Donate SIGN UP

Holy Communion

Avatar Image
Kgrayz | 21:52 Mon 11th Oct 2010 | Religion & Spirituality
19 Answers
Hello, do you have to be baptised to be able to make your holy communion??
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 19 of 19rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Kgrayz. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
Question Author
Ok thank you. Both my children have been baptised and my son has just started classes to prepare for his Holy Communion, they both attend a catholic school, just some of the children in the class have not been baptised but attend the same catholic school and are in the Holy Communion classes.?.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
yes.
err.. what does receive the body of christ mean?
yes, to eradicate 'original sin' (naughty Eve tempting dumbo Adam with an apple). You need to show your Bap Cert for a catholic church wedding.
-- answer removed --
Tony.. what does receive the body of christ mean?
In the Church of England not only did you have to be baptised, but also confirmed before you were admitted to Holy Communion, unlike the RC Church which admits unconfirmed children. I don't know whether that still applies in the C of E; it seems anything goes these days
The catholic church is quite happy to indoctrinate anybody, mother theresa baptised corpses allegedly
When you receive the body of Christ do you have to swallow?
why on earth would you make this decision for your children? Surely religion is a personal choice.......
apparently not, It seems had the devil excorcised without my knowing, that explains a lot.
Mib, that was worrying me too, I'm beginning to see where some of the catholic priests are cumming from.
Looks like you've found a work around the censorbot jomifl. You'd think the phrase 'catholic priests' alone would have put it on the alert.
There is no scriptural basis for such a tradition.
Pugwash, that isn't true. Although probably emanating from earlier traditions, that of the Christian church derives from the Last Supper when Jesus reputedly offered his disciples bread (his body) and wine (his blood) and told them to do this in remembrance of him. I've always suspected he meant them to get together for a meal occasionally, but I don't suppose anything that simple works for the church.

1 to 19 of 19rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Holy Communion

Answer Question >>