The
Sacrament of Anointing of the Sick
The sacrament of anointing is celebrated
communally during the Sunday Masses about twice a year. The sacrament may be
celebrated at any time for someone who is seriously ill or entering the hospital
for surgery. It should ideally be celebrated at the beginnning of the illness.
It can also be celebrated every six months for those experiences the weakening
effects of aging. One needs only to call one of the parish priests to make
arrangements to celebrate this sacrament.
As to Anointing by conferring the Holy Spirit completes the sacrament of baptism, so
extreme unction is the complement and completion of penance. Penance restores the
justification lost by sin, extreme unction takes away the infirmity left by sin; it
'removes that state which might be an obstacle to the clothing with glory of the
resurrection'; and, as every sacrament makes us men in some respect like Christ, 'so we
become by extreme unction like the risen Christ because it will be given to the dying as a
sign of the glory to come in which everything mortal will be stripped from the elect'
(Albertus Magnus). According to the teaching of great theologians, the holy anointing
makes the man who stands at the threshold of eternity and loyally cooperates with the
grace of the sacrament ready to enter directly upon the Beatific Vision.
That this sacrament was provided for the sick to strengthen them and prepare them for a
happy passage to the hereafter was for centuries an undisputed part of tradition. The
ancient prayers accompanying the anointing of the sick are evidence of this. The Church
only had to concern herself officially with the doctrinal side of it when particular
questions cropped up or errors appeared. For this reason the earliest documents deal more
with the question of the minister and the external rites. It was not until the Reformation
denied the sacramentality of extreme unction and its institution by Christ that a more
exact exposition was demanded of the Council of Trent.
THE CHURCH TEACHES: Extreme Unction is a true sacrament instituted by Christ and proclaimed by St. James.
It is administered by anointing with blessed oil accompanied by prayer. Only a priest can
validly administer it. It can be received by any baptized person who has reached the age
of reason and is on account of sickness or age in danger of death. Its effect is the
strengthening of the soul, often of the body as well, and in the necessary conditions
remission of sins.
For more information,
read the Catechism on Anointing of the Sick here.
Next sacrament:
Baptism
|