What does it mean that WE offer up Jesus' sacrifice at Mass?

  • Thread starter Thread starter ghunt
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
G

ghunt

Guest
Similarly, why do WE offer God the body and blood, etc. in the Chaplet of the Divine Mercy?

I realize this may be an involved question–anyone willing to point me to further reading would be most appreciated 🙂

Thanks, and God Bless!
 
We know that Jesus perpetually offers His sacrifice in the sight of the Father.

As members of His Body, we are permitted the amazing privilege of joining Him in that offering via the Mass. The chaplet of Divine Mercy refers to the same reality – being incorporated into Jesus by our baptism, we are permitted to offer the one acceptable sacrifice for the sins of the world.
 
We know that Jesus perpetually offers His sacrifice in the sight of the Father.

As members of His Body, we are permitted the amazing privilege of joining Him in that offering via the Mass. The chaplet of Divine Mercy refers to the same reality – being incorporated into Jesus by our baptism, we are permitted to offer the one acceptable sacrifice for the sins of the world.
👍

Through the grace of God Almighty / Hoping that I maintain my state of grace, I can NOT wait to see what this looks like on the other side of the veil from a purely spiritual sense.
:heaven:It must look amazing!
 
We know that Jesus perpetually offers His sacrifice in the sight of the Father.

As members of His Body, we are permitted the amazing privilege of joining Him in that offering via the Mass. The chaplet of Divine Mercy refers to the same reality – being incorporated into Jesus by our baptism, we are permitted to offer the one acceptable sacrifice for the sins of the world.
I was under the belief that Jesus died once (not in perpetuity) for all sins and is now seated at the right hand of God the Father. The effects of His sacrifice, the forgiveness of sins through him will be forever, but the sacrifice itself was a one time event. 🤷
 
I was under the belief that Jesus died once (not in perpetuity) for all sins and is now seated at the right hand of God the Father. The effects of His sacrifice, the forgiveness of sins through him will be forever, but the sacrifice itself was a one time event. 🤷
The perpetually offering of said the sacrifice =/= (does NOT equal) perpetually dying.
Usagi said that “Jesus perpetually offers His sacrifice” not Jesus perpetually dies.

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is the re-presenting of Christ crucified to God the Father for the Church. You are correct that Christ died once, but this death is re-presented hundreds of times all throughout the world for spiritual benefit of the His Holy Church to the Father. Thank God for this, by the way!

God bless you and keep asking!
 
Do a search on this forum. This question has been asked numerous times, and some excellent answers have been given.
 
I was under the belief that Jesus died once (not in perpetuity) for all sins and is now seated at the right hand of God the Father. The effects of His sacrifice, the forgiveness of sins through him will be forever, but the sacrifice itself was a one time event. 🤷
Yes, Christ died once and there was only one sacrifice but only from our perspective. What we forget is that God is outside of time, which is why we can say there is only one sacrifice but that sacrifice is perpetual.
 
I was under the belief that Jesus died once (not in perpetuity) for all sins and is now seated at the right hand of God the Father. The effects of His sacrifice, the forgiveness of sins through him will be forever, but the sacrifice itself was a one time event. 🤷
Indeed, Jesus suffered and died but once, but as you say the effects of that sacrifice are perpetual. When I was a Protestant we would speak (and sing) of being “washed in the blood of the Lamb,” even though the Lamb physically shed His blood on one occasion millennia ago and halfway across the world. God still acts in our lives because of Jesus’ sacrifice.

Now, as the author of the letter to the Hebrews makes clear, Jesus does not offer repeated, ineffectual sacrifices for sin, nor does He continue to suffer His Passion in eternity. But He is still (not just “once was”) our High Priest before the Father, and even “seated” He continues His work of reconciling individual sinners with the Father (through the fruits of His one sacrifice) until it’s time to bring down the curtain on the present Creation.

In Catholicism, as you likely know, we believe that we are privileged to participate in Jesus’ offering of His singular sacrifice before the Father, through the Mass. The prophet Malachi speaks of the Gentiles throughout the world one day making a pure offering to the true God. The only pure and acceptable offering is God’s own spotless Lamb, and so we see that prophecy fulfilled in the Mass. Just as with the lambs and other animal sacrifices of the Old Covenant, first God provides the sacrificial subject (since we have nothing that does not come from Him) and then He graciously permits His People to offer it back to Him. In the case of Jesus, our involvement is even more intimate, since we are told the saved are incorporated into Christ and become members of His Body. Through that connection we are enabled to worship God with a fitting offering that we could never have made ourselves.
 
Indeed, Jesus suffered and died but once, but as you say the effects of that sacrifice are perpetual. When I was a Protestant we would speak (and sing) of being “washed in the blood of the Lamb,” even though the Lamb physically shed His blood on one occasion millennia ago and halfway across the world. God still acts in our lives because of Jesus’ sacrifice.

Now, as the author of the letter to the Hebrews makes clear, Jesus does not offer repeated, ineffectual sacrifices for sin, nor does He continue to suffer His Passion in eternity. But He is still (not just “once was”) our High Priest before the Father, and even “seated” He continues His work of reconciling individual sinners with the Father (through the fruits of His one sacrifice) until it’s time to bring down the curtain on the present Creation.

In Catholicism, as you likely know, we believe that we are privileged to participate in Jesus’ offering of His singular sacrifice before the Father, through the Mass. The prophet Malachi speaks of the Gentiles throughout the world one day making a pure offering to the true God. The only pure and acceptable offering is God’s own spotless Lamb, and so we see that prophecy fulfilled in the Mass. Just as with the lambs and other animal sacrifices of the Old Covenant, first God provides the sacrificial subject (since we have nothing that does not come from Him) and then He graciously permits His People to offer it back to Him. In the case of Jesus, our involvement is even more intimate, since we are told the saved are incorporated into Christ and become members of His Body. Through that connection we are enabled to worship God with a fitting offering that we could never have made ourselves.
Thanks for this. It is the offering back to God what He provided us that both amazes and confuses me.
 
I was under the belief that Jesus died once (not in perpetuity) for all sins and is now seated at the right hand of God the Father. The effects of His sacrifice, the forgiveness of sins through him will be forever, but the sacrifice itself was a one time event. 🤷
Correct.

That is what the Catholic Church professes.

That one event…that one sacrifice… is made present for us here by the Holy Spirit.
 
Similarly, why do WE offer God the body and blood, etc. in the Chaplet of the Divine Mercy?

I realize this may be an involved question–anyone willing to point me to further reading would be most appreciated 🙂

Thanks, and God Bless!
My understanding:

We have nothing to offer up that hasn’t been given us to God. The only thing we can offer up is what He has given to us in the first place. His Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity are His greatest and most beautiful gifts. So, this is the best we can offer.
 
My understanding is that properly speaking we don’t offer the Body and Blood of Christ, as only a priest acting in persona Christi can do that. Rather, we unite ourselves to that offering. The wording of the Chaplet is to emphasize our closeness to the offering of the Mass rather than to make a theological point.

At least that’s what my understanding is.
 
My understanding is that properly speaking we don’t offer the Body and Blood of Christ, as only a priest acting in persona Christi can do that. Rather, we unite ourselves to that offering. The wording of the Chaplet is to emphasize our closeness to the offering of the Mass rather than to make a theological point.

At least that’s what my understanding is.
👍 Somewhat more clear than my approach.
 
I was under the belief that Jesus died once (not in perpetuity) for all sins and is now seated at the right hand of God the Father. The effects of His sacrifice, the forgiveness of sins through him will be forever, but the sacrifice itself was a one time event. 🤷
Wouldn’t it be more correct to say it was a timeless event?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top