P
PJM
Guest
Why are there SEVEN Sacraments?
GBY
Patrick
GBY
Patrick
Straight out of Scott’s mouth! Like at least one of his talks from decades ago.… We swear a covenant oath to God. Seven was the perfect number in the Old Testament. It was a sign of covenant. So when people made a covenant oath, they would say, “I seven (7) myself.” In Latin, the word “oath” is “sacramenum”. The seven sacraments are seven covenant oaths. Jesus fulfills the OT covenant and Jesus gives us a model for the New Covenant. We find this model in the seven sacraments and in the liturgy of the Word and Eucharist.
Because there are 7 days in the week.Why are there SEVEN Sacraments?
GBY
Patrick
Because that is the way that Jesus instituted themWhy are there SEVEN Sacraments?
GBY
Patrick
Great insightMy answer is from the Sacraments and the Bible series presented by the St Paul Institute. This is the Lenten Series offered for free to anyone who wished to sign up for it. In the Old Testament, covenant was made in sacrificial ritual. In the New Testament, covenant is through the sacraments. We swear a covenant oath to God. Seven was the perfect number in the Old Testament. It was a sign of covenant. So when people made a covenant oath, they would say, “I seven (7) myself.” In Latin, the word “oath” is “sacramenum”. The seven sacraments are seven covenant oaths. Jesus fulfills the OT covenant and Jesus gives us a model for the New Covenant. We find this model in the seven sacraments and in the liturgy of the Word and Eucharist.
TRUE:thumbsup:I was taught that numbers in the Bible are symbolic, and that the number seven is a symbol of God’s perfections.
Hmmmmmm,Because there are 7 days in the week.
Because God created the world in 7 days so he needs a sacrament for every day.Hmmmmmm,
I don’t see the connection?
Please explain further
GBY
This is an example of development of doctrine. The Church discerned that there were seven sacraments over a period of centuries. The Early Church didn’t necessarily distinguish between sacraments and sacramentals to the degree we do today. The Orthodox Churches still don’t. We would say the sign of the cross is a sacramental. The Assyrian Church of the East considers it a sacrament. There are many rites that go back to the earliest days of the Church that may have been considered sacraments at one point or another but which the Church has since clarified are sacramentals and not true sacraments.You offering a suggestion for an eighth?![]()
And seven (good) months in the year.Because there are 7 days in the week.
THANKS for the informationThis is an example of development of doctrine. The Church discerned that there were seven sacraments over a period of centuries. The Early Church didn’t necessarily distinguish between sacraments and sacramentals to the degree we do today. The Orthodox Churches still don’t. We would say the sign of the cross is a sacramental. The Assyrian Church of the East considers it a sacrament. There are many rites that go back to the earliest days of the Church that may have been considered sacraments at one point or another but which the Church has since clarified are sacramentals and not true sacraments.
Ordination to the priesthood versus the consecration of a virgin or the blessing of an abbot…