the sacraments session 1: the sacramental economy

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THE SACRAMENTS SESSION 1: THE SACRAMENTAL ECONOMY

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Page 1: THE SACRAMENTS SESSION 1: THE SACRAMENTAL ECONOMY

THE SACRAMENTS

SESSION 1: THE SACRAMENTAL ECONOMY

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Session themes:

God’s “Sacramental Economy”: ongoing communication of Christ’s Paschal Mystery through the Sacraments

The Liturgy: the “work” of the Blessed Trinity

Paschal Mystery: Christ’s passion, death and Resurrection

IV. Christian Prayer

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Session Schedule

Opening PrayerPaired ActivityTheme #1: The Liturgy Standing Activity Theme #2: The SacramentsSmall Group ActivityClosing Prayer

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WHAT DO THE LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS HAVE TO DO WITH MY

LIFE--AND WITH THE MISSION OF THE

CHURCH?

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Opening Prayer: The Road to Emmaus (Lk 24:13-35)

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“With that their eyes were opened and they recognized him…” (Lk 24:31)

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Paired Activity: Pair, Share, Compare

What role have the Sacraments played in your own spiritual growth?

What difference does the liturgy make in your daily life?

(Session Question: What do the Liturgy and the Sacraments have to do with my life--and with the mission of the Church?)

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Theme #1: The Liturgy—Work of the Holy Trinity

“The Church celebrates in theliturgy above all the PaschalMystery by which Christaccomplished the work ofour salvation.” (CCC, n. 1067)

“The liturgy as the sacred actionpar excellence is the summit towardwhich the activity of the Church isdirected and from which all herpowers flow.” (Comp., n. 219)

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I. What is the Liturgy?

“The word ‘liturgy’ originally meant a ‘public work’ or a ‘service in the name of/on behalf of the people.’ In Christian tradition it means the participation of the People of God in ‘the work of God’.” (CCC, n. 1069)

The liturgy celebrates Christ’s Paschal Mystery; in it, Christ continues the work of our redemption.

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Liturgical Realities “101”

In the liturgy of the Word and the liturgy of the Eucharist, Christ personally speaks to each member of his body.

The whole Body of the Church—head and members—offer the public worship which is due to God.

“Through the liturgy Christ continues the work of our redemption in, with and through his Church.” (Comp., n. 218)

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II. How is the Liturgy the Work of the Most Holy Trinity?

Father: shares his overflowing love as the source of the liturgy’s blessings.

Son: communicates his grace to the faithful of all times and places, through the Apostles and their successors.

Holy Spirit: recalls and manifests Christ to the faith of the assembly.

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Trinity, by Andrei Rublev

Father:Gold/eternity,

over Blue/divinity

Not touching thetable/earth

Son:Blue/divinity,

over Brown/humanity

Touching with twofingers—both D & H

Holy Spirit:Green/time,

Over Blue/eternity

Touching with onefinger--divinity

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The Liturgy & the Trinity

The "earthly liturgy" participates in the liturgy of Heaven.

"Christian liturgy not only recalls the events that saved us, but it actualizes them, makes them present" (CCC, n. 1104).

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III. Celebrating the Liturgy of the Church

A. Who celebrates?“Mother Church earnestly desires that

all the faithful should be led to that full, conscious and active participation in liturgical celebrations which is demanded by the very nature of the liturgy…” (CCC, no. 1141).

“Liturgy is an action of the whole Christ….”

(CCC, n. 1136)

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The Liturgy: The Body of Christ at Prayer

B. How is the Liturgy celebrated?

C. When is it celebrated? The Lord’s Day Liturgical Year Cycle of saints Liturgy of the Hours

D. Where is it celebrated?

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IV. The links between liturgy and life

At divine worship, we receive the grace that helps us be formed ever more closely to Christ.

“Go and announce the Gospel of the Lord.”

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The Liturgy and the “Day of the Lord”

Reclaiming Sunday as the first day of the week

Reclaiming the Liturgy as the center of Sunday

Reclaiming the Eucharist as the “Sacrament of Sacraments”

Bringing Christ to the Streets

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Standing Activity:

Reclaiming and Celebrating Sunday

I. Discuss and prepare “talking points”:

⁻ In a culture focused on the "weekend,“ how can we help others reclaim Sunday as the "day of the Lord"—a day dedicated to

God?

⁻ What are the obstacles and/or challenges that prevent people from “Keeping Holy the

Sabbath Day,” and how can we help people overcome them?

II.Consider role-playing a conversation which addresses the questions and challenges people face.

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Theme #2:

The Sacraments—

Seven Sacraments…one redemptive act of love for all.

Celebrating the Paschal Mystery

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I. A Sacramental World View:Rooted in Scripture and Tradition

A sacramental world view flows from doctrines of Creation—Incarnation—Redemption (Re-creation).

Physical signs convey the realities they represent.

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II. The Paschal Mystery in the Sacraments of the Church

Instituted by Christ, the Sacraments are visible and perceptible signs of God’s invisible and imperceptible grace.

Sacraments do not depend upon the personal holiness of the minister, since Christ himself acts in them and communicates the grace they signify.

Fruits of the Sacraments depend upon the dispositions of those who receive them.

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Christ’s Work in the Sacraments

St. Leo the Great wrote, "What was visible in our Savior has passed over into his mysteries."

Sacraments confer: grace, forgiveness of sins, adoption as children of god, conformation to Christ the Lord, and membership in the Church.

The Church initiates people into the mystery of Christ “by proceeding from the visible to the invisible, from the sign to the thing signified, form the ‘sacraments’ to the ‘mysteries’.” (CCC, n. 1075).

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III. The Grace of the Sacraments

Though all of the Sacraments "form an organic whole" in which each particular sacrament has its own vital place, "the Eucharist occupies a unique place as the ‘Sacrament of Sacraments’: ‘all the other sacraments are ordered to it as to their end’.”

(CCC, n. 1211)

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Mission-Essential Terminology

Sacrament: An efficacious sign of grace, instituted by Christ and entrusted to the Church, by which divine life is dispensed to us by the work of the Holy Spirit.

Grace: The help God gives us to respond to our vocation to become his adopted sons and daughters; the divine initiative of grace precedes, prepares, and elicits our free response in faith and commitment.

Sanctifying grace is a habitual gift of God’s own divine life, a stable and supernatural disposition that enables us to live with God and to act by his love.

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The Skit Guys on Grace

The gift of God’s grace

Jesus’ lessons for Peter—and for us??

The revelation of the Cross and Resurrection

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IV. Overview of the Seven Sacraments

Three main groupings? Initiation-Healing-At the Service of Communion

Effects?Heal & StrengthenCommunicate the H.S.Unite us to ChristMake us children of GodGive sacramental graceUnite Christians

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Small Group Activity:

“Sacrament Stations”

Create a "Billboard" in miniature for your Sacrament:

Use a sign or symbol to represent it Create a slogan or motto to get people’s attention

Consider how you could get your audience to (re)discover the grace hidden within this outward sign.

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Review & Reflection:

What do the Liturgy and the Sacraments have to do with my life--and with the mission of the Church?

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Follow-up Reflection and Resources

www.dioceseofjoliet.org/layformation

2) Recommended follow-up: US/CCA, ch. 14,

“The Celebration of the Paschal Mystery of Christ”

Catholicism, Episode VI:“The Mystical Union of Christ & His

Church”

4) Session powerpoint and additional resources:

3) For Catechists & Catholic School Teachers:

“Record of Formation,” includingrequired reflection & documentation

1) Session Evaluation & Feedback

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Closing Prayer

Consider the ways you encounter God each day, particularly through the Liturgy and Sacraments of the Church.

Pray with (and sing along with the refrain, if the Spirit so moves you): Everyday God.

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