Sacraments: Channels of Divine Grace

by John Hardon, S.J.

It is impossible to exaggerate the importance of understanding 
what we mean by the sacraments as channels of divine grace. We 
might almost say that Christianity is divided into two classes: 
those who believe that Christ instituted the sacraments as 
instruments of His grace and those who do not. In the sixteenth 
century, six whole nations separated from Catholic unity because 
their leaders no longer believed in what we Catholics call the 
seven sacraments.

This is also part of the crisis in the Christian world today. 
There are those who still believe that Christ instituted seven 
channels of His grace, and those who may use the word "sacrament" 
but no longer believe either in the sacraments as communicators of 
grace or the Church's authority over the sacraments. We may even 
say that the future of Christianity depends on professed 
Christians understanding-and I mean understanding-the necessity of 
the sacraments for reaching eternal life.

Our focus in this article will be on one word, "understanding." We 
ask ourselves three questions: Why did Christ institute seven 
sacramental channels of grace? How are these channels of grace 
being undermined in some professedly Catholic circles today? What 
is our consequent duty as teachers of the true faith?

Why the Sacrament.

God became man in order to bring the human race to join the Holy 
Trinity in a heavenly eternity. Our destiny is to return to the 
God from whom we came to share in His own perfect happiness that 
He enjoys. But this same God gave us a free will that we are to 
use, according to His will, in order to reach the celestial home 
where He is waiting for us.

The most fundamental condition that we are to fulfill is to be in 
His friendship when He calls us from time into eternity. Another 
name for this divine friendship is the possession of sanctifying 
grace. Having destined us for heavenly beatitude, in sheer 
justice, He provided us with the means of attaining what we call 
the Beatific Vision.

On these terms, the sacraments are the principal ways that we can 
obtain the supernatural life, without which no one can be saved. 
It is also through the sacraments that we grow in this life of 
grace, as it is also the sacraments that provide us with a means 
of restoring the life of God's friendship that we may have lost 
through grave sin. We see immediately that Christ instituted the 
sacraments to give us the grace we need to reach heaven, to grow 
in His grace and thus earn a greater happiness in eternity, and 
regain His friendship if we have lost it through our disobedience 
to His will.

The moment we say that the sacraments are channels of divine 
grace, we assume that we come into this world without the grace 
needed to reach heaven. It is not our purpose here to explore the 
mysterious providence of God in allowing so many people not to 
receive the sacraments which Christ instituted. There is such a 
thing as not receiving the sacraments actually but only in desire. 
Nevertheless, the basic principle remains, the sacraments are the 
means which Christ provided for the salvation of the human family. 
Immediately certain conclusions follow. Each of the seven 
sacraments has its own divinely intended purpose.

Baptism

We need first of all, to receive a share in the divine life. 
Christ instituted the Sacrament of Baptism in order to provide us 
with a share in His own divinity. When Christ told Nicodemus that 
he must be reborn of water and the Holy Spirit, He meant this 
literally. He presumed that we have a principle of natural life 
for the body which is the human soul. What He revealed to the 
wondering Nicodemus, however, was that we are also to have an 
above-natural principle of life for the soul. St. Augustine called 
it the soul of the soul. But whatever name you give the source of 
life for the human spirit, we dare not question that Christ 
provided the means of obtaining this life. The basic means is the 
Sacrament of Baptism. The Savior could not have been clearer. When 
Nicodemus pressed Him on what all of this means, Jesus used the 
strongest language at His command. He said, "Unless you are reborn 
of water and the Holy Spirit, you shall not reach the kingdom of 
heaven."

The Holy Eucharist and Penance

Once He told us that we need baptism to receive the life of grace 
in our souls, Christ made sure that we also know how to preserve 
this life to the dawn of eternity. Three chapters later, in St. 
John's Gospel, the Savior told His startled listeners that they 
needed to receive His flesh and blood to keep spiritually alive. 
No less than we need food and drink to sustain our natural lives, 
so we need the food and drink of the Holy Eucharist to stay alive 
in His grace. Again, He used the strongest language possible, 
"Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink His blood, 
you shall not have life in you." Baptism is necessary to obtain a 
share in the life of God. The Eucharist is equally necessary to 
remain spiritually alive. Christ foresaw that His followers would 
sin and even lose the divine life. He therefore provided the means 
for restoring this life in the Sacrament of Penance, which He 
instituted on Easter Sunday night.

Holy Orders

The Church which Christ founded is a visible reality. It is no 
mere abstraction or a poetic society of believers or the 
predestined. During His visible stay on earth, He was Himself the 
channel of the graces that He gave those who believed in His name. 
But Christ's mission of communicating grace was to continue after 
His return to heavenly glory. That is why He made sure that the 
Church He founded would continue the work He had begun. That is 
why at the Last Supper, He instituted two sacraments, the Holy 
Eucharist, and the priesthood which would ensure His continued 
bodily presence on earth and His communication of the fruits of 
Calvary through the sacrifice of the Mass.

Holy Matrimony

Most of Christ's followers would be married. As He told the 
startled Pharisees, those who believed in Him would be expected to 
remain "two in one flesh" for the rest of their lives. No more 
polygamy, or a writ of divorce with the right to remarry. Lifelong 
monogamy would be an imperative for those who called themselves 
Christians. Clearly, Christ had to give His married followers the 
superhuman grace they would need to remain faithful to His 
teaching. Matrimony, therefore, had to become a sacrament if 
Christians were to live an impossibly human life in the married 
state.

Confirmation

Throughout the Gospels, Jesus made no secret of the strength His 
followers would need to remain firm in their faith. That is why He 
gave them the Sacrament of Confirmation. Over the centuries, it 
has been called the sacrament of spiritual strengthening. In our 
day, it is being seen as the sacrament of martyrdom. As He told 
the disciples, on the day of His Ascension, we are to witness to 
Him, literally be His "martyrs" (from the Greek word for 
witnesses) even to the ends of the earth.

Anointing of the Sick

As our bodies approach the end of their days, our souls need the 
help that only Christ can give to enter eternity with peaceful 
confidence in God's mercy. That is why we have the Sacrament of 
Anointing. As only priests would know, people who are facing 
bodily death need extraordinary assistance from the Savior. This 
sacrament, we may say, completes the work that Christ began when 
we were baptized.

Catholic Sacraments Undermined

Over the centuries of the Church's history, the sacraments have 
been one of the principal targets of what we now call dissenters 
but what more accurately are heretics who deny one or more of the 
cardinal mysteries of the Catholic faith. Already in the time of 
Christ, many of His disciples left the Master because they would 
not accept His teaching on the Real Presence of the living Christ 
in the Blessed Sacrament. For the next fifteen centuries, one 
after another of the sacraments instituted by Christ was either 
openly denied or so reinterpreted as to leave nothing but the 
name. Finally in the sixteenth century, an avalanche of anti-
sacramentalism broke loose in one formerly Catholic country after 
another.

It was only logical, therefore, that the Council of Trent issued 
the following condemnation, "If anyone says that the sacraments of 
the New Law are more or less than seven, namely: Baptism, 
Confirmation, the Eucharist, Penance, Extreme Unction, Order, and 
Matrimony; or even that any of these seven is not truly and 
properly a sacrament, let him be anathema."

Needless to say, the followers of Luther, Calvin, Zwingli and 
Crammer did not change their minds. Their underlying reason for 
rejecting the sacraments was the more fundamental premise of 
absolute predestination. Those will reach heaven who have been 
predetermined to be saved. The very meaning of "grace" was 
changed. Instead of being a free gift of God's mercy, that we are 
to accept and cooperate with, grace was re-defined as the 
selective mercy of God which those receive who are destined to be 
saved.

Even more basic than the theory of absolute predestination was the 
denial of a supernatural life. Man was never elevated to a share 
in the divine life. On these terms, there could be no question of 
receiving the supernatural life through Baptism, or restoring this 
life through Penance, or nourishing this life through the Holy 
Eucharist. Even when the word "sacrament" might be used, a large 
part of world Christianity, outside of Roman Catholicism, no 
longer believes either that Christ instituted the sacraments or 
that we need them for our salvation.

However, a new phenomenon has entered Christian history in our 
day. A growing number of still professed Catholic writers are re-
interpreting the Church's teaching on the sacraments with a 
license and a devastating consequence that has no counterpart in 
the last half millennium. I will never forget the conference I 
attended of the Midwestern Theological Society. The keynote 
speaker was Richard McBrien. Through one hour of learned 
discourse, he gave the audience one reason after another why the 
Catholic priesthood was not a sacrament instituted by Our Lord at 
the Last Supper. It was a later second century innovation. A 
logical consequence of this position is to question whether Christ 
had instituted any of the sacraments.

One of the most prestigious universities on the east coast is 
currently teaching a course which identifies the supernatural with 
mythology. In fact, more than one dictionary describes the 
supernatural as the unreal or the fanciful.

We cannot overstate the widespread elimination of faith in the 
sacraments as channels of divine grace in some still nominally 
Catholic circles. The widespread desecration of the Holy Eucharist 
as the sacrament of Christ's physical presence now on earth 
through the Sacrament of the Eucharist; the massive departure from 
the priesthood of so many men who had received the Sacrament of 
Orders; the nationwide, in our country, and the worldwide 
internationally drop in confession; the closing of over one 
hundred parishes in just two dioceses in a few years; the epidemic 
of annulments of persons who putatively received the Sacrament of 
Matrimony: all of these are symptomatic of a plague of sacramental 
error that threatens to undermine the Catholic Church in one so-
called developed country after another.

We are now reading books and magazines, and hearing of classes and 
lectures that threaten the very essence of our sacramental faith. 
As we read these publications and listen to these talks, one thing 
becomes dear. There is a massive loss of faith not only in the 
sacraments but in the supernatural life which the sacraments are 
to confer and strengthen in our lives. We are being told that the 
sacraments were not instituted by Christ but invented by 
Christians over a period of several centuries. What we call the 
sacraments, it is said, goes back to the ancient religions of pre-
Christian times. The rituals that we call sacraments today are 
simply a continuation of what all the religions celebrated long 
before Christianity was born. Every sacrament of Catholic 
Christianity is being traced to its preChristian history. Washing 
with water, breaking and sharing of bread, the pouring and 
drinking of wine, anointing with oil, laying on of hands to bless 
and ordain, calling down divine power, pronouncing words of 
forgiveness, all of these are as ancient as religious history and 
were practiced long before the word sacrament was even used in 
religious discourse.

On these grounds, it would be not only mistaken but deceptive to 
associate and, much less, identify the sacraments with the ritual 
of the Catholic Church. To speak of the Church founded by Christ 
as the universal sacrament of salvation is at best a misnomer and 
at worst a blasphemy. Christ had no claim, we are told, on our 
human destiny. Nor does the Church He is said to have founded have 
any monopoly on the goodness of God.

Those who deny the divine origin of the Christian sacraments 
appeal to such geniuses as Karl Rahner. Building on his premises, 
they claim it is impossible to say that God's grace depends on the 
Church which Christ founded. The Church, people are told, has no 
rules or regulations, no imperatives, no prohibitions. It is 
emphatically not the clergy, nor the sacramental ritual, nor the 
worship by the people in sacramental celebration. All of these are 
adjuncts or, if you wish, superfluous additions to what 
Christianity really is. It is the living event of God's presence. 
It is people, no matter what their religious beliefs or practices 
may be, who constitute "The People Of God." They have been touched 
by God, are loved by Him and belong to Him, regardless of what 
religion they profess or even no religion at all.

On these terms the "sacraments" are not channels of divine grace. 
Bread and wine, oil and water, sex and prayer, are themselves the 
expressions of authentic Christianity.

Behind this reassessment of the sacraments, the new theologians 
are appealing to what they call the spirit of the Second Vatican 
Council. They are heartened by the use of names like "liturgy" and 
"eucharist" and "eucharistic celebration" as substitutes for the 
supposedly outdated word, "Mass." They do not hesitate to accuse 
Catholics of seeing a magical significance in the number of 
sacraments. They take comfort in the widespread practice of 
"general absolution" instead of making a private confession of 
one's sins to the priest.

Our Responsibility

Pope John Paul II introduces the <Catechism of the Catholic 
Church> by declaring, "Guarding the deposit of faith is the 
mission which the Lord entrusted to His Church and which she 
fulfills in every age."

As believing Christians, loyal to the Vicar of Christ, our first 
responsibility is to guard the deposit of faith in the sacraments 
which Christ became man to give us the grace we need to reach 
eternal life. This guarding of the sacramental faith carries with 
it a number of grave obligations.

We cannot begin to guard our faith unless we understand what we 
believe. In Christ's parable of the good seed which fell on 
different kinds of ground, the first infertile soil was the 
pathway. The seed fell on the hard ground and the birds of the air 
came along and picked up the seed. This, we are told, is what 
happens to those who have been given the true Faith but fail to 
understand what they believe. The result is tragedy. The devil 
comes along and steals the Faith from the hearts of once professed 
believers.

Ours is the most academically educated age of human history. The 
five million Americans on college campuses every year are only a 
symbol of the widespread growth in knowledge in our day. But this 
growth in secular knowledge will not only do no good. It will 
destroy the faith of once believing Catholics if they have not 
used their minds to grow in grasping what they believe. They must 
grow in understanding the meaning of their faith. They must grow 
in the clarity of mind in seeing the subtle distinctions hidden 
behind their faith. They must grow in the certitude of what they 
profess to believe. They must grow in knowing how to defend this 
faith in the face of opposition that is sweeping across the 
Catholic world like a demonic hurricane.

But understanding the Faith is not enough. The sacraments will 
become for them, what they have become for so many others, unless 
they put their faith into daily practice. We believe that the 
sacrament of the Eucharist, as sacrifice, communion and presence 
is nothing less than Jesus Christ alive and active on earth to 
provide us with the light and strength we need, especially to 
practice that charity by which we are recognized as His disciples. 
To remain faithful Catholics in today's self-intoxicated world we 
must expect to practice heroic generosity and heroic patience, 
which are impossible without the superhuman strength that only 
Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist can give us.

We asked what is our duty as teachers of the true faith in an 
atmosphere that is clouded to the point of blindness on the 
meaning of the sacraments. We shall be as faithful teachers of the 
true Faith as we are courageous in explaining this faith, without 
compromise and without fear of the consequences. To teach the 
Catholic Faith on the sacraments can literally mean living a 
martyr's life.

In Pope John Paul II's masterful encyclical, <The Splendor of 
Truth>, we are told to understand the Faith, as it has been 
entrusted by Christ to His Church, and proclaim this faith with 
heroic courage even at the cost of martyrdom.

When Christ told us, "Without me you can do nothing," He meant 
this literally. Without the grace which He gives through the 
sacraments which He instituted, we cannot hope to remain 
Christians or Catholics or, least of all, channels of His wisdom 
to those whom we are instructing in the one true Faith on which 
depends the salvation of the world.

Father John Hardon, S.J., is Executive Editor of The Catholic 
Faith.

This article was taken from the May/June 1996 issue of "The 
Catholic Faith".  Published bi-monthly for 24.95 a year by 
Ignatius Press. To subscribe, call: 1-800-651-1531 or write: The 
Catholic Faith, P.O. Box 160, Snohomish, WA  98291-0160.

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