Jenni Farley and Roger Matthews are "very proud parents" of their "newly baptized" son Greyson.
The couple, who have two-year-old daughter Meilani and six-month-old son together, decided to christen their youngest child over the weekend and have taken to social media to announce how happy they were with the holy ceremony.
Alongside a string of pictures, including a picture of Jenni - who was known as JWoww on the hit show 'Jersey Shore' - and Roger with Greyson, which was posted on his Instagram account, it read: "Great weekend with family and friends. Thanks @apinard for the amazing pics and thanks to Greyson's God Parents @k8up and@ktenan12 for honoring us by being Greys God Parents and accepting the morality clause to be an impressionable role model in his life as well as accepting certain financial doom by agreeing to feed him should anything happen to his parents. The kid ate the neighbors cat last week (sic).
"Very proud parents to this newly baptized Baby Beluga. Greyson Valor Mathews (sic)."
And the businessman has revealed he couldn't take his eyes off of the bread, which is given to those being baptised as a symbol of the body, because he was hungry throughout the ceremony.
He admitted: "I'm intently staring down a parishioner who appeared to be hogging to much bread during holy communion cause I was hungry. Grey said screw it and decided to eat his own thumb for nourishment because he was so famished. My grandmother behind us was appalled by the whole thing and shortly after this picture was taken hit me in the head with an old umbrella that smelled like moth balls. At the end of the day he got baptized and thumbs aren't that important (sic)."
Meanwhile the couple - who married in 2015 after meeting on the MTV series - have revealed they have "much more respect" for one another since having children and argue less because they don't want their brood to see them "fighting".
Speaking previously, Jenni said: "We have much more respect for each other now. We also learned to talk through disagreements rather than be stubborn or argue.
"We don't want our children to see us fighting. We want them to learn how to talk through things and grow from the experience."
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