48. Furthermore, since it is forbidden to
administer the sacrament of extreme unction except in a case of serious
illness, a penitent may no means be obliged to receive anointing with oil of
extreme unction as penance or satisfaction for his sins. As Pope Eugene IV
established in his Decretum pro Instructione Armenorum, satisfaction for
sins or penance imposed by confessors on their penitents should consist chiefly
in prayers, fasting, and almsgiving. In times past such anointing was
introduced among eastern Christians. That it was purely ceremonial may be
gathered from canon 74 or the Council of Nicaea (from the Arabic translation,
Harduin, Collect. vol. 1, p. 492). There it is decreed that if one of
the faithful shall live impurely with an unbeliever, he may be reconciled to
the Church after extended penance "through holy water and the oil of the
sick." This was the source of a further abuse. According to Joannes
Nathanael, de Moribus Graecorum, and Francois Richard, de Expeditione Sacra,
rich penitents were often obliged to receive this anointing as penance for
their sins; thus this practice was quite profitable for the clergy.
Pope Innocent IV opposed this serious error in his letter to the
Bishop of Tusculum: "Confessors may not impose on anyone any mere
anointing in satisfaction for their sins" (sect. 6). The synod of Nicosia
passed a similar decree (Harduin, Collect. vol. 7, p. 1114) and We renewed this
precept in Our constitution, Etsi Pastoralis, sect. 5 (Bullarium, vol. 1, no.
57). Thiers, de Superstit., bk. 8, chap. 6, should also be consulted. Arcudius,
moreover, refers to Greek priests who impose this on their penitents; he states
that they usually employ the sacramental words in performing the anointing. He
criticizes them severely for this (de Concordia, bk. 5, chap. 4, sect. Ego
praesentem). However, Goarius asserts that the Greeks did not intend to confer
the sacrament in performing this anointing: "They do not consider that the
infirmities of the soul are removed automatically by the anointing and prayers,
but only that the devotion of the penitent or the prayerful charity of the
minister, that is, the intention of the agent, may possibly have this
effect" (in notis ad Euchologium, p. 350). Still, even he criticizes this
custom since, as he says, the Greeks should be careful to act in this affair in
accordance with the teaching of the holy Roman Church. Many serious errors stem
from this practice of anointing: either the sacrament of extreme unction is
conferred on one in good health and so incapable of receiving this sacrament,
or the matter and form of the sacrament is used without the intention of
conferring the sacrament itself.
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