G
GregoryPalamas
Guest
I teach Theology 101 at a local Catholic University. Invarably when ask to list the seven sacraments of the Church about 1/2 the students will include “First” communion as a sacrament as in “I made my first communion”. Usually when someone writes this I comment something like “Whenever someone goes to communion for the first time one may call that first communion but that is not the name of the sacrament.” It usually turns out that very few of the students who proclaim “first” communion to be a sacrament that they have made attend Mass with any regularity.
I don’t know about you but the idea of “making first communion” troubles me greatly on several levels not only for the person who has experienced this unusual sacrament but for the Church that inadvertantly promotes it.
First, to say one “makes” first communion suggests that the student believes that they have rightly jumped through a hoop and overcome an obstacle the completion of which entitles them to eternal rewards just by having “made” the event. Is it any wonder that persons who think this way are susceptible to the charge that “the Catholic Church teaches ‘works righteousness’?”
Second, the adjective “first” suggests for many “only” at least in practicle terms. For many of the students using this phrase it really was the only time they received or ever thought they needed to receive the Eucharist. Most do not even know that “Eucharist” is the better term for the sacrament or even if they did would have no idea that “Eucharist” has a much fuller and more specific meaning that does communion.
Third, there are numerous bad theological ideas that have crept into the Church because of the separation of the three initiating sacraments. This is where the heirarchy must bare the major blame. I’m Eastern Catholic and have not noticed these same problems. We have our own set, just not these particular ones. The distinction comes precisely at the point that while the Eastern Church has mostly retained the practice of offering the three sacraments of initiation together the Roman Church has divided them. The unintended consequence of this division is the impression that while Baptism is a gift of grace, the other two sacraments are individual achievements. This misapprehension is encouraged by the practice of training sessions that are rewarded with “first communion” and then later “confirmation”.
In fairness many come through this with a firm and often mature faith. I suggest that it may be in spite of this all too common experience and not because of it.
Help me think through this. I’m not trying to be insulting but I would like to have help to think my way through this.
CDL
I don’t know about you but the idea of “making first communion” troubles me greatly on several levels not only for the person who has experienced this unusual sacrament but for the Church that inadvertantly promotes it.
First, to say one “makes” first communion suggests that the student believes that they have rightly jumped through a hoop and overcome an obstacle the completion of which entitles them to eternal rewards just by having “made” the event. Is it any wonder that persons who think this way are susceptible to the charge that “the Catholic Church teaches ‘works righteousness’?”
Second, the adjective “first” suggests for many “only” at least in practicle terms. For many of the students using this phrase it really was the only time they received or ever thought they needed to receive the Eucharist. Most do not even know that “Eucharist” is the better term for the sacrament or even if they did would have no idea that “Eucharist” has a much fuller and more specific meaning that does communion.
Third, there are numerous bad theological ideas that have crept into the Church because of the separation of the three initiating sacraments. This is where the heirarchy must bare the major blame. I’m Eastern Catholic and have not noticed these same problems. We have our own set, just not these particular ones. The distinction comes precisely at the point that while the Eastern Church has mostly retained the practice of offering the three sacraments of initiation together the Roman Church has divided them. The unintended consequence of this division is the impression that while Baptism is a gift of grace, the other two sacraments are individual achievements. This misapprehension is encouraged by the practice of training sessions that are rewarded with “first communion” and then later “confirmation”.
In fairness many come through this with a firm and often mature faith. I suggest that it may be in spite of this all too common experience and not because of it.
Help me think through this. I’m not trying to be insulting but I would like to have help to think my way through this.
CDL