http://www.gotquestions.org/seven-Catholic-sacraments.html
No, the sacraments were initiated by Jesus Christ.
The Sacraments of Initiation are Baptism, Confirmation, and the Most Holy Eucharist.
Baptism and the Lord's Supper (Communion).
http://www.gotquestions.org/seven-Catholic-sacraments.html
Cuthbert Lattey has written: 'Back to the Bible' -- subject(s): Bible, Criticism, interpretation 'Six sacraments' -- subject(s): Sacraments 'Religion and science'
Charles Paul Carlson has written: 'Justification and the sacraments' -- subject(s): Bible, Justification, Sacraments, Theology
Roman Catholic AnswerThe teaching on the sacraments is entirely consistent with the Bible, as they both came from the same place: Our Blessed Lord teaching through His Apostles and Church. If you look in the Catechism, it lists all the Bible references, the Council of Trent specifically ruled on each of these as well.
Protestants celebrate two sacraments, the Table of the Lord and Baptism. Catholics have seven sacraments. Among them the Eucharist (which Protestants call the Table of the Lord) and Bapstism.
Receive the sacraments regularly. Know Jesus, read the Bible, study the faith, etc.
Probably in the 7 sacraments section. I'm not really sure. Try it.
It is not biblical but of men. Pope Innocent the III introduced the 7 sacraments in 1215 AD, along with annual confessions. Today mainstream Christianity still adheres to them.
The Greek word musterion is translated as "sacraments" only in Ephesians 5:32 of the Douay Rheims (Catholic) Bible. In other versions, musterion is translated as "mystery," and the word "sacraments" doesn't appear in the Bible at all.According to Strong's Greek Lexicon (#3466), musterionmeans:hidden thing, secret, mystery generally mysteries, religious secrets, confided only to the initiated and not to ordinary mortalsa hidden or secret thing, not obvious to the understandinga hidden purpose or counsel secret will 1cof men 1cof God: the secret counsels which govern God in dealing with the righteous, which are hidden from ungodly and wicked men but plain to the godlyin rabbinic writings, it denotes the mystic or hidden sense of an OT sayingof an image or form seen in a visionof a dream