The
Sacraments
27.
The second divinely instituted means which the church offers for the pastoral
activity of penance and reconciliation is constituted by the sacraments.
In
the mysterious dynamism of the sacraments, so rich in symbolism and content,
one can discern one aspect which is not always emphasized: Each sacrament, over
and above its own proper grace, is also a sign of penance and reconciliation.
Therefore in each of them it is possible to relive these dimensions of the
spirit.
Baptism
is of course a salvific washing which, as St Peter says, is effective "not
as a removal of dirt from the body but as an appeal to God for a clear
conscience."(151) It is death, burial and resurrection with the
dead, buried and risen Christ.(152) It is a gift of the Holy Spirit
through Christ.(153) But this essential and original constituent of
Christian baptism, far from eliminating the penitential element already present
in the baptism which Jesus himself received from John "to fulfill all
righteousness,"(154) in fact enriches it. In other words, it is a
fact of conversion and of reintegration into the right order of relationships
with God, of reconciliation with God, with the elimination of the original
stain and the consequent introduction into the great family of the reconciled.
Confirmation
likewise, as a ratification of baptism and together with baptism a sacrament of
initiation, in conferring the fullness of the Holy Spirit and in bringing the
Christian life to maturity, signifies and accomplishes thereby a greater
conversion of the heart and brings about a more intimate and effective
membership of the same assembly of the reconciled, which is the church of
Christ.
The
definition which St. Augustine gives of the eucharist as "sacramentum
pietatis, signum unitatis, vinculum caritatis"(155) clearly
illustrates the effects of personal sanctification (pietas) and community
reconciliation (unitas and caritas) which derive from the very essence of the
eucharistic mystery as an unbloody renewal of the sacrifice of the cross, the
source of salvation and of reconciliation for all people.
However,
it must be remembered that the church, guided by faith in this great sacrament,
teaches that no Christian who is conscious of grave sin can receive the
eucharist before having obtained God's forgiveness. This we read in the
instruction Eucharisticum Mysterium which, duly approved by Paul VI, fully
confirms the teaching of the Council of Trent: "The eucharist is to be
offered to the faithful also 'as a remedy, which frees us from daily faults and
preserves us from mortal sin' and they are to be shown the fitting way of using
the penitential parts of the liturgy of the Mass. The person who wishes to
receive holy communion is to be reminded of the precept: Let a man examine
himself" (1 Cor 11:28). And the church's custom shows that such an
examination is necessary, because no one who is conscious of being in mortal
sin, however contrite he may believe himself to be, is to approach the holy
eucharist without having first made a sacramental confession. If this person
finds himself in need and has no means of going to confession, he should first
make an act of perfect contrition."(156)
The
sacrament of orders is intended to give to the church the pastors who, besides
being teachers and guides, are called to be witnesses and workers of unity,
builders of the family of God, and defenders and preservers of the communion of
this family against the sources of division and dispersion.
The
sacrament of matrimony, the exaltation of human love under the action of grace,
is a sign of the love of Christ for the church. But it is also a sign of the
victory which Christ grants to couples in resisting the forces which deform and
destroy love, in order that the family born from this sacrament may be a sign
also of the reconciled and reconciling church for a world reconciled in all its
structures and institutions.
Finally,
the anointing of the sick in the trial of illness and old age and especially at
the Christian's final hour is a sign of definitive conversion to the Lord and
of total acceptance of suffering and death as a penance for sins. And in this
is accomplished supreme reconciliation with the Father.
However,
among the sacraments there is one which, though it has often been called the
sacrament of confession because of the accusation of sins which takes place in
it, can more appropriately be considered by antonomasia the sacrament of
penance, as it is in fact called. And thus it is the sacrament of conversion
and reconciliation. The recent synod particularly concerned itself with this
sacrament because of its importance with regard to reconciliation.
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