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Godparent

In infant baptism and denominations of Christianity, a godparent (also known as a sponsor, or gossiprede)[1] is someone who bears witness to a child's christening and later is willing to help in their catechesis, as well as their lifelong spiritual formation.[2] In the past, in some countries, the role carried some legal obligations as well as religious responsibilities.[3] In both religious and civil views, a godparent tends to be an individual chosen by the parents to take an interest in the child's upbringing and personal development, to offer mentorship or claim legal guardianship of the child if anything should happen to the parents.[4][5] A male godparent is a godfather, and a female godparent is a godmother. The child is a godchild (i.e. godson for boys and goddaughter for girls).

Detail from the "Baptism Window" at St. Mary's Episcopal Cathedral in Memphis, Tennessee, showing godparents from the mid-20th century.
A Roman Catholic priest baptizing a child.

Christianity

Origins and history

As early as the 2nd century AD, infant baptism had begun to gain acceptance among Catholic Christians for the spiritual purification and social initiation of infants,[6] the requirement for some confession of faith necessitated the use of adults who acted as sponsors for the child. They vocalized the confession of faith and acted as guarantors of the child's spiritual beliefs.

Normally, these sponsors were the natural parents of a child, as emphasized in 408 by St. Augustine who suggested that they could, it seems exceptionally, be other individuals.[7] Within a century, the Corpus Juris Civilis indicates that parents had been replaced in this role almost completely.[8] This was clarified in 813 when the Synod of Mainz prohibited natural parents from acting as godparents to their own children.[9]

By the 5th century, male sponsors were referred to as "spiritual fathers", and by the end of the 6th century, they were being referred to as "compaters" and "commaters", suggesting that these were being seen as spiritual co-parents.[10] This pattern was marked by the creation of legal barriers to marriage that paralleled those for other forms of kin. A decree of Justinian, dated to 530, outlawed marriage between a godfather and his goddaughter, and these barriers continued to multiply until the 11th century, forbidding marriage between natural and spiritual parents, or those directly related to them.[11] As confirmation emerged as a separate rite from baptism from the 8th century, a second set of sponsors, with similar prohibitions, also emerged.[12] The exact extent of these spiritual relationships as a bar to marriage in Catholicism was unclear until the Council of Trent, which limited it to relationships between the godparents, the child, and the parents.[13]

During the Reformation

Luther, Zwingli, and Calvin preserved infant baptism against the attacks of more radical reformers including Anabaptists, and with it, sponsors at baptism.[14] However, Luther strongly objected to the marriage barriers it created, Zwingli stressed the role of parents and pastors, rather than the "witnesses", in religious instruction, and Calvin and his followers tended to prefer the sponsors to be the natural parents.[15] A single godparent was retained in baptism at Geneva and among French Calvinists, but some followers of Calvin, most notably in Scotland and eventually the English colonies in America, rejected them altogether.[16]

Numbers of sponsors

In the early church, one sponsor seems to have been the norm, but in the early Middle Ages, there seems to have been two, one of each sex, and this practice has been largely maintained in Orthodox Christianity.[17] In 888, the Catholic Council of Metz attempted to limit the number to one, but proliferation seems to have continued.[18] In early 14th-century Spain, as many as 20 godparents were being chosen.[19] In England, the Synod of Worcester (1240) stipulated three sponsors (two of the same sex and one of the opposite), and this has remained the norm in the Church of England.[20] The Council of Trent attempted to limit the numbers of godparents to one or two, but practice has differed across the Catholic world.[21]

Most Catholic families chose two godparents, one of each sex, one of which at least must be a baptised Catholic. It is possible for children to have more than two, for example in the case where neither of the two “candidates” are Catholic, in which case someone, often a member of the family, may act as a third godparent and as guarantor of the child's faith. (See below in “modern usage”)

In the Lutheran church, a baptized member may only have one godchild. This is because of the responsibility that goes along with it.

Modern practices

Anglican Communion

The Church of England, the mother Church of the Anglican Communion, retained godparents in baptism, formally removing the marriage barriers in 1540, but the issue of the role and status of godparents continued to be debated in the English Church.[22] They were abolished in 1644 by the Directory of Public Worship promulgated by the English Civil War Parliamentary regime, but continued to be used in some parishes in the north of England.[23] After the Restoration in 1660, they were reintroduced to Anglicanism, with occasional objections, but dropped by almost every dissenting church.[24] There is some evidence that the restored institution had lost some of its social importance as well as its universality.[25]

At present, in the Church of England, relatives can stand as godparents, and although it is not clear that parents can be godparents, they sometimes are. Godparents should be both baptised and confirmed (although it is not clear in which Church), but the requirement for confirmation can be waived. There is no requirement for clergy to baptise those from outside their parishes, and baptism can be reasonably delayed so that the conditions, including suitable godparents, can be met. As a result, individual clergy have considerable discretion over the qualifications of godparents.[26] Many "contemporary Anglican rites likewise require parents and godparents to respond on behalf of infant [baptismal] candidates."[27]

Lutheran churches

Lutherans follow a similar theology of godparents as Roman Catholics. They believe that godparents "help [children] with their Christian upbringing, especially if they should lose their parents".[28] Lutherans, like Roman Catholics, believe that a godparent must be both a baptized and confirmed Christian.[28] Some Lutherans also follow the Roman Catholic tradition that a Christian who is not affiliated with the Lutheran denomination may serve as a witness rather than a godparent.[29]

Methodist Church

The Book of Discipline stipulates that it is the duty of a godparent, also known as a sponsor, "to provide training for the children of the Church throughout their childhood that will lead to a personal commitment to Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, to an understanding of the Christian faith, and to an appreciation of the privileges and obligations of baptism and membership (¶ 225.4)." John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Church, wrote a homily titled "Serious Thoughts Concerning Godfathers and Godmothers" in which he stated that godparents are "spiritual parents to the baptized, whether they were infants or [adults]; and were expected to supply whatever spiritual helps were wanting either through the death or neglect of the natural parents."[30] He described the role of godparents, instructing that they should call upon their godchild "to hear sermons, and shall provide that he(/she) may learn the Creed, the Lord's Prayer, and the Ten Commandments, and all other things which a Christian ought to know and believe to his soul's health; and that this child be virtuously brought up, to lead a godly and a Christian life."[30] As such, the Book of Worship states that godparents/sponsors should be "selected carefully" and "should be members of Christ's holy Church; and it is the duty of pastors to instruct them concerning the significance of Holy Baptism, their responsibilities for the Christian training of the baptized child, and how these obligations may be fulfilled."[31]

Orthodox Church

The Orthodox institution of godparenthood has been the least affected of the major traditions by change. In some Orthodox churches (Serbian, Greek) usually the best man (kum, кум, koumbaros) or bridesmaid (kuma, кума, koumbara) at a couple's wedding act as a godparent to the first or all children of the marriage. In some instances, the godfather is responsible for naming the child. A godparent to a child will then act as a sponsor at the child's wedding.[32] Godparents are expected to be in good standing in the Orthodox church, including its rulings on divorce, and aware of the meaning and responsibilities of their role.[33] They cannot be a minor or a parent of the child, and at least one sponsor must be Orthodox.

Reformed Churches

In the Reformed tradition that includes the Continental Reformed, Congregationalist and Presbyterian Churches, the godparents are more often referred to as sponsors, who have the role of standing with the child during infant baptism and pledging to instruct the child in the faith.[34] In the baptismal liturgy of Reformed Geneva, "the traditional presence of godparents was retained".[35] John Calvin, the progenitor of the Reformed tradition, himself served as a godparent during forty-seven baptisms.[35] The Reformed Church in Geneva, in order to ensure confessional orthodoxy, "expected parents to select Reformed godparents."[36] Today, many Reformed churches invite parents to select godparents for their prospective neophyte, while other parishes entrust this responsibility to the whole congregation.[37][38]

Roman Catholic Church

 
A child being baptized with her parents and godparents.

The Catholic institution of godparenthood survived the Reformation largely unchanged. A godparent must normally be an appropriate person, at least sixteen years of age, a confirmed Catholic who has received the Eucharist, not under any canonical penalty, and may not be the parent of the child. Someone who belongs to another Christian church cannot become a godparent but can be a 'witness' in conjunction with a Catholic sponsor. A witness does not have any religious role recognized by the Church.[39]

In 2015, the Vatican declared that transgender Catholics cannot become godparents, stating in response to a transgender man's query that transgender status "reveals in a public way an attitude opposite to the moral imperative of solving the problem of sexual identity according to the truth of one's own sexuality" and that, "[t]herefore it is evident that this person does not possess the requirement of leading a life according to the faith and in the position of godfather and is therefore unable to be admitted to the position of godfather or godmother."[40]

Spiritual kinship

In some Catholic and Orthodox countries, particularly in southern Europe, Latin America, and the Philippines, the relationship between parents and godparents or co-godparents has been seen as particularly important and distinctive.[41] These relationships create mutual obligations and responsibilities that may be socially useful for participants. The Portuguese and Spanish compadre (literally, "co-father") and comadre ("co-mother"), the French marraine and parrain, and the archaic meaning of the English word gossip (from godsib, "godsibling"), describe these relationships.[42] By extension, they can also be used to describe a friendship.

The Spanish and Portuguese words for the godparent roles are used for members of the wedding partypadrino/padrinho meaning "godfather" or "best man" and madrina/madrinha meaning "godmother" or "matron of honor", reflecting the custom of baptismal sponsors acting in this role in a couple's wedding.[43]

The Spanish custom was also adopted in the Philippines, a predominantly Christian country in Southeast Asia that was a former part of the Spanish Empire. The Filipino terms ninong for godfather and ninang for godmother, were also borrowed from Hispanic custom, and apply to godparents in both a child's baptism and the child's later confirmation. In the context of a wedding, the terms instead refer to the principal sponsors of the couple.

Literature and folklore

Godparents are noted features of fairy tales and folklore written from the 17th century onwards, and by extension, have found their way into many modern works of fiction. In Godfather Death, presented by the Brothers Grimm, the archetype is, unusually, a supernatural godfather. However, most are a fairy godmother as in versions of Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, and The Blue Bird. This feature may simply reflect the Catholic milieu in which most fairy tales were created, or at least recorded, and the accepted role of godparents as helpers from outside the family, but feminist Marina Warner suggests that they may be a form of wish fulfilment by female narrators.[44]

Non-Christian traditions

Santeria

In the Yoruba religion Santería, godparents must have completed their santo or their Ifá. A person gets his Madrina and Yubona (co-godmother) or his Padrino and Yubon (co-godfather). A santero, aside from his co-godparents, may have an oluo (babalawo, initiate of ifa) who consults him with an ekuele (divining chain).

Judaism

 
Brit milah—the sandek holds the baby boy

There are two roles in the Jewish circumcision ceremony that are sometimes translated as godparent. The sandek, in Orthodox Judaism a man, sits on a specially designated chair, and holds the baby boy while he is circumcised.

Among Orthodox Ashkenazi, the kvater is the married couple who bring the child from his mother to where the circumcision is performed. The mother gives the baby to the woman, who gives the baby to her husband, who then carries the baby the rest of the way. The announcement "Kvatter" is the signal for the man to walk to where he will get the baby, and also for that man's wife to walk to the lady holding the baby (usually the mother), if she is not already standing there.

Kvater is etymologically derived from the archaic German Gevatter ("godfather"). Historically, the Jewish ‘Godfather’ bears responsibility for seeing that the child is properly raised, if both parents die young. Amongst the Kvater's many responsibilities, he is also obligated to ensure that the Godmother (should one be appointed) is fully capable of discharging her duties. Should he deem her irresponsible, he can revoke her status as Godmother by proclamation.

Humanism

Humanists use the term guideparent for a similar concept in that worldview.[45]

Chinese traditions

Some Chinese communities practise the custom of matching a child with a relative or family friend who becomes the godmother (yimu / ganma 義母/乾媽) or godfather (yifu / gandie 義父/乾爹). This practice is largely non-religious in nature, but commonly done to strengthen ties or to fulfil the wish of a childless adult to have a "son/daughter". In most circumstances, an auspicious day is selected on which a ceremony takes place, involving the godchild paying his/her respects to his new godfather/godmother in the presence of relatives or friends.[46]

Alternatively, as it is already common in Chinese kinship to use kinship terms among people that are not related (e.g. addressing a respected coworker as "brother" or one's father's friend may be referred to as "uncle"), an older friend or family friend with a deep friendship and a sufficient age gap will also informally address the other as his godparent or godchild, a gesture often initiated by the older person.

Kirvelik

In some parts of Turkey, mainly in the eastern, Kurdish-majority regions, a kind of fictive kinship relationship called kirvelik exists connected with the Islamic ritual of circumcision. The man who holds a male child who is being circumcised becomes the kirve of the child; at the same time, the kirve and the boy's parents become kirves in relation to each other. Kirvelik comes with particular duties, responsibilities and traditions. It has been compared to compadrazgo in Latin America and kumstvo in the Balkans.[47]

See also

References

  1. ^ Roth, John K. (1 December 2005). Ethics. Salem Press. p. 595. ISBN 9781587651724.
  2. ^ Fitzgerald, Timothy (1994). Infant Baptism. Liturgy Training Publications. p. 17. ISBN 9781568540085.
  3. ^ Rojcewicz, Rebekah (2009). Baptism is a Beginning. Liturgy Training Publications. p. 24. ISBN 9781568544984. In earlier times the role of godparent carried with it a legal responsibility for the child, should they become orphaned. Today, being a godparent is not legally binding and carries no legal rights, although godparents may also serve as legal guardians for children if this arrangement is documented in a valid will.
  4. ^ Marty, Martin E. (1962). Baptism: A User's Guide. Augsburg Books. p. 139. ISBN 9781451414080.
  5. ^ S. Ringen, What democracy is for: on freedom and moral government (Princeton University Press, 2007), p. 96.
  6. ^ J. H. Lynch, Godparents and Kinship in Early Medieval Europe (Princeton, NJ, 1980), p. 114.
  7. ^ W. Parsons, ed., Saint Augustine, Letters, The Fathers of the Church, 18 (New York, 1953), pp. 134-5.
  8. ^ P. Kruger, ed., Corpus Iuris Civis, vol. 3, Codex Iustinianus (Dublin and Zurich, 1970), v, 4, 26, p. 197.
  9. ^ "Godparent". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  10. ^ S. W. Mintz and E. R. Wolf, 'An analysis of ritual co-parenthood', Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, 6 (1950), p. 344.
  11. ^ C. E. Smith, Papal Enforcement of Some Medieval Marriage Laws (Port Washington, WI, and London, 1940), p. 48.
  12. ^ P. Cramer, Baptism and Change in the Early Middle Ages c. 200 – c. 1150, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, 4th series, 20 (Cambridge, 1993), p. 179.
  13. ^ N. P. Tanner, ed., Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, 1, (London and Georgetown Washington DC, 1990), p. 757.
  14. ^ J. D. C. Fisher, ed., Christian Initiation: the Reformation Period, Alcuin Collections, 51 (London, 1970), p. 171.
  15. ^ H. T. Lehmann and J. Pelikan, eds, Luther Works, 45 St Louis MO and Philadelphia, PA (1958-67), p. 24; W. P. Stephens, The Theology of Huldrych Zwingli (Oxford, 1986), p. 194.
  16. ^ W. Coster, Baptism and Spiritual Kinship in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2002), pp. 84-5.
  17. ^ S. Gudeman, 'The compadrazgo as a reflection of the natural and spiritual person', Proceedings of the Royal Anthropological Institute (1971), p. 48.
  18. ^ J. Goody, The Development of Family and Marriage in Europe (Cambridge, 1983), p. 199.
  19. ^ G. M. Foster, 'Confradia and compadrazgo in Spain and Spanish America', Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, 9 (1953), p. 3.
  20. ^ J. D. C. Fisher, ed., Christian Initiation: Baptism in the Medieval West. A Study in the Disintegration of the Primitive Rite of Initiation, Alcuin Collections, 47 (London, 1965), p. 157.
  21. ^ N. P. Tanner, ed., Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, 1, (London and Georgetown Washington DC, 1990), p. 747.
  22. ^ W. Coster, Baptism and Spiritual Kinship in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2002), p. 87.
  23. ^ C. Durston, 'Puritan rule and the failure of cultural revolution', in C. Durston and J. Eales, eds, The Culture of English Puritanism (London, 1986), p. 227.
  24. ^ H. Davis, Worship and Theology in England, from Andrews to Baxter and Fox 1603-1690 (Princeton, NJ, 1975) p. 384.
  25. ^ W. Coster, Baptism and Spiritual Kinship in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2002), pp. 269-273.
  26. ^ The Canons of the Church of England, 6th edn (London, 2000).
  27. ^ Hefling, Charles; Shattuck, Cynthia (1 July 2006). The Oxford Guide to The Book of Common Prayer: A Worldwide Survey. Oxford University Press. pp. 487–. ISBN 9780199723898.
  28. ^ a b Luther's Small Catechism with Explanation (Concordia Publishing House, 1991 edition). Retrieved 2010-16-05.
  29. ^ . Retrieved 2010-16-05.
  30. ^ a b Wesley, John (1831). The Works of the Reverend John Wesley, A. M. J. Emory and B. Waugh. p. 235.
  31. ^ The United Methodist Book of Worship. United Methodist Publishing House. 5 April 2016. p. 93. ISBN 9781426735004.
  32. ^ J. K. Campbell, Honour, family and Patronage, a Study of the Institutions and Moral Values in a Greek Mountain Community (Oxford, 1964).
  33. ^ Instructions for Weddings, Divorces, Baptisms, Funerals, and Memorials . Archived from the original on 2009-01-17. Retrieved 2009-01-06..
  34. ^ McKim, Donald K. (21 April 2014). The Westminster Dictionary of Theological Terms, Second Edition: Revised and Expanded. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 304. ISBN 9781611643862.
  35. ^ a b Manetsch, Scott M. (2013). Calvin's Company of Pastors: Pastoral Care and the Emerging Reformed Church, 1536-1609. Oxford University Press. p. 383. ISBN 9780199938575.
  36. ^ Maag, Karin (13 January 2016). Lifting Hearts to the Lord: Worship with John Calvin in Sixteenth-Century Geneva. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. p. 162. ISBN 9781467444002.
  37. ^ Maddox, Cindy. "Baptism & Communion". First Congregational Church - United Church of Christ. Retrieved 12 August 2017. You're welcome to invite one or two Godparents to take part in the baptism service, though this is optional and matter of personal choice.
  38. ^ Wehrheim, Carol A. (2006). The Baptism of Your Child: A Book for Presbyterian Families. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 24. ISBN 9780664502850.
  39. ^ Code of Canon Law Can. 872-4 [1].
  40. ^ Wofford, Taylor (September 2, 2015). "Transgender Catholics Can't Be Godparents, Vatican Says". Newsweek.com. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  41. ^ G. M. Foster, 'Confradia and compradrazgo in Spain and Spanish America', Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, 9 (1953), pp. 1–3.
  42. ^ W. Coster, Baptism and Spiritual Kinship in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2002), pp. 91–7.
  43. ^ H. G. Nutini, and E. Bell, Ritual Kinship: The Structure and Historical Development of the Compadrazgo System in Rural Tlaxcala 1 (Princeton, 1980), p. 342.
  44. ^ M. Warner, From the Beast to the Blonde, on Fairy Tales and Their Tellers (London, 1995), pp. 215-6.
  45. ^ For the UK see Humanists UK: Humanist Ceremonies; for the US see Mashupamericans.com: Guideparents, Not Godparents.
  46. ^ D. Waters, , Journals of The Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch, Vol. 33, 1993.
  47. ^ Sengul, Serap Ruken (2014). Broken (His)tories Inside Restored Walls: Kurds, Armenians and the Cultural Politics of Reconstruction in Urban Diyarbakir, Turkey (PhD thesis). University of Texas at Austin. hdl:2152/68379.

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of godparent at Wiktionary

godparent, godchild, redirects, here, manga, earl, cain, godson, redirects, here, other, uses, godson, disambiguation, padrino, redirects, here, application, framework, padrino, framework, other, uses, padrino, disambiguation, infant, baptism, denominations, c. Godchild redirects here For the manga see Earl Cain Godson redirects here For other uses see Godson disambiguation Padrino redirects here For the web application framework see Padrino web framework For other uses see El Padrino disambiguation In infant baptism and denominations of Christianity a godparent also known as a sponsor or gossiprede 1 is someone who bears witness to a child s christening and later is willing to help in their catechesis as well as their lifelong spiritual formation 2 In the past in some countries the role carried some legal obligations as well as religious responsibilities 3 In both religious and civil views a godparent tends to be an individual chosen by the parents to take an interest in the child s upbringing and personal development to offer mentorship or claim legal guardianship of the child if anything should happen to the parents 4 5 A male godparent is a godfather and a female godparent is a godmother The child is a godchild i e godson for boys and goddaughter for girls Detail from the Baptism Window at St Mary s Episcopal Cathedral in Memphis Tennessee showing godparents from the mid 20th century A Roman Catholic priest baptizing a child Contents 1 Christianity 1 1 Origins and history 1 1 1 During the Reformation 1 1 2 Numbers of sponsors 1 2 Modern practices 1 2 1 Anglican Communion 1 2 2 Lutheran churches 1 2 3 Methodist Church 1 2 4 Orthodox Church 1 2 5 Reformed Churches 1 2 6 Roman Catholic Church 1 3 Spiritual kinship 1 4 Literature and folklore 2 Non Christian traditions 2 1 Santeria 2 2 Judaism 2 3 Humanism 2 4 Chinese traditions 2 5 Kirvelik 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksChristianity EditOrigins and history Edit The baptismal font at the Cathedral of Magdeburg As early as the 2nd century AD infant baptism had begun to gain acceptance among Catholic Christians for the spiritual purification and social initiation of infants 6 the requirement for some confession of faith necessitated the use of adults who acted as sponsors for the child They vocalized the confession of faith and acted as guarantors of the child s spiritual beliefs Normally these sponsors were the natural parents of a child as emphasized in 408 by St Augustine who suggested that they could it seems exceptionally be other individuals 7 Within a century the Corpus Juris Civilis indicates that parents had been replaced in this role almost completely 8 This was clarified in 813 when the Synod of Mainz prohibited natural parents from acting as godparents to their own children 9 By the 5th century male sponsors were referred to as spiritual fathers and by the end of the 6th century they were being referred to as compaters and commaters suggesting that these were being seen as spiritual co parents 10 This pattern was marked by the creation of legal barriers to marriage that paralleled those for other forms of kin A decree of Justinian dated to 530 outlawed marriage between a godfather and his goddaughter and these barriers continued to multiply until the 11th century forbidding marriage between natural and spiritual parents or those directly related to them 11 As confirmation emerged as a separate rite from baptism from the 8th century a second set of sponsors with similar prohibitions also emerged 12 The exact extent of these spiritual relationships as a bar to marriage in Catholicism was unclear until the Council of Trent which limited it to relationships between the godparents the child and the parents 13 During the Reformation Edit Luther Zwingli and Calvin preserved infant baptism against the attacks of more radical reformers including Anabaptists and with it sponsors at baptism 14 However Luther strongly objected to the marriage barriers it created Zwingli stressed the role of parents and pastors rather than the witnesses in religious instruction and Calvin and his followers tended to prefer the sponsors to be the natural parents 15 A single godparent was retained in baptism at Geneva and among French Calvinists but some followers of Calvin most notably in Scotland and eventually the English colonies in America rejected them altogether 16 Numbers of sponsors Edit In the early church one sponsor seems to have been the norm but in the early Middle Ages there seems to have been two one of each sex and this practice has been largely maintained in Orthodox Christianity 17 In 888 the Catholic Council of Metz attempted to limit the number to one but proliferation seems to have continued 18 In early 14th century Spain as many as 20 godparents were being chosen 19 In England the Synod of Worcester 1240 stipulated three sponsors two of the same sex and one of the opposite and this has remained the norm in the Church of England 20 The Council of Trent attempted to limit the numbers of godparents to one or two but practice has differed across the Catholic world 21 Most Catholic families chose two godparents one of each sex one of which at least must be a baptised Catholic It is possible for children to have more than two for example in the case where neither of the two candidates are Catholic in which case someone often a member of the family may act as a third godparent and as guarantor of the child s faith See below in modern usage In the Lutheran church a baptized member may only have one godchild This is because of the responsibility that goes along with it Modern practices Edit Anglican Communion Edit The Church of England the mother Church of the Anglican Communion retained godparents in baptism formally removing the marriage barriers in 1540 but the issue of the role and status of godparents continued to be debated in the English Church 22 They were abolished in 1644 by the Directory of Public Worship promulgated by the English Civil War Parliamentary regime but continued to be used in some parishes in the north of England 23 After the Restoration in 1660 they were reintroduced to Anglicanism with occasional objections but dropped by almost every dissenting church 24 There is some evidence that the restored institution had lost some of its social importance as well as its universality 25 At present in the Church of England relatives can stand as godparents and although it is not clear that parents can be godparents they sometimes are Godparents should be both baptised and confirmed although it is not clear in which Church but the requirement for confirmation can be waived There is no requirement for clergy to baptise those from outside their parishes and baptism can be reasonably delayed so that the conditions including suitable godparents can be met As a result individual clergy have considerable discretion over the qualifications of godparents 26 Many contemporary Anglican rites likewise require parents and godparents to respond on behalf of infant baptismal candidates 27 Lutheran churches Edit Lutherans follow a similar theology of godparents as Roman Catholics They believe that godparents help children with their Christian upbringing especially if they should lose their parents 28 Lutherans like Roman Catholics believe that a godparent must be both a baptized and confirmed Christian 28 Some Lutherans also follow the Roman Catholic tradition that a Christian who is not affiliated with the Lutheran denomination may serve as a witness rather than a godparent 29 Methodist Church Edit The Book of Discipline stipulates that it is the duty of a godparent also known as a sponsor to provide training for the children of the Church throughout their childhood that will lead to a personal commitment to Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior to an understanding of the Christian faith and to an appreciation of the privileges and obligations of baptism and membership 225 4 John Wesley the founder of the Methodist Church wrote a homily titled Serious Thoughts Concerning Godfathers and Godmothers in which he stated that godparents are spiritual parents to the baptized whether they were infants or adults and were expected to supply whatever spiritual helps were wanting either through the death or neglect of the natural parents 30 He described the role of godparents instructing that they should call upon their godchild to hear sermons and shall provide that he she may learn the Creed the Lord s Prayer and the Ten Commandments and all other things which a Christian ought to know and believe to his soul s health and that this child be virtuously brought up to lead a godly and a Christian life 30 As such the Book of Worship states that godparents sponsors should be selected carefully and should be members of Christ s holy Church and it is the duty of pastors to instruct them concerning the significance of Holy Baptism their responsibilities for the Christian training of the baptized child and how these obligations may be fulfilled 31 Orthodox Church Edit The Orthodox institution of godparenthood has been the least affected of the major traditions by change In some Orthodox churches Serbian Greek usually the best man kum kum koumbaros or bridesmaid kuma kuma koumbara at a couple s wedding act as a godparent to the first or all children of the marriage In some instances the godfather is responsible for naming the child A godparent to a child will then act as a sponsor at the child s wedding 32 Godparents are expected to be in good standing in the Orthodox church including its rulings on divorce and aware of the meaning and responsibilities of their role 33 They cannot be a minor or a parent of the child and at least one sponsor must be Orthodox Reformed Churches Edit In the Reformed tradition that includes the Continental Reformed Congregationalist and Presbyterian Churches the godparents are more often referred to as sponsors who have the role of standing with the child during infant baptism and pledging to instruct the child in the faith 34 In the baptismal liturgy of Reformed Geneva the traditional presence of godparents was retained 35 John Calvin the progenitor of the Reformed tradition himself served as a godparent during forty seven baptisms 35 The Reformed Church in Geneva in order to ensure confessional orthodoxy expected parents to select Reformed godparents 36 Today many Reformed churches invite parents to select godparents for their prospective neophyte while other parishes entrust this responsibility to the whole congregation 37 38 Roman Catholic Church Edit A child being baptized with her parents and godparents The Catholic institution of godparenthood survived the Reformation largely unchanged A godparent must normally be an appropriate person at least sixteen years of age a confirmed Catholic who has received the Eucharist not under any canonical penalty and may not be the parent of the child Someone who belongs to another Christian church cannot become a godparent but can be a witness in conjunction with a Catholic sponsor A witness does not have any religious role recognized by the Church 39 In 2015 the Vatican declared that transgender Catholics cannot become godparents stating in response to a transgender man s query that transgender status reveals in a public way an attitude opposite to the moral imperative of solving the problem of sexual identity according to the truth of one s own sexuality and that t herefore it is evident that this person does not possess the requirement of leading a life according to the faith and in the position of godfather and is therefore unable to be admitted to the position of godfather or godmother 40 Spiritual kinship Edit See also Compadre In some Catholic and Orthodox countries particularly in southern Europe Latin America and the Philippines the relationship between parents and godparents or co godparents has been seen as particularly important and distinctive 41 These relationships create mutual obligations and responsibilities that may be socially useful for participants The Portuguese and Spanish compadre literally co father and comadre co mother the French marraine and parrain and the archaic meaning of the English word gossip from godsib godsibling describe these relationships 42 By extension they can also be used to describe a friendship The Spanish and Portuguese words for the godparent roles are used for members of the wedding party padrino padrinho meaning godfather or best man and madrina madrinha meaning godmother or matron of honor reflecting the custom of baptismal sponsors acting in this role in a couple s wedding 43 The Spanish custom was also adopted in the Philippines a predominantly Christian country in Southeast Asia that was a former part of the Spanish Empire The Filipino terms ninong for godfather and ninang for godmother were also borrowed from Hispanic custom and apply to godparents in both a child s baptism and the child s later confirmation In the context of a wedding the terms instead refer to the principal sponsors of the couple Literature and folklore Edit See also Fairy godmother Godparents are noted features of fairy tales and folklore written from the 17th century onwards and by extension have found their way into many modern works of fiction In Godfather Death presented by the Brothers Grimm the archetype is unusually a supernatural godfather However most are a fairy godmother as in versions of Cinderella Sleeping Beauty and The Blue Bird This feature may simply reflect the Catholic milieu in which most fairy tales were created or at least recorded and the accepted role of godparents as helpers from outside the family but feminist Marina Warner suggests that they may be a form of wish fulfilment by female narrators 44 Non Christian traditions EditSanteria Edit In the Yoruba religion Santeria godparents must have completed their santo or their Ifa A person gets his Madrina and Yubona co godmother or his Padrino and Yubon co godfather A santero aside from his co godparents may have an oluo babalawo initiate of ifa who consults him with an ekuele divining chain Judaism Edit Brit milah the sandek holds the baby boy There are two roles in the Jewish circumcision ceremony that are sometimes translated as godparent The sandek in Orthodox Judaism a man sits on a specially designated chair and holds the baby boy while he is circumcised Among Orthodox Ashkenazi the kvater is the married couple who bring the child from his mother to where the circumcision is performed The mother gives the baby to the woman who gives the baby to her husband who then carries the baby the rest of the way The announcement Kvatter is the signal for the man to walk to where he will get the baby and also for that man s wife to walk to the lady holding the baby usually the mother if she is not already standing there Kvater is etymologically derived from the archaic German Gevatter godfather Historically the Jewish Godfather bears responsibility for seeing that the child is properly raised if both parents die young Amongst the Kvater s many responsibilities he is also obligated to ensure that the Godmother should one be appointed is fully capable of discharging her duties Should he deem her irresponsible he can revoke her status as Godmother by proclamation Humanism Edit Humanists use the term guideparent for a similar concept in that worldview 45 Chinese traditions Edit Some Chinese communities practise the custom of matching a child with a relative or family friend who becomes the godmother yimu ganma 義母 乾媽 or godfather yifu gandie 義父 乾爹 This practice is largely non religious in nature but commonly done to strengthen ties or to fulfil the wish of a childless adult to have a son daughter In most circumstances an auspicious day is selected on which a ceremony takes place involving the godchild paying his her respects to his new godfather godmother in the presence of relatives or friends 46 Alternatively as it is already common in Chinese kinship to use kinship terms among people that are not related e g addressing a respected coworker as brother or one s father s friend may be referred to as uncle an older friend or family friend with a deep friendship and a sufficient age gap will also informally address the other as his godparent or godchild a gesture often initiated by the older person Kirvelik Edit In some parts of Turkey mainly in the eastern Kurdish majority regions a kind of fictive kinship relationship called kirvelik exists connected with the Islamic ritual of circumcision The man who holds a male child who is being circumcised becomes the kirve of the child at the same time the kirve and the boy s parents become kirves in relation to each other Kirvelik comes with particular duties responsibilities and traditions It has been compared to compadrazgo in Latin America and kumstvo in the Balkans 47 See also Edit Christianity portal Law portalCatechumen Legal guardianReferences Edit Roth John K 1 December 2005 Ethics Salem Press p 595 ISBN 9781587651724 Fitzgerald Timothy 1994 Infant Baptism Liturgy Training Publications p 17 ISBN 9781568540085 Rojcewicz Rebekah 2009 Baptism is a Beginning Liturgy Training Publications p 24 ISBN 9781568544984 In earlier times the role of godparent carried with it a legal responsibility for the child should they become orphaned Today being a godparent is not legally binding and carries no legal rights although godparents may also serve as legal guardians for children if this arrangement is documented in a valid will Marty Martin E 1962 Baptism A User s Guide Augsburg Books p 139 ISBN 9781451414080 S Ringen What democracy is for on freedom and moral government Princeton University Press 2007 p 96 J H Lynch Godparents and Kinship in Early Medieval Europe Princeton NJ 1980 p 114 W Parsons ed Saint Augustine Letters The Fathers of the Church 18 New York 1953 pp 134 5 P Kruger ed Corpus Iuris Civis vol 3 Codex Iustinianus Dublin and Zurich 1970 v 4 26 p 197 Godparent Encyclopaedia Britannica S W Mintz and E R Wolf An analysis of ritual co parenthood Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 6 1950 p 344 C E Smith Papal Enforcement of Some Medieval Marriage Laws Port Washington WI and London 1940 p 48 P Cramer Baptism and Change in the Early Middle Ages c 200 c 1150 Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought 4th series 20 Cambridge 1993 p 179 N P Tanner ed Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils 1 London and Georgetown Washington DC 1990 p 757 J D C Fisher ed Christian Initiation the Reformation Period Alcuin Collections 51 London 1970 p 171 H T Lehmann and J Pelikan eds Luther Works 45 St Louis MO and Philadelphia PA 1958 67 p 24 W P Stephens The Theology of Huldrych Zwingli Oxford 1986 p 194 W Coster Baptism and Spiritual Kinship in Early Modern England Ashgate 2002 pp 84 5 S Gudeman The compadrazgo as a reflection of the natural and spiritual person Proceedings of the Royal Anthropological Institute 1971 p 48 J Goody The Development of Family and Marriage in Europe Cambridge 1983 p 199 G M Foster Confradia and compadrazgo in Spain and Spanish America Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 9 1953 p 3 J D C Fisher ed Christian Initiation Baptism in the Medieval West A Study in the Disintegration of the Primitive Rite of Initiation Alcuin Collections 47 London 1965 p 157 N P Tanner ed Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils 1 London and Georgetown Washington DC 1990 p 747 W Coster Baptism and Spiritual Kinship in Early Modern England Ashgate 2002 p 87 C Durston Puritan rule and the failure of cultural revolution in C Durston and J Eales eds The Culture of English Puritanism London 1986 p 227 H Davis Worship and Theology in England from Andrews to Baxter and Fox 1603 1690 Princeton NJ 1975 p 384 W Coster Baptism and Spiritual Kinship in Early Modern England Ashgate 2002 pp 269 273 The Canons of the Church of England 6th edn London 2000 Hefling Charles Shattuck Cynthia 1 July 2006 The Oxford Guide to The Book of Common Prayer A Worldwide Survey Oxford University Press pp 487 ISBN 9780199723898 a b Luther s Small Catechism with Explanation Concordia Publishing House 1991 edition Retrieved 2010 16 05 Godparents at LCMS org Retrieved 2010 16 05 a b Wesley John 1831 The Works of the Reverend John Wesley A M J Emory and B Waugh p 235 The United Methodist Book of Worship United Methodist Publishing House 5 April 2016 p 93 ISBN 9781426735004 J K Campbell Honour family and Patronage a Study of the Institutions and Moral Values in a Greek Mountain Community Oxford 1964 Instructions for Weddings Divorces Baptisms Funerals and Memorials Instructions for Weddings Divorces Baptisms Funerals and Memorials Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Archived from the original on 2009 01 17 Retrieved 2009 01 06 McKim Donald K 21 April 2014 The Westminster Dictionary of Theological Terms Second Edition Revised and Expanded Westminster John Knox Press p 304 ISBN 9781611643862 a b Manetsch Scott M 2013 Calvin s Company of Pastors Pastoral Care and the Emerging Reformed Church 1536 1609 Oxford University Press p 383 ISBN 9780199938575 Maag Karin 13 January 2016 Lifting Hearts to the Lord Worship with John Calvin in Sixteenth Century Geneva Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company p 162 ISBN 9781467444002 Maddox Cindy Baptism amp Communion First Congregational Church United Church of Christ Retrieved 12 August 2017 You re welcome to invite one or two Godparents to take part in the baptism service though this is optional and matter of personal choice Wehrheim Carol A 2006 The Baptism of Your Child A Book for Presbyterian Families Westminster John Knox Press p 24 ISBN 9780664502850 Code of Canon Law Can 872 4 1 Wofford Taylor September 2 2015 Transgender Catholics Can t Be Godparents Vatican Says Newsweek com Retrieved September 23 2015 G M Foster Confradia and compradrazgo in Spain and Spanish America Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 9 1953 pp 1 3 W Coster Baptism and Spiritual Kinship in Early Modern England Ashgate 2002 pp 91 7 H G Nutini and E Bell Ritual Kinship The Structure and Historical Development of the Compadrazgo System in Rural Tlaxcala 1 Princeton 1980 p 342 M Warner From the Beast to the Blonde on Fairy Tales and Their Tellers London 1995 pp 215 6 For the UK see Humanists UK Humanist Ceremonies for the US see Mashupamericans com Guideparents Not Godparents D Waters Taking a Godson Journals of The Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch Vol 33 1993 Sengul Serap Ruken 2014 Broken His tories Inside Restored Walls Kurds Armenians and the Cultural Politics of Reconstruction in Urban Diyarbakir Turkey PhD thesis University of Texas at Austin hdl 2152 68379 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Sponsor The dictionary definition of godparent at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Godparent amp oldid 1145647180, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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