AMDG
In the American
culture the beautiful tradition of godparents is an honor, but only a formality
as part of the Baptismal rite. As the
years pass into adolescence, the godson or goddaughter has little or no contact
with the godparents. Often they move; friendships fade and the
family loses contact with them. The
child may not even know who his/her godparents are. Too often the godparents are lax in their
faith or fallen away Catholics, certainly not models of faithfulness to Church
teaching. That’s not the way the Church
intends it to be.
How should it be? The very name, godmother or godfather essentially means other mother or other father……in other words, back-up parents, especially if the corresponding birth parents are lax or indifferent in forming the children or something happens to the family as a traumatic accident, serious illness, or family breakup. Godparents are supposed to help or supplement the birth parents in spiritual formation and provide reinforcement of the Christian values that the birth parents are trying to inculcate in the children.
However, contradicting the values of
the family could present problems and the godparent should be sensitive to offending
the birth parents. Unless the godson or
goddaughter is of age or outright sin is involved, parental authority takes
precedence over the advice of godparents.
Especially in adolescence, the youth may be afraid to consult his/her
parents on a personal problem or simply desires a second opinion, another
viewpoint.
To keep contact
with the godson or goddaughter, parents should invite the godparents to family
functions, certainly such events as the child’s birthday party, graduation,
First Communion, Confirmation, wedding, and perhaps a class play, special
sports events, etc. Perhaps the
godparent could take the child to a major league baseball game or hiking, If distance is a problem, the godparent
should at least make a brief phone call on a birthday or upon achieving a
milestone. The godparent should keep up
on how the child is doing throughout his/her life.
The point is to build up a
relationship such that the child would feel free to consult a godparent
on a personal problem. This is easier if
the godparent is a relative of the child or a close family friend, rather young
yet mature to maintain a fruitful relationship for many years. Perhaps even better is choosing a married
couple to be the godparents who can reinforce or complement each other.
Really, godparents
should be accepted as members of the extended family. In Latin America they often call godparents, “compadres”
as part of the extended family. At the
very least godparents should try to pray daily for each of their
godchildren by name, a brief petition for each one as part of their
prayer life. Each brief petition by name
is an act of love that strengthens the bond between godparent and child.
Thus being a godparent is not simply an honor, but an awesome responsibility. May both parents and godparents take this responsibility seriously. May we, who are godparents, do a better job at this most important task. They may be able to help their godsons and goddaughters remain faithful to the Church. Let’s follow the Catholic culture, not the secular culture.
Pastors have a very important role in
instructing both parents and godparents in the selection and fulfilling their
duties. Parents often need guidance on
even naming the child. Traditionally,
the Church has asked parents to choose
the name of a saint or close to it so that the child may have a patron saint, a
model to follow for the rest of his/her life.
Patron saints are also great for the environment in the home, which is
the domestic church. In Poland people
celebrate a person’s “name day” (the feast day of his/her patron saint) often
even more than the birthday.
I realize that I
have portrayed the ideals of being a godparent which are not always achievable. Being what a godparent should be is not
easy. Career, family problems, home
maintenance, hobbies, the boob tube, and just being so busy with both the
essentials and non essentials of life all get in the way. Nevertheless, let’s strive for the
ideal. We may never achieve the ideal,
but the ideal gives us the right direction.
Only a few steps in that direction is progress.
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