SACRAMENTAL PREPARATION
word sacrament by defining certain Christian rituals as sacraments.
Since the twelfth century, we have articulated seven sacraments. These are the seven principal liturgical rites of the church through which participants experience the love and power of God (Grace) that flows from Jesus' Passion, Death and Resurrection. They can be grouped into three categories:
SACRAMENTS OF CHRISTIAN INITIATION
Baptism
Eucharist
Confirmation
SACRAMENTS OF HEALING
Reconciliation
Anointing of the Sick
SACRAMENTS OF VOCATION
Matrimony
Holy Orders
The Parish runs a Sacramental Preparation Programme for those children in the Parish who attend non Catholic schools and who would not be prepared for the Sacraments in their respective schools.
Children who attend non Catholic schools must complete the Sacramental Preparation Programme before they can receive the sacraments of the Eucharist and Confirmation. For further information please contact the Parish Office at the beginning of the academic year, i.e. in early September. For further details please phone 028 437 22401. Children attending the Sacramental Preparation Programme must be accompanied by a parent or guardian throughout the course of the programme.
The Sacraments, from the Latin "sacramentum" meaning "oath" or "pledge", are the ritual expressions through which Christians experience the love of God as it has been revealed in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The original meaning of the word sacrament is quite broad, as it refers to any manifestation or revelation of the sacred (sacer). The Greek word "mysterion", which predates the Latin "sacramentum," also refers to the mystery, the hiddeness that is revealed in the sacrament.
The Roman Catholic Church, over the course of time, has added a more specific meaning to the