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Faith of Our Fathers - Fr. Hugh Barbour, O. Praem. The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass Some argue against the Catholic teaching that the Mass is a
sacrifice. The early Church Fathers tell us that it is. In Genesis 14:18
Melchisedek the High Priest and King of Salem offers a sacrifice of
bread and wine. In Hebrews 7 Christ is priest after the order of
Melchisedek in fulfillment of the prophecy of Psalm 110:4: "Thou
art a priest forever according to the order of Melchisedek" Did
Christ then offer up bread and wine like Melchisedek, who prefigured His
eternal priesthood? Answer: At the Last Supper in the Gospels Christ the
High Priest commands His Apostles to do as He did with the bread and
wine in commemoration of Him. Were the Apostles then meant to share in
that one priesthood of Christ as His instruments offering His Body and
Blood under the appearances of a sacrifice of bread and wine? The Didache This passage contains a direct reference to the fulfillment of
Malachy's prophecy being the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass (cf. Malachy
1:11, 14). The Didache is one of the most ancient and authoritative
Christian writings, reflecting the teachings and liturgical practices of
the first-century Church. "On the Lord's own day assemble in common to break bread and
offer thanks; but first confess your sins, so that your sacrifice may be
pure . . . your sacrifice must not be defiled. For here we have a saying
of the Lord: 'In every place and time offer Me a pure sacrifice' (Greek:
thysia) . . . for I am a mighty king says the Lord and My name spreads
terror among the nations'" (A.D. 98). St. Ignatius of Antioch Writing just after the end of the first century, only a few years
after the death of St. John the Apostle, St. Ignatius gives us a short
but powerful indication of the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist. He
refers to those who absent themselves from the Eucharist celebrated by
the bishop and his priests. The Greek word he uses for the
"altar" used in Christian worship is thysiasterion, which
means "place where sacrifices are offered." "Let no one
deceive himself," St. Ignatius warns, "whoever keeps away from
the altar (thysiasterion) deprives himself of the divine bread"
(Letter to the Ephesians 5:2; A.D. 110). Epistola Apostolorum This work, only discovered in 1895, was originally composed in
Greek but exists today only in Coptic, Ethiopian, and Latin
translations. The Ethiopian version is the most complete and contains a
beautiful dialogue between Christ and His Apostles after the
Resurrection about the offering of the Christian paschal sacrifice. This
passage, translated especially for Envoy magazine, is not found in any
English language collections of the Fathers. It's as though the
objections of Protestants against the sacrifice of the Mass where
already being anticipated and answered back then: "The Lord said, 'You will celebrate the memorial of My death,
that is, the Passover Sacrifice . . . at the cock's crow, at dawn, you
will perform My feast of love and My memorial' . . . . The Apostles
said, 'Lord, haven't You drunk to the full of the Passover Sacrifice? Is
it then necessary that we do it again?' Jesus responded, 'Yes, it is
necessary, until I come again from the Father'" (Epistola
Apostolorum 13; A.D. 140). St. Irenaeus of Lyons This great Church Father was a disciple of St. Polycarp and, as
such, was the "spiritual grandson" of St. John the Apostle,
since St. Polycarp knew the Apostle. This means that the teachings St.
Irenaeus received from his mentor came directly from the Apostles. This
fact is important to keep in mind, since it demonstrates that the purity
of apostolic teaching was handed on intact to each subsequent generation
of Christians. The teaching on the Eucharist and the Mass as a Sacrifice
that St. Irenaeus speaks of in this passage he received from the
Apostles, through St. Polycarp. "He took that created thing, bread, and gave thanks and said,
'This is My Body.' And the cup likewise, which is part of that creation
to which we belong, He confessed to be His Blood, and taught the new
oblation of the new covenant, which the Church, receiving from the
Apostles, offers to God throughout the world . . . concerning which
Malachy, among the twelve prophets, thus spoke beforehand: 'From the
rising of the sun to the going down, My name is glorified among the
gentiles, and in every place incense is offered to My name and a pure
sacrifice . . . ' indicating in the plainest manner that in every place
sacrifice shall be offered to Him, and at that a pure one" (Against
Heresies 4,17,5; A.D. 170). St. Hippolytus of Rome St. Hippolytus composed a beautiful Eucharistic prayer at the
beginning of the third century. The second Eucharistic prayer of the
Missal of Pope Paul VI, which we use now, is based on it. In a
commentary on Daniel 4:35 St. Hippolytus refers to the outlawing of the
Church's sacrifice by the Antichrist at the end of time. Like many other
Fathers who teach on the Sacrifice of the Mass, he too uses the language
of the prophecy of Malachy. "For when the gospel is preached in every place, the times being
then accomplished . . . the abomination of desolation will be
manifested, and when he (the Antichrist) comes, the sacrifice and
oblation will be removed, which are now offered up to God in every place
by the gentiles" (Commentary on Daniel 22; A.D. 220). St. Cyprian of Carthage Later in the same century, this martyr bishop of Carthage, in the
midst of the ferocious persecution of Christians by the Romans, clearly
explains the Lord's Eucharistic Sacrifice as being "according to
the order of Melchisedek." "In the priest Melchisedek we see prefigured the sacrament of
the sacrifice of the Lord, according to what Divine Scripture testifies,
and says, 'And Melchisedek, king of Salem, brought forth bread and
wine.' Now he was a priest of the most High God, and blessed Abraham.
And that Melchisedek was a type of Christ, the Holy Spirit declares in
the Psalms, saying from the person of the Father to the Son: 'Before the
morning star I have begotten Thee; Thou art a priest forever, after the
order of Melchisedek.' This order is assuredly the one coming from that
sacrifice: that Melchisedek was a priest of the Most High God; that he
offered wine and bread; that he blessed Abraham. For who is more a
priest of the most high God than Our Lord Jesus Christ, Who offered a
sacrifice to God the Father, and offered the very same thing which
Melchisedek had offered, that is, bread and wine, to wit, His Body and
Blood? . . . For if Jesus Christ Our Lord and God is Himself the chief
priest of God the Father, and has first offered Himself a sacrifice to
the Father, and has commanded that this be done in commemoration of
Himself, certainly the priest truly discharges the office of Christ, who
imitates what Christ did; and he offers a true and full sacrifice in the
Church to God the Father, when he proceeds to offer it according to what
he sees Christ Himself to have offered" (Letter 62: 4,14; A.D.
253). St. Serapion of Thmuis This great bishop of Lower Egypt (that means Northern Egypt Ñ the
Nile is lower near the sea) was a good friend of St. Athanasius, the
defender of the Divinity of Christ against the Arian heretics. He offers
us the earliest text we have of a Eucharistic prayer which was actually
used in the Divine Liturgy of the Eucharist. "Heaven is full, and the earth as well is full of your
magnificent glory, O Lord of Hosts. Fill too this sacrifice with Your
power and communion, for we offer You this living sacrifice and unbloody
offering . . . Thus we offer bread, celebrating the likeness of His
death and we implore You, O God of Truth, to reconcile us to all and
have mercy on us through this sacrifice . . . and we offer wine using
the likeness of blood. May Your holy Word come upon this bread, O God of
Truth, that it might become the Body of the Word, and upon this chalice
that it might become the Blood of the Truth" (The Anaphora of
Serapion 4; A.D. 339 [original translation]). St. Cyril of Jerusalem The newly baptized converts of the Church in Jerusalem were
treated to the classiest instruction on the sacraments ever given, the
amazingly beautiful lectures of their bishop, St. Cyril. He describes
the Holy Eucharist as an "awe-inspiring" sacrifice. Here he
explains the liturgy after the consecration: "Next, when the spiritual sacrifice, the bloodless worship has
been completed, over that sacrifice of propitiation we beseech God for
the public peace of the Churches . . . for all, in a word, who need
help, we all pray and offer this sacrifice. Then we commemorate also
those who have fallen asleep . . . for all those who have gone before
us, believing that this [Eucharistic sacrifice] will be the greatest
benefit to the souls of those on whose behalf our supplication is
offered in the presence of the holy, of the most dread sacrifice"
(Catechetical Lectures 5, 8-9; A.D. 350). St. Ephraem the Syrian This is my favorite patristic text on the sacrifice of the Mass.
You won't find it anywhere published in an English translation Ñ except
for here. St. Ephraem so closely identifies the action of Christ in the
Eucharist with His sacrifice on the cross that he counts the three days
of Christ's death and burial as beginning with His mystical, sacramental
'slaying' at the Last Supper: "From the moment when He broke His Body for His disciples, and
gave it to them, one begins to count the three days during which He was
among the dead. Adam practically, after eating of the fruit of the tree,
lived a long time, even though he was counted among the dead for having
disobeyed the commandment of God. God had spoken to him thus 'The day
when you eat of it, you will die.' Thus it was for Our Lord. It was
because He had given them His Body to eat in view of the mystery of His
death that He entered into their bodies as He entered later on into the
earth" (Commentary on the Diatessaron 19, 4 [translated from the
Armenian version]; A.D. 363). The Liturgy of St. Maruthas This liturgy of Syrian origin is attributed to St. Maruthas, the
great Syrian missionary bishop in Persia and ally of St. John Chrysostom.
St. Maruthas, known for his corpulence (there have been some fat
saints!), was martyred around A.D. 412. He expands on the words of
institution and consecration in the Mass to identity the Eucharistic
Sacrifice with the Sacrifice of Christ on the Cross. (This text is not
found in any English selections, so I have translated the passage.) "On that last night on which He was about to save His creatures,
observe and fulfill the law, and begin His New Covenant, while teaching
those saved by Him the true doctrine, He took the bread into His pure
hands, and giving thanks to His Father, He blessed, sanctified, broke,
and divided it among His disciples and said: 'Take eat, believe, and be
certain, and so teach and preach that This is My Body which is broken
for the salvation of the world, and to those who eat it and believe in
Me it gives the expiation of sins and eternal life' Truly Lord we have
done wickedly, evilly, and foolishly, and we have provoked Your wrath,
nor have we kept even one of Your commandments. May you, O Good Lord,
excuse us and be merciful for our crimes for the sake of the Sacrifice
placed before You this day. Indeed it is You who have told us,
'Whosoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood, and believes in Me, abides
in Me and I in him, and I will raise him up on the last day May He (the
Holy Spirit) change this simple bread and make it the very Body which
was immolated for us on the cross for the remission of sins and the
eternal life of those receiving it." (Liturgy of St. Maruthas of
Maiferkat; circa A.D. 390). St. Ambrose of Milan The Roman Canon, or "First Eucharistic Pray-er" of the
Latin Church, is cited by St. Ambrose in his instructions on the
sacraments given to the newly baptized during the week of Easter: "And the priest says, 'Therefore, mindful of His most glorious
passion and resurrection from the dead and ascension into heaven, we
offer You this immaculate victim, a reasonable sacrifice, an unbloody
victim, this holy bread, and the chalice of eternal life. And we ask You
and pray that You accept this offering just as You deigned to accept the
sacrifice the high priest Melchisedek offered You.' So as often as you
receive, what does the Apostle say to you? As often as we receive, we
proclaim the death of the Lord. If death [then], we proclaim the
remission of sins. If as often as blood is shed, it is shed for the
remission of sins, I ought always to accept Him, that He may always
dismiss my sins. I, who always sin, should always have a remedy"
(On the Sacraments 4,6; A.D. 392 [original translation]). In his Commentary on the Psalms, not yet available in English, St.
Ambrose speaks clearly of the holy Sacrifice of the Mass offered on
Christian altars: "We priests follow [Christ's cross] as we are able, so that we
might offer sacrifice for the people, since, even though Christ is not
seen to offer, nevertheless He is offered on earth when the Body of
Christ is offered. Or rather, He is shown to offer in us, by whose word
is consecrated the sacrifice which is offered" (Commentary on Psalm
38, 25; circa A.D. 395 [original translation]). St. Augustine of Hippo There are so many texts of St. Augustine in which he speaks of the
Catholic Sacrifice of the Mass, that it's hard to choose which ones to
quote! Here are two representative examples of his teaching on this
subject. "Was not Christ immolated once in Himself, and nevertheless under the sacrament He is immolated for the people not only on every Paschal Feast Day, but even every day, and is it not also the case that he does not err at all who, when asked, responds that He is so immolated?" (Letter 98, 9; A.D. 410 [original tanslation]). "Recognize in this bread what hung on the cross, and in this
chalice what flowed from His side whatever was in many and varied ways
announced beforehand in the sacrifices of the Old Testament pertains to
this one sacrifice which is revealed in the New Testament." (Sermon
3, 2; circa A.D. 410 [original translation]).
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