Welcome to CAF, Please. Your username made me LOL!
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Thinking back 15 years ago when I was in confirmation classes, at that age I just pretty much went with whatever the church said. I remember not fulling understanding everything, and also not knowing better at the time, to ask more contriversial questions. I didn't realize that was the time to challenge myself and start thinking for myself. So it brings me to a few questions now that I'm older.
Do you think the church confirms at too young of an age?
No, I think that the preparation is insufficient. Most of the youngsters have not been raised “in the Faith”. Many parents will drop their kids at CCD but won’t even attend Mass with them, or talk to them about what they are being taught in classes. There is insufficient faith formation in the home, no family prayer, Bible study, or discussion about ethics.
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Does anyone think we should be asking more forward questions? And, if one disagrees with any of the below questions, should we tell them they can not be part of the church?
I think there should be better formation in the faith for all Catholics, from toddler to senior. Yes, questions should be part of this formation, but it is not up to us to “tell them they cannot be part of the Church”. This is for the ordained to do . We can, however, educate them about the Church doctrine, and teach them how they can excommunicate themselves by embracing sin and heresy.
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Here are a few of those questions I think we should be asking -
Do you, or do you not support gay rights including gay marriage?
I think it would be more appropriate to educate them about the church’s position on this, and help them understand why She believes as she does. I know I was a cafeteria Catholic for a long time, and I am glad no one told me I could no longer “be a part of the Church” because my values were encroached upon by this culture of death. I finally came around, but it did not happen all at once.
Having wrong values is concerning, but one can have distorted and erroneous thinking without acting upon it. I think this is the case with many Catholics, who don’t understand the teaching of the Church and haplessly support liberalism.
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Do you, or do you not think women should be church leaders including women as priests?
Do you, or do you not favor artificial birth control?
Do you, or do you not think the bread and wine really becomes Jesus?
I think that in order to call yourself a true Catholic, this is what the church should be more demanding of in their teachings.
The Church certainlly does teach these principles doctrinally. The best we can do is educate the faithful on these issues. It is good to start at the cradle, but if not, most adolescents are more than ready to argue and explore these ideas. The problem is that they lack faithful adults who can provoke their thinking and teach them the Truth on these matters.
Any infant baptized into the church is a Catholic. A person can lose their Catholicity by wandering astray in any of the areas you mention, but that does not make them unCatholic. They may be lapsed, Catholics, rebellious Catholics, Catholics living in a state of mortal sin, but the mark of baptism is permanent, and they will wear it for eternity, even if they deny the power of it and end up separated from God.