D
deMontfort
Guest
The latter.
It is not my intent to muddy the waters but maybe someone can help me. It seems to me that to re-present a once and for all event negates the once and for all aspect of the said event.That’s the Sacrifice that is re-presented. Same one.
Would you care to clarify what your last sentence is referring to? For the sake of others like me who aren’t connecting the dots!I’m aware, and not necessarily opposed if rightly understood.
That last part is what intrigues me. I like to see what average Roman Catholics say on the issue. There’s typically a good bit about conflating Christ’s sacrifice with… well, a considerably less-worthy sort.
Thanks to both you and GK Motley. I understand what you both are saying and won’t interfere with what you are saying.Sure.
As a Lutheran, I certainly understand Christ’s once-and-for-all sacrifice to be “re-presented” in the sense that, at Holy Communion, Christ’s real, physical Body and Blood is made present outside of time and space and shared with all Saints Militant and Triumphant of all eras and places. This is why Lutherans agree with imagery like this:
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His Real Presence is truly here on earth. If that were what Rome meant by ‘sacrifice’ in the mass, there wouldn’t be anything for Lutherans to complain about - it’s merely a descriptor for the Real Presence.
Yet Rome often means something else that smells faintly of Pelagianism to Lutheran ears. The priest seems to overstep the instruction to stand in persona Christi and administer the sacrament by adding “my sacrifice and yours” to Christ’s Sacrifice. The priest has no standing to add or remove anything from Christ’s work. Is Christ not sufficient? Is man’s sacrifice worthy of being joined to Christ’s? Is man’s thanks of salvific value as far as God is concerned? This is why Lutherans bristle at the ‘sacrifice of the mass’ - because Rome itself doesn’t know what it means by the phrase, and if she does, then she ought to know better than to conflate the two.