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  2. Infant baptism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infant_baptism

    Water is poured on the head of an infant held over the baptismal font of a Roman Catholic church. Infant baptism [1] [2] (or paedobaptism) is the practice of baptizing infants or young children. Infant baptism is also called christening by some faith traditions.

  3. Vaccination and religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccination_and_religion

    The cell culture media of some viral vaccines, and the virus of the rubella vaccine, are derived from tissues taken from aborted fetuses, leading to moral questions. For example, the principle of double effect , originated by Thomas Aquinas , holds that actions with both good and bad consequences are morally acceptable in specific circumstances ...

  4. Salvation of infants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvation_of_infants

    The Roman Catholic view is that baptism is necessary for salvation and that it frees the recipient from original sin. Roman Catholic tradition teaches that unbaptized infants, not being freed from original sin, go to Limbo (Latin: limbus infantium), which is an afterlife condition distinct from Hell. This is not, however, official church dogma.

  5. Baptismal regeneration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baptismal_regeneration

    One of the earliest of the Church Fathers to enunciate clearly and unambiguously the doctrine of baptismal regeneration ("the idea that salvation happens at and by water baptism duly administered") was Cyprian (c. 200 – 258): "While he attributed all the saving energy to the grace of God, he considered the 'laver of saving water' the instrument of God that makes a person 'born again ...

  6. Infant communion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infant_communion

    The practice of allowing young children to receive communion has fallen into disfavor in the Latin-Rite of the Catholic Church. Latin-Rite Catholics generally refrain from infant communion and instead have a special ceremony when the child receives his or her First Communion, usually around the age of seven or eight years old.

  7. Catholics debate the morality of vaccines

    www.aol.com/news/catholics-debate-morality...

    Mar. 5—Roman Catholic Archbishop of Santa Fe John C. Wester has entered the new debate among some Catholic leaders on the morality of getting vaccinated against COVID-19, in particular the use ...

  8. Affusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affusion

    However, Eastern Orthodox and some Roman Catholics practice infant immersion (though because of their different theology of original sin and historically different beliefs about the eternal fate of infants who die before baptism, Eastern Orthodox usually delay baptism until the infant is at least 40 days old, which considerably lessens the ...

  9. Mayim Bialik clarifies her stance on vaccines: ‘My children ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/mayim-bialik-clarifies-her...

    Mayim Bialik continues to set the record straight about her stance on vaccines, explaining in an interview with The Daily Beast that she never said she was anti-vax.. The 46-year-old actress ...