RCIA Questions

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I am a convert from evangelicalism, and so I have gone through the RCIA process. I am having trouble understanding how conversion to the faith works in all cases, specifically: I’m attempting what I guess could be young adult Catholic fiction. I have a character who is high school age and moves next door to a close-knit Catholic family, befriends the girls in the family, and is interested in the faith. It’s difficult for him because his mom is an atheist and religion wasn’t something ever mentioned in their house growing up. His mother is an Ob/Gyn and abortion provider for a women’s clinic, which makes his interest in religion uncomfortable for her. Also, he is bisexual. I assume he’d do some kind of RCIA, but us it different for high school? Would he be counseled because of his same sex attraction? I don’t think his Mom’s career would affect his ability to convert aside from being awkward, right? Does anyone know how this would go for baptism/confirmation/1STcommunion?

I’ve said some Catholic friends around who weren’t totally sure or said that it might depend on the size of the parish. I am working with a parish that is the only Catholic Church is a county of small farming towns if that matters.
 
ENCYCLICAL LETTER
CARITAS IN VERITATE
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF
BENEDICT XVI
TO THE BISHOPS
PRIESTS AND DEACONS
MEN AND WOMEN RELIGIOUS
THE LAY FAITHFUL
AND ALL PEOPLE OF GOOD WILL
ON INTEGRAL HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
IN CHARITY AND TRUTH

INTRODUCTION
  1. Charity in truth, to which Jesus Christ bore witness by his earthly life and especially by his death and resurrection, is the principal driving force behind the authentic development of every person and of all humanity. Love — caritas — is an extraordinary force which leads people to opt for courageous and generous engagement in the field of justice and peace. It is a force that has its origin in God, Eternal Love and Absolute Truth. Each person finds his good by adherence to God’s plan for him, in order to realize it fully: in this plan, he finds his truth, and through adherence to this truth he becomes free (cf. Jn 8:32). To defend the truth, to articulate it with humility and conviction, and to bear witness to it in life are therefore exacting and indispensable forms of charity. Charity, in fact, “rejoices in the truth” (1 Cor 13:6). All people feel the interior impulse to love authentically: love and truth never abandon them completely, because these are the vocation planted by God in the heart and mind of every human person. The search for love and truth is purified and liberated by Jesus Christ from the impoverishment that our humanity brings to it, and he reveals to us in all its fullness the initiative of love and the plan for true life that God has prepared for us. In Christ, charity in truth becomes the Face of his Person, a vocation for us to love our brothers and sisters in the truth of his plan. Indeed, he himself is the Truth (cf. Jn 14:6).
You can find High school catechisms online. Google “The Catholic toolbox” .

Peace
 
An unbaptized high school student interested in Catholicism would normally join an RCIA class at his parish in the fall and then receive baptism, first Communion, and confirmation at the Easter Vigil Mass. If the parish is very small and there is no RCIA class, he might meet regularly with a priest or deacon or nun to help him prepare before being received into the Church.

Mom’s career, faith, or lack of faith would not prevent the boy from being able to convert (unless he can’t drive and she refuses to bring him to the Church… that could be a source of conflict for your novel). Same sex attraction isn’t an impediment to joining the Church either, though a good RCIA program will explain the truth about human sexuality and the sinfulness of acting on any sexual impulses outside of the sacrament of marriage. If the character is unbaptized then he does not need to confess anything before becoming Catholic; all his sins are washed away when he recieves baptism at Easter.

Good luck with your story!
 
Keep this in mind: when you receive Baptism at Easter Vigil you will be completely free of all sins, both personal and Original. There won’t be one single sin on your soul when you step out of the waters of Baptism! So prepare well, lest you fall back into the sins you struggle with today. Your Baptismal garment is symbolic of the one that you will wear in Heaven, so keep it spotless by frequent Confession after you are received into the Church. I am a convert too so good luck and God bless. There are plenty of answers you’ll need here at CAF, so don’t be a stranger! Welcome. The Church will be a better place for having you.

Glenda
 
I am a convert from evangelicalism, and so I have gone through the RCIA process. I am having trouble understanding how conversion to the faith works in all cases, specifically: I’m attempting what I guess could be young adult Catholic fiction. I have a character who is high school age and moves next door to a close-knit Catholic family, befriends the girls in the family, and is interested in the faith. It’s difficult for him because his mom is an atheist and religion wasn’t something ever mentioned in their house growing up. His mother is an Ob/Gyn and abortion provider for a women’s clinic, which makes his interest in religion uncomfortable for her. Also, he is bisexual. I assume he’d do some kind of RCIA, but us it different for high school? Would he be counseled because of his same sex attraction? I don’t think his Mom’s career would affect his ability to convert aside from being awkward, right? Does anyone know how this would go for baptism/confirmation/1STcommunion?

I’ve said some Catholic friends around who weren’t totally sure or said that it might depend on the size of the parish. I am working with a parish that is the only Catholic Church is a county of small farming towns if that matters.
Hypotheticals are tough to answer.
You are basically asking if the person is disqualified from entering the Church due to his life circumstances, which fly in the face of Church teaching.
The answer is no, his circumstances do not prevent him from entering the RCIA process. During the RCIA process no one would (should) ask him his sexual orientation or practices, so it wouldn’t be an issue unless it was a public matter. If he brought it up, members of the RCIA team would probably counsel him as best they could, or the pastor would do it. Confession is part of that process (for candidates only), so if he has issues to confess, he would do that, just like any other candidate. Or Baptism for catechumens, which also cleanses the soul. We have had many catechumens who have had abortions or lived in irregular lifestyles. They go through RCIA, and hopefully in that process they find the mercy of God and the call to conversion, through the Church.

This hypothetical scenario is in fact very common. Many people are burdened by sin and during the RCIA process they come to know the Church through the members of the RCIA team. This is why it is of utmost importance to remember that RCIA is not -only- a program of doctrine, it is a lived process of finding communion with the Church. Hopefully, through RCIA, they discover that the Word did indeed become flesh. If RCIA is only about learning doctrine, the catechumen is simply overwhelmed and discouraged (we’ve had that happen) because they cannot possibly absorb it all in 7 months.

If the catechumen is publicly defying Church teaching, that would be another matter, and the pastor may say something like “you’re not committed to full communion with the Church, let’s try again when you are”.
Every person makes a free commitment to enter the Church. Sin does not prevent one from entering the Church, in fact the Church calls to sinners to come to Jesus.
 
ENCYCLICAL LETTER
CARITAS IN VERITATE
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF
BENEDICT XVI
TO THE BISHOPS
PRIESTS AND DEACONS
MEN AND WOMEN RELIGIOUS
THE LAY FAITHFUL
AND ALL PEOPLE OF GOOD WILL
ON INTEGRAL HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
IN CHARITY AND TRUTH

INTRODUCTION
… becomes the Face of his Person, a vocation for us to love our brothers and sisters in the truth of his plan. Indeed, he himself is the Truth (cf. Jn 14:6).

You can find High school catechisms online. Google “The Catholic toolbox” .

Peace
An unbaptized high school student interested in Catholicism would normally join… Church. I am a convert too so good luck and God bless. There are plenty of answers you’ll need here at CAF, so don’t be a stranger! Welcome. The Church will be a better place for having you.

Glenda
Hypotheticals are tough to answer.
You are basically asking if the person is disqualified from entering the Church due to his life circumstances, which fly in the …come to Jesus.
👍
 
Hello Jack.
How on earth did you manage to put my words in Nodito’s mouth or was that visa versa? How rude. If you are going to quote me, quote me. I’m wondering how many you are baffling with this. I don’t think Nodito wants me speaking for him or her either. So, what’s up with that?

Glenda
 
I think since Jack has been here less than a month, he probably is not adept at the various tools and functions yet. He’s been posting ALOT, but not long.
:coffeeread:
 
An unbaptized high school student interested in Catholicism would normally join an RCIA class at his parish in the fall and then receive baptism, first Communion, and confirmation at the Easter Vigil Mass. If the parish is very small and there is no RCIA class, he might meet regularly with a priest or deacon or nun to help him prepare before being received into the Church.

Mom’s career, faith, or lack of faith would not prevent the boy from being able to convert (unless he can’t drive and she refuses to bring him to the Church… that could be a source of conflict for your novel). Same sex attraction isn’t an impediment to joining the Church either, though a good RCIA program will explain the truth about human sexuality and the sinfulness of acting on any sexual impulses outside of the sacrament of marriage. If the character is unbaptized then he does not need to confess anything before becoming Catholic; all his sins are washed away when he recieves baptism at Easter.

Good luck with your story!
👍 Right. There are pretty much two ways a person typically becomes Catholic. Either they go through RCIA or they are baptized as infants and receive the other two Sacraments of Initiation between the age of reason and early adolescence. Anyone who is interested in becoming Catholic who has reached the age of reason will go through RCIA (ordinarily). In cases where the child is young (like, say, 9 years old), the RCIA will often be adapted to a more age appropriate dissemination of content. But it is still RCIA.

A high school student would likely be old enough to be put in the regular RCIA process a parish has in place. I’d say this is even more so in a smaller rural parish who probably doesn’t have that many people attending RCIA from year to year.

I know some smaller rural parishes will actually pool together with other nearby parishes for RCIA. Thus, you might have 4 rural parishes in one county that operate one RCIA program for people coming into any of the four parishes. Oftentimes, those 4 parishes may all have the same pastor, too.
 
We are in a semi-rural area. We combine the whole deanery for the RCIA process. So we have access to several priests and deacons for the sessions.
 
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