The Sacraments | Peter Kreeft | From Fundamentals of the Faith
Protestants don't see why
Catholics who come to disagree with essential teachings of the Church don't
just leave.
The answer is symbolized by the sanctuary lamp. They do not leave
the Church because they know that the sacramental fire burns there on the
ecclesiastical hearth. Even if they do not see by its light, they want to be
warmed by its fire. The real presence of Christ in the Eucharist is a magnet
drawing lost sheep home and keeping would-be strays from the deathly snows
outside. The Church's biggest drawing card is not what she teaches, crucial as
that is, but who is there. "He is here! Therefore I must be here."
Adult conversion to
Catholicism involves more than adding a few new beliefs. It means a whole new
world and life view. No ingredient in that new perspective was more of a shock
to my old Protestant sensibilities when I became a Catholic than the idea that
the God-man is really present in, and not just symbolized by, what appears to
be a wafer of bread and a cup of wine. It seemed scandalous!
It has ceased to scandalize
me, though it has not ceased to amaze me, that Almighty God suffers me to touch
him, move him and eat him! Imagine! When I move my hand to my mouth with the
Host, I move God through space. When I put him here, he is here. When I put him
there, he is there. The Prime Mover lets me move him where I will. It is as
amazing as the Incarnation itself, for it is the Incarnation, the continuation
of the Incarnation.
I think I understand how
the typical Protestant feels about sacramentalism not only because I was a
Protestant but because it is a natural and universal feeling. The Catholic
doctrine of the sacraments is shocking to everyone. It should be a shock to
Catholics too. But familiarity breeds dullness.
To Protestants, sacraments
must be one of two things: either mere symbols, reminders, like words; or else
real magic. And the Catholic definition of a sacrament — a visible sign
instituted by Christ to give grace, a sign that really effects what it symbolizes
— sounds like magic. Catholic doctrine teaches that the sacraments work ex
opere operato,
i.e., objectively, though not impersonally and automatically like machines.
They are gifts that come from without but must be freely received.
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