"Celebrated worthily in faith, the sacraments confer the grace that they signify. They are effcacious because in them
Christ himself is at work: it is he who baptizes, he who acts in the sacraments in order to communicate the grace that each sacrament signifies."
After quoting this, though, the author turns around and then says, "the thing is actually accomplished by the sacrament." In another spot he says, "It [referring to the sacrament] is the reality; it
actually effects in the heart of baptized believers something of God's grace." (Emphasis in original)
Now correct me if I am wrong, but it seems that the author is saying that the sacrament itself is working, but the Catechism clearly states that it is Christ working through the sacrament.
I am just wondering, because I often hear the argument against Catholics that they do works and take sacrements because they think the works save them. But if I understand this correctly, Catholics are actually pointing to Christ in the sacraments and say that He is the one working. Would this be an accurate representation of what (true) Catholics believe?
Trying to sort this all out,
Neal

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Christ is the working in the Sacraments. Without Christ they would be meaningless. Why bother?
Catholics do not believe works save you. Works (acts of charity) are an extension of a person who is "in Christ" .... it is something that a Christian should want to do, are called to do.
LaRae