parish question

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I accidentally got to Mass late (thought it started at 5:30, nope, 5) so I was hanging around in the back behind the doors.

Noticed that there was a metal container with the label “Holy Water”. There appeared to be a spigot. Can one draw water from that container? And what’s the purpose of said water?

Also noticed a thing where people rub some sort of ointment and make the sign of the cross before entering. What is that?

Lastly, there was a side room with a metal fence/door. Is that a prayer chapel, and do parishes open that for the public during the week?
 
The Holy Water is there for the faithful to fill a container (usually a small glass or plastic container) to take home. Many people have small holy water fonts by their front door to bless themselves before entering or leaving their homes.

Perhaps This small area off to the side of the sanctuary may be where the tabernacle is placed where the blessed sacrament rests, and the space is used for private devotion. If you saw a red candle near by, that was probably what it was. The candle, when lit, indicates the presence of Christ.

Peace and all good!
 
Is this the same holy water that the priest sprinkles on parishioners at the beginning of Mass? (Or at least sometimes…not sure what the occasion was)

Can I take some if I’m not Catholic?
 
Can I sprinkle my (Orthodox) icon with the holy water or does it take a priest to make something blessed/purified/etc?
 
Can I sprinkle my (Orthodox) icon with the holy water or does it take a priest to make something blessed/purified/etc?
It takes a priest…I am not sure of this view…I hope others can chime in or correct me…once blessed by a priest…be it a rosary, a statue, it becomes a sacramental.

On your first question, feel free to ask the parish or an usher as to the purpose of side door. It could be an area for adoration, if there are pews or kneelers inside it. Another area to check is the parish bulletin. If there is adoration, it usually will be in the schedule area of the bulletin.
 
Can I sprinkle my (Orthodox) icon with the holy water or does it take a priest to make something blessed/purified/etc?
In Orthodoxy, the use of an object for holy purposes blesses them. Although it is still a good idea to have a priest bless them, usually they will be placed on the altar table during Liturgy, or be blessed on the Sunday of Orthodoxy which is the First Sunday of Lent.

But you can certainly bless it yourself as well. Search the internet for blessings of objects by lay persons. And you can certainly use holy water and incense if you please.
 
I guess I’m just new to holy water/blessing things in general. My skin didn’t burn when the priest sprinkled it, so I guess I have some hope.

What spiritual consequence does blessing or holy water have? Is it a symbolic gesture of faith to bless something or does it impart some sort of effect?
 
I accidentally got to Mass late (thought it started at 5:30, nope, 5) so I was hanging around in the back behind the doors.

Noticed that there was a metal container with the label “Holy Water”. There appeared to be a spigot. Can one draw water from that container? And what’s the purpose of said water?

Also noticed a thing where people rub some sort of ointment and make the sign of the cross before entering. What is that?

Lastly, there was a side room with a metal fence/door. Is that a prayer chapel, and do parishes open that for the public during the week?
I use it to bless my house. I go into every room and spread it around and say a prayer.

But Holy Water is used to Bless things and People. And to get rid of Satan and any evil spirits.

I use it not because of evil spirits or anything. It just makes me feel better to bless my house and have the Presence of something Holy is all.
 
I guess I’m just new to holy water/blessing things in general. My skin didn’t burn when the priest sprinkled it, so I guess I have some hope.

What spiritual consequence does blessing or holy water have? Is it a symbolic gesture of faith to bless something or does it impart some sort of effect?
I believe it does have an effect. Its keeps evil away.

Anywhere you find Jesus the devil will leave.

Like for instance a statue of the Blessed Mother.

Believe this or not this is a true fact. If someone were to rob a neighborhood and there were four houses they choose. And one of the four had a Statue of Jesus or the Blessed Mother or a Saint, do you know it will bypass that house.

Not that I am saying to use it as a security device. But its proven.

Why? Maybe an attack of the conscience? Believe it or not evil people or people doing wrong are afraid of God or anything religious. They would prefer to keep their distance.
 
What spiritual consequence does blessing or holy water have? Is it a symbolic gesture of faith to bless something or does it impart some sort of effect?
First, let’s start with the Catechism:
1668 Sacramentals are instituted for the sanctification of certain ministries of the Church, certain states of life, a great variety of circumstances in Christian life, and the use of many things helpful to man. In accordance with bishops’ pastoral decisions, they can also respond to the needs, culture, and special history of the Christian people of a particular region or time. They always include a prayer, often accompanied by a specific sign, such as the laying on of hands, the sign of the cross, or the sprinkling of holy water (which recalls Baptism).

1669 Sacramentals derive from the baptismal priesthood: every baptized person is called to be a “blessing,” and to bless. Hence lay people may preside at certain blessings; the more a blessing concerns ecclesial and sacramental life, the more is its administration reserved to the ordained ministry (bishops, priests, or deacons).

1670 Sacramentals do not confer the grace of the Holy Spirit in the way that the sacraments do, but by the Church’s prayer, they prepare us to receive grace and dispose us to cooperate with it. “For well-disposed members of the faithful, the liturgy of the sacraments and sacramentals sanctifies almost every event of their lives with the divine grace which flows from the Paschal mystery of the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Christ. From this source all sacraments and sacramentals draw their power. There is scarcely any proper use of material things which cannot be thus directed toward the sanctification of men and the praise of God.”

And here’s something I found in the Catholic Encyclopedia:
One of the most remarkable effects of sacramentals is the virtue to drive away evil spirits whose mysterious and baleful operations affect sometimes the physical activity of man. To combat this occult power the Church has recourse to exorcism and sacramentals. Another effect is the delivery of the soul from sin and the penalties therefor. Thus in the blessing of a cross the Church asks that this sacred sign may receive the heavenly blessing in order that all those who kneel before it and implore the Divine Majesty may be granted great compunction and a general pardon of faults committed. This means remission of venial sins, for the sacraments alone, with perfect contrition, possess the efficacy to remit mortal sins and to release from the penalties attached to them. St. Thomas is explicit on this point: “The episcopal blessing, the aspersion of holy water, every sacramental unction, prayer in a dedicated church, and the like, effect the remission of venial sins, implicitly or explicitly” (Summa III, Q. lxxxvii, a. 3, ad 1um). Finally the sacramentals may be employed to obtain temporal favours, since the Church herself blesses objects made use of in every-day life, e.g. the blessing of a house on which is called down the abundance of heavenly dew and the rich fruitfulness of the earth; so likewise in the benediction of the fields, in which God is asked to pour down His blessings on the harvests, so that the wants of the needy may be supplied by the fertile earth.

Finally, here’s a link to a good article on sacramentals: SACRAMENTALS: WHAT ARE THEY?

Hope that helps. 🙂
 
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