THE RIGHT

TO HAVE

BAPTISMAL CERTIFICATES AMENDED

 

Every religion has teachings that are essential to its nature.   For instance, if Christianity stopped considering Jesus to be the Son of God it would cease to be Christianity.  If the essential teachings are seriously evil, then if we were entered into this religion as babies, that entry is invalid. 

 

If the essential teachings are seriously evil, the right thing to do is to revoke membership and go.

 

The seriously evil doctrines of Roman Catholicism are:

 

 

 

 

The Universe, Sunday 12 October 2008.  It was reported that it had been ruled in court in Spain that Spanish citizens who have been baptised into the Catholic Church and renounce the baptism when they grew up should have their renunciation recorded in their baptismal certificates.  The Church was ordered to record their departure from membership.

 

The Church refused to comply and it appealed the decision and won. 

 

The triumph was based on Catholic claims that the baptismal certificates did not necessarily mean that the persons named on them were still Catholics.  The Church argued too that they were confidential records and inviolable for they recorded a baptism ceremony that had in fact taken place.  The Church said that though the Information Protection Law gave Spanish citizens the right to change information held about them in public records the baptismal certificates were not public records.  The records were also organised in the baptism books by baptism date making it hard to find the names.  The fuss was started in 2006 as a result of Manuel Blat Gonzalez affirming his human rights to have his renunciation of baptism recorded by the Church in his Valencia parish.  He won this right in a lower court but the Church defeated him in a subsequent court battle. 

 

The Church should have lost for the following reasons.