What is a Sacrament?
An visible sign of an invisible God instituted by Christ that reveals
and communicates grace.
(Baptism, Matrimony, Reconciliation, Eucharist, Anointing of the
Sick, Confirmation, Holy Orders)
Baptisms: Contact the Parish office to schedule. Baptismal Preparation Classes held every first Sunday of the month at 6 p.m. in the Holy Family Room. Please call if you plan to attend 270-885-8522.
Matrimony: Couples wishing to share their lives with one another in Christian marriage are asked to contact the Parish office for an appointment. The first appointment must be scheduled at least six months before the proposed date of marriage. Saturday weddings cannot be scheduled later than 2:00 p.m.
Follow these links for SS Peter and Paul Wedding information.
| Reconciliation: Confessions will be heard every Saturday at 2:00, 3:00, and 4:00 p.m.; if no Priest is present, please wait until the next scheduled time. Confessions anytime by appointment. |
|
Anointing of the Sick: Any parishioner who is ill or infirmed may request the anointing by contacting the Parish office. The Sacrament is celebrated communally every six months.
Eucharist: Eucharistic Banquet celebrated at every Mass for practicing Catholics in right standing with the Church. (First Holy communion); (Any homebound parishioner wishing to receive Communion should contact the Parish office.)
Funerals: Advance planning can be done years in
advance, when death is not at all expected soon, or it can be done in
cases of terminal illness or aging. Every funeral home offers
advance planning counseling and sales, and in most cases advance
planning arrangements are transferable in case you move. Please
contact the Church office if you wish to begin the funeral planning
process.
![]()
The great mystery of the union in Christ of a human nature with the second Person of the Godhead is that the human actions and sufferings of Christ are divine actions and sufferings. The sacraments are a living continuation of this mystery. There are earthly, external signs here which, of themselves, could never acquire any supernatural significance, but the signs of the sacraments have been made by Christ into vehicles of his grace. They effect in men the grace for which Christ made them the sign.
So there are two fundamental ideas which constantly recur in the Church's teaching, on the sacraments. First there is the Church's concern for these instituted by Christ, their number, and their proper preservation and administration; then the grace which Christ has for all time linked with these signs and which is communicated by them.
The second is the effect of the sacraments. They are the signs of Christ's work; the effectiveness of Christ's continuing work in his Church cannot be dependent on man's inadequacy. A sacrament, administered properly in the way established by Christ and with the proper intention, gives the grace it signifies. It is effective not by reason of the power of intercession of priestly prayer nor on account of the worthiness of the recipient, but solely by the power of Christ. The power of Christ lives in the sacraments. The effect of the sacrament is independent of the sinfulness or unworthiness of the minister. The Church has never tolerated any subjective qualification of the objective effectiveness of the sacraments ex opere operato. This would ultimately be to conceive the way of salvation as being man's way to God and not God's way to man.
The Church Thus Teaches: There are seven sacraments. They were instituted by Christ and given to the Church to administer. They are necessary for salvation. The sacraments are the vehicles of grace which they convey. They are validly administered by the carrying out of the sign with the proper intention. Not all are equally qualified to administer all the sacraments. The validity of the sacrament is independent of the worthiness of the minister. Three sacraments imprint an indelible character.
Sacramentals are instituted by the
Church and are effective by virtue of the Church's
intercession. Institution and alteration of them is
reserved to the Holy See.
| Baptism:
Baptism is the sacrament that frees man from
original sin and from personal guilt, that makes him a member of
Christ and His Church. It is thus the door to a new and
supernatural life. This sacrament has been undisputed in the Church since the beginning of Christian tradition. It has never been rejected by any heresy intending to remain on a Christian basis. Doubts could arise only about the ways and means of administering it and on its effects and way of operation. These things are therefore in essence what Church documents about baptism deal with. THE CHURCH TEACHES: Baptism is a true sacrament instituted by Christ. It is administered by washing with natural water and at the same time invoking the Most Holy Trinity. Anybody, even an unbeliever or a heretic can validly administer baptism. Since it confers grace by the signs' being properly carried out children can and should be baptized even while still infants. Baptism is necessary for salvation. Baptism effects the remission of original sin and actual sins and of all punishment due to sin; it confers sanctifying grace, membership in Christ and in the Church and the obligation to obey the Church's laws, and give an indelible character. Note: from Pope Innocent III AD1201. The baptism of young children is not profitless. As circumcision made men members of the People of Israel, so baptism gives them entry to the kingdom of heaven......
Eucharist The doctrine of the Holy Eucharist
consist of that of the Eucharist sacrifice, the sacrificial
meal, and the sacrificial food, or to express it otherwise, it
consists of the doctrine of the Mass, of Communion, and of the
Real Presence. There is no presence of Christ in the Blessed
Sacrament that is not meant first and foremost as food for the
faithful people, and there is no sacramental union with Christ
in Holy Communion that is not to be thought of as a sacrificial
meal: 'For as often as you shall eat this bread, and drink the
chalice, you shall show the death of the Lord, until he come' (1
Cor. 11:26). The Eucharistic meal can only be prepared in the
sacrifice of the Mass. |
| Matrimony:
Matrimony is the marriage contract between Christians
raised by Christ to the dignity of a sacrament. The theological
and dogmatic treatment of this sacrament does not look very much
to its main features of unity and indissolubility which are
basic characteristics of all marriage in natural ethics; they
are rather premisses, though of course they attain greater
significance and depth and stability in marriage as a sacrament.
The fact, then, that these features take up a considerable
amount of space in Church documents must not be allowed to hide
the theological content of this sacrament which comes to us from
revelation and belongs to the supernatural order. As a sacrament
matrimony is entirely oriented on man's supernatural goal.
Matrimony and order are the two sacraments which not only serve
the individual in reaching this goal but are there for the
benefit of the community. Matrimony is there for the mutual help
of the spouses and the increase of the people of God. Devotion
to his twofold end is the way of salvation for married couples,
a way sanctified by the sacrament. 'Yet she shall be saved
through childbearing; if she continue in faith, and love, and
sanctification, with sobriety' (1 Tim:2:15).
|