J
JJO
Guest
Dear Jim,“living sacrifice”
Is this “living sacrifice” also present during Eucharistic Adoration?
Julian
Dear Jim,“living sacrifice”
I understand there is no re-enaction, but how can “the sacrifice of self that Jesus made,” be present if the suffering Body of Christ isn’t present.It’s a subtle nuance, but it’s critical: Christ died once and for all of us. We don’t need to re-enact the crucifixion. The offering of himself to the Father, though, is an eternal event, and since Christ commanded us to memorialize it, we do exactly that, at each Mass. We make present his body, blood, soul and divinity, and we re-present the sacrifice of self that Jesus made, and which is the source of our salvation.
Hi Vico,the one and only crucifixion of Jesus is made corporeally present, {although not in the manner in which bodies are in a place} during Eucharistic adoration also
That’s kinda like asking what’s the difference between dinner and hamburger, isn’t it?
- how can the sacrifice and crucifixion be different here if the sacrifice occurred in the manner of crucifixion?
No. The glorified body, blood, soul, and divinity of Christ is what is present in the Eucharist.
- I understand we memoralise, but I am more concerned about the corporal presence of this sacrifice. Is the physically suffering Body of Christ corporally present at Mass, not just the commemoration?
Yes. That is my understanding of the mystery.So you’re saying that “the risen Christ bears the wounds of his crucifixion in his glorified flesh” and it is this that is present at the Mass…
And this faith has ever been in the Church of God, that, immediately after the consecration, the veritable Body of our Lord, and His veritable Blood, together with His soul and divinity, are under the species of bread and wine; but the Body indeed under the species of bread, and the Blood under the species of wine, by the force of the words; but the body itself under the species of wine, and the blood under the species of bread, and the soul under both, by the force of that natural connexion and concomitancy whereby the parts of Christ our Lord, who hath now risen from the dead, to die no more, are united together; and the divinity, furthermore, on account of the admirable hypostatical union thereof with His body and soul. (Council of Trent, Session 13, First Decree, Chapter 3)
The same real presence is in both the Mass (Divine Liturgy) and in Eucharistic Adoration: “corporeally present, although not in the manner in which bodies are in a place”.Vico:![]()
Hi Vico,the one and only crucifixion of Jesus is made corporeally present, {although not in the manner in which bodies are in a place} during Eucharistic adoration also
You agreed with the above statement but then what difference is there between adoration and the Mass, not in terms of what we commemorate, but in what is corporally present?
This would also mean that we consume the crucified Body of Christ
Hi Todd,whereby the parts of Christ our Lord, who hath now risen from the dead, to die
The ‘means’? Do you mean “a sacrifice of bread and wine, changed into the body/blood/soul/divinity of Christ”, or something else?You could say unbloody but that doesn’t explain the means of the sacrifice.
No – and it would be an incomplete sacrifice if it were the case! After all, “in pain on the cross”, Christ hadn’t yet sacrificed His life to the Father for our sake! So, if all we offer is “Christ on the cross”, we aren’t re-presenting the salvific sacrifice which the Father accepts! Christ didn’t offer the Father merely His pain, but His very life itself!But is He present in the way He was when in pain on the cross?
It’s the glorified Christ.I dont think he is saying the risen Christ is in the Eucharist
No – the crucifixion was “merely” the means by which the sacrifice came to pass. You’re confusing the instrument with the thing itself.If it is the first option, then how is the Mass really a sacrifice since the sacrifice of Christ was His crucifixion?
Baltimore CatechismAnd what is Jesus experiencing in the Eucharist, His resurrected and glorious and painless state or His suffering state on the cross. If it is the first option, then how is the Mass really a sacrifice since the sacrifice of Christ was His crucifixion?
JJO
The whole divinity, and the humanity of Christ, body and soul, glorified at the Ascension is present in the world.Q. 357. What is the Mass?
A. The Mass is the sacrifice of the New Law in which Christ, through the ministry of the priest, offers Himself to God in an unbloody manner under the appearances of bread and wine.
Q. 362. Is there any difference between the sacrifice of the cross and the Sacrifice of the Mass?For, from the rising of the sun even to the going down, my name is great among the Gentiles; and in every place there is sacrifice and there is offered to my name a clean oblation. (Malachi 1:11)*
A. The manner in which the sacrifice is offered is different. On the cross Christ physically shed His blood and was physically slain, while in the Mass there is no physical shedding of blood nor physical death, because Christ can die no more; on the cross Christ gained merit and satisfied for us, while in the Mass He applies to us the merits and satisfaction of His death on the cross.
For we know that Christ, having risen from the dead, dies now no more, death shall no longer have dominion over him. (Romans 6:9)*
This makes sense except thatNo – and it would be an incomplete sacrifice if it were the case! After all, “in pain on the cross”, Christ hadn’t yet sacrificed His life to the Father for our sake! So, if all we offer is “Christ on the cross”, we aren’t re-presenting the salvific sacrifice which the Father accepts! Christ didn’t offer the Father merely His pain , but His very life itself !
Thank you, this is extremely useful (as well as the Constitution on the Liturgy)On the cross Christ physically shed His blood and was physically slain, while in the Mass there is no physical shedding of blood nor physical death, because Christ can die no more;