It’s not really news that godparenting has evolved into “a revered but blurry mix of religious and secular duty,” but The Tennessean has devoted an extended feature to describing the history and current context of the tradition, which aligns closely with infant or child baptism and traces back to around the 8th century, when Catholic doctrine decreed that one’s spiritual birth is distinct from one’s physical birth.
What does a godparent do? In most cases, whatever they, and their godchild’s parents, think best. The role may be centuries-old, but it’s far from anachronistic. People customize everything from their rides to their ringtones to suit their tastes these days, and how they treat godparenting is no different, keeping the lifelong position going strong and its prospects healthy.
“It’s this resilient, tenacious tradition that has lost its past,” said Lisa Kimball, a lecturer with the University of Minnesota who studies godparenting. “It’s lost its connection back to its history. What is its role today? People are inventing it.”
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People are fashioning it as a quilt of institutional knowledge, tradition and social expectation, Kimball said. The role has largely developed into one of companionship and mentoring, not always with a spiritual component.
The article features comments from several sets of godparents as well as a Catholic priest, and is available here.