G
Gorgias
Guest
I don’t think that the attitude is “a baptized Christian needs less” so much as it should be “a baptized Christian needs different”. More to the point, if we really mean that we recognize ‘one baptism’ – whether it occurs in our parish church or in the Protestant church down the street – then we should honest stop treating those who come to us for full communion with the Church as if they’re just a different flavor of catechumen.And having been involved with RCIA for about 20 years now, I have never been able to reconcile some people’s attitude that a baptized Christian needs less than someone who has never been baptized.
All these are true. What it says, of course, is that there isn’t a “one size fits all” program that can meet the varied and diverse needs of those approaching the Church for membership.People who have been baptized in other faith expressions may know a little about the Church, or know a tremendous amount of untruth about the Church, and may actually know little about the faith expression they were brought up in.
What makes it even more difficult, in parishes, is the level of resources available and the quality of those resources. Some RCIA programs are amazing; others are lukewarm and/or programmatic; some are infected with a variety of agendas that are (to a greater or lesser degree) foreign to what the Church intends.
All of these difficulties make RCIA quite the handful to manage. But, the potential upside is amazing!
I don’t know what your experience of RCIA was - it sounds as if it was not good; nor do I know if you have experienced it elsewhere, and for what length.
That’s because a homily isn’t a program of adult catechesis, nor is it a program of formation for candidates. The desire to turn a single homily into an exercise of “all things to all people” is as fruitless and vain as the desire to attempt to meet all needs in a single, monolithic RCIA program.I agree that one size does not necessarily fit all; but then, again, on Sunday we all get the same homily, and one size… is what we all get.
Absolutely!Most of us out here in the trenches are doing the very best we can.
It’s almost as if we need to band together, rather than run little fiefdoms in every parish, don’t you think?I am not against thinking outside the box; on the other hand, there are limited resources (i.e. people who can implement the program).