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Roman Catholic AnswerWithin the Roman Catholic Church, the age for confirmation varies widely depending upon two things. The first thing would be your Rite. The Latin Rite usually celebrates Confirmation between the ages of 12 go 16, although it may be younger, the second thing that it is dependent upon is your Bishop, he is the one who sets the age for confirmation. In the Eastern Rites, it varies, some administer Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Communion to infants a week old. In all cases of adults, the three are usually administered together.
Baptism & Confirmation.
Confirmation usually takes place during a Mass celebrated by the Bishop. It depends entirely on your diocese, in some dioceses the bishop will confirm at one Church in each deanery, in other dioceses, he will make a special trip to each parish in his diocese each year of two and confirm everyone when he gets there. In all other Rites of the Church (outside of the Latin Rite) confirmation takes place immediately after Baptism, so confirmation is administered by the priest who is baptizing the baby.
Roman Catholic AnswerThere are three sacraments of Initiation into the Church, they would be Baptism, Confirmation, and the Eucharist. For an adult coming into the Church, or an infant in the Eastern Rites, the culmination is the Eucharist, all three are administered together in these two instances with the Eucharist being the Culmination. In the Latin Rite, confirmation would be the Culmination as you would receive it last.
Two
Identify two types of involuntary actions and two types of voluntary actions
Confirmation is a scrament that is normally taken as a young adult. Baptism, reconciliation, and first communion are all lead to a catholic by parents of a guardian. Confirmation is that person deciding whether or not they want to continue the catholic teachings of the church. Durning this sacrament the priest or bishop puts a cross of anointing oil on your forehead and blesses you with your chosen Saint name.
can you list two actions of the mineralocoidicoid
confirmation bias
Baptism and confirmation have always been two separate sacraments. Christ established them with two different purposes. When the sacraments are received by people can vary though based on several circumstances. If an unbaptized person is an adult convert to Catholicism - they'll receive baptism and confirmationat the same time. In some Eastern Rite Catholic Churches infants receive the sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation at the same time. While in Roman/Latin Rite Catholic churches infants are baptized and the sacrament of Confirmation is administered later, when the child is older.
The Essential Glen Campbell Volume Two was created in 1995.
Screening and confirmation.