sacramental

Etymology

From Old French sacramental, from Ecclesiastical Latin sacrāmentālis.

adj

  1. Used in, or relating to, a sacrament.
    The altar boys were sacked after they were caught sampling the sacramental wine instead of just passing it to the priest before communion.

noun

  1. (Christianity, chiefly Roman Catholicism) An object (such as holy water or a crucifix) or an action (such as making the sign of the cross) which is regarded as encouraging devotion and thus spiritually aiding the person who uses it.
    But under the twofold pressure of solafideism’s rejection of "good works" for the sake of merit and sola scriptura’s denial of anything not explicitly mentioned in the Bible, sacramentals such as images, relics, blessings, and pilgrimages became the objects of the dissenters' most bitter condemnation and scorn. 1997, James Monti, The king's good servant but God's first
    The activities in this strategy immerse the young people in the many sacramentals that are part of the daily, weekly, and seasonal Catholic individual and communal religious expressions. 2000, Michael Theisen, Exploring Catholicism, page 17

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