S
SonCatcher
Guest
That had to do perhaps with the expansion of the Presbyterate. Originally, only the bishop would Chrismate the neophyte, whether adult or infant. As the Church grew, the number of Catholics under the care of the bishop also grew. In time it became simply impossible for the bishop to be present at every baptism. In the East, the practice retained its connection to Baptism and Eucharist to emphasize the unity of these three sacraments at the cost of its unity with bishop (that is, priests confer all three sacraments in the same liturgy). In the West, the connection of the sacrament and believer to the bishop was emphasized, at the cost of displacing the sacrament temporally from Baptism. Only under certain circumstances does the bishop delegate Confirmation to the priest.If someone can give me a link or something as to why did the time of confirmation change from infancy to young adult or in some cases 7 or 8 year olds?
I learned this in a spiritual conference so I don’t have a link to share.