Start and sustain the catechumenate
  • Home
  • About
    • Read about TeamRCIA
    • Contact
    • Security, Refund, Shipping, and Privacy Policies
    • What you’ve been saying about TeamRCIA
  • Question?
    • Ask your question here
    • RCIA Glossary
  • RCIA Articles
    • All articles
    • Training Basics
    • Commenting policy
  • Resources
    • All resources
    • Faith, Life & Creed: A Complete Catechesis for Christian Life
    • Friends on the Way: Children’s Catechumenate Resource
    • Get the confidence you need to be a children’s RCIA catechist
    • Videos
    • Webinars
  • Free newsletter
\Your Cart

Make the Book of the Elect worthy of the names it bears

Posted by Nick

A central element in the Rite of Election is the enrollment of names. This part of the rite is so important it is given equal billing in the title: “The second step in Christian initiation is the liturgical rite called both election and the enrollment of names.” (RCIA 118). Their enrollment is a sign of the catechumens’ fidelity to live the life of a Christian.

The rite offers several options for the inscription of names, but it says nothing about where the names are inscribed. See the rubrics at paragraph 132 in the rite.

  1. The catechumens may inscribe their names themselves
  2. They may call out their names while the godparents do the actual inscription
  3. They may call out their names while another minister does the actual inscription
  4. The parish may simply present a list of names to the bishop

Option four is perhaps the most common choice, as many dioceses opt to have the inscription of names take place at the parish rite of sending. (Note that even when this is the case, the actual enrollment does not occur until the names are presented to the bishop at the Rite of Election.)

What the rite does not say is where the names are actually written. Presumably, they could be written on a sheet of loose leaf paper (as I saw happen in one not-to-be-named parish). But that strikes us as inadequate. For such a solemn moment, shouldn’t the vessel that holds the names of those about to be baptized into Christ’s death be something worthy of the commitment? Shouldn’t it have more gravitas?

I presume we would all agree, and so I am a bit confused by what passes for a worthy book in many communities. A couple of publishers hit upon the “blank book” craze long before Hallmark did by mass producing some economical registers with “Book of the Elect” stamped in fake gold leaf on a church-maroon cover and some lined or blank sheets stuck in between. (One publisher has, incomprehensibly, even added a signature line for the local bishop.) If these were merely record books, such as the baptismal register kept in the parish vault, perhaps there would be no harm. But we have taken to using these weak and pallid things as symbols of the spine-chilling “YES” that shouts from the hearts of those about to be plunged into the waters of baptism.

Perhaps it’s time to stop shopping for our ritual books at ecclesial value-marts and think about ways in which we might obtain or create volumes that are worthy of the names they bear.

Click here for a set of links for handcrafted books you can purchase and instructions on how to make your own Book of the Elect. If you have bought or created a Book of the Elect you think raises the bar, send me a picture at nick[at]teamrcia.com, and I’ll publish it here.


See also these related articles:

  • Testify!
  • Are your catechumens ready for the next stage?
  • RCIA Discernment: How do you know if they know enough?
  • Help your assembly prepare for the Rite of Election


Posted on Sunday, January 6th, 2008 at 3:41 pm under Elect, Rite of Election.     

No comments yet.

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

Recent Posts

  • RCIA with teens: who’s in charge?
  • Four ways to keep your children’s RCIA catechesis from boring your kids to tears
  • 6 essential rules for communicating a new RCIA vision
  • Get an RCIA vision for your parish (angelic visitation optional)
  • Make the shift from “RCIA team” to “coalition for change”

some chatter

  • Rita Burns Senseman on Four ways to keep your children’s RCIA catechesis from boring your kids to tears
  • Rita Burns Senseman on Four ways to keep your children’s RCIA catechesis from boring your kids to tears
  • mary britanak on RCIA with teens: who’s in charge?
  • Christian on Four ways to keep your children’s RCIA catechesis from boring your kids to tears
  • Cindy on Should the elect choose a baptismal name?

Categories

  • Blog
    • Advent
    • Baptism
    • Candidates
    • Catechesis
    • Catechetical session
    • Catechumens
    • Children
    • Discernment
    • Easter
    • Elect
    • Evangelization
    • Handouts
    • Homily
    • Humor
    • Inquiry
    • Leadership
    • Lent
    • Liturgy
    • Mystagogy
    • Neophytes
    • Purification And Enlightenment
    • Q&A
    • RCIA
    • Reception
    • Rite of Acceptance
    • Rite of Election
    • Scrutinies
    • Sponsors
    • Team
    • Training
    • Triduum
    • Uncategorized
  • Featured Slider
  • Homepage Carousel
  • hometest

Children’s RCIA

 
Free training video. Click to watch now!

Current RCIA articles

  • RCIA with teens: who’s in charge?
  • Four ways to keep your children’s RCIA catechesis from boring your kids to tears
  • 6 essential rules for communicating a new RCIA vision
  • Get an RCIA vision for your parish (angelic visitation optional)
  • Make the shift from “RCIA team” to “coalition for change”

Adult RCIA

 
Free training video. Click to watch now!

Copyright © 2011 - TeamRCIA - All rights reserved.
Logo by SNS | Designs. Elegance theme by Storefront Themes.
TeamRCIA - San Jose, California - Diana@TeamRCIA.com - 408-728-8843


Facebook Facebook 
Twitter Twitter Free Newsletter Free Newsletter 
RSS RSS 
Email Email
grab this