• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

Can I ask a question about sin and baptism?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private
prodromos said:
Michelle, please define "perfect", because if you mean what I think you mean we are not in agreement.

John.

They have been freed from original sin and they have no mortal sin on their soul, and no venal sins either. They aren’t immaculately conceived where they have no concupiscence, but baptized infants are perfect because they have been reconciled to God through Christ and they have no sin. Liken to a perfected saint. What I mean is they are saints.
 
Upvote 0

Dominus Fidelis

ScottBot is Stalking Me!
Sep 10, 2003
9,260
383
51
Florida
✟33,909.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married

I agree. And they can't actually sin until they can reason, because a freewill choice requires reason to mean anything.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private

I agree 100% but the Latin Rite is considering St. Paul’s words, we must be able to discern the body and blood of Christ, know who and what we are receiving. We give it to children when they are at an age of reason. The EO do not agree that baptism does sanctify a person completely? Do you think the sacrament is somehow incomplete with out communion? Jesus says in Revelations that we are to keep our baptismal garment clean and do not soil them. Communion is for the strength and grace not to fall and for the forgiveness when we do fall, babies do not exactly struggle with that. Baptism is the life of grace, being divinized, they are complete with baptism but as they grow they will need to water the seeds with grace.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private

Elizabeth,

The Latin rite Catholics do not think there is something wrong with what the Eastern rite and EO Churches do. As I have said before, I believe the EO Churches sometimes confuses what is Big T tradition with what is little t Tradition. You may think everything is sacred Tradition, I don’t know but I do not think this was a sacred Tradition (giving or not giving communion to babies) I think it is little t tradition. Especially seeing how the very first Christians were adults, they were no cradle Catholics then all converts were adults.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private
PS Chanter,

One is excommunicated when there is unrepentant sin involved, this is not the case of babies. They are not forbidden communion because they would be receiving in condemnation of themselves. So to apply this to babies is really far fetched.
 
Upvote 0

Polycarp1

Born-again Liberal Episcopalian
Sep 4, 2003
9,588
1,669
USA
✟33,375.00
Faith
Anglican
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
A couple of comments, not to debate but to try to advance the discussion -- it would be my assumption that, like baptism, the "discernment of the body and blood" is a normative, not a mandative requirement: one who desires baptism but who never has access to a baptized Christian and water is deemed baptized by the "baptism of desire." I'd understand the Pauline stricture as "have such reverence for the Blessed Sacrament as, if you are able, prayerfully discern the body and blood in it," not, "if you are not capable of discerning the body and blood, you are barred from the gift of grace."

Too, Christ commanded two, and the Scriptures provide for, seven sacraments. They are not all exclusively for the forgiveness of sins -- that puts too much a Protestant salvationist focus on them. Baptism is primarily the act of adoption by which God puts to death by drowning our old sinful life and makes us a part of the Mystical Body of Christ and His sons and daughters by adoption and grace. The Eucharist nourishes and cleanses us, as the intake of food and the act of own our blood on our body serves to do physically. Chrismation indelibly marks us as the possessions of the Crucified One, anointed to be His hands and feet and mouths and ears in the world about us. Confirmation strengthens us to perform the work He has given us to do. All of them have the secondary function of the eradication of sin, that which separates us from Him -- but in much the sense in which applying alcohol to a wound has the primary function of killing germs and only the secondary function of cleansing the wound of dirt.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private


I agree but none of this is really my point. My point is it isn’t wrong to not give it or to give it. It is a choice and the Latin rite reserves the choice to not give it until reason. If the Church wanted to give it to my babies at baptism, I wouldn’t have a problem with it.

Besides me receiving communion when I am pregnant I believe sanctifies the child also. We could get into that debate, how can a parent receive communion while they are carrying the child, the child has not been baptized yet, so if they also benefit from communion, how can they, they aren’t baptized?

We choose to not give it until the age of reason, it isn’t like we are damming the children if we don’t. If the east wants to give it, fine but don’t make it sound like we are going against Christ by not giving it. Christ was silent on the salvation and status of baby’s soul frankly so neither Church can say what is definitive. This is what I mean by them confusing what it and isn’t sacred Tradition that is to be obeyed. They are mistaken custom for sacred Tradition, IMO. I don’t think it is bad but it isn’t like the Catholic Church is up to no good because we have our own customs.
 
Upvote 0

ChoirDir

Choir Director
Jan 19, 2004
376
24
71
South Carolina
Visit site
✟23,152.00
Faith
Eastern Orthodox
We could get into that debate, how can a parent receive communion while they are carrying the child, the child has not been baptized yet
Brings up another thought, in the Catholic Church after a pregnant woman delivers is she allowed back in the church? In the Orthodox faith, she must be churched first before she can come back to Liturgy.
On the OP, the entrance of an infant into the Orthodox faith involves 3 sacraments, Baptism, Chrismation, Communion. These can occur all at once but usually, the Baptism and Chrismation are done separately and Communion is taken at the first Divine Liturgy afterwards. It should be noted that Catholics Baptize, then wait 5-6 years for Communion then another 7-8 years for Confirmation. So the whole process takes about 13 years compared to 1 to 2 days in Orthodoxy
 
Upvote 0

Polycarp1

Born-again Liberal Episcopalian
Sep 4, 2003
9,588
1,669
USA
✟33,375.00
Faith
Anglican
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
No disagreement. I was merely looking into the reasoning behind the varying customs regarding the sacraments, to see where I could find truth in them. As it happens, we chrismate at Baptism (or chrismate separately those baptized Christians entering the church from a tradition that does not chrismate) and confirm at age 15 or so -- so our custom is different from both Catholicism and Orthodoxy.


ChoirDir said:
Brings up another thought, in the Catholic Church after a pregnant woman delivers is she allowed back in the church? In the Orthodox faith, she must be churched first before she can come back to Liturgy.
How long is the normal wait between childbirth and "churching of women"? Before converting to Episcopalianism, I was raised in a Methodist church that used this ritual once, in response to the wish of the new mother, so I have always been curious about it. And what is the liturgical purpose of it?
 
Upvote 0

ChoirDir

Choir Director
Jan 19, 2004
376
24
71
South Carolina
Visit site
✟23,152.00
Faith
Eastern Orthodox
 
Upvote 0

ChoirDir

Choir Director
Jan 19, 2004
376
24
71
South Carolina
Visit site
✟23,152.00
Faith
Eastern Orthodox
In regards to infant communion in the west I found this:
 
Upvote 0

prodromos

Senior Veteran
Site Supporter
Nov 28, 2003
23,798
14,247
59
Sydney, Straya
✟1,428,936.00
Country
Australia
Gender
Male
Faith
Eastern Orthodox
Marital Status
Married
Shelb5 said:
Especially seeing how the very first Christians were adults, they were no cradle Catholics then all converts were adults.

Whole families were baptised, not just the adults.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private

I have heard this and no, women are allowed to be present at the baptism and there is no “churching” necessary. They aren’t considered unclean.

Children are baptized and baptism brings sanctification. They aren’t incomplete beings because they have not had communion or confirmation. They do not have a sense of reasoning, they have no sin on their souls they simple at this stage in their existence do not need the graces that come from the other sacraments, As they grow they will but in this particular stage of their life the grace of baptism is sufficient.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private
ChoirDir said:
In regards to infant communion in the west I found this:

Okay and? Do you understand the point I am making? There is nothing wrong with giving it to them or not giving it to them. Apparently the EO must think there is something wrong with not giving it to them.
 
Upvote 0

ChoirDir

Choir Director
Jan 19, 2004
376
24
71
South Carolina
Visit site
✟23,152.00
Faith
Eastern Orthodox
Shelb5 said:
I know but as you know there is no Tradition that says “infants” were being confirmed or communicated when they were baptized, this is my point.
The above quote shows that there was no age prohibition in the early Church. It was established in 813 and renewed in 1175. Furthermore
Still the custom died hard, for we find traces of it in Hugh of St. Victor (De Sacr., I, c. 20) and Martène (De Ant. Ecc. Rit., I bk., I, c. 15) alleges that it had not altogether disappeared in his own day.
This quote seems to show that at one time all 3 Sacraments were given together So the West seems to have changed it to it's present day form.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private

And my point from the beginning is it can. There is a difference, at least to us, between what it apostolic sacred Tradition and tradition customs. Like, one time it was brought up about us changing the directing of the sign of the cross. Some thing’s aren’t “T” Big T apostolic sacred Tradition.

If the east wants to give a three, more power to you, the Church has NOT looked down on this at all, the Church used to do this herself. There is nothing wrong with doing it or not doing it.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private

I wonder why the whole in context article was left out?? Well anyway, i hope this sheds light.
 
Upvote 0

MariaRegina

Well-Known Member
Jun 26, 2003
53,283
14,159
Visit site
✟115,460.00
Faith
Eastern Orthodox
Marital Status
Married
Thanks, Michelle,

Note how the Byzantine Catholics preserve the ancient and Holy Tradition of giving Holy Communion to the infants. The Orthodox view all of our traditions as Holy Traditions because they are from the Holy Apostles. Why should we change things that the Apostles have always done?

This Latin Catholic article does show that the ancient One Holy Orthodox and Catholic Church did give Holy Communion to the infants, but by 813 AD the custom of communicating the infants was unfortunately dying out in the West. Also by that time, the theologial differences in the East and West were so great, that the Patriarch of Constantinople had stopped commemorating the Bishop of Rome during the Divine Liturgy.

The language barrier, enforced priestly celibacy (which was not apostolic), use of unleaved bread, the filioque, the new doctrine of purgatory and indulgences, increasing papal powers, and papal interference in the patriarchates of the East were just some of the reasons why the two churches finally separated.
 
Upvote 0

Benedicta00

Well-Known Member
Jun 25, 2003
28,512
838
Visit site
✟55,563.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Private


Elizabeth,

Notice how it is a discipline.

I have already made my point so I am not going to keep repeating. The Church does not put down the east for doing it, so I don’t think the east should put us down for not doing it. Read the explanation again, the answer is clear. If you like the all the "t"raditions, then by all means, knock yourself out.

Obviously the Catholic Church does not have that big a problem with you keeping all the eastern traditions, look at the Eastern Rite Catholics, who are in union with Rome. They returned and still practice the eastern traditions so they must understand disciplines and not take issue with them. If we are out to change the ancient faith then how come the Eastern Rite Catholics still have kept the same practices as the EO?
 
Upvote 0
Status
Not open for further replies.