Introduction to the Episcopal Church
Session
13
Understanding
the Book of Common Prayer (BCP)
Part
9: The Sacrament of the Prayer for the Sick or otherwise known as Holy Unction.
A major
crisis in life is sickness. As people we
have members who experience in uneven and varying ways the weakness of body and
mind. We know that our lives are
affected by sickness; family and community are affected by sickness. One is reminded that in certain eras of
history plagues devastated large numbers of the members of societies. Sickness is a crisis that we have to face and
the church believes that it is our calling to invoke the Holy Spirit upon our
lives as we believe that God’s presence can be known to us during the crisis of
sickness.
There
are some images of the Sacrament of the Prayer for the Sick that make some
people wary of its practice. For some Holy Unction
referred only to what used to be known as Extreme Unction otherwise called “Last
Rites.” So Holy Unction in some people’s
view was limited to be an end of life ritual done by the priest. For others, in watching televangelist
healers, it is associated with Pentecostal group frenzies where healing events
occur. It is associated with Elmer Gantry
type hucksters who seem to be more about “fundraising” for their
ministries. Sickness is a vulnerable
state of being and no sacrament should ever have an association with the requirement of an offering.
Response
to sickness has a long history and historical anthropology of medicine can
trace a varied practice in many times and cultures. In the days before it was discovered that
microscopic beasties were responsible for illness, sometimes it was convenient
to suggest that demonic forces were the cause of all illnesses. We know this is a very unsatisfactory
explanation even as we also know that sickness and disease are influenced by
states of mind.
The
Sacrament of the Prayer for the Sick is a liturgy that derives from the ministry
of Jesus to the sick of his time and from the practice in early Christian
communities of the elders of the community to pray for the sick and anoint them
with oil. One of the things that makes
me personally uncomfortable is to associate cause of sickness with a sin. There has been a long association of sickness
and sin. The words of Jesus stated that a man was not blind
because his sins or the sins of his parents. We know that lifestyle behaviors can have certain health results but victimization can occur when one presumes to know another person's sin and resulting illness.
How does the Sacrament of the Prayer for the Sick function in the church? I think it is here for us to promote the
ministry of health within the parish family.
How does that happen? I believe
that all of us are healthier if we practice within our significant communities
an “orientation” towards health. Too
obscure? I once worked as an orderly in
a VA hospital and I noticed that the hospitalized Veterans who had family and
friends and church involved with them had much shorter stays in the
hospital. This is what I mean by
creating an orientation toward health within the community. This does not mean instantaneous “cures” or
exemption from the full range of things that can occur to anyone of us. It means that we are “sick” together and not
alone and by being together and by invoking the power of the unseen sublime we
hope for the wonder of health to be known in a fuller way than if we “suffer”
alone.
In
an ironic way one’s sickness can be a “gift” of the community when it is
brought to the attention of the community in this Sacrament. A person experiencing sickness becomes
representative of what can happen to any of us and in presenting a condition of
sickness to the community, the practice of health within the community is
called forth. Meals are delivered to
help families, children are car pooled and the effects of sickness are
ameliorated as the community practices community health. Also the Sacrament of the Prayer for the Sick
mobilizes and raises up the gift of healing within a community. When some people hear about the sickness of
another they are deeply moved within themselves with a special concern. That moving concern is a particular gift of
empathy that includes lots of “energy,” even an intuitive energy that inspires
them to pray and to care in a special way.
The
actual Sacrament of the Prayer for the Sick does not exhaust the ministries and
the gift of health orientation within a community but it stands as a reminder
that we as Christians are all called to the ministry of healing and health in
many different ways.
Share the knowledge your sickness with others so that the gift of health and healing can be
practiced within the church. One of our
practical ministries is our prayer ministry is our Healing Mass on Wednesdays. The prayer chain ministries consists of a
group of people who have committed themselves to be informed about the prayer
needs of people and who pray in agreement with one another and in our prayers
this energy may be like a healing energy that is transmitted to those for
whom we pray. In faith we believe
prayers can help promote health but also that our prayers changes us and mobilize
us towards health as a caring community.
The
Sacrament of the Prayer for the Sick is offered each Sunday or upon
request. This Sacrament stands as our
calling to the ministry of health and healing as a caring community.
Exercise:
Do
you have the gift of healing? Do you
have a deep sense of empathy when you observe the sufferings of others? What do you do with the energy of
empathy? What do you think can happen
when the energy of empathy is shared among people within a community? Can you see yourself as helping to practice
this Sacrament as our community orientation toward supporting each other in our
health concerns?
Remember
we are called to health and healing. The
most accessible meaning for salvation is “health.”
Father
Phil