T
Tomyris
Guest
Almost all the remaining responses to my posts would take the thread in other directions, most of which have been hashed and rehashed. I respectfully decline to answer some of the other points made.You do realize that the priests do not re-sacrifice for atonement? At the moment of transubstantiation, Calvary itself becomes present to the faithful at that moment. The priest acts in person of Christ in transforming the bread and wine to the body and blood of Christ.
The priest does not perform a new sacrifice.
I recognize that current Catholic teaching is that it is not a re-sacrifice. I have not located who was teaching that it WAS a re-sacrifice, if anyone was, at the time of the Reformation. Calvin taught that it was, and I have not seen anything refuting him on this point at the time of the Reformation. Exactly what was happening in the teaching at this time is unclear to me. But today the Catholic Church explicitly denies re-sacrifice, which is a good thing.
If he is not sacrificing, why call him a priest? Priests, by the nature of their position, sacrifice. Otherwise they are not priests. To me the term is misleading at best.
I dispute transubstantiation, by the way, but that also would be off-thread.
I also appreciate the concept that in some way we are brought back to Calvary at the Eucharist.
