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That this
sacrament was provided for the sick to strengthen them and prepare them for a
happy passage to the hereafter was for centuries an undisputed part of
tradition. The ancient prayers accompanying the anointing of the sick are
evidence of this. The Church only had to concern herself officially with the
doctrinal side of it when particular questions cropped up or errors appeared.
For this reason the earliest documents deal more with the question of the
minister and the external rites. It was not until the Reformation denied the
sacramentality of extreme unction and its institution by Christ that a more
exact exposition was demanded of the Council of Trent.
The Catholic Church
teaches:
Extreme Unction is a true
sacrament instituted by Christ and proclaimed by St. James. It is administered
by anointing with blessed oil accompanied by prayer. Only a priest can validly
administer it. It can be received by any baptized person who has reached the age
of reason and is on account of sickness or age in danger of death. Its effect is
the strengthening of the soul, often of the body as well, and in the necessary
conditions remission of sins.