HerDotness
Lady Babbleon
PARIS (RNS) A decade ago, Rene Lebouvier requested that his local Catholic church erase his name from the baptismal register. The church noted his demands on the margins of its records and the chapter was closed.
But the clergy abuse scandals rocking Europe, coupled with Pope Benedict XVI’s conservative stances on contraception, hardened Lebouvier’s views. Last October, a court in Normandy ruled in favor of his lawsuit to have his name permanently deleted from church records—making the 71-year-old retiree the first Frenchman to be officially “de-baptized.”
Story continues... Here
For those who don't know Roman Catholic doctrine, baptism is regarded as placing a mark upon a person's soul which cannot be removed. Thus, the saying, "Once a Catholic, always a Catholic."
Until this case, which the church is appealing, all that the church would do is to add a note to a person's baptismal record to the effect that the individual had left the church. The name could not and would not be removed from the records. This is done in the hope that the person will someday repent and wish to return to full and active participation in the RCC.
What's problematic about baptism is that the RCC baptizes infants. You don't have an option to wait until you get old enough to decide if Catholicism is for you or not; you have no choice when you're baptized as an infant.
It's going to be a fight to get the RCC to give in on this issue. I'd like to get my own self "de-baptized," so I'm watching what results from this case with much interest.
What do you think of this man's case? Does/should the Catholic Church have the right to say, "No. We're not taking your name off the records," and refuse to do so because the secular state has no authority over what the church decrees?
But the clergy abuse scandals rocking Europe, coupled with Pope Benedict XVI’s conservative stances on contraception, hardened Lebouvier’s views. Last October, a court in Normandy ruled in favor of his lawsuit to have his name permanently deleted from church records—making the 71-year-old retiree the first Frenchman to be officially “de-baptized.”
Story continues... Here
For those who don't know Roman Catholic doctrine, baptism is regarded as placing a mark upon a person's soul which cannot be removed. Thus, the saying, "Once a Catholic, always a Catholic."
Until this case, which the church is appealing, all that the church would do is to add a note to a person's baptismal record to the effect that the individual had left the church. The name could not and would not be removed from the records. This is done in the hope that the person will someday repent and wish to return to full and active participation in the RCC.
What's problematic about baptism is that the RCC baptizes infants. You don't have an option to wait until you get old enough to decide if Catholicism is for you or not; you have no choice when you're baptized as an infant.
It's going to be a fight to get the RCC to give in on this issue. I'd like to get my own self "de-baptized," so I'm watching what results from this case with much interest.
What do you think of this man's case? Does/should the Catholic Church have the right to say, "No. We're not taking your name off the records," and refuse to do so because the secular state has no authority over what the church decrees?