Baptism is to have your soul clean from sin that Adam and Eve
inflicted upon us. The Eucharist is to receive Christ in ones heart and physically unites themselves with Christ when he is received and it reminds us how he gave everything that he could give to us his life. Confirmation is also a seal given by the holy spirit in this case one is taking ownership of his/her beliefs completing initiation and being able to one day ascend into heaven.
No. It is the sacrament where sins are confessed and forgiven.
The three sacraments of initiation are Baptism, Confirmation and the Holy Eucharist.
The time for celebrating the Sacraments of Initiation is Easter.
A person called to the sacraments of initiation are called candidates.
They are called Sacraments of Initiation as the rest or our Christian lives depend on them. The Sacraments of Initiation are Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist.
Most adults in the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA) celebrate the Sacraments of Initiation (Baptism, Confirmation, and Eucharist) at the Easter Vigil Mass on Holy Saturday night.
Baptism, Confirmation & the Holy Eucharist
Furgi
Not clear after initiation of what?
Initiation into an organized religion (denominational/non-denominationly)
The Celebration of the Sacraments of Initiation is presented to the elect in the Rite of Christian Initiation.
Catholic AnswerThe Sacraments of Initiation, baptism, confirmation, and Holy Eucharist, are normally received all at once except in the case of infants in the Western Church. In the Eastern Church, these sacraments are all received by an infant, at the same time: the priest confirms the infant immediately after Baptism, and then gives Holy Communion. In the Western Church, the three sacraments are still received together by adults coming into the Church at the Easter Vigil. Those who are not baptized, are baptized, then confirmed, then, later in the Mass, receive their first Holy Communion. Is in only in the case of infants in the Western Church where the sacraments of initiation have been set apart and are usually given Baptism, First Communion, Confirmation, - in that order.