Roman Catholic AnswerOf course, if the child is baptized, it is required that he be raised in the Catholic faith. If a child is not baptized, there must be reasonable assurance that he will be raised in the faith, to be baptized.
He was baptized as a Catholic, raised as a Catholic, and lived his entire life until he died as a Catholic.
He was baptized and raised a Roman Catholic. Later, he turned to old Germanic paganism.
A person can only be baptized once so baptizing in both churches would be redundant. Generally, when a non-Catholic marries a Catholic they are required to affirm that any children must be raised as Catholics before the Church will allow them to marry. Therefore, if they were married in a Catholic church the children should be baptized in a Catholic church. If the parents were not married in a Catholic church, then they have another problem. They need to regularize their marriage to be in full communion with the Catholic Church. They must arrange to have their marriage blessed by the Catholic Church.
No, because a Godparent's purpose is to help assure that the child is raised as a Catholic. If the Godparent is not a Catholic there is no assurance that this responsibility will be complied with by the non-Catholic person.
Mother Teresa was born and raised Catholic.
I do not think so, she said, "I was raised Catholic, baptized a Methodist, and almost married a Muslim."
Yes, a child could be baptized Catholic if the parents were Anglican and if the parents agreed to raise the child Catholic. This would be a very unique circumstance because most parents chose to have their children baptized and raised in their own religion. A unique circumstance would be if the Anglican parents were consconverting to Catholicism but had not finished their RCIA instructions but wanted baby baptized Catholic.
No, Ronald Reagan was raised with the Disciples of Christ Church.
I believe that Pettitte was baptized & raised a Catholic, but now might belong to some Evangelical storefront "church".
The answer is generally no. The Church needs to be assured that the child will be raised as a Catholic. There may be certain circumstances that it could be allowed but it is best to discuss the situation with a priest.
Dean Martin was in fact Catholic, being raised in the Roman Catholic Church from birth. He made his First Holy Communion in 1927 and his Confirmation in 1928 at St. Anthony's Church.