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    How Do I Get My Child Confirmed

    In The Parish

    Year 10 Confirmation

    Confirmation Registration 2024-2025



    For children in year 10 and above in September, please complete the Confirmation registration form and email to anitahammond@rcdow.org


    The closing date is Sunday 1st September.


    What is the confirmation process like? There are three requirements to meet. Firstly, your child needs to have been baptised. Baptism is a necessary sacrament that welcomes them into the Christian community and sets them on their spiritual journey. If your child hasn't been baptised yet, please contact us, and we'll assist you in making the necessary arrangements.


    Secondly, your child should be in Year 10 or above. This ensures that they have reached a level of understanding and maturity to participate in the confirmation process actively.


    Lastly, your child should reside within our parish. This ensures that the confirmation ceremony occurs within our community, allowing your child to engage with fellow members actively.


    Please download the application form on the right-hand side to initiate the confirmation process. Please fill out the form with the necessary details and send it to Anita Hammond. She will be delighted to receive your child's application and guide you through the confirmation journey.


    If you have any questions or concerns, please don't hesitate to reach out. We're here to support you and provide any additional information or assistance you may need.


    At Baptism, we begin a life-long journey and a way of life. At Confirmation, the graces received in Baptism are sealed with the reception of the seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit. The words that Jesus shared with his disciples at Pentecost apply to each one of us at Confirmation, you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses (Acts 1:8).


    In Westminster, the Sacrament of Confirmation is typically received by children, who are at least twelve years of age, baptised, and prepared with the help of the parish community and remotely through our Catholic secondary schools. Confirmation is administered by the Bishop and, on rare occasions, by a priest delegated by the Bishop.

    Anointed and Gifted

    The prophets of the Old Testament foretold that God's Spirit would rest upon the Messiah to sustain his mission. Their prophecy was fulfilled when Jesus, the Messiah (Christ), was conceived by the Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary. The Holy Spirit descended on Jesus on the occasion of his baptism by John. Jesus' entire mission occurred in communion with the Spirit. Before he died, Jesus promised that the Spirit would be given to the Apostles and to the entire Church. After his death, he was raised by the Father in the power of the Spirit.


    The Sacrament of Confirmation confers ‘the full outpouring of the Holy Spirit as once granted to the apostles on the day of Pentecost (CCC 1302)’. As such, Confirmation is ordinarily administered by the bishop, who is the successor of the apostles.


    Confirmation deepens our baptismal life that calls us to be missionary witnesses of Jesus Christ in our families, neighbourhoods, society, and the world.


    In the Sacrament of Confirmation, we receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit: wisdom, knowledge, right judgment, understanding, courage, piety, and fear of the Lord. In this way, the Sacrament of Confirmation completes the Sacrament of Baptism (see CCC 1303).

    The Rite of Confirmation

    In the Rite of Confirmation, the bishop traces the Oil of Holy Chrism on the candidate’s forehead in the shape of the cross. This recalls Christ’s title as ‘the Anointed’. In the Old Testament, we also read about the anointing of priests, prophets, and kings:


    Then Samuel took the horn of oil, and anointed him in the presence of his brothers; and the spirit of the Lord came mightily upon David from that day forward (1 Samuel 16:13)


    In Baptism, we receive an anointing (which cleanses and strengthens us for the Christian life), the anointing then received in Confirmation acts as a consecration, a setting apart for mission (CCC 1294).


    Contact

    Resources

    Anita Hammond

    Pastoral Assistant

    anitahammond@rcdow.org.uk

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