Make a real difference in the lives of people seeking faith
  • 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
  • Free Articles
    • All articles
    • Training Basics
    • Commenting policy
  • RCIA 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
    • RCIA Forms
    • Videos
    • Webinars
  • Free newsletter
\Your Cart

The key to adapting the RCIA for children

Posted by Nick

RCIA image posted by TeamRCIAThe key to catechizing children in the RCIA is this:

The process of initiation [of child catechumens] thus must be adapted both to their spiritual progress…and to the catechetical instruction they receive. (RCIA 253, emphasis added)

We can’t stress enough that the spiritual progress and instruction required for each child is unique. We must constantly be adapting the initiation process for each child. So how do we know what to adapt?

The goal of adapting the RCIA for children

To know what to adapt, we need to be diligent in asking the right question. Often, we get stuck on the wrong question: What do they need to know? The right question is: Who do they need to know?

I don’t know about you, but I get stuck on the wrong question because it is the question that helped me grow in my faith. By the time I could read and write, I was learning what I needed to know to be a better Catholic. But, by the time I could read and write, I already knew who I needed to know. I was raised in a faithful Catholic home. By the time I started school, I knew how to make the Sign of the Cross, say the Lord’s Prayer and the Hail Mary, and had a basic understanding of the Trinity. I started school catechized. I didn’t need to be introduced to Christ. I needed an ongoing catechesis for my continuing conversion.

RCIA catechesis is initiatory catechesis

Ongoing catechesis is way different than initiatory catechesis (see National Directory of Catechesis, 57-59). Initiatory catechesis is a

comprehensive and systematic formation in the faith [that]…includes more than instruction: it is an apprenticeship of the entire Christian life, it is a “complete Christian initiation,” which promotes an authentic following of Christ, focused on his Person; it implies education in knowledge of the faith and in the life of faith, in such a manner that the entire person, at his deepest levels, feels enriched by the word of God. (General Directory for Catechesis, 67)

So the adaptations we are striving for in initiatory catechesis are those that are focused on the Person of Christ and following that Person. It is a catechesis that provides a

basic and essential formation, centered on what constitutes the nucleus of Christian experience, the most fundamental certainties of the faith. (General Directory for Catechesis, 67)

The purpose of this initiatory catechesis is to lay a foundation that will enable the child catechumens to later engage fully in Christian life—which includes a more comprehensive, complex, ongoing, lifelong catechesis.

By focusing on the wrong question—what they need to know—we run the risk of not attending fully enough to the most important question—who they need to know. The key to adapting the RCIA for children is this: first who, then what.


See also these related articles:

  • 5 principles for adapting the RCIA for children
  • Why we need to stop RCIC
  • How to prepare baptized, uncatechized Catholic children

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to the TeamRCIA free newsletter. Thanks for visiting!


Posted on Wednesday, August 6th, 2008 at 4:40 am under Children.     

No comments yet.

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

Recent Posts

  • Six RCIA actions that guarantee intimacy with Christ
  • What do you ask of God’s church? The first question in the RCIA
  • The RCIA challenge of developing intimacy with Jesus—and my billion best friends
  • Six signs of readiness for the Rite of Acceptance
  • Can an art docent help RCIA teams learn to catechize better?

some chatter

  • Greg Poser on The RCIA challenge of developing intimacy with Jesus—and my billion best friends
  • Nick on Who’s on your RCIA team?
  • Gary on Who’s on your RCIA team?
  • Tino on The RCIA challenge of developing intimacy with Jesus—and my billion best friends
  • Nick on The right way and the wrong way to do a “teaching Mass”—according to the pope

Categories

  • Blog
    • Advent
    • Baptism
    • Candidates
    • Catechesis
    • Catechetical session
    • Catechumens
    • Children
    • Discernment
    • Easter
    • Elect
    • Evangelization
    • Handouts
    • Homily
    • Humor
    • Inquiry
    • 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

Next team training session

RCIA image  by Rich Sharples, CC BY 2.0, posted by TeamRCIA
 
Sign up today!

Current RCIA articles

  • Six RCIA actions that guarantee intimacy with Christ
  • What do you ask of God’s church? The first question in the RCIA
  • The RCIA challenge of developing intimacy with Jesus—and my billion best friends
  • Six signs of readiness for the Rite of Acceptance
  • Can an art docent help RCIA teams learn to catechize better?
  • Five key questions to ask RCIA inquirers
  • Six “best practices” for every RCIA catechist
  • Is your RCIA team catechizing at all the levels the church expects?

Adult RCIA

 
Free training video. Click to watch now!

Copyright © 2012 - 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