
The Mystery of Healing: Oil, Anointing, and the Unity of the Local Church

The Holy Sacraments of Baptism, Chrismation and Holy Communion

The Seven Sacraments of the Greek Orthodox Church
|
The
church has made use of sponsors (godparents) at Holy Baptism from
the earliest days of its history. The practice is mentioned by such early
Christian writers as Tertullian, St. Dionysius the Areopagite and others.
According to the “Priest’s Guide” published by the Syrian Orthodox Archdiocese,
“The sponsors in Baptism are guarantors pledging to the Church that the
baby to be baptized will be brought up in the faith of that Church; therefore
they must be members of the Holy Orthodox Catholic Church.” It is the
duty of the godparents to see that their godchildren are taught the Orthodox
Faith and made to understand the significance of the vows made on their
behalf at Baptism. “No one can guarantee that which he himself does not
possess.” It is illogical to expect non-Orthodox sponsors to teach Orthodox
children Orthodoxy. One cannot even reasonably expect such persons to
be interested enough or to know enough about the Faith to impart its teachings
to Orthodox children.
Among the other duties of sponsors is the duty of seeing that their
godchildren receive Holy Communion frequently, that they attend Sunday
School and church regularly, that they learn their prayers and fulfill
all the other requirements of the Orthodox Faith.
It is obvious, therefore, that with their high calling, sponsors
must be not only Orthodox Christians, but good Orthodox Christians. They
must be practicing Orthodox Catholics who know at least the chief truths
of the Christian Faith, who abide by the laws of the Church, who understand
the significance of the vows they must give at Holy Baptism. According
to the rules of the Archdiocese, any Orthodox persons who have been married
outside the Orthodox Church are forbidden to stand as sponsors. If they
themselves have broken the Church’s law they cannot he expected to instill
loyalty to the Church’s law in their godchildren.
Underage persons cannot stand for sponsors because they are themselves
learning the doctrines of the Church. The godfather must not be younger
than 15 years of age, and the godmother not younger than 13 years of age.
Those who are totally ignorant of the teachings of the Church cannot be
sponsors. They cannot teach what they do not themselves know. Notorious
sinners and persons who have fallen in public opinion by their moral life
or scandalous behavior cannot be sponsors. Those who have been excommunicated
for breaking the laws of the Church, schismatics, and non-Orthodox generally,
cannot be godparents.
In the Orthodox Church only one sponsor is indispensable. This
is the ancient tradition: the custom of having two godparents is fairly
modern. As a minimum, therefore, the Church requires one sponsor: at the
Baptism of a male child, a man: and at the Baptism of a child of the female
sex, a woman. Where it is absolutely unavoidable, and with the Bishop’s
dispensation, a non-Orthodox sponsor of the opposite sex of the child
may be allowed, providing that he is at least a member of one of the major
Christian bodies where the principle dogmas concerning the Person of Christ
are believed. This excludes members of such religious bodies as the Unitarians,
Universalists, Quakers, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Christian Scientists and
other such sects, and of course unbaptized persons and all non-Christians.
Before standing as sponsors, the prospective godparents must receive
the Sacraments of Confession and Holy Communion and be instructed in their
duties. If this law of the Archdiocese is strictly observed the problem
of non-Orthodox sponsors will soon disappear, for only Orthodox Catholics
may receive Orthodox sacraments. All sponsors are expected to know the
Creed from memory and to recite it at the Baptism. They ought to understand
the essence of the Sacrament in general and to be aware of the great responsibility
they are assuming.
Parents ought to choose the most pious and devout Orthodox Christians
to sponsor their children at the baptismal font. Kinship or friendship
of the parents with the prospective sponsors does not insure that they
will be the most suitable. In choosing the parents ought to consider the
faith, the churchmanship, and the fitness to accept the responsibility
of sponsorship of the prospective godparents. Those who disregard the
laws of the Church, do not fast, do not attend services, do not contribute
to the support of the Church’s work, or do not receive the Sacraments
frequently, or have no love, loyalty, or devotion to the Church, are not
the type of persons to be the spiritual parents of children at Baptism.
From Word
Magazine
Publication of the Antiochian Orthodox
Christian Archdiocese of North America
September 1957
p. 174
|