C
ccmcmg
Guest
I pray that your health improves soon. Your priest can answer your question best, especially as you are validly baptized. I don’t know if you have to have any other sacraments before receiving the anointing of the sick.
I actually just spoke with my priest about this last week, and another this week. You don’t have to be on your deathbed, or even in surgery or hospitalization to receive the sacrament.
I’ve received it. It healed me.
No, you don’t need to be in the danger of death. Severe illnesses can have other consequences than death that can be healed.No, but you do need to be in danger of death. I went to the emergency because I thought I wasn having a heart attack. Once there, it was determined I wasn’t having a heart attack, but my health was very very poor and my tests were coming back positive for various serious things. I thought about calling my priest, since the hospital I was at wasn’t too far from our parish. I hesitated and didn’t call, but when I asked about if I would have qualified, he said that I must be in danger of death. If it wasn’t certain, then I should call, but it isn’t for people who are just really sick.
Even if you aren’t ‘visibly ill’ (handicapped, serious, serious illness or injury), you can have invisible maladies that need healed.That’s not what they taught us in RCIA – my group was told that "if you are in need of healing, you qualify for “Anointing of the SICK” – in the past it was called “Extreme Unction” and it was only used if you were in danger of dying. Vatican II changed that.
Now, I’d expect that we’re talking serious illness or injury here, but you don’t have to be on Death’s doorstep to be eligible for the sacrament. Many people who are going to have major surgery have the sacrament the day before they go to the hospital.
Seeing as many/most illnesses, can, at worst, cause death or severe injury (even a simple sinus infection can infect your brain!!), you don’t need to wait for ‘obvious’ illnesses or signs for the sacrament.The Catechism of the Catholic Church mentions that “over the centuries the Annointing of the Sick was conferred more and more exclusively on those at the point of death.” - (#1512) I can remember that many years ago (I’m old) people would refuse to have the priest called in for the sacrament because they thought that meant they were goners for sure. And with good reason because that’s the only time they ever heard of the priest being called in.
The CCC does go on to say "the Anointing of the Sick “is not a sacrament for those only who are at the point of death. Hence, as soon as anyone of the faithful begins to be in danger of death from sickness or old age, the fitting time for him to receive this sacrament has certainly already arrived.” - #1514
I actually just spoke with my priest about this last week, and another this week. You don’t have to be on your deathbed, or even in surgery or hospitalization to receive the sacrament.
I’ve received it. It healed me.