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Friday, October 4, 2024

Preview: Newman and the Greek Church Fathers: the Sacraments


On Monday, October 7, we're going to continue our Son Rise Morning Show discussion, based on Father Ian Ker's introduction to the Paulist Press collection of Selected Sermons of Saint John Henry Newman, of how his study of the Greek Fathers of the Church influenced Newman in his theology and that influence on his sermons. 

As a reminder, the first three topics we've discussed are: The Incarnation, The Resurrection and Ascension, and the Indwelling of the Spirit/Justification. Our topic on Monday, October 7 is Sacraments. Please tune in at my usual time, about 6:50 a.m. Central DST/7:50 a.m. Eastern DST here or catch the podcast later.

Just to provide some context: As an University of Oxford student and Fellow and Anglican minister, Newman had sworn to uphold the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England. Under those articles, there were only TWO Sacraments: Baptism and The Supper of the Lord, according to Article 25, "Of the Sacraments":
SACRAMENTS ordained of Christ be not only badges or tokens of Christian men's profession, but rather they be certain sure witnesses, and effectual signs of grace, and God's good will towards us, by the which he doth work invisibly in us, and doth not only quicken, but also strengthen and confirm our Faith in him.

There are two Sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospel, that is to say, Baptism, and the Supper of the Lord.

Those five commonly called Sacraments, that is to say, Confirmation, Penance, Orders, Matrimony, and extreme Unction, are not to be counted for Sacraments of the Gospel, being such as have grown partly of the corrupt following of the Apostles, partly are states of life allowed in the Scriptures; but yet have not like nature of Sacraments with Baptism, and the Lord's Supper, for that they have not any visible sign or ceremony ordained of God.

The Sacraments were not ordained of Christ to be gazed upon, or to be carried about, but that we should duly use them. And in such only as worthily receive the same they have a wholesome effect or operation: but they that receive them unworthily purchase to themselves damnation, as Saint Paul saith.

This article clearly separates the Church of England from the Catholic Church, East and West and the Eastern Orthodox Churches (where the Sacraments are more commonly called the Mysteries), and also clearly removes the sacrificial aspect of the Supper of the Lord by eliminating the priestly role of its ministers. And the Church of England also rejects the doctrine of Transubstantiation. We've dealt with the issue of how Newman accepted the Catholic Church's doctrines about the Mass, Holy Communion, and Transubstantiation through his conversion before, when we examined Newman's PPS "The Eucharistic Presence" in April this year. 

Where did Newman find this lesson about the Sacraments or the Mysteries from the Greek Fathers? Certainly the mystagogy of Saint Cyril of Jerusalem, Saint Ambrose of Milan, and Saint John Chrysostom, etc., played a part. Saints Augustine of Hippo and Maximus the Confessor also presented instructions to the neophytes after their reception of the Sacraments of Initiation. Having received the mysteries/sacraments, they could be told more about what they had received and how to respond to those graces. Living the Mysteries: A Guide for Unfinished Christians by Scott Hahn and Mike Aquilina is an excellent introduction to these catecheses.

In his introduction, Father Ker provides a hinge between the Indwelling of the Spirit and the Sacraments with this question, "But how do we receive this Presence and enter into this loving relationship?" and the answer Newman learned from the Greek Fathers, " . . . the Sacraments were the concrete means of our union with God." (p. 38). 

As he had left behind the Calvinist doctrine of double predestination, Newman had also accepted the doctrine of the salvific, regenerative effect of Baptism (even Infant Baptism! in an 1828 sermon) after he had served as an Anglican deacon at Saint Clement's near Oxford. Thus, he writes in a 1835 PPS, "Regenerating Baptism" that Christ,
Though He now sits on the right hand of God, He has, in one sense, never left the world since He first entered it; for, by the ministration of the Holy Ghost, He is really present with us in an unknown way, and ever imparts Himself to those who seek Him. Even when visibly on earth He, the Son of Man, was still "in heaven;" and now, though He is ascended on high, He is still on earth. And as He is still with us, for all that He is in heaven, so, again, is the hour of His cross and passion ever mystically present, though it be past these eighteen hundred years. Time and space have no portion in the spiritual Kingdom which He has founded; and the rites of His Church are as mysterious spells by which He annuls them both. . . . Thus Christ shines through [the Sacraments], as through transparent bodies, without impediment. He is the Light and Life of the Church, acting through it, dispensing of His fulness, knitting and compacting {278} together every part of it; and these its Mysteries are not mere outward signs, but (as it were) effluences of His grace developing themselves in external forms, as Angels might do when they appeared to men. He has touched them, and breathed upon them, when He ordained them; and thenceforth they have a virtue in them, which issues forth and encircles them round, till the eye of faith sees in them no element of matter at all. Once for all He hung upon the cross, and blood and water issued from His pierced side, but by the Spirit's ministration, the blood and water are ever flowing, as though His cross were really set up among us, and the baptismal water were but an outward image meeting our senses. Thus in a true sense that water is not what it was before, but is gifted with new and spiritual qualities. Not as if its material substance were changed, which our eyes see, or as if any new nature were imparted to it, but that the lifegiving Spirit, who could make bread of stones, and sustain animal life on dust and ashes, applies the blood of Christ through it; or according to the doctrine of the text, that He, and not man, is the baptizer.
Father Ker quotes this long passage from "Worship, A Preparation for Christ's Coming", calling it "magnificently mysterious":
And what is true of the ordinary services of religion, public and private, holds in a still higher or rather in a special way, as regards the sacramental ordinances of the Church. In these is manifested in greater or less degree, according to the measure of each, that Incarnate Saviour, who is one day to be our Judge, and who is enabling us to bear His presence then, by imparting it to us in measure now. A thick black veil is spread between this world and the next. We mortal men range up and down it, to and fro, and see nothing. There is no access through it into the next world. In the Gospel this veil is not removed; it remains, but every now and then marvellous disclosures are made to us of what is behind it. At times we seem to catch a glimpse of a Form which we shall hereafter see face to face. We approach, and in spite of the darkness, our hands, or our head, or our brow, or our lips become, as it were, sensible of the contact of something more than earthly. We know not where we are, but we have been bathing in water, and a voice tells us that it is blood. {11} Or we have a mark signed upon our foreheads, and it spake of Calvary. Or we recollect a hand laid upon our heads, and surely it had the print of nails in it, and resembled His who with a touch gave sight to the blind and raised the dead. Or we have been eating and drinking; and it was not a dream surely, that One fed us from His wounded side, and renewed our nature by the heavenly meat He gave. Thus in many ways He, who is Judge to us, prepares us to be judged,—He, who is to glorify us, prepares us to be glorified, that He may not take us unawares; but that when the voice of the Archangel sounds, and we are called to meet the Bridegroom, we may be ready.

In addition to the bolded passages in which Newman emphasizes the presence of Jesus in the Sacraments, I've highlighted in italics how Newman emphasized what we Catholics usually call the Precious Blood of Christ and how It washes us clean. 

In the two Sacraments accepted by the Church of England Newman saw--through his study of the Fathers--how personally and fully God reaches out to the Christian. He even notes a distinction between the Holy Bible as "a common possession" that "speaks to one man as much and as little to his neighbor" and the Sacraments as "sensible tokens of God's favour", personally received as required by human nature (which God created). (Justification, 323)

Once a Catholic Newman began to receive the other Sacraments, starting with his Confession to Blessed Dominic Barberi, his first Holy Communion, his Confirmation (1845), his Ordination (1847), and Extreme Unction on his deathbed (1890). And as a Catholic priest, he celebrated Holy Mass, baptized infants and others, heard Confessions, officiated at weddings, and anointed the sick and the dying. The Fathers prepared him for the fullness of these "concrete means of our union with God."

Saint Cyril of Jerusalem, pray for us!

Saint Ambrose of Milan, pray for us!

Saint John Chrysostom, pray for us!

Saint John Henry Newman, pray for us!

Saint Francis of Assisi, pray for us!

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