As Jesus entered the town of Bethsaida, some people there brought to Him a man who was born blind and asked Him to heal Him. Jesus took some spittle and rubbed it in his eyes, but it effected only a partial healing. The man could only see shapes. It was not until He laid His hands upon the man that the man was able to see clearly (c.f. Mark 8:22-27). This event has often plagued Biblical commentators who have struggled to interpret it. At first glance it appears that Jesus was somehow limited in His power to heal, having to do it in stages. But those who are familiar with the Catholic practice of using Sacramentals will recognize it for what it is, an institution of sorts of the practice. The man receives the grace of healing after the man has been properly disposed after coming in contact with a consecrated object. It is with this in mind, that we shall discuss the Church’s use of Sacramentals.
Theology of Sacramentals
Any discussion of Sacramentals must begin with making an important distinction between Sacramentals and Sacraments. As the Catechism puts it, “Sacramentals do not confer the grace of the Holy Spirit in the way that the Sacraments do, but by the Church’s prayer, they prepare us to receive grace and dispose us to cooperate with it” (CCC 1671). Sacramentals do not work ex opere operato the way Sacraments do, but instead their efficacy comes from the intercessory power of the Church. In short they do not bestow sanctifying grace but only aid in disposing the person to receive them.
Because the efficacy rests upon the intercessory power of the Church, unlike Sacraments which were instituted by Christ, Sacramentals are instituted by the Church. By bestowing a prayer of consecration over the object, it becomes a means by which those who use them become disposed to the infusion of sanctifying grace. The specific grace of the Sacramental depends upon the prayer itself, a prayer that is said by a Priest but has the entire Church. The consecrated object is given a power to effect a certain blessing, although it is not infallible as with the Sacraments. Nevertheless, Sacramentals are a powerful help in the pursuit of sanctity. This is what makes Sacramentals so powerful. But they are also made powerful through the intercessory power of the whole Church. In this way they are different from having someone pray for you. If, as St. James says, “the prayer of a righteous man is indeed powerful and effective” (James 5:16), then the prayer of the whole Church, the spotless Bride of Christ is much greater.
St. Thomas in his Theology of the Sacraments says that the existence of Sacramentals is fitting because none of the Seven Sacraments “was instituted directly against venial sin. This is taken away by certain sacramentals, for instance, Holy Water and such like” (ST III q.65, art.1, ad.8). This “supplementary power” placed upon some Sacramentals is a key point to grasp in their use so as to keep us from treating them like good luck charms. They each contain a certain power that comes from the prayer of consecration by which they were made to be Sacramentals.
Some Examples of Sacramentals
Using St. Thomas’ example, this power to take away venial sins is bestowed upon Holy Water because it was specifically consecrated for that purpose by the prayer of consecration:
Blessed are you, Lord, all-powerful God, who in Christ, the living water of salvation, blessed and transformed us. Grant that, when we are sprinkled with this water or make use of it, we will be refreshed inwardly by the power of the Holy Spirit and continue to walk in the new life we received at baptism. We ask this through Christ our Lord.
A blessed crucifix is effective in providing both bodily and spiritual protection, especially “against the cruel darts of the enemy” (1962 Rituale Romanum). Likewise, sacred images, be they of Our Lord, Our Lady, St. Joseph or any of the saints make available the merits and intercession of those who are depicted when a person pays devout homage to them. In a very real way they make the person in the image immediately present to the person who seeks to speak with them.
Another important Sacramental, especially relevant to Lent is Palms. As Dom Prosper Gueranger describes in his book The Liturgical Year, palms are blessed using “prayers that are are eloquent and full of instruction; and, together with the sprinkling with holy water and the incensation, impart a virtue to these branches, which elevates them to the supernatural order, and makes them means for the sanctification of our souls and the protection of our persons and dwellings.” The palms act to give protection to houses and the people in them when they are kept there. This is a reason why if palms are being offered, even if you can’t get to Mass, that you should seek them out.
Obviously then the efficacy of Sacramentals depends upon the blessing that has been bestowed upon them by the Priest. When we ask for an object to be blessed then, we are not just asking to make it somehow holy but to have it set aside for a specific purpose. We should always ask that the proper blessing be said over the object so that it can be used for the purpose that the Church puts forth. Similarly, we should listen to the words of blessing so that we can learn exactly what the objects do.