CONFIRMATION
Q. What is Confirmation?
A. Confirmation is the rite in which we express a mature commitment to
Christ, and receive strength from the Holy Spirit through prayer and
the laying on of hands by a bishop.
Q. What is required of those to be confirmed?
A. It is required of those to be confirmed that they have been
baptized, are sufficiently instructed in the Christian Faith, are penitent for
their sins, and are ready to affirm their confession of Jesus Christ as
Savior and Lord.
(From An Outline of the Faith, commonly called the Catechism, p. 860,
Book of Common Prayer 1979)
"The Sacramental Life & Faith Formation" diocesan guidelines were released Easter 2005 from the Bishop's Task Force on Confirmation.
Curricular Resources: AN OVERVIEW OF CONFIRMATION RESOURCES
Copies of many of these materials can be borrowed from the Diocesan
Resource Center, as well as other ideas and resources for Youth
Confirmation programs. Questions to keep in mind when developing a Confirmation
program:
- Are the participant's active in the congregation, and are they
personally ready to make a mature affirmation of their Baptismal Vows?
- Are the following elements part of our holistic program?
- Worship & prayer
- Service & outreach
- Fun & fellowship
- Spirituality - can each individual write a spiritual autobiography?
- Participation in the life of the worshipping community - youth group,
usher, choir, acolyte, Vestry, Outreach, assist with Church School,
etc.
- Does the confirmand have a mentor or adult spiritual guide (not their
parent) who is an active member of the parish for whom they can discuss
their questions, hopes and fears about their faith?
- Is there a way for the newly confirmed to enter into a new role as an
adult member of the parish community? (Hopefully, confirmation is not
seen as "graduation" from religious education!)
Affirming Faith: A Congregation's Guide to Confirmation
(United Church of Christ; United Church Press, 1996)
Ages: 12-16 years
Goals: Faith formation - to aid persons in affirming and renewing
faith; "connecting with the congregation through mentoring, witness, service
projects, field trips, retreats, liturgical resources
Foundation: UCC Statement of Faith
Time frame: 90-minute sessions - 25 sessions
Claim the Name (United Methodist Church; Cokesbury, 2000)
Age; 6th - 8th Grade
Goal: For youth to claim the name Christian.
- Accept the salvation god offers them in Christ
- To know how to live as Christians in our materialistic and
individualistic culture
- To be able to responds to the pressures and realities of life as
Christ's disciples as they continue to go on to Christ's perfection
Understanding of Confirmation: "To make firm or solid that which has
gone before or was done before." Emphasis has been shifted from polity to
faith; from membership to discipleship. We confirm what God has already
done in baptism; it is an act of the Holy Spirit and a means of grace.
Foundation: We help youth make a faith commitment by providing youth
with stories of persons of faith who stood out against the culture of
their time; we are honest about being in relationship with God - not
because of parents or peers; it is a journey with Christ
Time frame: 6-15 weeks
Confirmed: Anointed & Sealed (Roman Catholic; Living the Good News, 1997)
Ages: 7-17 years
Goal: To have candidates take into their minds and hearts theological
concepts and important church teachings on the sacraments that will be
manifest in their attitudes and behaviors.
Understanding of Confirmation: Confirmation is about sealing the
transformation through the Holy Spirit received at baptism. The Rite of
Confirmation presumes the candidate was baptized as an infant and raised
within the Christian household of faith. Preparation for Confirmation is
not considered a time to review a summary of all Christian teaching.
Foundation: Based on the Rite of Confirmation (Roman Catholic)
- In Confirmation we receive the gift of the Holy Spirit
- To help us be more like Christ in the world: ministries in the
church, work for the transformation of society, openness to the Spirit
- Confirmation is a celebration of the whole parish
Time frame: Confirmation prep is two years
Diocese of Albany: Diocesan Confirmation Workbook (Episcopal; Episcopal Diocese of Albany, 2002)
Ages: 16 years
Goal: To undergird people's understanding of the Christian Faith and
help them commit/recommit their lives to Jesus Christ.
Understanding of Confirmation: Commissioning of adults to Baptismal
Ministry; it is a vital sacrament of Apostolic Formation.
Foundation: Provides the intellectual content for a leadership team in
each parish to assist students in developing the faith and commitment
which fills out the content of the course; includes sponsor/mentor,
retreats, service and mission, and participation in diocesan educational
programs such as Cursillo, Alpha, Disciple, Happening.
Time frame: 9 months - two years
The Great Adventure: Exploring Christian Faith with Young People
(Anglican Church of Canada; Anglican Book Centre, 1997)
Ages: 10-15 years
Goals: Help students examine Christian beliefs at their stage of faith
development
Understanding of Confirmation:
- Baptism conveys full membership in the church.
- Confirmation is an important sacramental rite by which young people
reaffirm for themselves the baptismal promises made on their behalf in
infancy, and make a commitment to appropriate adult ministry in the
church and in everyday life.
- Everyone is a learner - children, adolescents, adults. Christian
education is life-long.
- There are many different learning styles.
Foundation: The Book of Alternative Services and using literature to
explore the Christian faith (such as the works of CS Lewis)
Time Frame: 6-12 weeks of 90 minutes each
Grow in Grace: A Confirmation Workbook
(Episcopal; Morehouse Publishing, 1979, 1989) Ages: Grades 5-8
Understanding of Confirmation: Confirmation is a "joyful expression of
a growing desire to know and serve Christ in and through the church
Foundation: Theological and liturgical stance of the Episcopal Church;
follows the Catechism
Time frame: 10 sessions
Head to Heart (Independent; Faith Inkubators, 2001)
Ages: 12-15 year olds
Goal: A holistic, relational, arts-based small group ministry concept blurring the lines between Christian education and pastoral care while growing intentional, surrogate, adoptive, intergenerational "Faith Families" in the body of Christ.
Understanding of Confirmation: "Head to Heart Confirmation Ministry" strives to grow junior high small groups into senior high small groups and bond them as living cells into the body of Christ.
Time frame: 16 set series - 32 weeks
I Will, With God's Help
(Episcopal; Living the Good News, 2000) Goal: Encourages youth and adults to enter into a uniquely Episcopal -
yet profoundly Christian - faith journey.
Understanding of Confirmation: Confirmation is a time to acknowledge
that we are baptized into union with Christ by making a public statement;
through the bishop's participation in the rite, Confirmands are
physically connected to the diocese, the Episcopal Church and the Anglican
Communion; it is a commissioning for ministry; the renewal of one's
baptismal covenant - a public, voluntary reaffirmation of Christian identity.
Foundation: Built on the Baptismal Covenant from the Book of Common
Prayer, includes reading the Gospel of Luke
Time frame: 6-12 weeks
Journey to Adulthood
(Episcopal; LeaderResources, 2002) Ages: 6th grade - 12th grade (11-18 years) - Confirmation to take place
around age 16 years
Goal: A program of spiritual formation for young people that provides a
liturgical frame for their experience in our modern culture, celebrates
their individuality and their creative potential, and instructs them in
skills needed for successful adult participation in church and society.
Following the imperatives of the Baptismal Covenant, it enables young
people to discover and experience the love of God in three phases. It
seeks to integrate four aspects of being human (self, society,
sexuality, spirituality) into a harmonious whole.
Understanding of Confirmation: Mature re-affirmation of baptismal vows
(this is not a Confirmation curriculum but a formational program which
supports delaying Confirmation until age 15 or 16). Confirmation
becomes a mature decision made by spiritually-equipped young people and
places it in its proper context, not as a rite of passage or exit ritual,
but a chance for the individual youth to confirm that which was said for
them and to them at their Baptism. It is their chance to stand before
the community of faith and make a public declaration of their
understanding of their place in the journey of faith and their desire and
willingness to continue along the journey with us, all together, in the Body
of Christ.
Foundation: Manhood and womanhood are gifts from God. Adulthood must be
earned. Emphasis placed on celebration and responsibility, on what we
have been freely given and what we must earn. Each segment of the
program has in common a systematic focus on all the aspects of a whole
person: Self, Society, Sexuality and Spirituality - each covered in light of
the Gospel.
Time frame: 6 or 7 years
Keeping the Promise: A Mentoring Program for Confirmation in the
Episcopal Church
(Episcopal; Morehouse Publishing, 1994)
Age: 16 years
Goals: Aims to bring younger and older Christians together to explore
our common inheritance in the Christian faith. The purpose is not just
to learn the "facts," but to connect the experience of teenagers with
the Christian tradition as conveyed in the Bible, the Book of Common
Prayer, and the saints of the local congregation. Together they attend a
healing service, vestry meeting, soup kitchen. There is a private meeting
scheduled with a priest, a Vigil on the eve of Confirmation and a
'declaration of commitment' to the process
Understanding of Confirmation: A mature public affirmation of Baptism
with the laying on of hands by the Bishop.
Foundation: Follows "The Catechism" using a mentor & confirmand's
edition
Time frame: Meet once a week for one hour - 9 sessions (three months)
Making Disciples
(United Methodist Church; Logos Productions, Inc., 1990) Age: Promoted as being usable for age 12 to 19 years
Goal: To allow Confirmands to experience and build relationships with
mature Christians who are struggling to live out their faith; not to
pass on a block of information
Understanding of Confirmation: A historic means of making Christians
(following the theology of Tertullian); giving people the equipment they
need now to be disciples; Confirmation continues and strengthens
Christian growth that has already begun.
Foundation: Pairs confirmands with adult mentors and guides them
through a variety of learning experiences that will strengthen the student's
understanding of the faith while connecting him or her with the
community of believers in a personal way. Discipleship becomes an engaging,
active, multi-faceted process.
Time frame: 13 weeks / 3 months
My Faith, My Life: A Teen's Guide to The Episcopal Church by Jennifer Gamber (2006:Morehouse Publishing) is written for teens as they explore The Episcopal Church and prepare for Confirmation. Chapters include The Bible, Baptism, Church History, Prayer, Worship, The Episcopal Church and more.
In depth overviews of Confirmation curricula listed above
The Standing Commission on Ministry Development's subcommittee on
Ministry in Daily Life submitted a report to the 2003 General Convention
regarding The Future of Confirmation for the Episcopal Church
in the 21st Century. (See
Adobe pdf file)
|