by Carmelite Sisters | February 8, 2012 12:02 am
Dear Sister,
My wife and I are thinking of waiting until our newborn is old enough to be an active part of her baptism. We see our roles as parents as preparing her for that great moment when she embraces the faith. I am wondering, do you know of other Catholic parents who are doing this?
Dear Friend
Thank you for your question. In it I see a father’s heart wanting to do the very best for his little baby. Yes, from time to time people have told me that they don’t want to baptize their children as infants. They want to wait until the child is an adult or at least old enough that he or she can choose. Would you like to know what I think of every time I hear that?
Here are my thoughts based on Catholic doctrine. We are all acutely aware that our culture is, in the words of Blessed John Paul II, becoming a culture of death. Or should I say, it already is. All of us are bombarded daily, with sights and sounds – on billboards, on computer screens, on every kind of media – that are not life-giving. Like the proverbial frog that was put in the pot of water and swam around joyfully, never even noticing that the heat was turned up higher and higher until it killed him and cooked him, the sights and sound we see around us are getting for lack of a better word, more and more pagan. Like the frog, we are joyfully going about our daily routines, in the pot of this world and don’t even notice that the heat has been turned up higher and higher. That real sin is looking back at us as we view so many things as we go through our daily life. It is a fact.
Now, our children (we Carmelites teach in schools from California to Florida) were born into this milieu. It’s all they know. . It is very sad to see their frame of reference so narrow, so imbued with a culture that is dying spiritually. I’ve spoken to children who have never even heard of a swim suit that isn’t a bikini. They think it is normal and right to wear them. Is it? What do you think? On what is your thinking based? I’m using bikinis only as one example. You get the point.
This is scary. I can only imagine what parents feel when they think of the precious infant growing up in this type of culture. Some parents, themselves the product of that same culture, can’t pass on what they themselves do not know. Other parents choose to home school their children. God bless them. Some move away to smaller towns away from the big cities of America.
Baptism is not just a beautiful family event when the infant comes to church for the first time with godparents, the priest arrives and pours water and says prayers, everyone has a good feeling about the day, and then some kind of celebration occurs in the home. It is SO MUCH MORE! Every human being, every tiny infant, has a soul and Baptism brings God’s grace streaming into that soul and we know that grace is defined as “a supernatural gift of God.” This brings about the Divine Indwelling within the baby’s soul. This gift of grace is HUGE. It is UNLIMITED. Sanctifying grace enters the soul during the Sacrament of Baptism.
This means that there is a new, intimate, personal, loving, wonderful special relationship between God and that little baby. That little one now has, in a new and extraordinary way, the presence of the Holy Trinity within that little soul. And as the child grows up, yes into teen years, into young adult years, all the way to senior years, the Holy Spirit is present in an exceptionally personal way. Now here is my point. God is working from within that child, guiding, helping, forming, teaching, and loving. This is something bigger than the words we have to describe it.
How can a parent deny this to their children? I don’t get it.
Thank you for your question and until next time,
Sister Laus Gloriae, O.C.D.
Send your questions for Sister to asksister@integratedcatholiclife.org[1].Please help us in our mission to assist readers to integrate their Catholic faith, family and work. Tell your family and friends about this article using both the Recommend and Share buttons below and via email. We value your comments and encourage you to leave your thoughts below. Thank you! – The Editors
[2]To learn more about the Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Los Angeles, read their biography in the left-hand sidebar and visit their website (link provided at the bottom of the bio).
They publish a beautiful print magazine, Spirit of Carmel, and we encourage you to support the work of the sisters with your prayers and through donations and subscriptions to the Spirit of Carmel.
If you are able to help them, please click on the image of their magazine to visit their subscription and donation page.
If you hear God calling you to the religious life, I encourage you to visit their vocations page[3]. – Deacon Mike
Or for more information, please contact:
Sister Grace Helena, OCD, Vocation Directress
920 East Alhambra Road
Alhambra, California 91801
Source URL: https://integratedcatholiclife.org/2012/02/ask-a-carmelite-should-baptism-be-delayed-until-children-can-choose/
Copyright ©2024 Integrated Catholic Life™ unless otherwise noted.