Celebrate your kids’ baptism anniversaries
The challenge, of course, is to fully realize the grace of baptism. And when it comes to infants and children, it’s the parents* who have the first responsibility for pulling that off, with the help of the faith community. Celebrating the anniversary of your kids’ baptisms is one way to emphasize its importance and teach them what it means.
A baptism anniversary celebration
Here are some of the materials you might want to gather for your celebration. All of these are optional:
- your child’s baptismal candle
- your child’s baptismal gown
- your child’s baptismal certificate
- photos or video of your child’s baptism
- holy water
- a white cloth or table runner
- fabric markers
- special foods and decorations for a party
On the big day, try one or more of the following ideas:
Tell the story of your child’s baptism.
Explain the significance of the baptism.
Display items from his/her baptism on your prayer table.
Light her baptismal candle during family prayer. If you kept her baptismal candle, light it during family prayer.
Bless your child.
Make a prayer cloth remembering your child’s baptism.
Tell the story of the saint or person(s) your child is named for.
Let her choose a special food for the day.
Play act a baptism.
Other ways to highlight your child’s baptism
To highlight the importance of your child’s baptism all year long, display a photo of the baptism in his or her room, or frame the baptismal certificate and display it on a wall.
If you’re a little more ambitious, create a work of art about your child’s baptism that emphasizes his or her new character in the grace of the sacrament, using phrases like “child of God,” “priest, prophet, king,” “on a mission for Christ,” etc. Some ideas:
- Using air dry clay, have your child make handprints in a disc of clay, then etch and/or paint his name underneath with the date of his baptism.
- Using glass paints, decorate a wide glass bowl with the name of your child and the date of her baptism, plus any other words or symbols that seem appropriate. On special occasions, put the bowl out on your prayer table with holy water in it.
Talking points: More about baptism
When celebrating the baptismal anniversary of older kids, take the opportunity to explain the meaning and significance of the sacrament to them.- Baptism is the gateway to the sacramental life: It makes us children of God, members of the Body of Christ, and members of the Church. Baptism is the basis of the whole Christian life (Catechism #1213).
- By the grace of baptism, all our sins are forgiven—both personal sins and original sin (Catechism #1263, 1264). Of course, infants are not capable of committing personal sins, but even infants are marked by original sin. Original sin is what we call the wounded human nature that was passed on to all human beings by the sin of our first parents, Adam and Eve (Catechism #417).
- Baptism gives us a new identity, making us children of God, a member of Christ’s body and a sharer in his divine nature, and the Temple of the Holy Spirit (Catechism #1265).
- Baptism gives us the power to believe in God, to act under the prompting of the Holy Spirit, and the ability to grow in goodness through the moral virtues (Catechism #1266).
- Baptism makes us members of the Body of Christ, and therefore members of the Church. As members of Christ, we share in his priestly, prophetic, and royal mission (Catechism #1268).
- Baptism gives us rights and responsibilities within the Church—the responsibility to carry on the mission of Christ in the world, and the right to receive the spiritual help of the Church (Catechism #1269).
- In baptism, we are forever marked as belonging to Christ; nothing, not even our own sin, can remove this mark (Catechism #1272).
* Right at the beginning of the Rite of Baptism, the priest says to the parents: “You have asked to have your child baptized. In doing so you are accepting the responsibility of training him (her) in the practice of the faith. It will be your duty to bring him (her) up to keep God’s commandments as Christ taught us, by loving God and our neighbour. Do you clearly understand what you are undertaking?” The parents are instructed to say, “We do,” although in retrospect, most of us probably didn’t fully understand the enormity of that responsibility.
Celebrate your kids’ baptism anniversaries
https://teachingcatholickids.com/celebrate-your-kids-baptism-anniversaries/.