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Alex1
Guest
I was told by a Dominican Nun that the sacrament traditionally known as Last Rites is now called Anointing of the Sick. Is this an official name change, or just a change in common speech?
Well, yes and no.So Last Rites still exists, but it’s the collective term for the last sacraments administered; Confession, Communion, And Anointing of the Sick.
(Emphasis mine)If the patient gets better then relapses, the Sacrament can be administered again. The Church emphasizes that we should not wait till the patient is at death’s door before the Sacrament is administered.
The text is included in the iBreviary app, though unless you’re a priest who is administering the sacrament it would be useful only to satisfy curiosity.Thank you for the clarification. I’m glad to learn about the book Pastoral Care of the Sick, and wish I could get it in kindle format.
You should see how much Baptism of infants has changed!I was told by a Dominican Nun that the sacrament traditionally known as Last Rites is now called Anointing of the Sick. Is this an official name change, or just a change in common speech?
She’s wrong from the start because there never was any Sacrament called “Last Rites.”I was told by a Dominican Nun that the sacrament traditionally known as Last Rites is now called Anointing of the Sick. Is this an official name change, or just a change in common speech?
I am reading from my 1954 Collectio Rituum published for the United States.Well, yes and no.
No, there’s nothing by the official name ‘Last Rites’. IIRC, that was never the official name of any Catholic liturgical or sacramental expression. But…
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Here’s a linkThanks Father. I’m assuming you’re a priest by your username. This is the first I’ve heard of the Apostolic Pardon, and I’m a decently-informed Catholic.
I sure hope my dying relatives got it,and that priests administer it without being asked.
I think many people don’t know about it.Thanks Father. I’m assuming you’re a priest by your username. This is the first I’ve heard of the Apostolic Pardon, and I’m a decently-informed Catholic.
Let me suggest one more thing; that some trusted person make sure to have Gregorian Masses said for you. So many Catholics die without any, or just a couple, Masses said for them.…when I made out my will I also prepared a proxy for health care. I made sure I included in it that if possible, at the end of my life, I wanted Confession, Anointing of the Sick, Viaticum, and the Apostolic Pardon…