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No, baptism and confirmation are not the same in the Christian faith. Baptism is a sacrament that symbolizes a person's initiation into the Christian faith, while confirmation is a ritual in which a baptized person publicly affirms their faith and receives the gifts of the Holy Spirit.

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Is confirmation the same as baptism?

No, confirmation is not the same as baptism. Baptism is a sacrament that initiates a person into the Christian faith, while confirmation is a ritual in which a baptized person publicly affirms their faith and receives the gifts of the Holy Spirit.


Why does the church teach everyone that baptism and confirmation is an important element of the faith journey for a christian?

With baptism we as christians are just identifying ourselves with christ but confirmation is a catholic invention same as: the hail mary, her ascension into heaven, venial and mortal sins and purgatory .


Why is baptism linked to confirmation?

The link between Baptism and confirmation is baptism is when your parents' choice to have you join the church. Confirmation is when you decide whether to carry on with your faith. So the link is that there both to do with choosing ! Hope this helped =)


In what church is baptism and confirmation received at the same time?

in the orthodox church


When did Confirmation become separate from Baptism?

Roman Catholic AnswerThey have always been separate sacraments, although they were initially given during the same ceremony. Normally, baptism is administered by a priest, and confirmation is administered by a Bishop. In the West, with the growing number of infant baptisms during the year, and the impossibility of the Bishop being at all of them, gradually Confirmation was moved to a later period, after instruction in the faith. So that very early on, in the first couple centuries, Baptism and Confirmation became separated. In the East, the three sacraments of Initiation, Baptism, Confirmation, and the Holy Eucharist, are still administered together to an infant.


What did Romans believe that Baptism was?

Roman religion did not have baptism. Only Christian Romans had baptism and their beliefs about it were the same as that of modern Christians.


What is the relation between confirmation and baptism?

with baptism the baby or childs promises are made by the parents and god parents, also the baby is welcomed into the family of God. Whereas with confirmation usually at age 12 in the UK, then the person makes the promises, and knows after classes discussing this, why they have opted to be confirmed..then they have their first communion


Can you be a godmother twice to the same child?

If you mean godmother as "sponsor" at Baptism and Confirmation then yes If you mean godmother at Baptism then no, since you are only baptized once and can only be godmother once to the same child.


What goes first baptism or confirmation?

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.


Is baptism one of the religions?

Christianity with its various forms, some forms of Hinduism, and some branches of Judaism, just to name a few. However, each of these groups do "baptisms" for different reasons and they do not believe or refer to baptism using the same words. Some of the earliest Christian forms of baptism have roots back in Jewish ceremonial washings with the Dead Sea Scroll community of Qumran.


Why do you think people being confirmed repeat the promises made for them at Baptism?

Baptism begins a process of entering the Church by grace. Confirmation perfects the same process by adding the Holy Spirit. The promises are repeated because they are the same.


What happened in first century Confirmation?

In the first years of the Church Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist were all celebrated in the same ceremony; this is how it is still done in Eastern Orthodoxy, Oriental Orthodoxy and Eastern Catholicism. As the Church grew, and presbyters rather than bishops were local leaders, the Church in the West began to separate Confirmation from Baptism. Confirmation was celebrated in each parish by the bishop as a sign of unity.