THE
SACRAMENT OF EXTREME UNCTION
Lesson 25: ON EXTREME UNCTION
Question 271: What is the Sacrament of Extreme Unction?
Question 272: When should we receive Extreme Unction?
Question 273: Should we wait until we are in extreme danger before we
receive Extreme Unction?
Question 274: Which are the effects of the Sacrament of Extreme
Unction?
Question 275: What do you mean by the remains of sin?
Question 276: How should we receive the Sacrament of Extreme
Unction?
Question 277: Who is the minister of the Sacrament of Extreme
Unction?
Explanation: "Unction" means the anointing or rubbing with oil or
ointment. "Extreme" means last. Therefore Extreme
Unction means the last anointing. It is called the "last"
because other unctions or anointings are received before
it. We are anointed at Baptism on three parts of the
body-on the breast, the back, and the head. We are
anointed on the forehead at Confirmation; and when
priests are ordained they are anointed on the hands. The
last time we are anointed is just before death, and it is
therefore very properly called the last anointing, or
Extreme Unction. But if the person should not die after
being anointed would it still be called Extreme Unction?
Yes; because at the time it was given it was thought to be
the last. It sometimes happens that persons receive
Extreme Unction several times in their lives, because theycould receive it every time they were in danger of death
by sickness. Suppose a person should die immediately
after being anointed in Baptism or Confirmation, would
the anointing in Baptism or Confirmation then become
Extreme Unction? No. Because Extreme Unction is in
itself a separate and distinct Sacrament-a special anointing
with prayers for the sick. Oil is used in Extreme
Unction-as in Confirmation-as a sign of strength; for as
the priest applies the holy oil in the Sacrament, the grace
of the Sacrament is taking effect upon the soul. This
Sacrament was instituted as much for the body as for the
soul, as all the prayers said by the priest while
administering it indicate. It is given generally after a
person has made his confession and received the
Viaticum, and when his soul is already in a state of grace;
showing that it is in a special way intended for the body.
It must be given only in sickness; for although one might
be in danger of death if the danger did not come from
within, but from without, he could not be anointed. A
soldier in battle, persons being shipwrecked, firemen
working at a great fire, etc., could not be anointed,
although they are in very great danger of death; because
the danger is not from within themselves, but from
without. If, however, these persons were so frightened
that there was danger of their dying from the fright, they
could then be anointed.
Question 271: What is the Sacrament of Extreme Unction?
Answer: Extreme Unction is the Sacrament which, through the
anointing and prayer of the priest, gives health and
strength to the soul, and sometimes to the body, when we
are in danger of death from sickness.
Explanation: "Anointing." In this Sacrament the priest anoints all our
senses-the eyes, the ears, the nose, the mouth, the hands,
and the feet-and at the same time prays God to forgive
the poor sick person all the sins he has committed by any
of these. The eyes, by looking at bad objects or pictures;
the ears, by listening to bad conversation; the nose, by
indulging too much in sensual pleasures; the mouth, by
cursing, lying, bad conversation, backbiting, etc.; the
hands, by stealing, fighting, or doing sinful things; the
feet, by carrying us to do wrong or to bad places. I told
you already most of our sins are committed for our body,
and the senses are the chief instruments. "Strength to the
body," if it is for our spiritual welfare. If God foresees,
as He foresees all things, that after our sickness we shall
lead better lives and do penance for our sins, then He
may be pleased to restore us to health, and give us an
opportunity of making up for our past faults. But if He
foresees that after our sickness we would again lead bad
lives, and fall perhaps into greater sins, then He will
likely take us when we are prepared, and will not restore
us again to health. As He always knows and does what
is best for His children, we must in sickness always be
resigned to His holy will, and be satisfied with what He
sees fit to do with us.
Question 272: When should we receive Extreme Unction?
Answer: We should receive Extreme Unction when we are in
danger of death from sickness, or from a wound or
accident.
Question 273: Should we wait until we are in extreme danger before we
receive Extreme Unction?
Answer: We should not wait until we are in extreme danger before
we receive Extreme Unction, but if possible we should
receive it whilst we have the use of our senses.
Explanation: We should always be glad to receive the grace of the
Sacraments. When, therefore, we are sufficiently ill to be
anointed--when there is any danger of death--we should
send for the priest at once. If the sick person has any
chance of recovering, the Sacrament will help him and
hasten the recovery; but if the priest is sent for just when
the person is in the last agony of death, the person could
not recover except by a miracle, and God does not
perform miracles for ordinary reasons. If you are in
doubt whether the person is sick enough to receive the
last Sacraments, do not be the judge yourself, send for
the priest and let him judge; and then all the responsibility
is removed from you in case the person should die
without the Sacraments. Very often persons are near
death, and their relatives do not know it. The priest, like
the doctor, has experience in these cases, and can judge
of the danger. Again, do not foolishly believe, as some
seem to do, that if the priest comes to anoint the sick
person it will frighten him by making him think he is
going to die. It has never been known that the priest
killed anyone by coming to see him; and if these same
persons who are now sick receive the Sacraments in the
church from the very same priest, why should they be
afraid to receive them from him in their house? And if
they are so near death that a little fright would kill them,
then they are surely sick enough to receive the
Sacraments. The sick person who is afraid that Extreme
Unction will kill him or hasten his death shows that he
has not the proper faith and confidence in God's grace.
They who do not wish to receive Holy Communion or the
Holy Viaticum in their houses do not want Our Lord to
visit them. How ungrateful they are! When Our Lord
was on earth the people carried the sick out into the
streets to lay them near Him that He might cure them.
Now, He does not require us to do that, but comes
Himself to the sick in the most humble manner, and they
refuse to receive Him. See how ungrateful, therefore, and
how wanting in faith and devotion such persons are! If
the sick person is one who has been careless about his
religion, and has for some time neglected to receive the
Sacraments, do not wait for him to ask for the priest or
for his consent to send for him. Few persons ever
believe they are so near death as they really are: they are
afraid to think of their past lives, and do not like to send
for the priest, or at least they put off doing so, frequently
till it is too late. The devil tempts them to put off the
reception of the Sacraments, in hopes that they may die
without them, and be his forever. In these cases speak to
the sick man quietly and gently, and ask him if he would
not like to have the priest come and say a few prayers for
his recovery. Do not say anything about the Sacraments
if you are afraid he will refuse. Simply bring the priest
to the sick man, and he will attend to all the rest. Even
if the person should refuse-if he has been baptized in the
Catholic religion-send for the priest and explain to him
the circumstances and dispositions of the sick man. It
would be terrible to let such persons die without the
Sacraments if there is any possibility of their receiving
them. Even when they refuse to see the priest it
generally happens that after he has once visited them,
talked to them, and explained the benefits of the
Sacraments, they are better pleased than anyone else to
see him coming again.
Explanation: Sometimes it is God's goodness that sends sickness to
such persons, to bring them back to His worship and the
practice of their religion. What does a good father
generally do with an unruly child? He advises and warns
it, and when words have no effect, punishes it with the
rod, not because he wishes to see it suffer, but for its
good, that it may give up its evil habits and become an
obedient, loving child. In like manner God warns sinners
by their conscience, by sermons they hear, by accidents
or deaths around about them, etc.; and when none of
these things have any effect on them, He sends them
some affliction-He brings them to a bed of sickness. He
punishes them, as it were, with a rod. This He does, not
that He may see them suffer, but for their good; that they
may understand He is their Master, the only one who can
give them health; that all the doctors and all the friends
and money in the world could not save them if He
determined that they should die. Then they come to
know that the world is not their friend; then they see
things as they really are, and begin to think of the next
world, of eternity, etc. Thus they again turn to God and
to the practices of religion. Many persons who reform
and begin to lead good lives in sickness would never have
changed if God had left them always in good health. But
you must not think that all who are sick are so on account
of sin. Sometimes very holy persons are in a state of
sickness, and then it is sent them that they may bear it
patiently, and have great merit before God for their
sufferings, and thus become more holy. Again, very
small children who have never sinned are sick, and then
it is perhaps that their parents may have merit for
patiently taking care of them. I say that God sometimes
sends sickness to persons living in sin for the purpose of
bringing them back to a better way of living, and in that
case their sickness is for them a great mercy from God,
who might have allowed them to continue in sin till His
judgments and condemnation came suddenly upon them.
Question 274: Which are the effects of the Sacrament of Extreme
Unction?
Answer: The effects of Extreme Unction are: first, to comfort us
in the pains of sickness and to strengthen us against
temptations; second, to remit venial sins and to cleanse
our soul from the remains of sin; third, to restore us to
health when God sees fit.
Question 275: What do you mean by the remains of sin?
Answer: By the remains of sin I mean the inclination to evil and
the weakness of the will, which are the result of our sins
and which remain after our sins have been forgiven.
Explanation: "Remains of sin" that is, chiefly the bad habits we have
acquired by sin. If a person does a thing very often, he
soon begins to do it very easily, and it becomes, as we
say, a habit. So, too, a person who sins very much soon
begins to sin easily. This Sacrament therefore takes away
the ease in sinning and the desire for past sins acquired
by frequently committing them.
Question 276: How should we receive the Sacrament of Extreme
Unction?
Answer: We should receive the Sacrament of Extreme Unction in
a state of grace and with lively faith and resignation to the
will of God.
Question 277: Who is the minister of the Sacrament of Extreme
Unction?
Answer: The priest is the minister of the Sacrament of Extreme
Unction.
Explanation: The Sacraments that the priest administers in the house
are the Sacraments for the sick; namely, Penance,
Viaticum, or Holy Communion, and Extreme Unction.
The other Sacraments may be administered there in
special cases of necessity. You should know what things
are to be prepared when the priest comes to administer
the Sacraments in your house. They are as follows: A
small table covered with a clean white cloth, and on it a
crucifix and one or two lighted candles in candlesticks;
some holy water in a small vessel, with a sprinkler which
you can make by tying together a few leaves or small
pieces of palm; a glass of clean water, a tablespoon, and
a napkin for the sick person to hold under the chin while
receiving; also a piece of white cotton wadding, if the
priest should ask for it.
Explanation: Then you may have ready in another place near at hand
some water, a towel, and a piece of bread or lemon for
purifying the priest's fingers; but these things are not
always necessary: still, it would be better to have them
ready in case the priest should require them, so as not to
keep him waiting. Every good Catholic family should
have all these things put away carefully in the house. It
would be well, though it is not necessary, to keep a
special spoon, napkin, etc., for that purpose alone.
Sometimes persons are taken ill very suddenly in the
night, and when the priest comes they have none of the
things they should have; and if their neighbors are as
careless as themselves, they will not have them either: so
the priest is delayed in giving the Sacraments, or is
obliged to administer them in a way that is always
disrespectful to Our Lord. If we would make such
preparations for the coming of a friend to our house, why
should we be so careless when Our Lord comes? If a
friend comes when we are not prepared to receive him,
we feel very much ashamed, and make a thousand
excuses for our want of thought. Therefore provide the
things necessary for the administration of these
Sacraments in your house, and keep them though they
may be seldom if ever required in your family.
Explanation: When Our Lord comes to visit your house receive Him
with all possible respect and reverence. Some good
Catholics have the very praiseworthy practice of meeting
the priest at the door with a lighted candle when he
carries the Blessed Sacrament, and of going before him to
the sickroom. This can be done where there is only one
family living in the house, or at least in the apartment.
All who can do this should do it, because it is in keeping
with the wish of the Church. In olden times, and even
now in Catholic countries, the priest brings the Blessed
Sacrament in procession to the sick. He goes vested as
for Benediction, accompanied by altar boys with lighted
candles and bells. The people kneel by the way as Our
Lord passes. Our Lord is carried in procession always in
the church and on the feast of Corpus Christi, on Holy
Thursday, and during the Devotion of Forty Hours. The
Church would like to have this solemn procession in
honor of Our Lord every time the Blessed Sacrament is
brought from one place to another. But this cannot
always be done in the streets, because there are many
persons not Catholics who would insult Our Lord while
passing along; and in order to prevent this, the priest
brings the Blessed Sacrament to the dying without any
outward display. But we should always remember the
very great respect due to Our Lord, and do all we can to
show it when possible.