To be a sacramental person is so far beyond anything that I think we can convey in words. It is to be Christ himself present to the world, as his hands, eyes, feet and mouth.
As a convert, the very nature of our faith is so much beyond what I felt and knew growing up. Though my basic beliefs have not changed much, many of them have been further defined in ways that I could hardly have imagined. Fleshed out if you will. Baptism for instance in the church I grew up in was not a sacrament, but a symbol of an inward change. It was something we did, not something that “did” something to us. Seeing baptism for what it truly is makes a great deal of difference in how we react to the world.
As in baptism we are buried to the world in the tomb with Christ, and we arise a new man; so too must we think of our daily life. When approaching others we are to be priest, prophet and king; representatives of a holy Kingdom, of Christ himself. Our priestly role is to be liturgically present to the church and participate fully in the Mass. We are a part of the liturgy and with the Bishop, Priests, and Deacons; we the body of Christ offer ourselves up sacramentally as a living sacrifice to be united with Christ’s sacrifice on the cross. As prophet(s) we are to be ever willing and ready to speak the word of God, by internalizing it and living the spirit of the Gospels in front of and TO every person we meet. The true King, Christ himself came as a servant, so too must we as king be servants to other, ready to pour ourselves out as a living libation in the world.
Through the sacrament of Reconciliation we are able to heal the damage we have done to our relationship with God, but also we are able to restore ourselves to right community with the body of Christ. The grace of Christ pours out into our hearts and through the actions of our penance we are able to make ‘right’, what we have put wrong. When we live this sacrament out in the world we too should be channels of grace that pour out our forgiveness to others and want to draw them closer to Christ and his church.
Through the sacrament of Confirmation we can say a resounding Yes, just as Mary, the mother of God, gave her fiat; so too must we say to Christ “Let it be done to me according to thy word.” As living members sealed by this Sacrament, we must also go into the world renewed with energy and joy, allowing Christ to be created in us so that we can then in turn bring him into the world. A spiritual rebirth that begins with the humbling of ourselves to do his will.
I think to sum up, as I have gone longer than a single page, the sacramental character of our lives means that we as Catholic Christians should live in the world in the exact same way we live at the Altar. All too often we see church as an action we do on Sunday, living one way in front of the priest, and another in the parking lot on the way back into our lives. Until we begin to not just internalize the Sacraments but to live them out fully in our lives, so that the person we are is starting to look like the person that God created us to be, can we truly begin to be the body of Christ in a world that so very much needs us! It is only by allowing grace to flow through our lives and to restore us to the fullness of humanity that God bestowed upon our first father and mother, and restored to us through the second Adam and second Eve, Jesus and Mary, that we can begin to truly live out what we pray in the Our Father, “Thy will be done, on earth, as it is in heaven.”