Please help, I would like to be baptised but i dont know whether to be baptised caholic or church of england? The reason for this is that I would like to be godparent for my nephew. I need to be baptised to do this. My husband is catholic and my family are church of england. Please can someone explain the difference?
If that's your only reason for being babtised, then the whole affair is totally meaningless for you.
Read the NT and find Christ, then make a choice - eternity depends on it, not just a social occasion to celebrate the birth of a child, delighfl though that is.
Investigate Jesus for yourself, and you will make a better Christian role mdel for the child.
I don't think you can be a god parent to a catholic child if you're not catholic. I wouldn't advocate catholicism as a way forwards if you're not that way inclined. CoE is much more relaxed if you can go that way.
The child will be baptised non catholic. I also need to mention my husband is a reverend and really thinks I should be catholic like him, but as a new believer Im really not sure which way to go.
Besides which, Catholic priests are called Father. Church of England Priests are called Vicar. Methodist Ministers and Ministers of several other denominations are called Reverend. I think those attempting a wind-up should make sure they have their facts correct first, otherwise they are easily spotted.
a priest may not marry, but a convert to Catholicism may become a priest.
Thus at my parish church we have the senior priest, a curate, and the hospital chaplain - all priests in every sense - except the chaplain is a concert - he was an Anglican vicar - and he has four children, but he is still a priest in the Catholic church, so it can be done.
Andy I did realise that in certain circumstances that would be possible but was hoping badnews would explain. Somehow calling him a Reverand did not quite fit. And if he was a convert at some stage wouldnt she ask him about conversion rather than a section of answerbank? What did he convert from? If from church of England than he is an ideal person to explain the difference, so why ask us???????
If the husband was an Anglican married with children, who converted to catholicism and became an ordinand, then he would still be a Priest, and not a Reverend, as the questioner states.
Is it true that you can't be a godparent if you aren't baptised?
If so it must be the reason that I wasn't godmother to my niece. Here was me thinking that I was the last person on earth that they would want looking after their little girl.