Holy Water Bucket and Sprinkler
The
use of holy water in the earliest days of the Christian Era is attested
by documents of only comparatively late date. The "Apostolic
Constitutions", the redaction of which goes back to about the year 400,
attribute to the Apostle St. Matthew the precept of using holy water.
The letter written under the name of Pope Alexander I, who lived in the
second century, is apocryphal
and of more recent times; hence the first historical testimony does not
go back beyond the fifth century. However, it is permissible to suppose
for the sake of argument that, in the earliest Christian times, water
was used for expiatory and purificatory purposes, to a way analogous to
its employment under the Jewish Law. As, in many cases, the water used
for the Sacrament of Baptism was flowing water, sea or river water, it
could not receive the same blessing as that contained in the
baptisteries. On this particular point the early liturgy is obscure,
but two recent discoveries are of very decided interest. The Pontifical
of Scrapion of Thumis, a fourth-century bishop, and likewise the
"testamentum Domini", a Syriac composition dating from the fifth to the
sixth century, contain a blessing of oil and water during Mass. The
formula in Scrapion's Pontifical is as follows: "We bless these
creatures in the Name of Jesus Christ,
Thy only Son; we invoke upon this water and this oil the Name of Him
Who suffered, Who was crucified, Who arose from the dead, and Who sits
at the right of the Uncreated. Grant unto these creatures the power to
heal; may all fevers, every evil spirit,
and all maladies be put to flight by him who either drinks these
beverages or is anointed with them, and may they be a remedy in the
Name of Jesus Christ, Thy only Son." As early as the fourth century
various writings, the authenticity of which is free from suspicion,
mention the use of water sanctified either by the liturgical blessing
just referred to, or by the individual blessing of some holy person.
St. Epiphanius (Contra haeres., lib. I, haer. xxx) records that at
Tiberias a man named Joseph poured water on a madman, having first made
the sign of the cross and pronounced these words over the water: "In
the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, crucified, depart from this
unhappy one, thou infernal spirit, and let him be healed!" Joseph was
converted an subsequently used the same proceeding to overcome
witchcraft; yet, he was neither a bishop nor a cleric. Theodoret (Hist.
eccl., V, xxi) relates that Marcellus, Bishop of Apamea, sanctified
water by the sign of the cross and that Aphraates cured one of the
emperor's horses by making it drink water blessed by the sign of the
cross ("Hist. relig.", c. viii, in P.G., LXXXII, col. 1244, 1375). In
the West similar attestations are made. Gregory of Tours (De gloria
confess., c. 82) tells of a recluse
named Eusitius who lived in the sixth century and possessed the power
of curing quartan fever by giving its victims to drink of water that he
had blessed; we might mention many other instances treasured up by this
same Gregory
("De Miraculis S. Martini", II, xxxix; "Mirac. S. Juliani", II, iii,
xxv, xxvi; "Liber de Passione S. Juliani"; "Vitae Patrum", c. iv, n.
3). It isknown that some of the faithful believed that holy water
possessed curative properties for certain diseases, and that this was
true in a special manner of baptismal water. In some places it was
carefully preserved throughout the year and, by reason of its having
been used in baptism, was considered free from all corruption. This
belief spread from East to West; and scarcely had baptism
been administered, when the people would crown around with all sorts of
vessels and take away the water, some keeping it carefully in their
homes whilst others watered their fields, vineyards, and gardens with
it ("Ordo rom. I", 42, in "Mus. ital.", II, 26).
However,
baptismal water was not the only holy water. Some was permanently
retained at the entrance to Christian churches where a clerk sprinkled
the faithful as they came in and, for this reason, was called hydrokometes
or "introducer by water", an appellation that appears in the
superscription of a letter of Synesius in which allusion is made to
"lustral water placed in the vestibule of the temple". This water was
perhaps blessed in proportion as it was needed, and the custom of the
Church may have varied on this point. Balsamon tells us that, in the
Greek Church, they "made" holy
water at the beginning of each lunar month. It is quite possible that,
according to canon 65 of the Council of Constantinople held in 691,
this rite was established for the purpose of definitively supplanting
the pagan feast of the new moon and causing it to pass into oblivion.
In the West Dom Martène declares that nothing was found prior to the
ninth century concerning the blessing and aspersion of water that takes
place every Sunday at Mass. At that time Pope Leo IV ordered that each
priest bless water every Sunday
in his own church and sprinkle the people with it: "Omni die Dominico,
ante missam, aquam benedictam facite, unde populus et loca fidelium
aspergantur" (P.L., CXV, col. 679). Hincmar
of Reims gave directions as follows: "Every Sunday, before the
celebration of Mass, the priest shall bless water in his church, and,
for this holy
purpose, he shall use a clean and suitable vessel. The people, when
entering the church, are to be sprinkled with this water, and those who
so desire may carry some away in clean vessels so as to sprinkle their
houses, fields, vineyards, and cattle, and the provender with which
these last are fed, as also to throw over their own food" ("Capitula
synodalia", cap. v, in P.L., CXXV, col, 774). The rule of having water
blessed for the aspersion at Mass on Sunday was thenceforth generally
followed, but the exact time set by Leo IV and Hincmar was not
everywhere observed. At Tours, the blessing took place on Saturday
before Vespers; at Cambrai and at Aras, it was to be given without
ceremony in the sacristy before the recitation of the hour of Prime; at
Albi, in the fifteenth century, the ceremony was conducted in the
sacristy before Terce; and at Soissons, on the highest of the sanctuary
steps, before Terce; whereas at Laon and Senlis, in the fourteenth
century, it took place in the choir before the hour of Terce. There are
two Sundays on which water is not and seems never to be blessed: these
are Easter Sunday and Pentecost. The reason is because on the eve of
these two feasts water for the baptismal fonts is blessed and
consecrated and, before its mixture with the holy chrism, the faithful
are allowed to take some of it to their homes, and keep it for use in
time of need.
Written by H. Leclercq. Transcribed by Michael T. Barrett. Dedicated to Fr. Hugh Marshall
The
Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VII. Published 1910. New York: Robert
Appleton Company. Nihil Obstat, June 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D.,
Censor. Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
BARRAUD,
De l'eau benite et des vases destines a la contenir in the Bulletin
monumental, 4th series, vol. VI (1870), p. 393-467; PFANNENSCHMIDT,
Weihwasser im heidnischen und christlichen Cultus (Hanover, 1869).

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