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Each Sacrament is different, but all should be celebrated with solemn reverence. For each Sacrament you attend or partake in, read up on it in the Catholic Catachesis ahead of time. For example, the Catachesis explains how one can go about making a good confession for the sacrament of Reconciliation.
What is needed to celebrate the Sacraments validly is the proper matter and form. Matter regards the "stuff" or "material" of the celebration, the form is the prayers.Roman Catholic AnswerThat depends on the Sacrament being celebrated. The above answer is correct. For instance, for Baptism, you need a human being (the one to be baptized), another human being (the one doing the baptism), water, and the words, I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. You also need the correct intention (to do what the Church does). Each Sacrament is slightly different, most of the other sacraments require and ordained minister, some require a priest, and Holy Orders requires a Bishop.
A scale grows larger each time you add weight to it.
In the sacrament of chrismation the newly baptised person receives the Holy Spirit through the anointing with oil by the bishop or priest. The roots of this sacrament are clear in both the Old and New Testaments, and are especially brought to light on the Day of Pentecost. Christmation
A priest is supposed to celebrate the Eucharist in a consecrated Church on a consecrated altar. To celebrate Mass anywhere else, he needs special permission from his Bishop for each time.
The Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick is today as it always has been: a Sacrament to give a person spiritual and physical healing, although physical healing does not always occur. The only difference is that the Vatican has allowed it to be given to a person at any time they are terribly ill, or before surgery, instead of just Last Rites.
Hail
In New Zealand we celebrate Christmas by giving or sending gifts to each other and spending time with family we also have a christmas brekfast lunch or dinner
At the Last Supper, Christ instructed the disciples, "Do this in memory of Me." He had broken bread, blessed the Bread and Wine, and shared it with his followers. Each time we reenact the Sacrament, we are redoing and participating in a Sacrament that Christ instructed us to do, and during which we draw closer to Christ.
No, it grows a new segment to its rattle each time it sheds.
Anytime you can celebrate the fact that you still are.
They gave each other the time to celebrate in the Roman Cathedral on how their lives have been