My dad has been pushing me to have the boys baptized since I was pregnant with DS1 and I just never got around to it (I was baptized Catholic but do not attend church regularly). He called me this morning and told me that he met with the priest from my brother's church (brother is a deacon) and the priest offered to baptize the boys without me having to follow the normal "rules" like being a tithing member of the church or regularly attending mass. He offered to handle all of the logistics, so I said okay. I have no issue with having them baptized and my dad sounded so happy when I agreed, so I'm happy to do this for him.
So how do I explain to my sons that they're going to be baptized? Should I have them meet with the priest beforehand (he played with them over Thanksgiving at my brother's house so they're comfortable with him)? We've never talked about God or Jesus. STBXH is atheist and since he moved out of the country, I figured I would just raise them to be educated on all faiths and let them choose what/if they want to believe. But I was waiting until they were older to have that conversation.
Did anyone baptize their kids when they were older? I'd appreciate any insight on how I should best handle this.
Re: WWPD: Baptism for older kids (long)
For what it's worth I'm an atheist and H is a Catholic, but doesn't practice it or go to church regularly. We baptized DD1 as a baby because he wanted to and because of pressure from his family. Now with DD2 we're not baptizing her because I feel like H only wants to to please his family. That's not a good reason in my opinion. We will raise them both with open minds and educate them about all religions and let them know it's their choice of what to believe, if anything.
If so, I would suggest introducing the concept of God, and talk about Baptism as a "welcome" into the church.
If not, I would really consider it before going forward.
We don't attend church regularly and don't talk about religion w the older one (not that we won't ever, just that we haven't yet). However, as the priest said when he baptized them, baptism is more about the family than the kid. The kid makes their commitment at confirmation.
H and I have had conversations about the role that religion will play in our kids' lives.
I don't think it's a bad thing to get them baptized, but it might be a conversation worth having if you never ever ever have any intention of introducing religion.
ETA: clarity
I grew up Baptist so the whole idea of baptizing someone who hasn't asked to be baptized will always give me the icks. I know it's standard in a lot of other denominations though. It's my personal hang-up, I suppose.
If you are going to do it, the children should at least understand what is being done and why. They are older and will obviously have questions as opposed to an infant who doesn't have a clue.