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BECOMING A MEMBER OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Each year St. John’s, and Catholic parishes throughout the
world, offer adults and children who wish to learn about the Catholic faith an
opportunity to get acquainted with our beliefs and practices through Inquiry
sessions. After the Inquiry sessions, adults and children who desire to
become members of the Church continue learning and prayerfully prepare to
receive the sacraments of the Church. These sacraments are Baptism (if the
adult is not already a baptized Christian), Confirmation and Eucharist.
We are now accepting Registrations.
Classes will start in September.
If interested contact St. John’s rectory during
office hours at 353-8969
BIENVENIDO A HACERSE Y SER MIEMBRO DE LA IGLESIA CATÓLICA
Cada año la Iglesia
católica ofrece a los adultos la oportunidad de aprender la doctrina, para
recibir la fe, hacerla crecer, y hacerse mejores miembros de esta Iglesia. Así
que quienes deseen volverse miembros o a quienes ya son por el bautismo y
quieren recibir los otros sacramentos de la Iniciación cristiana: ( Primera
comunión y confirmación), les invitamos a la preparación que se iniciará el
próximo 19 de septiembre. Se tendrá una sesión de una hora y media cada semana
hasta la pascua del próximo año. Pues pensamos también en aquellos que ya están
adultos y desean contraer matrimonio.
RCIA (RClC) For Children
Registration for the Children’s RCIA program is going on
right now with the CCD registration.
The RCIA process is offered to children who have reached the
age of 7 and older that have never been baptized or baptized in a different
Christian faith; and also to baptized Catholics who have not received Eucharist
and Confirmation.
If you are a parent or know of parents’ and children that may
be interested in this process, please call the Rectory Office at 353-8969 for
more information. You could be responsible for bringing God's graces and
Sacraments into their lives.
RCIA
The process for becoming a
Roman Catholic
The Rite of Christian
Initiation of Adults (RCIA) names the process by which interested
persons gradually become members of the catholic Church.
The R.C.I.A. is primarily a journey of faith:
- From the awareness of stirring of faith and
curiosity within one's heart,
- through all those stages of asking and
seeking,
- through beginning involvement with
Christian/Catholic people,
- through hearing the Gospel proclaimed and by
faithful reflection and prayer on this Word of God,
- through study and discussion about the
Catholic experience,
- through doubts and hesitations,
- through involvement in the works of charity
and justice with those already committed to the catholic way of
life,
- through discernment of God's call for them
as individuals,
- through the steps of commitment,
- through the sacraments of initiation
(baptism, confirmation, and eucharist)
- to a life of faith, love, and justice lived
in communion with catholics throughout the world.
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The Rite of Christian
Initiation of Adults (RCIA) names the process by which interested
persons gradually become members of the catholic Church.
The R.C.I.A. is primarily a journey of faith:
- From the awareness of stirring of faith and
curiosity within one's heart,
- through all those stages of asking and
seeking,
- through beginning involvement with
Christian/Catholic people,
- through hearing the Gospel proclaimed and by
faithful reflection and prayer on this Word of God,
- through study and discussion about the
Catholic experience,
- through doubts and hesitations,
- through involvement in the works of charity
and justice with those already committed to the catholic way of
life,
- through discernment of God's call for them
as individuals,
- through the steps of commitment,
- through the sacraments of initiation
(baptism, confirmation, and eucharist)
- to a life of faith, love, and justice lived
in communion with catholics throughout the world.
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- The R.C.I.A. as a rite, marks stages along
the path to full commitment in the Catholic Church; the R.C.I.A. as
a process, describes in broad terms what this gradual commitment
means.
- The R.C.I.A. as formation gradually looks
both to the inner transformation of the individual to God's call as
given week by week in the lectionary of Scripture readings at the
Sunday Eucharist and to the gradual transformation of the person to
an active member of the local church wherever he or she lives.
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- The Period of Inquiry (Also known as the
time of Evangelization or Pre-Catechumenate),
- Catechumenate,
- Period of Purification and Enlightenment/Scrutinies,
- The Paschal Triduum with the Sacraments of
Initiation
and
- Mystagogical Catechesis.
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Period of Inquiry has as its
purpose a time
to become acquainted with the catholic Church
and to hear the good news of salvation from Jesus Christ our Savior; it
is a time to look within at one's one life story and see connections to
or needs for the gospel story of good news.
During this period, the gospel of Jesus is
proclaimed, and inquirers look within their own story to make and mark
connections.
This reflective process becomes a continuing,
on-going method used by inquirer and member
alike.
This period lasts as
long as the person needs it to last,
from a few months to several years, if necessary. During this period,
some may decide that this is not the right time for them to consider
membership in the Catholic Church, either because of their own life
circumstances or because they feel some other Tradition is better for
them.
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Period of catechumenate embodies the first
stages of commitment leading to full membership.
For a person to enter this phase, s/he must already have come to faith
in Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior and sincerely desire to become
members of the Catholic Church.
During this phase, the catechumens now gather
with the Catholic community on Sundays for the first part of the mass,
during which, together, we hear the Scriptures, respond to them, and
reflect on the meaning of God's Word for us personally and as community
through the homily.
After the homily, catechumens are dismissed , and with their Catechist,
continue a process of reflection and application of the Scriptures to
their own lives.
During this period, the initial conversion is
deepened and appropriated; the person comes to know more and more deeply
the love of God in their own lives and in the midst of the church
community.
This period, too, lasts as long as the person needs it to last, from a
few months to several years, if necessary.
- For the unbaptized, this
phase must normally last 12 months.
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- The Period of Purification corresponds to
that time known in the Catholic Church as Lent,
the six-weeks of preparation for Easter become the days of prayerful
time for catechumens and candidates,
who are now known as the Elect, as they
prepare for the moment of welcome as full members and are
established as such by the Sacraments of Initiation.
This period is begun by the Rite
of election, usually celebrated at the Cathedral Church with
the Diocesan Bishop; by this rite they are accepted as candidates
for the Sacraments by the Bishop, representing the fact that this
decision is not theirs alone.
Normally this rite takes place on the first Sunday of Lent.
Throughout Lent, special prayers are
offered at the Sunday Eucharist for the catechumens and candidates;
they are called scrutinies; these prayers for strengthening in grace
and virtue and for purification from all past evil and from any
bonds which hinder them from experiencing the love of God.
Throughout this period, the Elect are invited to join with the whole
Church in a deeper practice of works of charity and in the practice
of fasting.
During this period, the common reflection
on the Scriptures continues; the readings of Lent were chosen with
the themes of continuing conversion in mind.
Toward the end of the period, the Church continues the custom of
"handing over" to the Elect the Creed (the summary of our
faith) and the Lord's Prayer (which represents its practice
of continuing prayer after the command of Jesus who taught us to
pray).
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- The Sacraments of Initiation are celebrated
at the Easter Vigil, an extended night-watch of prayer, singing and
hearing the Word of God.
- By the waters of baptism, a person passes
into the new life of grace and becomes a member of the Body of
Christ.
- Anointing with special holy oil called
chrism seals the initiation by the power of the Holy Spirit and
participation at the Table of the Lord in the eucharist marks full
membership in the church.
Even though students are on Easter-break,
those to be initiated and their Sponsors stay to take part in the
Holy Sacraments of Initiation.
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The Period of Mystagogy lasts from Easter
Sunday until the completion of the Easter season, fifty days later
on Pentecost Sunday and completes the initiation process.
Those who have just shared in the sacraments of initiation are now
called Neophytes and during this period of Easter joy they reflect
on what they have just gone through and look to the future as to how
they can now share in the mission of Christ who came to bring
salvation and life to the whole world.
This period of time reminds the whole church that life in Christ
constantly calls us to grow and to look for new ways to live the
life of grace, personally and together.
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- By means of the processes described in
the document, R.C.I.A., interested non-baptized persons become
Catechumens, and Catechumens become full members of the Catholic
Church by means of baptism, confirmation, and eucharist, which
are referred to as the Sacraments of Initiation.
- "However, when one speaks of a
baptized person from a Protestant tradition, for example, who is
preparing for reception into full communion in the Roman
tradition, one is speaking of a different matter.
A baptized person should not be led automatically through the
full catechumenal process or be called a catechumen.
Instead, we call him or her a candidate." By this we mean
that this person is a candidate for the catholic Sacrament of
Confirmation and a candidate preparing to receive Holy Communion
in the Catholic Church and thus become a full member of the
Catholic Church, the Catholic Communion.
- "Frequently candidates for full
communion in the Catholic church find certain elements of the
catechumenate process helpful in their preparation.
For example, the focus on continuing conversion is appropriate
for any Christian, especially at a time of transition.
An understanding of Catholic beliefs, the practice of Catholic
observances in the church year over an appropriate period of
time and the experience of Catholic community are all necessary
for an informed commitment that will last." The differences
in the process must be tailed by the candidate in conjunction
with the RCIA Director and the Church-provided Sponsor.
- "Since candidates are already
baptized, the liturgical rites that mark the steps of the
formation process are different from those of catechumens.
there are rites of welcoming by the parish community and
recognition by the bishop, a celebration of the call to
continuing conversion and a penitential rite.
Reception into full communion in the Catholic church takes place
with a profession of faith, confirmation and eucharist." By
penitential rite we mean that the person examines his or her own
life with some scrutiny to things that s/he has done right and
things that s/he knows has been wrongfully done; these latter
things need to be repented of.
Sometimes the Sacrament of Reconciliation is the appropriate
means for this person to mark the movement from sin to grace,
from old life to new life before s/he enters into full
communion.
Sometimes it is a less formal act of repentance.
- The R.C.I.A., sometimes generically
called the Catechumenate, is a responsibility of the whole
Church; this responsibility takes particular shape mainly in
parishes, the normal locus of catholic community life; yet
there are some other kinds of particular communities with the
Catholic Church which serve as adjuncts to parish and service
special needs such as this Catholic University community.
In view of this commitment and obligation of the Church, we
provide an outreach person for each person who presents
himself or herself as a "seeker"; these
church-provided Sponsor will serve as spiritual companions as
they seek to discover God's call.
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- "The Rite of Christian Initiation
is not a program.
- It is the church's way of ministering
sensitively to those who seek membership.
For that reason some people will need more time than others to
prepare for the lifetime commitment that comes with membership
in the Catholic Church.
The usual length of preparation is from one to two years.
For those already baptized and who seek full communion in the
Catholic church, the time may also vary.
- It seems reasonable that catechumens or
candidates experience the yearly calendar of Catholic practice
at least one time around in order to make an informed decision.
- The process of spiritual renewal and
catechesis should not be hasty, especially for those not
accustomed to the fasts and feasts and Sundays and seasons the
way Catholics observe them.
- One of the best time for the sacraments
of initiation or the Rite of reception into full communion is
the Easter Vigil. Lent prepare catechumens, candidates and the
whole community for baptism,, confirmation and eucharist. The
celebration of the Easter Vigil dramatically points to the
wellspring of the church's life:
the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ."
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Any person who is
seriously thinking about become a catholic-christian or who would
simply like more information can contact the Religious Education
Office at (512) 353-8969 or the Parish Office at (512) 353-5065. You
may also send e-mail to stjohn@sanmarcos.net.
NOTE: The content of this page was
copied with permission from that of the University of Dayton Campus
Ministry page on the Process
for becoming a Roman Catholic
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