J
JoyToTheWhirled
Guest
Actually yeah, another question from the UK, as I am entering the church next year, will I have to or get to choose a saint or is that not applicable in my case? Entirely a question from ignorance here…
I didn’t know that. I’ll ask my mom today (she’s 91 years old) if she remembers her confirmation name and how she came to get it, if she still remembers.I think people being confirmed should realize that, although a lot of US and UK folks are taught now to “choose” a Confirmation name, a lot of the older older generation used to expect that you would take your sponsor’s name, or your godparent’s name if one of them is your sponsor, and if you weren’t given his/her name at Baptism.
This still happens–or happened years ago. Ironically, not in any of the cultures, you speak of.I think people being confirmed should realize that, although a lot of US and UK folks are taught now to “choose” a Confirmation name, a lot of the older older generation used to expect that you would take your sponsor’s name, or your godparent’s name if one of them is your sponsor, and if you weren’t given his/her name at Baptism.
(This depends a lot on local culture, of course. But if you really are close to your sponsor or godparent and he is older, or if it is expected to the point that not doing it would seem like a rejection of your sponsor/godparent, you might want to think about doing it. This is something you would probably see in Hispanic or Irish heritage families, but it crops up all over the place. One tactful way of finding out is to ask the older generation or your sponsor how they chose their Confirmation names!)