Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I were both raised Catholic (attended Mass every Sunday; the works). Our child is baptized Catholic, and we have taken her to Christmas and Easter masses a few times. She is still little - only 3 - but DH and I are starting to think about how much we want to integrate church life into our life. We'd like her to have the cultural and family background of Catholicism, and be grounded in the basic faith, but I don't think we are ready for the crucifixion discussion or any of the other rather gruesome aspects.
Anyone have any suggestions about ways to carefully raise a Catholic child, without necessarily going the Sunday School route?
Thank you
Oh lord. I think you are a troll because if you were raised catholic you would know no one is going to whip out a bloody crucifix and shove it in a three year olds face. You'd also know to reach holy communion "sunday school" (which a catholic would likely call CCD, catechism or if you want to be fancy confraternity of christian doctrine) is required unless they are enrolled in parochial.
I'm a cradle catholic and honestly until I saw The Passion as an adult I never encountered any "rather gruesome aspects".
If this is a serious question you may want to try being an Episcopalian.
Anonymous wrote:I attended Catholic school from K-8 and don't recall any gruesome crucifixion stories or lessons. You learn about what happened and why in the context of Easter, similar to the readings or homily during Mass around this time of year but in a way that younger kids will understand. If you are truly concerned, why not contact your parish CCD teacher to find out how they teach these things to young kids? If you want your child be "Catholic", as in, having all of the sacraments, you can't avoid going either the CCD route or Catholic school. If you simply want your child to have an understanding of the Catholic faith and traditions, then just take her to Mass regularly and talk about it at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught CCD for years, from kindergarten up to 6th grade. The gruesome stuff is tastefully dealt with, at least in the Arlington Diocese curriculum. Perhaps at the Confirmation level they get more into it, but overall, there is not a focus on the gory details, just the themes.
Gee, that's nice to know -- personally I think it would be nice to avoid gruesome stuff altogether, especially when teaching morals to children
Anonymous wrote:I have taught CCD for years, from kindergarten up to 6th grade. The gruesome stuff is tastefully dealt with, at least in the Arlington Diocese curriculum. Perhaps at the Confirmation level they get more into it, but overall, there is not a focus on the gory details, just the themes.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I were both raised Catholic (attended Mass every Sunday; the works). Our child is baptized Catholic, and we have taken her to Christmas and Easter masses a few times. She is still little - only 3 - but DH and I are starting to think about how much we want to integrate church life into our life. We'd like her to have the cultural and family background of Catholicism, and be grounded in the basic faith, but I don't think we are ready for the crucifixion discussion or any of the other rather gruesome aspects.
Anyone have any suggestions about ways to carefully raise a Catholic child, without necessarily going the Sunday School route?
Thank you
Anonymous wrote:^ I mention the above about CCD because you say you don't want to go the Sunday School route. But you HAVE to.