The Word "Sacrament"
Since, then, we are about to treat of the Sacraments in
general, it is proper to begin in the first place by explaining the force and
meaning of the word Sacrament, and showing its various significations, in order
the more easily to comprehend the sense in which it is here used. The faithful,
therefore, are to be informed that the word Sacrament, in so far as it concerns
our present purpose, is differently understood by sacred and profane writers.
By some it has been used to express the obligation which
arises from an oath, pledging to the performance of some service; and hence the
oath by which soldiers promise military service to the State has been called a
military sacrament. Among profane writers this seems to have been the most
ordinary meaning of the word.
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But by the Latin Fathers who have written on theological
subjects, the word sacrament is used to signify a sacred thing which lies
concealed. The Greeks, to express the same idea, made use of the word mystery.
This we understand to be the meaning of the word, when, in the Epistle to the
Ephesians, it is said: That he might make known to us the mystery (sacramentum)
of his will; and to Timothy: great is the mystery (sacramentum) of godliness;
and in the Book of Wisdom: They knew not the secrets (sacramenta) of God. In
these and many other passages the word sacrament,- it will be perceived,
signifies nothing more than a holy thing that lies concealed and hidden.
The Definition of a Sacrament
Besides the meaning of the word, which has hitherto engaged
our attention, the nature and efficacy of the thing which the word signifies
must be diligently considered, and the faithful must be taught what constitutes
a Sacrament. No one can doubt that the Sacraments are among the means of
attaining righteousness and salvation. But of the many definitions, each of
them sufficiently appropriate, which may serve to explain the nature of a
Sacrament, there is none more comprehensive, none more perspicuous, than the
definition given by St. Augustine and adopted by all scholastic writers. A
Sacrament, he says, is a sign of a sacred thing; or, as it has been expressed
in other words of the same import: A
Sacrament is a visible sign of an invisible grace, instituted for our
justification.
"A Sacrament is a Sign"
The more fully to develop this definition, the pastor should
ex plain it in all its parts. He should first observe that sensible objects are
of two sorts: some have been invented precisely to serve as signs; others have
been established not for the sake of signifying something else, but for their
own sakes alone. To the latter class almost every object in nature may be said
to belong; to the former, spoken and written languages, military standards, images,
trumpets, signals a and a multiplicity of other things of the same sort. Thus
with regard to words; take away their power of expressing ideas, and you seem
to take away the only reason for their invention. Such things are, therefore,
properly called signs. For, according to St. Augustine, a sign, besides what it
presents to the senses, is a medium through which we arrive at the knowledge of
something else. From a footstep, for instance, which we see traced on the
ground, we instantly infer that some one whose trace appears has passed.
Proof From Reason
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A Sacrament, therefore, is clearly to be numbered among
those things which have been instituted as signs. It makes known to us by a
certain appearance and resemblance that which God, by His invisible power,
accomplishes in our souls. Let us illustrate what we have said by an example.
Baptism, for instance, which is administered by external ablution, accompanied
with certain solemn words, signifies that by the power of the Holy Ghost all
stain and defilement of sin is inwardly washed away, and that the soul is
enriched and adorned with the admirable gift of heavenly justification; while,
at the same time, the bodily washing, as we shall hereafter explain in its
proper place, accomplishes in the soul that which it signifies.
Proof From Scripture
That a Sacrament is to be numbered among signs is dearly
inferred also from Scripture. Speaking of circumcision, a Sacrament of the Old
Law which was given to Abraham, the father of all believers," the Apostle
in his Epistle to the Romans, says: And he received the sign of circumcision, a
seal of the justice of the faith. In another place he says: All we who are
baptised in Christ Jesus, are baptised in his death, words which justify the
inference that Baptism signifies, to use the words of the same Apostle, that we
are buried together with him by baptism into death.
Nor is it unimportant that the faithful should know that the
Sacraments are signs. This knowledge will lead them more readily to believe
that what the Sacraments signify, contain and effect is holy and august; and
recognising their sanctity they will be more disposed to venerate and adore the
beneficence of God displayed towards us.
"Sign of a Sacred Thing" : Kind of Sign Meant Here
We now come to explain the words, sacred thing, which constitute
the second part of the definition. To render this explanation satisfactory we
must enter somewhat more minutely into the accurate and acute remarks of St.
Augustine on the variety of signs.
Natural Signs
Some signs are called natural. These, besides making
themselves known to us, also convey a knowledge of something else, an effect,
as we have already said, common to all signs. Smoke, for instance, is a natural
sign from which we immediately infer the existence of fire. It is called a
natural sign, because it implies the existence of fire, not by arbitrary
institution, but from experience. If we see smoke, we are at once convinced of
the presence of fire, even though it is hidden.
Signs Invented By Man,
Other signs are not natural, but conventional, and are
invented by men to enable them to converse one with another, to convey their
thoughts to others, and in turn to learn the opinions and receive the advice of
other men. The variety and multiplicity of such signs may be inferred from the
fact that some belong to the eyes, many to the ears, and the rest to the other
senses. Thus when we intimate any thing to another by such a sensible sign as
the raising of a flag, it is obvious that such intimation is conveyed only
through the medium of the eyes; and it is equally obvious that the sound of the
trumpet, of the lute and of the lyre,-instruments which are not only sources of
pleasure, but frequently signs of ideas -- is addressed to the ear. Through the
latter sense especially are also conveyed words, which are the best medium of
communicating our inmost thoughts.
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Signs Instituted By God
Besides the signs instituted by the will and agreement of
men, of which we have been speaking so far, there are certain other signs
appointed by God. These latter, as all admit, are not all of the same kind.
Some were instituted by God to indicate something or to bring back its
recollection. Such were the purifications of the Law, the unleavened bread, and
many other things which belonged to the ceremonies of the Mosaic worship. But
God has appointed other signs with power not only to signify, but also to
accomplish (what they signify).
Among these are manifestly to be numbered the Sacraments of
the New Law. They are signs instituted not by man but by God, which we firmly
believe have in themselves the power of producing the sacred effects of which
they are the signs.
Kind of Sacred Thing Meant Here
We have seen that there are many kinds of signs. The sacred
thing referred to is also of more than one kind. As regards the definition
already given of a Sacrament, theologians prove that by the words sacred thing
is to be understood the grace of God, which sanctifies the soul and adorns it
with the habit of all the divine virtues; and of this grace they rightly
consider the words sacred thing, an appropriate appellation, because by its
salutary influence the soul is consecrated and united to God.
In order, therefore, to explain more fully the nature of a
Sacrament, it should be taught that it is a sensible object which possesses, by
divine institution, the power not only of signifying, but also of accomplishing
holiness and righteousness. Hence it follows, as everyone can easily see, that
the images of the Saints, crosses and the like, although signs of sacred
things, cannot be called Sacraments. That such is the nature of a Sacrament is
easily proved by the example of all the Sacraments, if we apply to the others
what has been already said of Baptism; namely, that the solemn ablution of the
body not only signifies, but has power to effect a sacred thing which is
wrought interiorly by the operation of the Holy Ghost.
Other Sacred Things Signified By The Sacraments
Now it is especially appropriate that these mystical signs,
instituted by God, should signify by the appointment of the Lord not only one
thing, but several things at once.
All The Sacraments Signify Something Present, Something
Past, Something Future:
This applies to all the Sacraments; for all of them declare
not only our sanctity and justification, but also two other things most
intimately connected with sanctification, namely, the Passion of Christ our
Redeemer, which is the source of our sanctification, and also eternal life and
heavenly bliss, which are the end of sanctification. Such, then, being the
nature of all the Sacraments, holy Doctors justly hold that each of them has a
threefold significance: they remind us of something past; they indicate and
point out something present; they foretell something future.
Nor should it be supposed that this teaching of the Doctors
is unsupported by the testimony of Holy Scripture. When the Apostle says: All
we who are baptised in Christ Jesus, are baptised in his death, he gives us
clearly to understand that Baptism is called a sign, because it reminds us of
the death and Passion of our Lord. When he
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says, We are buried together with him by baptism into death;
that as Christ is risen from the dead by the glory of the Father, so, we also
may walk in newness of life, he also clearly shows that Baptism is a sign which
indicates the infusion of divine grace into our souls, which enables us to lead
a new life and to perform all the duties of true piety with ease and
cheerfulness. Finally, when he adds: If we have been planted together in the likeness
of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection, he teaches
that Baptism clearly foreshadows eternal life also, which we are to reach
through its efficacy.
A Sacrament Sometimes Signifies The Presence Of More Than
One Thing
Besides the different significations already mentioned, a
Sacrament also not infrequently indicates and marks the presence of more than
one thing. This we readily perceive when we reflect that the Holy Eucharist at
once signifies the presence of the real body and blood of Christ and the grace
which it imparts to the worthy receiver of the sacred mysteries.
What has been said, therefore, cannot fail to supply the
pastor with arguments to prove how much the power of God is displayed, how many
hidden miracles are contained in the Sacraments of the New Law; that thus all
may understand that they are to be venerated and received with utmost
devotion.'
Why the Sacraments were Instituted
Of all the means employed to teach the proper use of the
Sacraments, there is none more effectual than a careful exposition of the
reasons of their institution. Many such reasons are commonly assigned.
The first of these reasons is the feebleness of the human
mind. We are so constituted by nature that no one can aspire to mental and
intellectual knowledge unless through the medium of sensible objects. In order,
therefore, that we might more easily understand what is accomplished by the
hidden power of God, the same sovereign Creator of the universe has most
wisely, and out of His tender kindness towards us, ordained that His power
should be manifested to us through the intervention of certain sensible signs.
As St. Chrysostom happily expresses it: If man were not clothed with a material
body, these good things would have been presented to him naked and without any
covering; but as the soul is joined to the body, it was absolutely necessary to
employ sensible things in order to assist in making them understood.
Another reason is because the mind yields a reluctant assent
to promises. Hence, from the beginning of the world, God was accustomed to
indicate, and usually in words, that which He had resolved to do; but
sometimes, when designing to execute something, the magnitude of which might
weaken a belief in its accomplishment, He added to words other signs, which
sometimes appeared miraculous. When, for instance, God sent Moses to deliver
the people of Israel, and Moses, distrusting the help even of God who had
commissioned him, feared that the burden imposed was heavier than he could
bear, or that the people would not heed his message, the Lord confirmed His
promise by a great variety of signs. As, then, in the Old Law, God ordained
that every important promise should be confirmed by certain signs, so in the
New Law, Christ our Saviour, when He promised pardon of sin, divine grace, the
communication of the Holy Spirit, instituted certain visible and sensible signs
by which He might oblige Himself, as it were, by pledges, and make it
impossible to doubt that He would be true to His promises.
A third reason is that the Sacraments, to use the words of
St. Ambrose, may be at hand, as the remedies and medicines of the Samaritan in
the Gospel, to preserve or recover the health of the soul. For, through the
Sacraments, as through a channel, must flow into the soul the efficacy of the
Passion of Christ, that is, the grace which He merited for us on the altar of
the cross, and without which we cannot hope for salvation. Hence, our most
merciful Lord has bequeathed to His Church, Sacraments stamped with the
sanction of His word and
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promise, through which, provided we make pious and devout
use of these remedies, we firmly believe that the fruit of His Passion is
really communicated to us.
A fourth reason why the institution of the Sacraments seems
necessary is that there may be certain marks and symbols to distinguish the
faithful; particularly since, as St. Augustine observes, no society of men,
professing a true or a false religion, can be, so to speak, consolidated into
one body, unless united and held together by some bond of sensible signs. Both
these objects the Sacraments of the New Law accomplish, distinguishing the
Christian from the infidel, and uniting the faithful by a sort of sacred bond.
Another very just cause for the institution of the
Sacraments may be shown from the words of the Apostle: With the heart we
believe unto justice; but with the mouth confession is made unto salvation. By
approaching them we make a public profession of our faith in the sight of men.
Thus, when we approach Baptism, we openly profess our belief that, by virtue of
its salutary waters in which we are washed, the soul is spiritually cleansed.
The Sacraments have also great influence, not only in
exciting and exercising our faith, but also in inflaming that charity with
which we should love one another, when we recollect that, by partaking of these
mysteries in common, we are knit together in the closest bonds and are made
members of one body.
A final consideration, which is of greatest importance for
the life of a Christian, is that the Sacraments repress and subdue the pride of
the human heart, and exercise us in the practice of humility; for they oblige
us to subject ourselves to sensible elements in obedience to God, from whom we
had before impiously revolted in order to serve the elements of the world.
These are the chief points that appeared to us necessary for
the instruction of the faithful on the name, nature, and institution of a
Sacrament. When they shall have been accurately expounded by the pastor, his
next duty will be to explain the constituents of each Sacrament, its parts, and
the rites and ceremonies which have been added to its administration.
Constituent Parts of the Sacraments
In the first place, then, it should be explained that the
sensible thing which enters into the definition of a Sacrament as already
given, although constituting but one sign, is twofold. Every Sacrament consists
of two things, matter, which is called the element, and form, which is commonly
called the word.
This is the doctrine of the Fathers of the Church; and the
testimony of St. Augustine on the subject is familiar to all. The word, he
says, is joined to the element and it becomes a Sacrament. By the words
sensible thing, therefore, the Fathers understand not only the matter or
element, such as water in Baptism, chrism in confirmation, and oil in Extreme
Unction, all of which fall under the eye; but also the words which constitute
the form, and which are addressed to the ear.
Both are clearly pointed out by the Apostle, when he says:
Christ loved the Church, and delivered himself up for it, that he might
sanctify it, cleansing it by the laver of water in the word of life. Here both
the matter and form of the Sacrament are expressly mentioned.
In order to make the meaning of the rite that is being
performed easier and clearer, words had to be added to the matter. For of all
signs words are evidently the most significant, and without them, what the
matter for the Sacraments designates and declares would be utterly obscure.
Water, for instance, has the quality of cooling as well as cleansing, and may
be symbolic of either. In Baptism, therefore, unless the words were added, it
would not be certain, but only conjectural, which signification was intended; but
when the words are added, we immediately understand that the Sacrament
possesses and signifies the power of cleansing.
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In this the Sacraments of the New Law excel those of the Old
that, as far as we know, there was no definite form of administering the
latter, and hence they were very uncertain and obscure. In our Sacraments, on
the contrary, the form is so definite that any, even a casual deviation from it
renders the Sacrament null. Hence the form is expressed in the clearest terms,
such as exclude the possibility of doubt.
These, then, are the parts which belong to the nature and
substance of the Sacraments, and of which every Sacrament is necessarily
composed.
Ceremonies Used in the Administration of the Sacraments
To (the matter and form) are added certain ceremonies. These
cannot be omitted without sin, unless in case of necessity; yet, if at any time
they be omitted, the Sacrament is not thereby invalidated, since the ceremonies
do not pertain to its essence. It is not without good reason that the
administration of the Sacraments has been at all times, from the earliest ages
of the Church, accompanied with certain solemn rites.
There is, in the first place, the greatest propriety in
manifesting such a religious reverence to the sacred mysteries as to make it
appear that holy things are handled by holy men.
Secondly, these ceremonies serve to display more fully the
effects of the Sacraments, placing them, as it were, before our eyes, and to
impress more deeply on the minds of the faithful the sanctity of these sacred
institutions.
Thirdly, they elevate to sublime contemplation the minds of
those who behold and observe them with attention, and excite within them faith
and charity.
To enable the faithful, therefore, to know and understand
clearly the meaning of the ceremonies made use of in the administration of each
Sacrament should be an object of special care and attention.
The Number Of The Sacraments
We now come to explain the number of the Sacraments. A
knowledge of this point is very advantageous to the faithful; for the greater
the number of aids to salvation and the life of bliss which they understand to
have been provided by God, the more ardent will be the piety with which they
will direct all the powers of their souls to praise and proclaim His singular
goodness towards us.
The Sacraments of the Catholic Church are seven in number,
as is proved from Scripture, from the tradition handed down to us from the
Fathers, and from the authority of Councils. Why they are neither more nor less
in number may be shown, at least
with some probability, from the analogy that exists between
the natural and the spiritual life. In order to exist, to preserve existence,
and to contribute to his own and to the public good, seven things seem
necessary to man: to be born, to grow, to be nurtured, to be cured when sick,
when weak to be strengthened; as far as regards the public welfare, to have
magistrates invested with authority to govern, and to perpetuate himself and
his species by legitimate offspring. Now, since it is quite clear that all
these things are sufficiently analogous to that life by which the soul lives to
God, we discover in them a reason to account for the number of the Sacraments.
First comes Baptism, which is the gate, as it were, to all
the other Sacraments, and by which we are born again unto Christ.
The next is Confirmation, by which we grow up and are
strengthened in the grace of God; for, as St. Augustine observes, to the
Apostles who had already received Baptism, the Redeemer said: "Stay you in
the city till you be endued with power from on high.,, The third is the
Eucharist, that true bread from heaven which The third is the Eucharist, that
true bread from heaven which
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nourishes and sustains our souls to eternal life, according
to these words of the Saviour: My flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink
indeed. The fourth is Penance, through which lost health is recovered after we
have been wounded by sin. Next is Extreme Unction, which obliterates the
remains of sin and invigorates the powers of the soul; for speaking of this
Sacrament St. James says: If he be in sins, they shall be forgiven him. Then
follows Holy Orders, by which power is given to exercise perpetually in the
Church the public administration of the Sacraments and to perform all the
sacred functions. The last is Matrimony, instituted to the end that, by means
of the legitimate and holy union of man and woman, children may be procreated
and religiously educated for the service of God, and for the preservation of
the human race.
Comparisons among
the Sacraments
Though all the Sacraments possess a divine and admirable
efficacy, it is well worthy of special remark that all are not of equal
necessity or of equal dignity, nor is the signification of all the same.
Among them three are said to be necessary beyond the rest,
although in all three this necessity is not of the same kind. The universal and
absolute necessity of Baptism our Saviour has declared in these words: Unless a
man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God. Penance, on the other hand, is necessary for those only who have stained
themselves after Baptism by any mortal guilt. Without sincere repentance, their
eternal ruin is inevitable. Orders, too, although not necessary to each of the
faithful, are of absolute necessity to the Church as a whole.
But if we consider the dignity of the Sacraments, the
Eucharist, for holiness and for the number and greatness of its mysteries, is
far superior to all the rest. These, however, are matters which will be more
easily understood, when we come to explain, in its proper place, what regards
each of the Sacraments.
The Author of the
Sacraments
It now remains to inquire from whom we have received these
sacred and divine mysteries. Any gift, however excellent in itself, undoubtedly
receives an increased value from the dignity and excellence of him by whom it
is bestowed.
The present question, however, is not hard to answer. For
since human justification comes from God, and since the Sacraments are the
wonderful instruments of justification, it is evident that one and the same God
in Christ, must be acknowledged to be the author of justification and of the
Sacraments.
Furthermore, the Sacraments contain a power and efficacy
which reach the inmost soul; and as God alone has power to enter into the
hearts and minds of men, He alone, through Christ, is manifestly the author of
the Sacraments.
That they are also interiorly dispensed by Him we must hold
with a firm and certain faith, according to these words of St. John, in which
he declares that he learned this truth concerning Christ: He who sent me to
baptise with water, said to me: He, upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit
descending, and remaining upon him, he it is that baptizeth with the Holy
Ghost.
The Ministers of the
Sacraments
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But although God is the author and dispenser of the Sacraments, He nevertheless willed that they should be administered in His Church by men, not by Angels. To constitute a Sacrament, as the unbroken tradition of the Fathers testifies, matter and form are not more necessary than is the ministry of men.
Unworthiness Of The Minister And Validity
Since the ministers of the Sacraments represent in the
discharge of their sacred functions, not their own, but the person of Christ,
be they good or bad, they validly perform and confer the Sacraments, provided
they make use of the matter and form always observed in the Catholic Church
according to the institution of Christ, and provided they intend to do what the
Church does in their administration. Hence, unless the recipients wish to
deprive themselves of so great a good and resist the Holy Ghost, nothing can
prevent them from receiving (through the Sacraments) the fruit of grace.
That this was, at all times, a fixed and well ascertained
doctrine of the Church, is established beyond all doubt by St. Augustine, in
his disputations against the Donatists. And should we desire Scriptural proof
also, let us listen to these words of the Apostle: I have planted; Apollo
watered; but God gave the increase Therefore neither he that planteth nor he
that watereth is any
thing, but God who giveth the increase. From these words it
is clear that as trees are not injured by the wickedness of those who planted
them, so those who were planted in Christ by the ministry of bad men sustain no
injury from the guilt of those others.
Judas Iscariot, as the holy Fathers infer from the Gospel of
St. John, conferred Baptism on many; and yet none of those whom he baptised are
recorded to have been baptised again. To use the memorable words of St.
Augustine: Judas baptised, and yet after him none were rebaptised; John
baptised, and after John they were rebaptised . For the Baptism administered by
Judas was the Baptism of Christ, but that administered by John was the baptism
of John. Not that we prefer Judas to John, but that we justly prefer the
Baptism of Christ, although administered by Judas, to that of John although
administered by the hands of John.
Lawfulness Of Administration
But let not pastors, or other ministers of the Sacraments,
hence infer that they fully acquit themselves of their duty, if, disregarding
integrity of life and purity of morals, they attend only to the administration
of the Sacraments in the manner prescribed. True, the manner of administering
them demands particular diligence; yet this alone does not constitute all that
pertains to that duty. It should never be forgotten that the Sacraments,
although they cannot lose the divine efficacy inherent in them, bring eternal
death and perdition to him who dares administer them unworthily.
Holy things, it cannot be too often repeated, should be
treated holily and with due reverence. To the sinner, says the Prophet, God has
said: Why dost thou declare my justices, and take my covenant in thy mouth,
seeing that thou hast hated discipline? If then, for him who is defiled by sin
it is unlawful to speak on divine things, how enormous the guilt of that man,
who, conscious of many crimes, dreads not to accomplish with polluted lips the
holy mysteries, to take them into his befouled hands, to touch
them, and to present and administer them to others? All the
more since St. Denis says that the wicked may not even touch the symbols, as he
calls the Sacraments.
It therefore becomes the first duty of the minister of holy
things to follow holiness of life, to approach with purity the administration
of the Sacraments, and so to exercise himself in piety, that, from their
frequent administration and use, he may every day receive, with the divine
assistance, more abundant grace.
Effects of the Sacraments
When these matters have been explained, the effects of the
Sacraments are the next subject of instruction. This subject should throw
considerable light on the definition of a Sacrament as already given.
First Effect: Justifying Grace
The principal effects of the Sacraments are two. The first
place is rightly held by that grace which we, following the usage of the holy
Doctors, call sanctifying. For so the Apostle most clearly taught when he said:
Christ loved the church, and delivered himself up for it; that he might
sanctify it, cleansing it by the laver of water in the word of life. But how so
great and so admirable an effect is produced by the Sacrament that, to use the
wellknown saying of St. Augustine, water cleanses the body and reaches the
heart, -- this, indeed, cannot be comprehended by human reason and
intelligence. It may be taken for granted that no sensible thing is of its own
nature able to reach the soul; but we know by the light of faith that in the
Sacraments there exists the power of almighty God by which they effect that
which the natural elements cannot of themselves accomplish.
Lest on this subject any doubt should exist in the minds of
the faithful, God, in the abundance of His mercy, was pleased,
from the moment when the Sacraments began to be
administered, to manifest by the evidence of miracles the effects which they
operate interiorly in the soul. (This He did) in order that we may most firmly
believe that the same effects, although far removed from the senses, are always
inwardly produced. To say nothing of the fact that at the Baptism of the
Redeemer in the Jordan the heavens were opened and the Holy Ghost appeared in
the form of a dove, to teach us that when we are washed in the sacred font His
grace is infused into our souls -- to omit this, which has reference rather to
the signification of Baptism than to the administration of the Sacrament -- do
we not read that on the day of Pentecost, when the Apostles received the Holy
Ghost, by whom they were thenceforward inspired with greater alacrity and
resolution to preach the faith and brave dangers for the glory of Christ, there
came suddenly a sound from heaven, as of a mighty wind coming, and it filled
the whole house where they were sitting, and there appeared to them parted
tongues, as it were, of fire? By this it was understood that in the Sacrament
of Confirmation the same Spirit is given us, and such strength is imparted as
enables us resolutely to encounter and resist our incessant enemies, the world,
the flesh and the devil. For some time in the beginning of the Church, whenever
these Sacraments were administered by the Apostles, the same miraculous effects
were witnessed, and they ceased only when the faith had acquired maturity and
strength.
From what has been said of sanctifying grace, the first
effect of the Sacraments, it clearly follows that there resides in the
Sacraments of the New Law, a virtue more exalted and efficacious than that of
the sacraments of the Old Law. Those ancient sacraments, being weak and needy
elements, sanctified such as were defiled to the cleansing of the flesh, but
not of the spirit. They were, therefore, instituted only as signs of those
things, which were to be accomplished by our mysteries. The Sacraments of the
New Law, on the contrary, flowing from the side of Christ, who, by the Holy
Ghost, offered himself unspotted unto God, cleanse our consciences from dead
works, to serve the living God, and thus work in us, through the blood of
Christ, the grace which they signify. Comparing our Sacraments, therefore, with
those of the Old Law we find that they are not only more efficacious, but also
more fruitful in spiritual advantages, and more august in holiness.
Second Effect: Sacramental Character
The second effect of the Sacraments -- which, however, is
not common to all, but peculiar to three, Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy
Orders -- is the character which they impress on the soul. When the Apostle
says: God hath anointed us, who also hath sealed us, and given the pledge of
the Spirit in our hearts, he not obscurely describes by the word sealed a
character, the property of which is to impress a seal and mark.
This character is, as it were, a distinctive impression
stamped on the soul which perpetually inheres and cannot be blotted out. Of this
St. Augustine says: Shall the Christian Sacraments accomplish less than the
bodily mark impressed on the soldier? That mark is not stamped on his person
anew as often as he resumes the military service which he had relinquished, but
the old is recognised and approved.
This character has a twofold effect: it qualifies us to
receive or perform something sacred, and distinguishes us by some mark one from
another. In the character impressed by Baptism, both effects are exemplified.
By it we are qualified to receive the other Sacraments, and the Christian is
distinguished from those who do not profess the faith. The same illustration is
afforded by the characters impressed by Confirmation and Holy Orders. By
Confirmation we are armed and arrayed as soldiers of Christ, publicly to
profess and defend His name, to fight against our internal enemy and against
the spiritual powers of wickedness in the high places; and at the same time we
are distinguished from those who, being recently baptised, are, as it were, new-born
infants. Holy Orders confers the power of consecrating and administering the
Sacraments, and also distinguishes those who are invested with this power from
the rest of the faithful. The rule of the Catholic Church is, therefore, to be
observed, which teaches that these three Sacraments impress a character and are
never to be repeated.
How to Make Instruction on the Sacraments Profitable
On the subject of the Sacraments in general, the above are
the matters on which instruction should be given. In explaining them, pastors
should keep in view principally two things, which they should zealously strive
to accomplish. The first is that the faithful understand the high honour,
respect and veneration due to these divine and celestial gifts. The second is
that, since the Sacraments have been established by the God of infinite mercy
for the common salvation of all, the people should make pious and religious use
of them, and be so inflamed with the desire of Christian perfection as to deem
it a very great loss to be for any time deprived of the salutary use,
particularly of Penance and the Holy Eucharist.
These objects pastors will find little difficulty in
accomplishing, if they call frequently to the attention of the faithful what we
have already said on the divine character and fruit of the Sacraments: first,
that they were instituted by our Lord and Saviour from whom can proceed nothing
but what is most perfect; further that when administered, the most powerful
influence of the Holy Ghost is present, pervading the inmost sanctuary of the
soul; next that they possess an admirable and unfailing virtue to cure our
spiritual maladies, and communicate to us the inexhaustible riches of the
Passion of our Lord.
Finally, let them point out, that although the whole edifice
of Christian piety rests on the most firm foundation of the cornerstone; yet,
unless it be supported on every side by the preaching of the divine Word and by
the use of the Sacraments, it is greatly to be feared that it may to a great
extent totter and fall to the ground. For as we are ushered into spiritual life
by means of the Sacraments, so by the same means are we nourished and
preserved, and grow to spiritual increase.
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