, but there is nothing objectively different. Your insinct is correct.I was told by someone that my kids who were baptized RC are in a better position vis a vis the church than my kid who was baptized Lutheran. That didn’t seem right to me. Thanks for your response.
If you are not raising them in the Catholic faith, the only advantage to them (with respect to Catholicism) is that a Catholic parish has their baptismal certificate, which would only make it perhaps insignificantly easier for them to receive the sacraments if they later decide to return to the faith of their baptism. That is not a significant concern since I would assume that Lutheran parishes keep good sacramental records. Someone could also make arguments about the difference in prayers between the two rites, but there is nothing objectively different. Your insinct is correct.
I was RC, then I adopted my two daughters and had them baptized in the RC. Then my wife and I left the RC and joined up with Lutheranism. Then we had our third daughter and we had her baptized in our Lutheran parish.I am confused. You said your children were baptized in the Catholic Church, yet you are raising them as Lutherans. Didn’t you vow before God to raise them in the Catholic faith, or did you become Lutheran after their baptisms?