Els Sagraments

As the name implies, the Sacraments are sacred rites instituted in the Church by Jesus. Properly speaking, there are seven Sacraments in the Catholic faith: Baptisme, Confirmació, el Eucaristia, Confessió, Matrimoni, Orders, and the Unció dels malalts.

Through the Sacraments believers receive God’s grace through material things like water, bread, wine and oil.

The Sacraments may be understood as outward signs that convey the grace they signify. Water, for example, signifies cleanliness and life. By the grace of God, the waters of Baptism actually cleanse the soul of sin and fill it with divine life (veure Evangeli de Joan, 3:5, and the Fets dels Apòstols, 2:38). The Sacraments are patterned after the Incarnation, in which God, a spiritual being, took on human fleshand the invisible one became visible.

The idea of grace being transferred through material things is a Biblical concept.

In the New Testament alone, we see water used in this way (again, veure Joan 3:5; 9:7; Fets dels Apòstols, 8:37; Paul’s Letter to Titus 3:5; or Peter’s First Letter 3:20 – 21); as well as oil (veure el Evangeli de Marc 6:13, or the Carta de Jaume 5:14); clay (veure Joan 9:6); garments (senyal 5:25 o Luke 8:43); and even handkerchiefs (veure el Fets dels Apòstols 19:11-12).

God’s grace is transmitted through other sensible things, també, such as Mary’s voice and Peter’s shadow (veure el Evangeli de Lluc 1:41, 44, and the Fets dels Apòstols 5:15, respectively).

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