Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Sacramental Vocabulary for Midterm


Anointing of the Sick
1.       Suffering -  to submit to or be forced to endure <suffer martyrdom>
2.       Original sin - Either the sin committed by Adam as the head of the human race, or the sin he passed onto his posterity with which every human being, with the certain exception of Christ and his Mother, is conceived and born
3.       Church - Equivalent to the Roman Catholic Church, an earlier title by which the body of the Christian faithful were identified. It stresses the Church's universality.
4.       Who administers the sacrament – bishop or priest
5.       Who can receive the sacrament – anyone who is gravely in or on the edge of death
6.       Celebration of the sacrament – anointing with oil of the sick
7.       Grace received - including the fortitude to resist temptation in the face of death, when he is weakest; a union with the Passion of Christ, which makes his suffering holy; and the grace to prepare for death, so that he may meet God in hope rather than in fear. If the recipient was not able to receive the Sacrament of Confession, Anointing also provides forgiveness of sins. And, if it will aid in the salvation of his soul, Anointing may restore the recipient's health.
8.       Apostolate - The work of an apostle, not only of the first followers of Christ but of all the faithful who carry on the original mission entrusted by the Savior to the twelve to "make disciples of all nations"
9.       Apocalyptic - The Book of Revelation, commonly attributed to St. John the Apostle. It was written to encourage the persecuted Christians be foretelling the fall of Rome and the final victory of Christ and his church.
10.   Oil of the sick - The olive oil blessed by the bishop of a diocese for use in the sacrament of anointing of the sick.
11.   Stations of the cross - A devotion performed by meditating on the Passion of Christ, successively before fourteen stations of the Cross.
12.   Sacrament - A sensible sign, instituted by Jesus Christ, by which invisible grace and inward sanctification are communicated to the soul
Reconciliation
13.   Penance - The virtue or disposition of heart by which one repents of one's own sins and is converted to God
14.   Confession - The voluntary self-accusation of one's sins to a qualified priest in order to obtain absolution from him
15.   Forgiveness - Pardon or remission of an offense. The Catholic Church believes that sins forgiven are actually removed from the soul (John 20) and not merely covered over by the merits of Christ
16.   Conversion - Any turning or changing from a state of sin to repentance, from a lax to a fervent way of life, from unbelief to faith, and from a non-Christian religion to Christianity
17.   Empathy - A function of the virtue of charity by which a person enters into another's feelings, needs, and sufferings.
18.   Ten commandments - Also called the Decalogue, they are the divinely revealed precepts received by Moses on Mount Sinai. Engrave on two tablets of stone, they occur in two versions in the Bible
19.   Testament - In the Old Testament an agreement between God and Israel in which God promised protection to the Chosen People in return for exclusive loyalty
20.   Examination of conscience - Reflection in God's presence on one's state of soul, e.g., in preparation for the sacrament of penance
21.   Act of contrition - the prayer of the penitent in the sacrament of penance, by which he expresses sorrow for the sins confessed before receiving absolution. In general, an act of repentance for having offended God
22.   Absolution - In the sacrament of penance, the act by which a qualified priest, having the necessary jurisdiction, remits the guilt and penalty due to sin.
23.   Sin -  salutary fear produced in the believing soul by a clear understanding of the nature and malice of sin.  
24.   Mortal sin - An actual sin that destroys sanctifying grace and causes the supernatural death of the soul
25.   Venial sin - An offense against God which does not deprive the sinner of sanctifying grace.
26.   Moral object - A human act. One performed with knowledge and free will. It is called a moral act because it is always either morally good or bad. Every consciously deliberate action is therefore a moral act.
27.   Original sin - Either the sin committed by Adam as the head of the human race, or the sin he passed onto his posterity with which every human being, with the certain exception of Christ and his Mother, is conceived and born.
28.   Concupiscence - Insubordination of man's desires to the dictates of reason, and the propensity of human nature to sin as a result of original sin. More commonly, it refers to the spontaneous movement of the sensitive appetites toward whatever the imagination portrays as pleasant and away from whatever it portrays as painful.
29.   Apostasy -The total rejection by a baptized person of the Christian faith he once professed
30.   Excommunication - An ecclesiastical censure by which one is more or less excluded from communion with the faithful. It is also called anathema, especially if it is inflicted with formal solemnities on persons notoriously obstinate to reconciliation
31.   Heresy - Commonly refers to a doctrinal belief held in opposition to the recognized standards of an established system of thought.
32.   Schism - A willful separation from the unity of the Christian Church. Although St. Paul used the term to condemn the factions at Corinth, these were not properly schismatical, but petty cliques that favored one or another Apostle
33.   Interior repentance - Conflict within a human person between his or her own desires and the will of God. What naturally pleases is not always good. This is the fight of the spirit versus the flesh -- human will against human passions, whether bodily or spiritual
34.   Grace of reconciliation - graces that help us to live a Christian life
35.   Who forgives sin? – God
36.   What is the role of the priest? – he’s like a bridge between the person and God, like a messenger of sins
37.   How often should one attend confession? – at least once per year.
38.   Who administers the sacrament? – bishop or priest
Matrimony
39.   Abortion - In Catholic morality, abortion is either direct (induced) or indirect. Direct abortion is any destruction of the product of human conception, whether before or after implantation in the womb
40.   Declaration of nullity - The Church's official declaration that an apparently valid marriage is actually null and void because of: an invalidating impediment (such as a previous marriage), lack of due consent (absence of adequate knowledge or freedom), or a defect of required form (prescribed conditions for the actual celebration of marriage).
41.   Contraception - Deliberate interference with marital intercourse in order to prevent conception. It is the performance of the marriage act with the positive frustration of conception
42.   Sterilization - Any action that deprives the body, either temporarily or permanently, of the power either to beget or to bear children
43.   Natural family planning - The controlling of human conception by restricting the marital act to the infertile periods of the wife. This practice is based on the theory that the period of a woman's ovulation can be determined with considerable accuracy.
44.   Nuptial blessing - The formal blessing of the newlywed couple, given at Mass after the Lord's Prayer.
45.   Fidelity - Constancy in allegiance to God or the things of God; steadfastness in fidelity to a person or cause, organization or enterprise. Implicit in loyalty is strong affection based on firm conviction that the object of one's fidelity deserves the allegiance.
46.   Divorce - Legal separation of husband and wife, or the release by civil authority from any one or more of the bonds of matrimony between them. Imperfect divorce is the separation of husband and wife so that the duty of living together, and sometimes the support, is relaxed, but giving them no right to remarry
47.   Polygamy - The status or institution of simultaneous marriage of more than one woman to one man, or of several women to several men. The two forms are polygyny and polyandry. In ordinary use, the term is restricted to polygyny, i.e., where one man is simultaneously married to more than one woman.
48.   Adultery - Sexual intercourse of a married person and another who is not the wife or husband. Forbidden by the sixth commandment of the Decalogue, it was extended in meaning by Christ, who forbade divorce with the right to remarry during the lifetime of one's legitimate spouse
49.   Annulment - Official declaration by competent authority that, for lawful reasons, a previous act or contract was invalid and consequently null and void. In ecclesiastical law, annulments mainly apply to marriage contracts over which the Church has the right to determine their validity
50.   Unity - The condition or state of oneness, especially among persns. What ultimately unites people is their common beliefs or convictions, and their common desires and affections. Union is the state of uniting different people. It is their state of mind agreeingon certain ideas and of will attaching its desires or love to certain objects that unify.
51.   Procreation - Begetting children. It is a formal term for generation and stresses the role of marital intercourse with the intention of producing offspring.
52.   Exchange of vows - A free, deliberate promise made to God to do something that is good and that is more pelasing to God than its ommission would be. The one vowing must realize that a special sin is committed by violating the promise
53.   Grace - In biblical language the condescension or benevolence (Greek charis) shown by God toward the human race; it is also the unmerited gift proceeding from this benevolent disposition. Grace, therefore, is a totally gratuitous gift on which man has absolutely no claim
54.   Family - A group of persons who are related by marriage or blood and who typically include a father, mother, and children. A family is a natural society whose right to existence and support is provided by the divine law
55.   Creation - The production of material and spiritual things in their whole substance, done by God and of nothing.
Holy Orders
56.   Diocese - The territory over which a bishop exercises ecclesiastical jurisdiction. The Pope alone, ultimately, erects dioceses, changes their limits, divides, unites, or suppresses them
57.   Vicar - An ecclesiastic who substitues for another in the exercise of a clerical office and acts in his name and with his authority according to canon law
58.   Episcopal college - A form of assembly in which the bishops of a certain country or region exercise their pastoral office jointly in order to enhance the Church's beneficial influence on all men especially by devising forms of the apostolate and apostolic methods suitably adopted to the circumstances of the times
59.   Synod of bishops - An assembly of bishops, chosen from various parts of the world, that meets in Rome every several years to "render more effective assistance to the supreme pastor of the Church in a consultative body which will be called by the proper name of Synod of Bishops
60.   Ecumenical council - iterally "universal" and commonly used to identify the general councils of the Church. With the rise of the movement for Christian unity, it has become synonymous with "striving for reunification" among the separated Churches of Christendom.
61.   Infallibility - Freedom from error in teaching the universal Church in matters of faith or morals. As defined by the First Vatican Council, "The Roman Pontiff, when he speaks ex cathedra—that is, when in discharge of the office of pastor and teacher of all Christians
62.   Imprimatur - The Latin term for "let it be printed," which signifies the approval by a bishop of a religious work for publication. Authors are at liberty to obtain the imprimatur either from the bishop where they reside, or where the book is to be published, or where it is printed
63.   Parish - Normally, in a diocese, a definite territorial division that has been assigned its own church, a determined group of the faithful, and its own distinct pastor who is charged with the care of souls
64.   Stole - A liturgical vestment composed of a strip of material, several inches wide, and worn around the neck by priests and bishops; at the left shoulder like a sash by deacons, for the celebration of Mass, administration of the sacraments, and ceremonies of the Blessed Sacrament.
65.   Dogmatic - A truth that, though not revealed by God, nevertheless comes under the infallible teaching authority of the Church. The reason for the Church's competence over dogmatic facts is their close connection with revealed truths.
66.   Presbyters - In the early Church a member of a group (usually of priests) who advised a bishop.
67.   Seminary - A school established for the academic and spiritual training of candidates for the priesthood
68.   Celibacy - The state of being unmarried and, in Church usage, of one who has never been married
69.   Bishops - A successor of the Apostles who has received the fullness of Christ's priesthood.
70.   Pope - title of the visible head of the Catholic Church.
71.   Priest - An authorized mediator who offers a true sacrifice in acknowledgment of God's supreme dominion over human beings and in expiation for their sins. A priest's mediation is the reverse of that of a prophet, who communicates from God to the people. A priest mediates from the people to God.
72.   Deacon - A man specially ordained to the service of the Church's ministry
73.   Cardinal - A high official of the Roman Catholic Church ranking next to the Pope
74.   Clergy - Those specially ordained for Divine Service as deacons, priests, or bishops. In this sense the clergy form the Church's hierarchy. Entrance into the clerical state now takes place when a man is ordained deacon
75.   Chasuble - A sleeveless outer garment worn by a priest at Mass. It is worn over all other vestments and is made of silk, velvet, or other rich material usually decorated with symbols.
76.   Discern - The ability to distinguish whether a given idea or impulse in the soul comes from the good spirit or from the evil spirit
Baptism
77.   Baptism - The sacrament in which, by water and the word of God, a person is cleansed of all sin and reborn and sanctified in Christ to everlasting life.
78.   Proper matter – flowing water
79.   Correct form – “I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit” with triple pour of water.
80.   Designated minister – bishop, priest or deacon (in emergency anyone who intends to offer baptism)
81.   Catechumens - A learner, a person being instructed preparatory to receiving baptism and being admitted into the Church.
82.   Baptismal graces - The supernatural effects of the sacrament of baptism. They are: 1. removal of all guilt of sin, original and personal; 2. removal of all punishment due to sin, temporal and eternal; 3. infusion of sanctifying grace along with the theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity, and the gifts of the Holy Spirit; 4. incorporation into Christ; and 5. entrance into the Mystical Body, which is the Catholic Church; 6. imprinting of the baptismal character, which enables a person to receive the other sacraments, to participate in the priesthood of Christ through the sacred liturgy, and to grow in the likeness of Christ through personal sanctification
83.   Water - Besides the ordinary holy water used in the Church's liturgy, there are several other blessings of water approved by the Church. Each has a history of remarkable favors, spiritual and temporal, granted to those who use such water with faith and devotion
84.   Baptismal name - The name that a person receives at baptism
85.   Concupiscence - Insubordination of man's desires to the dictates of reason, and the propensity of human nature to sin as a result of original sin
Confirmation
86.   Confirmation - The sacrament in which, through the laying on of hands, anointing with chrism, and prayer, those already baptized are strengthened by the Holy Spirit in order that they may steadfastly profess the faith and faithfully live up to their profession
87.   Proper matter – anointing with chrism
88.   Correct words/form – “Be sealed with the gift of the holy spirit” with oil on the forehead in the sign of the cross
89.   Designated minister – Bishop
90.   Seal - To establish or determine irrevocably, in the saacrament of confirmation, when a bishop anoints a person with chrism and says, "[Name], be sealed with the Gift of the Holy Spirit." Thus, by confirmation a baptized Christian becomes permanently marked as a witness of Christ and is enabled to preserve, profess, and communicate the faith even (if need be) with the price of his blood
91.   Holy spirit - he third person of the Holy Trinity, who is distinct from the Father and the Son but one in being, coequal, and coeternal with them, because, like them, he is in the fullest sense God
92.   Fruits of the holy spirit - Supernatural works that, according to St. Paul, manifest the presence of the Holy Spirit.
93.   Gifts of the holy spirit - The seven forms of supernatural initiative conferred with the reception of sanctifying grace.
94.   Age of discretion – 8th grade 12-13 years old
95.   Pentecost - Feast commemorating the descent of the Holy Spirit on the Apostles. It takes its name form the fact that it comes about fifty days after Easter.
96.   Sponsor - The person who presents a child at baptism and professes the faith in the child's name. A sponsor serves as the official representative of the community of faith and, with the parents, requests baptism for the child.
97.   Confirmation name - The additional name that a person assumes when receiving the sacrament of confirmation. While not strictly required, it is recommended as a sign that the one confirmed has entered on a new way of life, having received a new sacramental character as a witness of Christ.
98.   Community - The new name of the reorganized Sodalities of Our Lady. Groups of men and women, both adults and young people, whose purpose is to develop their Christian vocation in the world.
99.   Chrismation - The act of anointing. Consequently, the use of chrism for anointing in the administration of the sacraments and in the blessing of persons and things.
Eucharist
100.                        Eucharist - The true Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, who is really and substantially present under the appearances of bread and wine, in order to offer himself in the sacrifice of the Mass and to be received as spiritual food in Holy Communion. It is called Eucharist, or "thanksgiving," because at its institution at the Last Supper Christ "gave thanks," and by this fact it is the supreme object and act of Christian gratitude to God.
101.                        Transcendence -Supassing excellence, which may be either relative or absolute. It is relative when the excellence surpasses some objects below it, as human nature transcends the irrational creation. It is absolute when the excellence surpasses in being and activity all other beings. Only God is absolutely transcendent; in being because he alone is infinite and perfect Being who cannot change; in activity because he alone has existence of himself as uncreated First Cause on whom all creatures depend for their least operation.
102.                        Consecration - The words of institution of the Eucharist, pronounced at Mass, by which is accomplished the very sacrifice that Christ instituted at the Last Supper.
103.                        Transubstantiation - The complete change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of Christ's body and blood by a validly ordained priest during the consecration at Mass, so that only the accidents of bread and wine remain.
104.                        Tabernacle - A cupboard or boxlike receptacle for the exclusive reservation of the Blessed Sacrament
105.                        Proper matter – wheat based bread and pure grape wine
106.                        Correct words/form – The words of Institution: “this is my body…this is my blood…”
107.                        Designated minister – bishop or priest
108.                        Liturgy of the word - The second part of the Mass, during which the faithful are instructed in the revealed word of God. It consists of readings from Sacred Scripture and the songs occurring between them. The homily, profession of faith, and the prayer of the faithful develop and conclude the Liturgy of the Word.
109.                        Liturgy of the Eucharist - The most solemn part of the Mass, from the Presentation to the Gifts to the Postcommunion included
110.                        Eucharistic meal - Holy Communion as food of the soul. Implied in Christ's words when he told his followers to eat his body and drink his blood, the Eucharist is the principal source of sustenance of the supernatural life



Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Universal Call to Holiness (Blog Post #15)


The Universal Call to Holiness is the way the Church expresses the exhortation made to all Christians by Christ to "be perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect." (Matthew 5:48)  There are 4 articles on the handouts page (you were likely given two in class as well).  You must read the articles and write a 500-700 word response to the following prompt on your blog.

Msgr. Luigi Giussani states:  "[T.S. Eliot] asked himself "Has the Church failed mankind, or has mankind failed the Church?" . . . Both, both, because first and foremost it is mankind who failed the Church, because if I need something, I chase after it if it goes away. No one chased after it . . . The Church began to fail mankind, as I see it . . . because she forgot who Christ was, she did not rely on..., she was ashamed of Christ, of saying who Christ is."(Interview, 2004)

What does it mean to say, "if I need something, I chase after it if it goes away"?  How does this relate to the "Universal Call to Holiness"?  What do you think this quote implies for the everyday Catholic?  What do you think it means to "say who Christ is" without shame?

            Msgr. Luigi Giussani states:  "[T.S. Eliot] asked himself "Has the Church failed mankind, or has mankind failed the Church?" . . . Both, both, because first and foremost it is mankind who failed the Church, because if I need something, I chase after it if it goes away. No one chased after it . . . The Church began to fail mankind, as I see it . . . because she forgot who Christ was, she did not rely on..., she was ashamed of Christ, of saying who Christ is"(Interview, 2004).  What does it mean to say, “if I need something, I chase after it if it goes away”? It means that no matter what I will do what it takes to get that something even it means that I must give everything up in my life just to do so.
            This relates to the “Universal Call to Holiness” because as a Catholic we are called to be devout in our faith. We are called to have a close relationship with God. We are supposed to make him number one in our lives. We are supposed to go to church every Sunday, pray every day and thank him for everything we have in our lives because it wasn’t for him we would not be alive today. But at times society likes to dictate what followers of Christ can do and that sometimes taints one’s universal call to holiness putting them on a path of destruction.
            This quote implies for the everyday Catholic that the Church has become a little ashamed of its faith and that as Catholic in today’s society we should not hide our faith. We should display our faith for everyone to see because God is good and that is what he would want us to do. He wants us to spread the good news of the Bible to everyone. Even the Church sometimes loses its true vision and veers away from the path that God wants us to follow. The world has corrupt everyone’s vision of faith and the freedom to practice one’s faith.
            To “say who Christ is” without shame is to proclaim that you believe in him without worrying about what other people will think about you by doing so. It should not matter what someone will think about you if you say that you believe in Christ. If you believe in Christ and trust him then no harm should ever come of you because he will protect you. Believe in God is a good thing, no one should be ashamed of their own religious faith. Has world come to that? It shouldn’t be like that. Being able to believe in Christ is right that should be respected.