Sacraments of Initiation - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 07 Jul 2022 07:25:44 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Sacraments of Initiation - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Sacramental preparation without leaving home https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/07/07/new-online-resource-sacraments-initiation/ Thu, 07 Jul 2022 08:07:01 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=148911 Sacraments of initiation

The Melbourne Archdiocese has just released a new online resource for sacraments of initiation. The aim is for people to use the resource at home. Archbishop of Melbourne Peter Comensoli says the home remains the prime location within which faith can be formed and nurtured. This was the case in the early Church. People assembled Read more

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The Melbourne Archdiocese has just released a new online resource for sacraments of initiation.

The aim is for people to use the resource at home.

Archbishop of Melbourne Peter Comensoli says the home remains the prime location within which faith can be formed and nurtured.

This was the case in the early Church. People assembled and passed on the faith in family homes.

"Might not this also be our calling at this time and place?" Comensoli suggested.

Called Journeying Together, the new online resource for sacraments of initiation was created specifically to serve the Catholic Church needs in Australia.

Comensoli says it offers parents an accessible, easy-to-use resource to help them participate in their children's spiritual formation and faith journey.

"Journeying Together facilitates an at-home experience of ‘God-talk' and is designed not to replace but to complement children's sacramental preparation in a Catholic primary school or parish catechetical setting," he says.

The Confirmation and Eucharist modules are currently available, with Penance and Baptism to follow.

Each of the modules is divided into four sessions. The process helps parents and children explore the meaning behind the elements of the sacrament and grow in the Catholic faith through a spiritual encounter with Jesus.

Comensoli says each session has the feel of a home liturgy, teaching the core elements of the sacrament, but always ending in a prayerful processing of the content.

"The audio elements include children reading Scripture, adult voices narrating various sections, and occasional music. Families are encouraged to engage with the resource through interactive quizzes and comparison slides," he says.

Photos and artwork are used to re-enforce key points.

"The wide variety of learning objects cater to a range of learning styles," Comensoli says.

Each weekly session takes approximately 45 minutes.

Journeying Together - the resource can be found at sacraments.melbournecatholic.org.

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Irish Catholic dioceses defy govt's no baptism, confirmation, communion rule https://cathnews.co.nz/2021/08/02/irish-catholic-dioceses-baptism-confirmation-communion-government-rule/ Mon, 02 Aug 2021 08:09:18 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=138866 Independent.ie

Several Irish Catholic dioceses are defying a government ban on celebrating sacraments of initiation. They are planning to hold the ceremonies from mid-August. Bishop Kevin Doran of Elphin says after consulting with clergy, baptisms, First Holy Communions and confirmation ceremonies will be held. The regulations for general religious services will be followed. "The mission of Read more

Irish Catholic dioceses defy govt's no baptism, confirmation, communion rule... Read more]]>
Several Irish Catholic dioceses are defying a government ban on celebrating sacraments of initiation. They are planning to hold the ceremonies from mid-August.

Bishop Kevin Doran of Elphin says after consulting with clergy, baptisms, First Holy Communions and confirmation ceremonies will be held. The regulations for general religious services will be followed.

"The mission of the Church cannot be put on hold indefinitely," he says. He describes the state's guidance as "advice by government rather than regulation."

Three other Irish Catholic dioceses will follow suit. Like Doran, the bishops of Clogher, Waterford and Lismore wrote to the government last week informing it that access to the sacraments "will go ahead from mid-August."

Taoiseach (prime minister) Micheál Martin responded, saying he did not approve "any unilateral breaching of regulations no matter what quarter they come from.

"I'd say to the Church authorities that the government's only motivation here in terms of the regulations we have brought in, in respect of gatherings and congregations, is to protect people and to protect people's health."

Last month Archbishop Eamon Martin, who is the Primate of All Ireland, accused the government of communicating in a "grossly disrespectful" way that the baptism, confirmation and communion ceremonies should be delayed due to COVID-19.

The government's decision marked a "complete reversal" of its previous position in June, where the Taoiseach indicated the ceremonies could go ahead the following month.

Martin says he has been "deluged with calls from parishes" and priests and others have been extremely disappointed by the government's change of mind.

By 31 July, Ireland's 4.9 million people had recorded 299,549 COVID-19 cases and 5,035 related deaths. It is currently experiencing a fourth COVID wave driven by the Delta variant.

Waterford and Lismore's bishop is criticising the way the government and its COVID health team saying its communications with the Church "regarding the sacraments leaves a great deal to be desired.

"We are all conscious of the need to remain vigilant. Parishes have been exemplary ... but for any local parish community and their priest who wish to avail themselves of these sacraments, they must be allowed to do so."

The bishop of Clogher, whose diocese straddles the border with Northern Ireland, says the ceremonies will take place in the Republic of Ireland from 20 August.

"The appropriate protocols presently in place in our churches will be maintained, and families are reminded of the need for adherence to public health guidance in relation to social interactions following the church celebration," he says.

He says the diocese will follow the same practice as last year. The liturgies will involve small groups of children. Attendance will be restricted to the child, the parents/guardians, and sponsor."

The new regulations effectively criminalise Mass with a congregation, Martin says.

After meeting with Ireland's health minister, he stressed that priests' pastoral work should be "deemed essential, rather than subject to penal sanction" amid the pandemic.

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Confirmation seen as graduation out of the Church https://cathnews.co.nz/2015/05/01/confirmation-seen-as-graduation-out-of-the-church/ Thu, 30 Apr 2015 19:07:55 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=70803 Honolulu diocese is planning to return to the traditional order of the sacraments of initiation because Confirmation of teens isn't working well. In a pastoral letter, Bishop Larry Silva said Confirmation is "often experienced more as a graduation from the Church than as a free gift of God's grace". He cited Pope Francis's 2013 description Read more

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Honolulu diocese is planning to return to the traditional order of the sacraments of initiation because Confirmation of teens isn't working well.

In a pastoral letter, Bishop Larry Silva said Confirmation is "often experienced more as a graduation from the Church than as a free gift of God's grace".

He cited Pope Francis's 2013 description of Confirmation as a "sacrament of farewell" for many.

So Honolulu diocese plans to return the sacraments of initiation to what Bishop Silva called their proper order, that is: Baptism, Confirmation, and then First Holy Communion.

He invited parents, priests, deacons, youth ministers, faith formation staff and school staff to be part of education during this transition.

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