Child’s faith goes to court
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The Superior Court of Pennsylvania recently ruled in a custody battle
involving a divorced couple and their daughter. In short, the mother
-- who was raised Roman Catholic and attended an Assemblies of God
church while married -- married a Russian Orthodox man and wanted to
have her daughter (who attended the father’s Assemblies of God church
three weekends a month and the mother’s church the other weekend)
baptized in the Russian Orthodox Church. The father opposed the
baptism, saying the daughter shouldn’t have to be baptized until
she’s old enough to decide for herself.
A judge in the Court of Common Pleas in Mercer County, Pa., ruled
last year that the daughter should be allowed to decide which church
to be baptized into when she turns 13. The Superior Court overturned
that decision, saying that confusion of religion did not constitute
enough risk to delay the daughter’s baptism to the age of 13.
Disregarding the idiosyncrasies of what baptism symbolizes in each
denomination, when should a child be allowed to make decisions
regarding what church or religious group they attend or are baptized
in?
Battles have been waged over making similar decisions for, and
such initiation into, religious groups. This is true not only in
families like the one in Pennsylvania, which has unfortunate
parallels locally, but for historical religious communities. Various
groups with roots in 16th century Europe, and comprehensively known
as “Anabaptists,” have refused to allow their children to be baptized
and reinstituted the baptism of believers. When one is able to truly
“believe” has always been debated, even among those of us who are
confident that true belief is a lifelong journey.
When baptism is viewed as “the sacrament by which God adopts us as
his children and makes us members of Christ’s Body, the Church, and
inheritors of the kingdom of God,” (Book of Common Prayer, 858),
belief begins not with the believer but with God. For those of us who
so believe, responsible persons initiate others into faith
communities and provide opportunities for them to claim those
decisions for themselves later in their lives.
In the Episcopal Church, people express a mature commitment to
Christ and affirm decisions made for them at their baptism when they
receive the sacrament of Confirmation.
When people should be confirmed is the issue on which
Episcopalians differ. American Anglicans have never held an “age of
reason” to be 8 to 9 years old, as I was taught in my Roman Catholic
high school, but we used to regularly and normally confirm when
children were 12 or 13. (I was confirmed with my dad when I was 11.)
After studying adolescent development, many of us now think that 15
or 16 is more age-appropriate.
In this Parish Church, when desire is expressed for those who are
younger than 15 to receive the laying on of hands by a bishop in
Confirmation, I ask the candidate to write a short letter to me about
what their Baptismal Covenant means to them and why they want to
confirm it; “because Dad and/or Mom want me to” is the only surely
incorrect answer.
Clearly, we grow and mature differently, and individuals should be
encouraged to make important decisions for themselves at times in
their lives that are necessarily right for them.
For Episcopalians/Anglicans, this concern is most often raised as
we question at what age people should receive the outward and visible
signs of the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving in the Holy
Eucharist, the Holy Communion, the Body and Blood of Christ given to
his people and received by faith. When adults protest, “But ‘they’
don’t understand what it is!” my “And what do you understand it to
be?” usually stops the debate.
Once, when someone challenged my giving the sacrament to very
young children, my then 3-or 4-year-old son was standing beside me
and I risked asking him, “Don, what does it mean to you when I put
the bread from the altar into your hand?”
He responded simply, “Jesus!”
All who heard this were astonished and delighted.
(THE VERY REV’D CANON)
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All
Angels Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Oh, how unfortunate! This poor girl, and the spectacle of the body
of Christ being used as a weapon between two families. Forgive us,
Lord! It seems odd to me that the mother was OK with the girl being
raised in the Assemblies church for so many years while she was
married, and only decides it is a bad influence after her divorce.
Contrary to some of the claims, these are not “contradictory”
religions. Their foundations are identical. It is not as if she were
converting to Islam or Buddhism, which have totally different views
of Jesus and his purposes on Earth.
I was baptized as an infant in the Episcopal Church because it
made my grandparents feel better. I had nothing to do with the
choice. I chose to be baptized again at age 17 because I made a
conscious decision about the faith I wanted to follow.
According to this father’s beliefs, he could let his daughter be
baptized in the Orthodox faith and have no fear because baptism is
only symbolic and has no efficacious value. She could (and will,
regardless of what any of them decide) later make her own decision.
However, her mother is afraid if the daughter is not baptized before
she dies, it will affect her eternal destiny.
My uncle asked me years ago if he should succumb to the family
pressure to have his daughters baptized. I told him that as far as I
could see, the Bible didn’t give baptism any miraculous power to save
people, and that the decision was best left to his daughters when
they were capable of making the decision themselves.
Today, I am wearing a wedding ring symbolizing the commitment I
made to my wife and our Lord. I lost my original ring. That ring held
no mystical powers, so I replaced it. If someone else takes my ring
and puts it on their finger, it does not mean that they are married
to me or anyone else.
The power is not in the ring, but in the commitment made. The ring
is just a symbolic reminder of that decision. Baptism works the same
way. It is merely a symbol of the commitment we make to follow Jesus.
Whether they like it or not, the girl will make her own choice of
faith and practice someday. It may be none of the three expressions
of Christianity her family is involved in. The best they can do is
raise her faithfully according to the teachings of Scripture.
To try to put a “wedding ring” on her finger before she decides
who she wants to “marry” may condition her for rebellion more than
compliance. They should have faith in the promise of Scripture that
says, “Train up a child in the path they should go, even when they
are old they will not depart from it.”
SENIOR ASSOCIATE
PASTOR RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
When does a child or youngster attain sufficient intelligence and
maturity to choose a religious faith? As in so many other areas of
development and aptitude, there can be no universally applicable,
one-age-fits-all answer.
Yes, a state can rule that a teen, one day before his 16th
birthday, is not qualified to receive a driver’s license, but that
one day later, he is sufficiently responsible to be entrusted with
one. So it is with voting rights, military service, marriage and
alcohol consumption. The Supreme Court this week rejected the death
penalty for juveniles. Religious insight, however, is much more
subjective.
A corollary issue has just surfaced, featuring a child-abuse
scandal in the Roman Catholic Church. No, not the scandal that has
been playing out over recent years, but a historical one.
During World War II, many Jewish children were placed by their
parents in European convents, monasteries and other Catholic
institutions to save them from death at the hands of the Nazis. Many
of these youngsters were baptized. If relatives found them after the
war, they were often told that the children could not be turned over
to them, as they were now Catholic.
In 1946, according to a newly discovered directive, the Vatican
instructed French authorities on how to respond to Jewish officials
who came to reclaim Jewish children.
“Children who have been baptized must not be entrusted to
institutions that would not be in a position to guarantee their
Christian upbringing,” the directive said.
It is further ordered to not allow Jewish children who had been
baptized Catholic to go home to their own parents.
“If the children have been turned over by their parents, and if
the parents reclaim them now, providing that the children have not
received baptism, they can be given back,” said the directive.
Even Jewish orphans who had not been baptized were not to be
turned over automatically to Jewish authorities.
“For children who no longer have their parents, given the fact
that the church has responsibility for them, it is not acceptable for
them to be abandoned by the church or entrusted to any persons who
have no rights over them, at least until they are in a position to
choose themselves,” the document said. “This, obviously, is for
children who would not have been baptized.”
“At least until they are in a position to choose themselves ... “
When would that be? We can only lament that such tugs of war over a
child’s soul between people of different faiths -- whether they be
Churchmen or spouses -- are often especially heart-rending, if not
tragic. Alas, the pain we so often cause in the name of religion!
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
It’s a shame that the three parents involved -- father, mother and
stepfather -- could not resolve the matter of their child’s religious
affiliation among themselves, with the happiness and contentment of
the child being the most important concern.
It’s a difficult responsibility for parents to decide the degree
to which they will guide, mold or coerce their child into
participating in their chosen faith. Bringing these matters into
court in the context of custody proceedings is less than ideal, and
it’s likely the parents will have to answer for it when the child is
older.
My children are just now becoming adults, at ages 21 and 22. They
are involved in the critical process of following their spiritual
interests and making their own commitments. Their father and I began
our family agreeing that our religious choices and propensities need
not be our children’s, and that the most important point was to share
our values while letting our kids know they were completely capable
of finding their own way.
For this decision, we too have had to answer: “Why did other
children go to church and we didn’t?” etc.
They were told that in Zen, we don’t go to church, but we
meditate, sometimes by ourselves and often with others, and did they
want to do that? Their answers were sometimes mixed, but often were,
“No, not now. I’d rather (fill in the blank).” Nevertheless, our
children were raised in a Zen Buddhist household and community, and I
believe they have been deeply affected by it.
In Zen, there is not an infant baptism tradition, but there is a
Blessing Ceremony within, during which the child is welcomed into the
world and embraced in an atmosphere of love and caring. The ceremony
involves sprinkling water and offering incense in acknowledgment of
the great mystery, but equally important is the articulation of the
parents to accept the responsibility to care for the child as a
sacred being, and vowing to do their best.
In Zen, there is also a Refuge Taking ceremony, through which a
person formally becomes a Buddhist by taking the Buddhist precepts
(ethical principles), but we have not emphasized this at our center.
Our emphasis has been on the actual practice of Zen meditation and
its application in our daily lives.
When Zen practitioners learn the upaya, the skillful means of Zen,
they are able to see for themselves what the Buddha realized when he
saw the morning star while meditating under the Bodhi tree. They then
have the skills to be awake and appreciate any moment of life, no
matter whether we see the moment as happy or sad, ugly or beautiful.
This gradual maturing is called the “fiery baptism,” without which
Zen is only words.
Although some Zen Centers teach zazen, or Zen meditation, to
children, our youngest practitioners thus far have been teenagers.
This coming year, we will be exploring how to best include younger
children as well as families in the Zen meditative tradition.
In response to this question about whether the courts should allow
a mother to baptize her child against the father’s wishes, I believe
much can and should be done so that a situation doesn’t come to this
point, and the parents should set aside their religious preferences
for the happiness and contentment of the child. That, in itself,
would be a good baptism.
REV. CAROL AGUILAR
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
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