CATECHISM: ON CONFIRMATION
166 Q. What is Confirmation?
A. Confirmation is a Sacrament through which we receive
the Holy Ghost to make us strong and perfect Christians
and soldiers of Jesus Christ.
In Baptism we are made Christians,
but we are not very strong in our faith till the Holy
Ghost comes in Confirmation. You remember how
timid the Apostles were before the coming of the Holy
Ghost, and how firm and determined in their faith
they were afterwards; and how fearlessly they preached
even to those who crucified Our Lord. “Soldiers,”
because we must fight for our salvation against our
three enemies, the devil, the world, and the flesh.
Our Lord is our great leader in this warfare, and
we must follow Him and fight as He directs. A
soldier that fights as he pleases and not as his general
commands, will surely be beaten.
167 Q. Who can administer Confirmation?
A. The bishop is the ordinary minister of Confirmation.
“Ordinary,” because in
some very distant countries where on account of the
small number of Christians they have as yet no bishops,
the Pope allows some priest to give Confirmation;
but then he must use the holy oil consecrated by a
bishop, and cannot consecrate oil himself.
168 Q. How does the bishop give Confirmation?
A. The bishop extends his hands over those who are
to be confirmed, prays that they may receive the Holy
Ghost, and anoints the forehead of each with holy
chrism in the form of a cross.
169 Q. What is holy chrism?
A. Holy chrism is a mixture of olive oil and balm,
consecrated by the bishop.
The oil signifies the strength we
receive, and the balm that we should be free from
the corruption of sin, and give forth the sweetness
of virtue.
170 Q. What does the bishop say in
anointing the person he confirms?
A. In anointing
the person he confirms the bishop says: I sign
thee with the Sign of the Cross, and I confirm thee
with the chrism of salvation, in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
171 Q. What is meant by anointing
the forehead with chrism in the form of a cross?
A. By anointing the forehead with chrism in the form
of a cross is meant, that the Christian who is confirmed
must openly profess and practice his faith, never
be ashamed of it, and rather die than deny it.
“Openly profess” that
is, acknowledge that he is a Catholic when it is necessary
to do so. He need not proclaim it in the streets.
“Practice” it without regard for what
other people think, say, or do. “Ashamed”
of a religion so glorious as the Catholic religion?
Would we not be proud to belong to a society of which
kings and princes were members? Well, a few centuries
ago nearly all the kings, princes, and great men of
the earth were Catholics. All the saints were
Catholics. All the Popes were Catholics.
At present over three hundred million people in the
world are Catholics. This Church was founded
when Christ Our Lord was on earth, and is nearly two
thousand years old. All the other churches are
only a few hundred years old. We ought, therefore,
to be proud of our religion, for which and in which
so many noble persons died. We should feel proud
that we are Catholics; while Protestants should feel
ashamed in our presence, for they have deserted the
true standard of Christ, and followed some other leader
who set up a religion of his own in opposition to
the true Church of Our Lord. They will not have
the cross or crucifix, the standard of Christ, in
their churches or houses or about their persons, and
yet they claim to be Christians redeemed by the Cross.
We are called upon to defend or profess our religion
when we have to do what the Church and God require
us to do: for example, hear Mass on Sundays and
holy days; abstain from the use of fleshmeat on Ash
Wednesday and the Fridays of Lent, fast on fast-days,
and the like, when we are among persons not Catholics.
172 Q. Why does the bishop give
the person he confirms a slight blow on the cheek?
A. The bishop gives the person he confirms a slight
blow on the cheek to put him in mind that he must
be ready to suffer anything, even death, for the sake
of Christ.
173 Q. To receive Confirmation worthily
is it necessary to be in the state of grace?
A. To receive Confirmation worthily it is necessary
to be in the state of grace.
174 Q. What special preparation
should be made to receive Confirmation?
A. Persons
of an age to learn should know the chief mysteries
of faith and the duties of a Christian, and be instructed
in the nature and effects of this Sacrament.
How can one be a good soldier who
does not know the rules and regulations of the army
nor understand the commands of his general? How
can one be a good Christian who does not understand
the laws of the Church and the teachings of Christ?
The “nature” that is, understand
the Sacrament itself. “Effects” that
is, what it does in our souls.
175 Q. Is it a sin to neglect Confirmation?
A. It is a sin to neglect Confirmation, especially
in these evil days when faith and morals are exposed
to so many and such violent temptations.
“Temptations” from
the sayings and writings of the enemies of religion.
To neglect it when we have an opportunity of receiving
it without any very great difficulty would be a sin.
When persons have been unfortunate enough to grow
up without Confirmation, they should come at any time
in their lives to receive it, and not be ashamed to
do so on account of their age or condition in life.