OK. I think we are having a very nice and polite discussion on this topic, so I dare to continue.
mercygate, it might be helpful for you to know that this conversation really began in another thread with this comment:
Theodore said:
Sacramental Communion is more effective than Spiritual Communion, it is when we truely receive the Body and Blood of Our Lord JESUS CHRIST.
followed by the following conversation between jmcrae and myself:
Grace_Seeker said:
Then I feel for the poor thief who experienced no sacramental graces, only the love of his Lord dying next to him. It is a shame that he missed out on something that would have been more effective.
jmcrae said:
He had the
actual blood of Jesus on him, and he
actually imitated Christ’s death - how much more Sacramental can you get?
So you see, the question of what is and what is not sacramental is integral to this discussion as much as is efficacy. My sarcastic remarks were meant to imply that I understand that St. Dimas certainly had an efffective grace in his life, but I do question whether he experienced sacramental grace. Is a baptism of desire or of blood truly a sacrament. As I read yours and jmcrae’s answers to that question, It seems that there is disagreement among my Catholic brethern. What chance to us poor protestants have in such waters?
jmcrae, you use a very good illustration in your confession story. I understand that we are to avail ourselves of ALL the means of grace. And I understand that we do so for many reasons, our own spiritual life being just one part of it.
Yet, I find a difference, a significant difference in the way you have answered my questions and the way mercygate has. So, either I’m seeing a distinction in some of the things you two are saying that isn’t as big to you as it appears to me – I’ve been known to make a few mountains out of molehills before. Or, there is still confusion among the three of us (and perhaps others) as to the effect of sacraments.
mercygate, yes, I appreciate that what we are talking about with sacraments is their effect. I understand that we look at sacraments to see if they are in order, valid, and effecacious. Leaving baptism to speak of communion briefly, one of the most meaningful experiences in my life was a time with a group of other high school kids (its been a few years) I was asked to such on a butterscotch drop and think of Christ’s death on the cross. Well it wasn’t a valid sacrament for a multitude of reasons, the issue of order is sort of moot, but it was one of the most spiritually efficaious moments of my life, maybe the single most efficacious moment. Yes, even more so than my baptism which was in order (at least by my standards, even if not by yours), valid (by all our standards), and also efficacious.
If I have intuited the correct answer to whether or not baptism of desire or blood could be rightly termed a sacrament, then we are left with the effect of a spiritual baptism in Christ or spiritual communion with Christ being every bit equal to the effect of the sacraments themselves. I believe this is what you have yourself expressed, mercygate. And I believe that this is what jmcrae has affirmed when she said of baptism of desire and blood, “They have the same effect as actual baptism.”
I have no problem with that; hence the objection I initially raised to Theodore which started this two thread line of conversation. And it was not my intent to imply a pitting of spirituality against sacraments. Indeed that thought is what I was obejcting to.
jmcrae, not only do I not suggest that one’s spirituality could be considered superior to meeting Christ in the sacraments, I concur with you that it should never be substituted for meeting Christ in the sacraments. That is like telling someone to pick a favorite child. Those who do, do so foolishly and to their own loss. That is precisely why I argue against someone who elevates sacramental grace over and against other spiritual graces. We need them all, and we don’t build the importance of one up, but tearing down the value of others.