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At First Communion the child receives Christ in the Blessed Sacrament for the very first time in his/her life(hence "FIRST"). At Confirmation, the young adult receives the Seal of the Holy Spirit.
Baptism and communion come first.
In the Catholic Church, the next is traditionally Confirmation.
You take a saints name for your Confirmation, not your First Communion. See the related question below.
Henry Garrett Newland has written: 'Confirmation and first communion' -- subject(s): Doctrines, Confirmation, Catechumens, Instruction and study, First communion, Church of England
No. Although at the service the parents usually go up to Communion with the First Communicant. You only need a sponsor for Confirmation.
there are many types of sacraments, the first is baptism, then comes contrition, then Eucharist which is your first communion, there's confirmation, marriage, holy orders and i believe that is all, not sure! hope it helped!
The sacrament of confirmation is when a young member of the church who has received his/her baptism, first reconciliation, and first communion decides to become an adult within the church.
A matter of minutes if you are confirmed as a roman Catholic. Eastern rite does confirmation either at birth, or after your first communion. I do not know when you receive communion in the eastern rite though.
Baptism, Communion, & Confirmation.
The Eucharistic prayer, which included the Consecration, comes before Communion.
It depends on when your diocese has chosen to celebrate the sacrament of Confirmation. In the United States, Confirmation can be celebrated anywhere between the age of reason (7 yrs) and age 16. So, if your diocese celebrates Confirmation in the second or third grade, then it will come before First Communion. But, if your diocese celebrates Confirmation in the eighth grade, then it would come after First Communion.