One of my favorite scenes in nature is when the sun breaks through a cloudy
sky and shines down on the earth. Probably everyone has seen something like it.
The clouds are thick and slightly gray, but they part just enough to let golden
rays of sunlight shine through. You can see the rays travel all the way from the
sky to the ground, getting bigger as they get closer, where they illuminate a
small piece of land like a spotlight from heaven. Few things could capture my
attention more completely. And I think there is no more appropriate picture than
this to capture the essence of what makes a sacrament sacramental.
By themselves the sacraments are actually pretty ordinary activities. Think,
for example, what an outsider might see if they were to watch a sacrament
without knowing anything about the church or the Spirit of God. They would see
people eating bread and drinking wine—nothing out of the ordinary. They would
see people being prayed for—a nice gesture. They would see two people getting
married—it happens all the time. But we who know what’s going on—or what should
be going on—know that it isn’t just the activity that makes a sacrament
sacramental. It’s the presence of the Holy Spirit transforming it into something
greater.
It is not the form of the
sacrament that dispenses grace but it is the divine presence that gives life.
—Doctrine and Covenants 162:1d
It’s this transformation from the ordinary to the
extraordinary in a sacrament that makes me think of the sun breaking through on
a cloudy day. Cloudy days, to me, are always dull and uninspiring. But when the
sun shines through, that ordinary day is transformed into something
extraordinary. Something normal becomes something beautiful.
Unfortunately, though, just as a cloudy day can go by without
the sun breaking through, so can a sacrament without someone feeling the
presence of the Holy Spirit. The only times I have had a truly sacramental
experience is when I’ve invited and welcomed the Spirit to participate in that
sacrament with me. If my mind is caught up in other things, like the business of
the day, Communion will go by like a mid-morning snack. But when I eat and drink
with the open invitation of the Spirit, the eating and drinking are transformed
into true communion with the Lord. All it takes is an intentional invitation to
the Spirit of God.
So, for me, the sacraments have become a sort of training for
sacramental living, and vice versa. They are a call to bring our attention to
the Divine and to let the divine Spirit mix with the physical world. When we do
that, everything can be sacramental. It’s what transforms the bread and wine
into the body and blood of Christ. It changes a simple meal into a call for
justice and a reminder of our hope. It changes a prayer into a blessing, and the
submerging of a person into the cleansing of a soul. The invitation of the
Spirit can turn a smile into medicine, or conflict into growth.
In our day-to-day activities, the invited presence of God can
transform our ordinary encounters into a Zionic embrace. The sacraments, and the
challenge of sacramental living, are calls to let the Spirit of God break
through on this broken world like a light shining from heaven and illuminating
the hearts and souls of all people. With our prayerful invitation and attention,
the Spirit will transform the ordinary into the extraordinary.