What is a Sacramental
The catechism teaches us that Sacramentals are “holy things or actions of which the church makes use to obtain for us from God, through her intercession, spiritual and temporal favours.” A Sacramental is anything set apart or blessed by the Church to excite good thoughts and to help devotion. It is through the prayers of the church offered for those who make use of these Sacramentals, as well as through the devotion they inspire, that they convey and obtain God’s grace and blessings.
Sacramentals are not unlike the Sacraments in that they are channels of grace and can obtain for us these benefits:
Sacramentals do not produce sanctifying grace, a power that belongs to Sacraments alone. Sacraments were instituted directly by Christ while Sacramentals were instituted by Christ through His church. Sacramentals should never take the place of Sacraments. The Sacraments are necessary for salvation; Sacramentals are not necessary. Nevertheless, the prayers, pious objects, sacred signs, and ceremonies of Mother Church are means to salvation.
Since they are blessed objects, Sacramentals should always be treated with reverence and devotion. It is a custom of Catholics to kiss a rosary or scapular that they have accidentally dropped on the ground. The sign of the cross or a genuflection should be made deliberately and prayerfully.
How do Sacramentals work
Sacramentals should not be thought of as contracts, investments, or good luck charms. To wear the Scapular does not give us free reign to commit mortal sin and still be assured of heaven. The Scapular is a symbol of Marian devotion and a silent prayer to Our Blessed Mother in heaven for salvation that she most certainly will not ignore. Using holy water is not an infallible wiping away of our venial sins unless we have contrition for our sins when we use it. The power of Sacramentals, then, depends greatly on the devotion of both the priest who gives the blessing and the person who is receiving the Sacramental. They depend on the prayers of the church, the prayers of the blessings that are imposed on them, and the merits of Jesus Christ, the Blessed Mother, and the Saints. Of themselves they do not save souls, but they are the means for securing heavenly help for those who use them properly.
Regarding blessed objects of devotion, it is good to remember that it is the blessing the Priest gives an object that makes it a Sacramental. The blessing gives God ownership over the object, Priests alone have been given the power to bless with a guarantee, as it were, and it is they and they alone who can take a new Crucifix or Rosary and turn them into Sacramentals with the power and prayers of the entire Church behind them. This is why it is very important to have Sacramentals blessed; without the blessing they do not hold any of the graces of benefits promised by the Church. To believe otherwise is to degrade the Sacramental to the level of a good luck charm. It is superstition to hold that the grace and spiritual benefit one may receive comes from the Sacramental itself; all grace comes from God. A sacramental is merely a channel through which He has chosen to work.
“Sacramentals obtain favors from God through the prayers of the Church offered for those who make use of them, and through the devotion they inspire.”
Types of Sacramentals
Sacramentals can include physical objects such as Rosaries, chaplets, Scapulars, devotional medals, statues, and other objects. They can also be non-physical, including music, gestures such as genuflecting and making the sign of the cross, and novenas and other devotional prayers. Some Sacramentals are exclusively part of official Church rituals – such as sacred oils – while others are commonly (but not necessarily exclusively) used in parishioners’ private lives – such as candles and Rosaries.
When a material Sacramental becomes so worn that it can no longer be used as a Sacramental, one should not casually toss it into the trash. To prevent desecration, the Sacramental should be returned to the earthly elements. Holy water, for example, should be poured into a hole dug in the earth, in a spot no one would walk over. Combustible Sacramentals, such as Scapulars and holy books, should be burned and then buried. Larger Sacramentals that do not burn should be altered so that their form no longer appears to be a Sacramental (for example, a statue should be broken up into small pieces) and then buried. Objects made of metals can be melted down and used for another purpose.
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