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The History of the Christian Church

70-Sacramentalism

The History of the Christian Church

sanctorum.us

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.6790 Ratings

🗓️ 4 January 2015

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this, the 70th Episode of CS , we take a look at Sacramentalism; a mindset that dominated the religious landscape of late Medieval Christianity.The question that consumed Europeans of the Middle Ages was, “How can I be saved? What must I believe and do that will preserve my soul from the torments of hell?”Rome answered that with what’s called Sacramentalism.Now, let me be clear; the basic answer was, “Trust in the Lord Jesus Christ.” But the Church went on to define what that trust looked like with a set of rules and required practices. Yes, people are saved by grace through faith, but that grace is received by special acts only authorized clergy may conduct. These acts were called “sacraments” from the word “sacred” meaning holy. But there was a specific flavor to the word sacrament that carried the idea of mystery. Precisely HOW the sacraments communicated grace was unknown, while that they did was a certainty. So while salvation was by grace, one had to go to the Church to get that grace. The sacraments were channels of grace and necessary food of the soul. They accompanied human life from the cradle to the grave. An infant was ushered into the world by the sacrament of Baptism while the dying were sent on their way out by the sacrament of Extreme Unction.While all the sacraments were important, the most essential were Baptism and the Eucharist.Baptism was thought to open the door to the Kingdom of Heaven by removing the stain of original sin. But that door to glory was only opened. The baptized needed to follow up their baptism as an infant with later sacraments like Confirmation, Marriage and others. So important was baptism, in an emergency, when an infant appeared to be in distress and a bishop wasn’t close enough to perform the rite, the Church allowed the nearest available pious person to baptize.The Lord’s Table, Communion, or as it’s referred to by some churches, the Eucharist, was the sacrament of grace by which people nourished and nurtured their spirits and progressed in sanctification.Besides these, other rites were called sacraments, but until the time of the Scholastics, there was little agreement as to the proper number. Before the Scholastics, the number of sacraments varied from four to twelve.Bernard of Clairvaux listed ten and including foot-washing and the ordaining or as it was called, “investiture” of bishops and abbots. Abelard named only five. A mystic theologian named Hugo of St. Victor also gave five but went on to suggested thirty possible means by which the Church dispensed special grace. Hugo divided the sacraments into three classes,—First were the sacraments necessary for salvation; Baptism and the Eucharist.Second were those which sanctified the worshipper and made spiritual progress possible. This includes holy water and the use of ashes on Ash Wednesday.A third class prepared the way for the other sacraments.Though Thomas Aquinas listed seven sacraments, he recognized some of the lesser rites as quasi-sacramental in character.The uncertainty concerning the number of the sacraments was a heritage from the Church Fathers. Augustine defined any sacred rite as a sacrament. In 1179, the Third Lateran Council used the term in a wide sense to include the investiture of bishops and burial. The Catholic Church today makes a distinction between certain sacred rites, called sacramentalia, and the seven sacraments. Aquinas gave as the reason for the proper number to be seven—saying that three is the number of Deity, four of creation, and seven represents union of God and man. A rather interesting “reason” for the supreme Scholastic to make since it sounds far more like the work of one of the Mystics.Following the inquisitive nature of the Scholastics however, ingenious and elaborate attempts were made to correlate the seven sacraments to all the areas of mankind’s spiritual need. They were understood as undoing the Fall and its effects.Sev

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the History of the Christian Church, Season 1 with Lance Rolston.

0:13.0

In this, the 70th episode of Communia Syncturn, we take a look at sacramentalism, a mindset that dominated the religious

0:22.7

landscape of late medieval Christianity. The question that consumed Europeans of the Middle Ages

0:29.3

was, how can I be saved? What must I believe and do that will preserve my soul from the

0:35.9

torments of hell? Rome answered that with what's called

0:40.2

sacramentalism. Now let me be clear. The basic answer was trust in the Lord Jesus. But the church

0:48.1

went on to define what that trust looked like with a set of rules and required practices. Yes, people are saved by grace through

0:56.2

faith, but that grace is received by special acts only authorized clergy may conduct. These acts were

1:03.8

called sacraments from the word sacred, meaning holy. But there was a specific flavor to the word

1:10.1

sacrament that carried the idea of mystery.

1:14.0

Precisely how the sacraments communicated grace was unknown.

1:18.4

While that they did was a certainty.

1:21.3

So while salvation was by grace, one had to go to the church to get that grace.

1:27.4

The sacraments were channels of grace and necessary food for the soul.

1:31.5

They accompanied human life from the cradle to the grave.

1:34.9

An infant was ushered into the world by the sacrament of baptism,

1:38.5

while the dying were sent on their way out by the sacrament of extreme unction.

1:46.4

While all the sacraments were important,

1:53.2

the most essential were baptism and the Eucharist. Baptism was thought to open the door to the kingdom of heaven by removing the stain of original sin. But that door to glory was only opened.

1:59.5

The baptized needed to follow up their baptism as an infant with later sacraments, like

2:04.6

confirmation, marriage, and others.

2:08.0

So important was baptism in an emergency when an infant appeared to be in distress, and a bishop

...

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