51. The main issue of this unfair and untimely
disagreement between the Latin and Greek churches derives from the
controversies in which our theologians habitually engage. Some dispute whether
the Apostles conferred the sacrament of Confirmation by laying on of hands or
by using holy oil, and as usual some assert what others deny. They also dispute
whether the imposition of hands alone is the matter of this sacrament. Some hold
that this is the case, while others consider the holy oil to be the remote
matter of the sacrament; in this case the application of this oil in the sign
of the Cross to the forehead of the confirmand is considered the proximate
matter. These last argue from the text of the decree for the Instruction of the
Armenians published by Pope Eugenius IV: "The second sacrament is
Confirmation whose matter is chrism. Chrism is made from oil and balm which has
been blessed by the bishop. The oil signifies a good conscience and the balm,
good reputation." In speaking of the imposition of hands which the
Apostles used in conferring this sacrament, Pope Eugenius adds: "In place
of that imposition of hands, however, Confirmation is given in the
Church." Finally, others join together the imposition of hands and the
chrism, stating that both are equally the matter of the sacrament of
Confirmation, but that either is insufficient by itself. Only when these two
are joined together do they comprise the full matter of the sacrament.
As regards the imposition of hands, some think it consists in the
stretching out of the hands of the bishop towards the confirmands at the start
of the ceremony while he is saying the opening prayers. Others understand it to
consist in the very act of anointing of the forehead of the confirmand by the
bishop, since it is impossible to anoint the forehead without laying a hand on
it. These are controversies which engage our theologians, and everyone may
embrace the interpretation he finds most persuasive. But it is wrong for anyone
to assert that the sacrament of Confirmation does not exist in the Greek
Church. For this opinion is contradicted by ancient eastern practice as found
in the Greek Rituals which make no reference to the imposition of hands as matter
either sufficient or insufficient of the sacrament of Confirmation. And this
practice has never been condemned or criticized by the Apostolic See although
it was well-known. So to escape the labyrinth of this difficulty, a different
line must be followed, a line which is open to the careful seeker. This line
avoids a condemnation of a view which has many supporters among the orthodox,
on the basis of an uncertain and undefined proposition.
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