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What is the essence of the Sacrifice of the Mass? This question was
posed in one manner in the time of St. Thomas, and in another manner
after the appearance of Protestantism. Yet in his very first article
the saint formulates the objection which will be developed by
Protestantism.
1. In the thirteenth century the question was generally posed in
these terms: Is Christ immolated in this sacrament? And the answer
commonly given is that of Peter Lombard, which is based on these
words of St. Augustine: [916] Christ was immolated once in
Himself, and yet He is daily immolated in the sacrament. The words
"in the sacrament" were explained as meaning: He is immolated
sacramentally, not, as on the cross, physically. Hence in the Mass
there is an immolation, not a physical immolation of Christ's body,
for that body is now glorified and impassible, but a sacramental
immolation. This language had been familiar to the Church Fathers.
[917] It is repeated by Peter Lombard, [918] and by
his commentators, notably by St. Bonaventure and St. Albert the
Great. [919] The explanation of St. Thomas [920]
runs as follows: In two ways this sacrament is the immolation of
Christ. First because, in the words of Augustine, [921]
"we are accustomed to name an image by the name of the thing of which
it is the image." Now this sacrament, as said above, [922]
is an image of the passion of Christ, which was a true immolation..
Secondly by efficient causality, because this sacrament makes us
participators in the fruits of our Lord's passion.
On the nature of this sacramental immolation the saint [923]
speaks thus: As on the cross Christ's body and blood were separated
physically, thus, in the Mass, by the double consecration, they are
separated sacramentally. Thus, the substance of the bread having been
changed into Christ's body and that of the wine into His blood,
Christ is really present on the altar in the state of death, His
blood being shed, not physically, but sacramentally, even while, by
concomitance, His body is under the species of wine and His blood
under the species of bread.
2. When Protestantism denied that the Mass is a true sacrifice,
Catholic theologians, instead of asking, "Is Christ immolated in
this sacrament? " began to pose the question in this form: "Is the
Mass a true sacrifice, or only a memorial of the sacrifice on the
cross?"
But we must note here that St. Thomas had anticipated the
Protestant objection. He [924] formulates it thus: Christ's
immolation was made on the cross, whereon He "delivered Himself as
offering and victim, an odor of sweetness unto God." [925]
But in the mystery of the Mass, Christ is not crucified. Hence
neither is He immolated. To this objection he replies that, although
we do not have in the Mass the bloody immolation of the cross, we do
have, by Christ's real presence, a real immolation, commemorative
of that on the cross.
The objection itself, however, under various forms, is reasserted as
truth by Luther, by Calvin, by Zwingli. The last says:
[926] Christ was slain once only, and once only was His blood
shed. Hence He was offered in sacrifice only once.
Let us notice the assumption which underlies this argument. Any true
sacrifice includes essentially a physical immolation of the victim,
whereas, in the Mass, there can be no physical immolation of His
body which is now glorified and impassible. The Council of Trent,
[927] recalling the doctrine of the Fathers and of the
theologians of the thirteenth century, notably St. Thomas, answers
that the unbloody immolation, the sacramental immolation of the Mass,
is a true sacrifice.
Is real, physical immolation of the victim an essential element of
sacrifice? In a bloody sacrifice, yes. But there can be, and is in
the Mass, an unbloody sacramental immolation, which represents the
bloody immolation of the cross and gives its fruits to us. This answer
of St. Thomas [928] is repeated by the great Thomists. Thus
Cajetan [929] says: This unbloody mode, under the species of
bread and wine, re-presents, sacrificially, Christ who was offered
on the cross. Similarly, John of St. Thomas: [930] The
essence of the Eucharistic sacrifice consists in the consecration,
taken, not absolutely, but as sacramentally and mystically,
separative of the blood from the body. On the cross the sacrifice
consisted in the real and physical separation of Christ's blood from
His body. The action, therefore, which mystically and sacramentally
separates that blood is the same sacrifice as that on the cross,
differing therefrom only in its mode, which there was real and physical
and here is sacramental.
The Carmelites of Salamanca [931] teach the same doctrine.
But they add a modification which is not admitted by all Thomists,
viz.: Reception of the sacrament by the priest belongs to the essence
of this sacrifice. Many other Thomists hold that the priest's
Communion (which destroys, not Christ's body, but only the
Eucharistic species) belongs not to the essence, but only to the
integrity of the sacrifice. But whatever may be the truth on this last
point, the Salmanticenses hold that this double consecration
constitutes a true immolation, not physical, but sacramental.
Bossuet [932] has the same doctrine. And this thesis, which
seems to us the true expression of the thought of St. Thomas, is
reproduced, not only by the majority of living Thomists, but also by
other contemporary theologians. [933] .
Some Thomists, [934] however, under the influence, it
seems, of Suarez, wish to find in the double consecration a physical
immolation. Then, since they must recognize that only the substance
of the bread and that of the wine undergo a real physical change, and
that these are not the thing offered in sacrifice, they are led to
admit, with Lessius, a virtual immolation of Christ's body. This
virtual immolation is thus explained: In virtue of the words of
consecration the body of Christ would be really and physically
separated from His blood, did it not remain united by concomitance,
from the fact that Christ's body is now glorified and impassible.
This innovation is not a happy one, because this virtual immolation is
not in fact real and physical, it remains solely mystic and
sacramental. Besides, what it would virtually renew would be the act
by which Christ was put to death. But this act, says St. Thomas,
[935] was not a sacrifice, but a crime, which therefore is not
to be renewed, either physically or virtually.
The only immolation which we have in the Mass, therefore, is the
sacramental immolation, the sacramental separation, by the double
consecration, of His blood from His body, whereby His blood is shed
sacramentally.
But is this sacramental immolation sufficient to make the Mass a true
sacrifice? Yes, for two reasons: first because exterior immolation,
in sacrifice of any kind, is always in the order of sign, [936]
of signification: secondly because the Eucharist is simultaneously
sacrifice and sacrament.
First then, even where there is no physical immolation, we can still
have a true sacrifice, if we have an equivalent immolation, above all
if we have an immolation which is necessarily the sign, the
signification, the re-presentation of a bloody immolation of the
past. The reason is as we have said, that exterior immolation is
effective only so far as it is a sign, an expression of the interior
immolation, of the "contrite and humbled heart," and that without
this interior immolation, the exterior is valueless, is like the
sacrifice of Cain, a mere shadow and show. The visible sacrifice,
says St. Augustine, [937] is the sacrament, the sacred
sign, of the invisible sacrifice.
Even in the bloody sacrifice, the exterior immolation is required,
not as physical death (this condition is required to make the animal
fit for eating) but as the sign of oblation, adoration, contrition,
without which the slaughter of the animal has no religious meaning, no
religious value.
This position granted, we see that the Mass is a true sacrifice,
without being bloody in its mode, even if the immolation is only
sacramental, in the order of a sign signifying something that is now
impossible, namely, the physical separation of Christ's blood from
His impassible body. Yet this sacramental immolation is the sign, is
essentially the memorial and representative sign, of the bloody
immolation on Calvary, an effective sign, which makes us sharers in
the fruits of that bloody immolation, since the Eucharist contains the
Christ who has suffered. [938] Again, this immolation in the
Mass of the Word made flesh, though it is only sacramental, is, as
sign, as expression, of reparative adoration, much more expressive
than all the victims of the Old Testament. St. Augustine and St.
Thomas [939] demanded only this sacramental immolation to make
the Mass a true sacrifice.
A second reason for this doctrine, as we said above, lies in the
character of the Eucharist as being simultaneously sacrament and
sacrifice. Hence we are not surprised that the exterior immolation
involved should be, not physical, but sacramental.
But it does not follow that the Mass is a mere oblation. St.
Thomas [940] writes: We have a sacrifice in the proper sense
only when something is done to the thing offered to God, as when
animals were killed and burned, or bread was broken and eaten and
blessed. The very word gives us this meaning, because sacrificium
[941] is used of man doing something sacred. But the word
"oblation" is used directly of a thing which unchanged is offered to
God, as when money or loaves are laid unchanged on the altar,
Hence, though every sacrifice is an oblation, not every oblation is a
sacrifice.
In the Mass, then, we have, not a mere oblation, but a true
sacrifice, because the thing offered undergoes a change; the double
transubstantiation, namely, which is the necessary prerequisite for
the Real Presence and the indispensable substratum of the sacramental
immolation.
3. St. Thomas insists on another capital point of doctrine: The
principal priest who actually offers the Mass is Christ Himself, of
whom the celebrant is but the instrumental minister, a minister who at
the moment of consecration does not speak in his own name, nor even
precisely in the name of the Church, [942] but in the name of
the Savior "always living to intercede for us." [943] .
Let us hear some further texts of St. Thomas. This sacrament is so
elevated that it must be accomplished by Christ in person.
[944] And again: In the prayers of the Mass the priest indeed
speaks in the person of the Church, which is the Eucharistic unity;
but in the sacramental consecration he speaks in the person of Christ,
whom by the power of ordination he represents. [945] When he
baptizes, he says "I baptize thee": when he absolves, he says "I
absolve thee"; but when he consecrates, he says, not "I consecrate
this bread," but, "This is My body." [946] And when he
says "Hoc est corpus meum," he does not say these words as mere
historical statement, but as efficient formula which produces what it
signifies, transubstantiation, namely, and the Real Presence. But
it is Christ Himself who, by the voice and ministry of the
celebrant, performs this substantiating consecration, which is always
valid, however personally unworthy the celebrant may be. [947]
.
Is it then sufficient to say [948] that Christ offers each
Mass, not actually, but only virtually, by having instituted the
sacrifice and commanded its renewal to the end of the world? This
doctrine, from the Thomistic viewpoint, depreciates the role of
Christ. Christ Himself it is who offers actually each Mass. Even
if the priest, the instrumental minister, should be distracted and
have at the moment only a virtual intention, Christ, the one high
priest, the principal cause, wills actually, here and now, this
transubstantiating consecration. And further, Christ's humanity,
as conjoined to His divinity, is the physically instrumental cause of
the twofold transubstantiation. [949] .
It is in this sense that Thomists, together with the great majority
of theologians, understand the following words of the Council of
Trent: "In the two sacrifices there is one and the same victim, one
and the same priest, who then on the cross offered Himself, and who
now, by the instrumentality of His priests, offers Himself anew,
the two sacrifices differing only in their mode." [950] .
Substantially, then, the Sacrifice of the Mass does not differ from
the sacrifice of the cross, since in each we have, not only the same
victim, but also the same priest who does the actual offering, though
the mode of the immolation differs, one being bloody and physical, the
other non-bloody and sacramental. Hence Christ's act of offering
the Mass, while it is neither dolorous nor meritorious (since He is
no longer viator): is still an act of reparative adoration, of
intercession, of thanksgiving, is still the ever-loving action of
His heart, is still the soul of the Sacrifice of the Mass. This
view stands out clearly in the saint's commentaries on St. Paul,
[951] particularly in his insistence on Christ's ever-living
intercession. Christ also now, in heaven, says Gonet, [952]
prays in the true and proper sense (by intercession): begging divine
benefits for us. And His special act of intercession is the act by
which, as chief priest of each Mass, He intercedes for us. Thus
the interior oblation, always living in Christ's heart, is the very
soul of the Sacrifice of the Mass; it arouses and binds to itself the
interior oblation of the celebrant and of the faithful united to the
celebrant. Such is, beyond doubt, the often repeated doctrine of
St. Thomas and his school. [953] .
Each Mass, finally, has a value that is simply infinite. This
position is defended by the greatest Thomists against Durandus and
Scotus. [954] This value arises from the sublimity both of the
victim and of the chief priest, since, substantially, the Sacrifice
of the Mass is identified with that on the cross, though the mode of
immolation is no longer bloody but sacramental. The unworthiness of
the human minister, however great, cannot, says the Council of
Trent, reduce this infinite value. Hence one sole Mass can be as
profitable for ten thousand persons well disposed as it would be for
one, just as the sun can as easily give light and warmth to ten
thousand men as to one. Those who object 41 have lost sight, both
of the objective infinity which belongs to the victim offered, and of
the personal infinity which belongs to the chief priest.
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