Anonymous wrote:OP doesn't say what faith they are, but in a Catholic baptism, there is a blessing of each parent. The sacrament of baptism is not only about the child. In an infant baptism the role of the parents is very important, because they are giving assurance that they will raise the child being baptised in the Catholic faith and upon Catholic values. The child's parents are apart of the sacrament, whether it is one or two. Yes, a single parent would be the only one presenting the child for baptism, but a married couple would present the infant for baptism together. It is also a part of the vow taken in a Catholic marriage, so to just not show up for it is a big deal. I actually think a priest who knew Dad skipped out for a soccer game would tell the family to reschedule and rethink their commitment. It's not just a ceremony; it's a sacrament.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like other posters feel it too...OP what aren't you telling us?
...your marriage is on the rocks?
...your husband comes from a culture that prioritizes sports / boys over all else?
...your husband finds excuses not to spend time with the family?
...your husband is having an affair with another soccer parent?
...your husband hates your family?
...why did you intentionally have kids with such a large age gap?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I actually think a priest who knew Dad skipped out for a soccer game would tell the family to reschedule and rethink their commitment. It's not just a ceremony; it's a sacrament.
Did OP state which was scheduled first, the soccer game or the baptism?
It literally doesn't matter. The dad isn't the coach, he doesn't need to be there. Churches only baptize certain Sundays a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I actually think a priest who knew Dad skipped out for a soccer game would tell the family to reschedule and rethink their commitment. It's not just a ceremony; it's a sacrament.
Did OP state which was scheduled first, the soccer game or the baptism?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I actually think a priest who knew Dad skipped out for a soccer game would tell the family to reschedule and rethink their commitment. It's not just a ceremony; it's a sacrament.
Did OP state which was scheduled first, the soccer game or the baptism?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I actually think a priest who knew Dad skipped out for a soccer game would tell the family to reschedule and rethink their commitment. It's not just a ceremony; it's a sacrament.
Did OP state which was scheduled first, the soccer game or the baptism?
Anonymous wrote: I actually think a priest who knew Dad skipped out for a soccer game would tell the family to reschedule and rethink their commitment. It's not just a ceremony; it's a sacrament.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since he’s 15, your son can and should go with another family to the tournament. Your DH is absolutely wrong here. He can miss one day.
This. Absolutely this. It is insane that your husband is skipping a baptism to chauffeur a teen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't the church require the parents to present the child? How is that going to work?
Surely the church has baptized children of single parents before.
So now OP is a is single parent?