“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.”
– Thirty-nine Articles of Religion, Article XXV. Of the Sacraments (1571)
Anglicans recognize
that “Other sacramental
rites which evolved in the Church include confirmation, ordination, holy
matrimony, reconciliation of a penitent, and unction” (An
Outline of the Faith commonly called the Catechism, 1979 Book of Common
Prayer), but have not generally counted them as sacraments on a par with
baptism and Eucharist.
Baptism
“The crushing suffocation of sin, the rage that sweeps over us like torrents,
the weakness that undermines all resolve, the pitiful self-righteousness that
cannot ignore how tinny it all sounds, the smallness and meanness, the icy
darkness of cruelty: Christ has tasted all this in His baptism for us and for
our sake.”
– Katherine Sonderegger (1950 - ), Systematic Theology Vol. 1
“Christians will be found in the neighbourhood of Jesus – but Jesus is found in
the neighbourhood of human confusion and suffering, defencelessly alongside
those in need. If being baptized is being led to where Jesus is, then being
baptized is being led towards the chaos and the neediness of a humanity that
has forgotten its own destiny.”
– Rowan Williams (1960 - ), Being Christian
“Christians are baptized ‘into a life summed up in love,’ even though we have
to spend the rest of our own lives learning how to do it. Love, therefore, is
the budding-point from which all the rest come: that tender, cherishing
attitude; that unlimited self-forgetfulness, generosity and kindness which is
the attitude of God to all His creatures; and so must be the attitude towards
them which His Holy Spirit brings forth in us . . . To be unloving is to be out
of touch with God. So the generous, cherishing Divine Love, the indiscriminate
delight in others, just or unjust, must be our model too. To come down to brass
tacks, God loves the horrid man at the fish shop, the tiresome woman in the
next flat, the disappointing vicar . . . and the contractor who has cut down
the row of trees we loved, to build a row of revolting bungalows. God *loves*,
not tolerates, these wayward, half-grown, self-centered spirits, and seeks
without ceasing to draw them into His love. And the first-fruit of His
indwelling presence, the first sign that we are on His side and He on ours,
must be at least a tiny bud of this Charity breaking the hard and rigid outline
of our life.”
– Evelyn Underhill (1875-1941), The Fruits of the Spirit
"The sacrament of baptism is a lifelong commitment immersed in the reality
of the triune God and daring to live the teachings and the ways of Jesus of
Nazareth. It is a commitment to renounce, reject, and actively oppose in our
lives and in our world anything that rebels against the God who the Bible says
is love. It is a commitment to renounce anything that attempts to separate us
from the love of God and from each other. It is a commitment to renounce
anything that hurts or harms any human child of God or this creation."
– Michael Curry (1953 - ), Opening remarks for Executive Council, June
25, 2021
"In Jesus, God shows what it looks like to be vulnerable, humble, and
self-giving. In him, we see one who did not run from the things that broke his
heart, nor did he first calculate what he would gain from a situation. Jesus
sought instead to give away his life, that he and others night flourish as God
intends. And before you say, 'Well, he was God; of course he did. What's that
got to do with us?’, know *how* Jesus did it. In the very first chapter of
Mark, Jesus heads from Nazareth to be baptized by John in the River Jordan.
Just as Jesus comes up from the waters, the heavens break open and the Holy
Spirit descends on him like a dove. 'And a voice came from heaven, "You
are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased"' (Mark 1:10-11). Everything
that follows is powered by the Holy Spirit and by the love of God.
The same Spirit that Jesus received now rests on anyone who follows him. God
invites us into covenant, whereby the power of the Spirit we can allow our
hearts to break, and then take the pieces–our lives, our love, our
privileges–and share it all like a broken loaf of communion bread."
– Stephanie Spellers (1971 - ), The Church Cracked Open
Eucharist
“We receive Christ Jesus in baptism once as the first beginner of our life,
and in the eucharist repeatedly to bring our life by degrees to its completion”
– Richard Hooker (1554-1600), Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity
“. . . they saw their Lord and Master with hands and eyes lifted up to heaven
first bless and consecrate for the endless good of all generations till the
world's end the chosen elements of bread and wine, which elements made for ever
the instruments of life by virtue of his divine benediction . . . They had at
that time a sea of comfort and joy to wade in, and we by that which they did
are taught that this heavenly food is given for the satisfying of our empty
souls, and not for the exercising of our curious and subtle wits.”
– Richard Hooker (1554-1600), Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity
“It was one special end why the Sacrament itself was ordained, our comfort; the
Church so tells us, we so hear it read every time to us: He has ordained these
mysteries of His love and favour, to our great and endless comfort. The Father
will give you the Comforter. Why He gives Him, we see; how He gives Him, we see
not. The means for which He gives Him, is Christ—His entreaty by His word in
prayer; by His flesh and blood in sacrifice, for His blood speaks, not His
voice only. These means for which; and the very same, the means by which He
gives the Comforter: by Christ the Word, and by Christ’s body and blood, both.
In tongues it came, but the tongue is not the instrument of speech only but of
taste, we all know. . . That not only by the letter we read, and the word we
hear, but by the flesh we eat, and the blood we drink at His table, we be made
partakers of His Spirit, and of the comfort of it.”
– Lancelot Andrewes (1555-1626), Sermons of the Sending of the Holy
Ghost preached Upon Whit-Sunday, Sermon III
“The doctrine of the church of England, and generally of the Protestants, in
this article, is,--that after the minister of the holy mysteries hath rightly
prayed, and blessed or consecrated the bread and the wine, the symbols become
changed into the body and blood of Christ, after a sacramental, that is, in a
spiritual real manner: so that all that worthily communicate, do by faith
receive Christ really, effectually, to all the purposes of his passion: the
wicked receive not Christ, but the bare symbols only; but yet to their hurt,
because the offer of Christ is rejected, and they pollute the blood of the
covenant, by using it as an unholy thing. The result of which doctrine is this:
It is bread, and it is Christ's body. It is bread in substance, Christ in the
sacrament; and Christ is as really given to all that are truly disposed, as the
symbols are; each as they can; Christ as Christ can be given; the bread and
wine as they can; and to the same real purposes, to which they are designed;
and Christ does as really nourish and sanctify the soul, as the elements do the
body. It is here, as in the other sacrament; for as there natural water becomes
the laver of regeneration; so here, bread and wine become the body and blood of
Christ; but, there and here too, the first substance is changed by grace, but
remains the same in nature.”
– Jeremy Taylor (1613-1667). The Real Presence and Spiritual of Christ
in the Blessed Sacrament
“Week by week
the Eucharistic Feast, inexhaustible centre of mystic experience, incandescent
with the love of God, welcomes the faithful to the vision of Eternal Truth
behind the Sacramental Veil.
What are the
social emphases in this crowning Feast, wherein our triumph and our sorrow
meet, and the personal life of the soul finds its most sacred expression.”
– Vida Dutton
Scudder (1861-1954), Social Teachings of the Christian Year
“In the Eucharist, with the Risen Jesus present as our food, we are worshipping with the saints and angels in heaven. But the risen Jesus who is the heart of the heavenly worship is also a Jesus who was crucified, and we share in heaven’s worship only as sharing also in the Jesus who suffers in the world around us, reminding us to meet him there and to serve him in those who suffer. Indeed in the Eucharist we are summoned by two voices, which are really one voice: ‘Come, the heavenly banquet is here. Join with me and my mother and my friends in the heavenly supper.’ ‘Come, I am here in this world in those who suffer. Come to me, come with me, and serve me in them.”
– Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), Quoted in Love’s Redeeming Work: The Anglican Quest for Holiness, Rowell, Stevenson, Williams, ed.
“The creation in all its intricacy and ambiguity is placed on the altar. We
place ourselves there, too, even though we can scarcely fathom the mystery of
ourselves any more than the wildness of creation. We present the totality of
our lives with the bread and wine. We may be eating the ‘bread of adversity and
the water of affliction (Isaiah 30:20); we may be content and thankful; we may
be confused or exhausted. We may have daily work, cares, and relationships to
bring to the altar. To present these things at God’s altar is to present
ourselves. We present them so the bread and the wine will be transformed into
Christ, and that we ourselves will become Christ anew. Jesus ‘takes’ the bread
and the cup from us. We await transformation.”
– Julia Gatta (1948 - ), Life in Christ: Practicing Christian Spirituality
“This is why Jesus is hymned not as grape juice but as wine: because He is
dangerous and excessive. He is more than you need, and He is more than
pleasure, and if you attend to Him, you will find so much there that you will
be derailed completely. And you will think your heart might break. And then,
per Louis de Blois, He will withdraw and you will be miserable and sick until
He returns.”
– Lauren Winner (1976 - ), Wearing God: Clothing, Laughter, Fire, and Other Overlooked
Ways of Meeting God
“The chief object, then, of the Holy Eucharist, as conveyed
by type or prophecy, by the very elements chosen, or by the words of our Lord,
is the support and enlargement of life, and that in Him.”
– Edward Bouverie Pusey (1800-1882), The Holy Eucharist a Comfort to
the Penitent
Sacramental Perspective
Through the lens of the sacraments, we begin to see that
all of creation is indeed sacramental – all material reality is
charged with spiritual significance.
“The Eucharist demonstrates that material reality can
become charged with Jesus' life, and so proclaimed hope for the whole world of
matter. . . The matter of the Eucharist, carrying the presence of the risen
Jesus, can only be a sign of life, of triumph over the death of exclusion and
isolation . . . If the Eucharist is a sign of the ultimate Lordship of Jesus,
his ‘freedom’ to unite to himself the whole material order as a symbol of
grace, it speaks of creation itself, and the place of Jesus in creation.”
– Rowan Williams (1950 - ), Resurrection:
Interpreting the Easter Gospel
“What else do the sacraments teach us but that we dare not approach heaven by
leaving creation behind? Indeed, Catholicism [including Catholic Anglicanism]
insists that to be with God we must be willing to subject ourselves to the
simplest objects of creation: water, grapes, grain and oil. Strange to think
that the same ingredients used for baking a pie can be used for filling the
faithful with God’s grace. Alongside the wood of the cross, those four
ingredients are the earthly elements of our salvation. Without them we are
lost.”
– Mark Clavier (1970 - ), A Pilgrimage of Paradox: A Backpacker’s Encounters with
God and Nature
“In a general sense you may say that the whole universe is sacramental – that
is to say, all material things have some spiritual meaning. They convey to us
some vision of beauty and truth and good. The whole universe is a Sacrament of
God. So it is that all our great poets of nature are sacramental.”
– Charles Gore (1853-1932), The Holy Communion
“Next to the Blessed Sacrament itself, your neighbor is the holiest object
presented to your senses.”
– C.S. Lewis (1898-1963), The Weight of Glory
Next: 9. Incarnational