Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,190
I think an issue is the timing of Confirmation. Our church has it scheduled for the spring of freshman year, right in the middle of teen angst. CCD is never fun, I didn't like going as a child, and the only time my kids have liked it was after Confirmation, when they volunteered as teachers. The fact that it's either right after school or early Sunday mornings doesn't help. I think many don't appreciate the sacraments until they are adults, which is why Catholic parents push their children through this particular one. After 8 years of CCD, this is the last year. I have friends who converted to Catholicism as adults, and it's a lot of work.
Yeah, our parish just moved Confirmation from 8th to 9th grade and it is causing a lo of complaints among kids and therefore parents. They also changed it so that kids who attend the parish school still have to attend CCD for two years in preparation for Confirmation, which has gone over like a lead balloon. The kids have religion class 5 days a week and attend mass twice a week already, but now they have to make time for the Confirmation classes as well (often at the expense of sports or other activities, since the classes are on a Tuesday night). Fortunately my older DD was confirmed right before the change. We'll see what happens when younger DD gets there. Older DD decided, at 12, that she wanted to join the Church and get baptized in order to be confirmed with her class. Younger DD has, so far, just followed older DD's lead so I'm not sure where she'll stand on Confirmation when the time comes.
My mom forced me to attend church through Confirmation. It was a celebration not because it was something I chose but because it was the milestone that "freed" me from CCD and going to church every week, and it was 20 years before I set foot in a church again other than for weddings, funerals, and baptisms. I've taken a much more laid-back approach with my kids; they attend Catholic school (for academic reasons) but their engagement with their faith beyond that is their own to shape.