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agangbern
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Please read Post#20.By the power of God, the sacrifice is made present to us. Does that help?
Please read Post#20.By the power of God, the sacrifice is made present to us. Does that help?
In the US, the Church uses both methods of describing it. What happens does not change - only the words we use to describe it. The descriptions are synonymous, and any difference is a matter of language. Since it is God that presents the sacrifice, man cannot re-present it. Man cannot make it present. Only the Lord can. Any better?Please read Post#20.
That’s better. What basically I took exception of is the use of the word “re-presentation” in the sense of “presenting again”. In the Holy Mass, there is simply no “presenting again”. For “presenting again” implies a repetition of a past event. I know that the poster who used that word did not have in mind the concept of “repetition of a past event.” But to the innocent reader, the word “presenting again” is prone to confuse him. That is why it should not be used as regards the Holy Mass.In the US, the Church uses both methods of describing it. What happens does not change - only the words we use to describe it. The descriptions are synonymous, and any difference is a matter of language. Since it is God that presents the sacrifice, man cannot re-present it. Man cannot make it present. Only the Lord can. Any better?
In my understanding you are quite correct, the Mass is us being present across time-space, at the events of the Last Supper culminating in the Crucifixion - we do not re-sacrifice Jesus.Let us see if I could say it right. Just correct me if I get unquestionably wrong.
Firstly, I don’t think the Holy Mass is a re-presentation of the Crucifixion of Jesus at Calvary. For to say that it is a re-presentation would imply a “repetition” of what had been done before. It is not like that . There is no repetition of a past event there.
The sacrifice that Christ did in calvary is the same sacrifice done in the Holy Mass. The “explosion” , so to speak, that exploded about 2,000 years ago in calvary is one and the same “explosion” that we hear and feel and witness during the Holy Mass. The sacrifice was not limited by time and space. It reaches to our place and time through the Holy Mass.
That is why, the Holy Mass is in fact a sacrifice of Christ.
NO the sacrificial nature of the Mass is NOT greatly diminished in the Mass, anywhere it is validly and licitly celebrated. It is ALWAYS present and obvious and apparent to those who look for it, which is the meaning of “full, active participation”. To say otherwise is to deny the Church and her authority over Mass and the sacraments.I know you aren’t interesting in hearing another Traditionalists attack on the Novus Ordo, and believe it or not that is not my intent; but the reality is, the Novus Ordo does not reflect this sacrifice. It’s more of a “service” where you hear Bible readings, and maybe sing, shake hands with your neighbor, and hear a sermon; but the sacrificial nature of the Mass is greatly diminished.
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I can understand why you would think that since “lex orandi, lex credendi”. In other words, the new Mass could well imply this, but it is upside down.Yours Truly:
I’m not quite sure how to state this so bear with me…Jesus is said to be “a Priest forever according to the order of Melchisedech”. Why is he a Priest according to the order of Melchisedech? Because Melchisedech offer to God a sacrifice of bread and wine; just as our Lord is offered to God as sacrifice under the appearances of bread and wine. Through transubstantiation, what appears to be bread is no longer bread. Thus, what is offered to God is not “the fruit of the vine and work of human hands”, but Jesus Christ in the flesh.
I’ve contemplated this for a long while now, We as Gods people bring up, as an offering, to the altar the bread and wine and our donations for the poor and the church. It has occurred to me that we offer up to God everything we do in our daily lives that God has provided for us. The fruit that humans have cultivated and turned into wine, the wheat that is planted and harvested and ground into flour to make the bread, the money that we make to support our families and mankind, thus thanking God for all the benefits He bestows in our lives by providing us as humans all that is needed to sustain our lives here on earth. It is only through Him that all these things are accomplished. God accepts all of these things that give glory to Him and “Makes” them Jesus Christ. For it is only Jesus that is a pure sacrifice. So what He bestows upon us is Christ himself, that which sustains us in life. So the fruit of the vine and the work of human hands is Christ himself. Am I even close here?
The Mass is not about our offerings. It is the Sacrifice of Jesus on Calvary transcending time and space and being made present on the altar.4 Q. What, then, is the Holy Mass?
A. The Holy Mass is the Sacrifice of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ offered on our altars under the appearances of bread and wine, in commemoration of the Sacrifice of the Cross.
5 Q. Is the Sacrifice of the Mass the same as that of the Cross?
A. The Sacrifice of the Mass is substantially the same as that of the Cross, for the same Jesus Christ, Who offered Himself on the Cross, it is Who offers Himself by the hands of the priests,…
Deacon Ed, as far as I am aware the Church has never said that we are present at Christ’s crucifixion. I would be indebted to you, though, if you could show me that, because it would clear up a good deal many questions. There are times when saints and theologians mention being present at the crucifixion but always it seems with the clarification “as it were” or “in a manner of speaking”. These seem to be devotional ways of speaking and not putting forth a theological or metaphysical thesis about the nature of the sacrifice.We do not re-crucify Jesus but, rather, are present at his one and only crucifixion through the Mass.
Here’s where I see a possible problem. To say that we stand, metaphysically, at the foot of the cross (i.e. at the crucifixion) but to also say that Christ’s blood is not being shed, seems a contradiction.We stand at the foot of the cross. It’s a bloodless sacrifice because we do not shed His blood again but, rather, stand at the cross where is blood is being shed for us.
Again, this seems to be one opinion of why the Mass is a sacrifice, but I don’t think it is the teaching of the Church, necessarily.The Mass is a sacrifice because we are there, at the cross, when Jesus is crucified. . .
I didn’t make myself clear, I’m not talking about good works. But what then is the offering for if not part of the sacrifice?I can understand why you would think that since “lex orandi, lex credendi”. In other words, the new Mass could well imply this, but it is upside down.
What is offered to God is the sacrifice of Jesus on Calvary. It is the Sacrifice that satisfied the justice of God for our sins. That is what the Mass is, and it doesn’t matter if there are any faithful present for it. If the Priest is offering the Mass by himself, it is no less efficacious.
It is true that we can offer up our sacrifices etc. along with this sacrifice of Jesus at Mass, but this is not the Mass. This is just us offering up our little bit at the Mass.
To make the point sink in, keep in mind that a Mass offered by a Priest all by himself is no less efficacious as one offered with a congregation. What is pleasing to God about the Mass is not any “work of human hands”, but the sacrifice of His son for our sins.
If we have made any sacrifices during the week we can certainly offer them to God at Mass, but these are not the Mass.
Here’s the teaching again from the Catechism
The Mass is not about our offerings. It is the Sacrifice of Jesus on Calvary transcending time and space and being made present on the altar.
When thinking about our contribution at Mass, think about what John the apostle, or Mary Magdelen contributed at Calvary. It is the same thing.
Was the sacrifice at Calvary the good works that they had done? No, it was the Sacrifice of Jesus in attonement for the bad works they have done; and that is what the Mass is.
If you have done any good works, or made any sacrifices, you can certainly offer them up to God at the Mass, but any such offering on our part is not the Mass.
To understand the Mass correctly, all you have to realize is that it is the same as Calvary. It is called *The Sacrifice of the Mass *because it is the Sacrifice of Jesus for the sins of man - and that is why it has such an infinite worth.
I’m not sure that this follows necessarily. Another possibility is that because Christ now lives, and lived then, he was present to my grandparents and is present to me now. After all, it seems that, in his humanity, he really is in heaven and not on the cross.If you believe in the presence of Jesus. . .that he was with your great grand parents and is with you now, then you have to believe that he also still hangs on the cross.
You are definitely typical.Aside: How troubling is a post like this!?! It strikes me a scandalous! Why is this fundamental aspect of Catholic Liturgy so poorly understood?
For my part, after 30 years or so of exposure to NO/OF, I certainly didn’t understand it. Although the NO/OF is supposed to perfectly clear to everybody, I didn’t grasp sacrificial nature of Mass until I discovered TLM/EF. Maybe in general I’m just obtuse; but regarding this point, I believe I’m pretty typical.
That statement is an exaggeration, but, on the other hand, it is entirely true that the architects of the new Mass sought to downplay the Sacrificial nature, *and they stated this plainly themselves. * These things have been gone over many times in this forum.The only explanation that makes any sense to me is that it’s intentional: Church leaders must not want Catholics to understand the Mass in sacrificial terms now.
The sacrificial nature of the Mass is not as readily apparent in the Novus Ordo Mass as the Tridentine - even the designers of the new Mass admitted this.NO the sacrificial nature of the Mass is NOT greatly diminished in the Mass, anywhere it is validly and licitly celebrated. It is ALWAYS present and obvious and apparent to those who look for it, which is the meaning of “full, active participation”. To say otherwise is to deny the Church and her authority over Mass and the sacraments.