Dear Amy: I grew up in a conservative Catholic family and went to 12 years of Catholic school. After, I decided to leave the Catholic faith. My husband was raised without a religious background.
Ten months ago, we welcomed our first child (my parents' first grandchild) and have decided not to have her baptized. My family is very upset.
They say we don't have to have her baptized Catholic, and that any nondenominational baptism would be OK with them, however my husband and I are just not religious and don't see the point of going through the motions or making "promises" that we will raise our child Christian or with any religious ideals.
We want her to make that decision (if she chooses to) later in life.
My family's disappointment is really weighing on me and now I'm feeling guilty and a little resentful for them not respecting our decision. The conversation keeps coming up.
Should we just do it and get it over with to make them happy and end the conversation?
Amy says: My siblings and I were also never baptized; even though we were raised as churchgoers, my independent mother let her children choose their own faith practice, including choosing none. When I decided to get baptized as a teenager, I was proud to make a choice about the course of my own life.
Baptism means different things to different denominations but yes, if you baptize a child with clergy present, you are participating in a Christian rite, and if you do not intend to have your child identify as a Christian, you should not do it.