there is a different becouse words of consecration are quoted from Gospel and we dont need to change this words! Jesus knew what he is talking about,so … leave the ancient form. As someone wrote, pro multis is in all eastern traditions, as I am right, the error of pro omnibus (for all) is watched after secound vatican council so I think it is child of Novus Ordo.
Once agine we see that latin language in lithurgy could save as from many problems as wrong translation
z Bogiem!

Exactly!
I think that those who say “many” could mean “all” may be forgetting that when the priest speaks the words of consecration he is a mystical Christ; it is Christ who is speaking (through the priest) what should be Christ’s OWN WORDS – not some new interpretation of them.
The words Christ spoke came down to the Latin rite and to eastern rites by tradition, in somewhat different forms, but with the same essential meaning. The Church stated that the form in Latin required “multis” not “omnibus” (and not both), and Latin was the official language of the Church.
It isn’t enough to use an interpretation that matches ONE of the many usages in the Bible. Christ knew the meaning of His own words that HE used at the Last Supper. He knew that we might interpret them in different ways – but do you think He wanted us to CHANGE His words to match OUR interpretation?
“For many” and “for all” can mean different things … but I agree that it is a waste of time to argue endlessly about it.
We should pray endlessly about it (and peacefully discuss it as we can)
As everyone reading this thread probably knows:
The consecration of the Mass is at the very heart of the Church. By the consecration Christ comes to us (Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity) in the Holy Eucharist, for our adoration and reception in Holy Communion. But the consecration is also the center of the HOLY SACRIFICE OF THE MASS. In the Mass CHRIST (mystically through the priest) offers HIMSELF (fully present in the Holy Eucharist) to His Father for our sakes, perhaps especially during the transubstantiation itself.
Christ’s (BLOODY) Sacrifice of the Cross occurred only at a single point in history. An absolutely IDENTICAL (Bloody) Sacrifice could not be offered again. The Sacrifice of the Cross brought about the REDEMPTION of ABSOLUTELY ALL MEN, once and for all; it was ABSOLUTELY
SUFFICIENT for ALL men to be saved. Christ gave infinite satisfaction for our sins.
But Christ instituted the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass for a special purpose. Understanding this purpose helps explain why the word “many” is used.
Here is what the Baltimore Catechism says:
362. Is there any difference between the sacrifice of the cross and the Sacrifice of the Mass?
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. ***
Christ’s purpose for the Sacrifice of the Mass is not to redeem all men again; it is to apply or distribute the graces He won among the many (certainly not all) who accept them. Christ’s death is **SUFFICIENT for all
but only ** EFFICACIOUS for many. There are many Masses said, not just one; Christ’s graces are not applied all at once, but over all our lifetimes, primarily through the Mass.
So using the word “all” instead of “many” could divert even good men away from the very purpose of the Mass. It also could divert them away from the purpose of Christ’s Sacrifice on the Cross - to save, not just to redeem.
I think that the Mass is the greatest treasure of the Church (remember it contains the Holy Eucharist). It is the primary way that the Mystical Body participates in the salvation of men, through the graces won by Christ. What an unimaginable gift this is to the Church, to truly share in Christ’s sacrifice.
Christ is the Head of the Mystical Body. At the Last Supper He said:
Do this for a commemoration of me. How can the Mystical Body DO what He did, unless it SAYS what He said?
It is wonderful that Pope Benedict XVI’s
Motu Proprio Summum Pontificum has begun to restore the Latin Tridentine Mass. But let’s pray that the complete restoration will follow soon…