M
MrSnaith
Guest
My understanding is that sacramentals act, as you say, as vehicles of Grace. Not that God needs to use objects in such a way, but that He does so for our benefit.I have a question regarding sacramentals. I understand that statues/icons are images that remind us of the particular person/saint and call people to devotion, thanksgiving etc.
Do sacramentals likewise serve that function? As in serving as a reminder of God’s glory etc, and then the grace comes from God, or is the sacramental seen as being a vehicle of grace (if that term makes any sense) I understand the sacramental has no power of its own, but I also know that they must be disposed of in particular ways if they become broken etc, and are to be treated with an appropriate measure of respect.
Do they “hold” some of the power/grace of God in themselves, or does it simply move through them when the faithful make use of them?
I recall when I was in high school one of the sisters invited us to touch our rosaries to one that the Virgin at Medrugorge had handled. ( I think that is not an approved vision, but the circumstances of touching a rosary to one blessed by a pope etc might be considered similar). It was unclear to me what effect/grace was being conferred from one to the other.
We humans are body bodies and spirits, a union of the two very un-alike natures. While it is inappropriate to act or worship in body only, it is likewise inappropriate to act or worship in spirit only. It is inappropriate because, being a body-spirit union, our nature is perfected when these two aspects are in proper and perfect unity. Thus, to aspire to behave in either an entirely spiritual manner, or an entirely physical manner is unnatural, and actually destructive.
Therefore, if our relationship with God is spiritual only, it is deficient, and if God dispensed His grace in a purely spiritual manner, that would run the risk of a kind of blindness on our part to His Divine activity in our lives. God respects our nature, as He is its creator. Therefore, He provides us visible signs, physical aids to the spiritual realities that He grants to us.
So, while sacramentals are on the one hand reminders for us, they are on the other hand visible signs of an invisible Grace, through which God acts. It must be remembered, however, that sacramentals are usually tied to a devotion entered into by the user of the sacramental. For example, in an apparition of Mary (on Mount Carmel I believe), we received the Brown Scapular sacramental, and with it the promise that whoever should wear it in devotion at death would not go to Hell. Well, it’s not a “free pass” so to speak. The wearer of the Brown Scapular must enter into its devotion, a devotion to Christ, and must be inwardly disposed to the graces promised. Essentially, it is the devotion that is important, and the sacramental acts as a reminder of the devotion, and outward sign of it, as well as an outward sign of the graces promised.