
The word Mass (missa) first
established itself as the general designation for the Eucharistic
Sacrifice in the West after the time of Pope Gregory the Great (d.
604), the early Church having used the expression the "breaking of
bread" (fractio panis) or "liturgy" (Acts 13:2, leitourgountes); the
Greek Church has employed the latter name for almost sixteen centuries.
There were current in the early days of Christianity other terms;
* "The Lord's Supper" (coena dominica),
* the "Sacrifice" (prosphora, oblatio),
* "the gathering together" (synaxis, congregatio),
* "the Mysteries", and
* (since Augustine), "the Sacrament of the Altar".
With the name "Love Feast"
(agape) the idea of the sacrifice of the Mass was not necessarily
connected. Etymologically, the word missa is neither (as Baronius
states) from a Hebrew, nor from the Greek mysis, but is simply derived
from missio, just as oblata is derived from oblatio, collecta from
collectio, and ulta from ultio. The reference was however not to a
Divine "mission", but simply to a "dismissal" (dimissio) as was also
customary in the Greek rite (cf. "Canon. Apost.", VIII, xv: apolyesthe
en eirene), and as is still echoed in the phrase Ite missa est. This
solemn form of leave-taking was not introduced by the Church as
something new, but was adopted from the ordinary language of the day,
as is shown by Bishop Avitus of Vienne as late as A.D. 500 (Ep. 1 in
P.L., LIX, 199):
In churches and in the emperor's or the prefect's courts, Missa est is said when the people are released from attendance.
In the sense of
"dismissal", or rather "close of prayer", missa is used in the
celebrated "Peregrinatio Silvae" at least seventy times (Corpus
scriptor. eccles. latinor., XXXVIII, 366 sq.) and Rule of St. Benedict
places after Hours, Vespers, Compline, the regular formula: Et missae
fiant (prayers are ended). Popular speech gradually applied the ritual
of dismissal, as it was expressed in both the Mass of the Catechumens
and the Mass of the Faithful, by synecdoche to the entire Eucharistic
Sacrifice, the whole being named after the part. The first certain
trace of such an application is found in Ambrose (Ep. xx, 4, in P. L.
XVI, 995). We will use the word in this sense in our consideration of
the Mass in its 1existence, essence, and 1causality.
I. THE EXISTENCE OF THE MASS
Before dealing with the
proofs of revelation afforded by the Bible and tradition, certain
preliminary points must first be decided. Of these the most important
is that the Church intends the Mass to be regarded as a "true and
proper sacrifice", and will not tolerate the idea that the sacrifice is
identical with Holy Communion. That is the sense of a clause from the
Council of Trent (Sess. XXII, can. 1): "If any one saith that in the
Mass a true and proper sacrifice is not offered to God; or, that to be
offered is nothing else but that Christ is given us to eat; let him be
anathema" (Denzinger, "Enchir.", 10th ed. 1908, n. 948). When Leo XIII
in the dogmatic Bull "Apostolicae Curae" of 13 Sept., 1896, based the
invalidity of the Anglican form of consecration on the fact among
others, that in the consecrating formula of Edward VI (that is, since
1549) there is nowhere an unambiguous declaration regarding the
Sacrifice of the Mass, the Anglican archbishops answered with some
irritation: "First, we offer the Sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving;
next, we plead and represent before the Father the Sacrifice of the
Cross . . . and, lastly, we offer the Sacrifice of ourselves to the
Creator of all things, which we have already signified by the oblation
of His creatures. This whole action, in which the people has
necessarily to take part with the priest, we are accustomed to call the
communion, the Eucharistic Sacrifice". In regard to this last
contention, Bishop Hedley of Newport declared his belief that not one
Anglican in a thousand is accustomed to call the communion the
"Eucharistic Sacrifice." But even if they were all so accustomed, they
would have to interpret the terms in the sense of thethirty-nine
Articles, which deny both the Real Presence and the sacrifical power of
the priest, and thus admit a sacrifice in an unreal or figurative sense
only. Leo XIII, on the other hand, in union with the whole Christian
past, had in mind in the above-mentioned Bull nothing else than the
Eucharistic "Sacrifice of the true Body and Blood of Christ" on the
altar. This Sacrifice is certainly not identical with the Anglican form
of celebration.
The simple fact that
numerous heretics, such as Wyclif and Luther, repudiated the Mass as
"idolatry", while retaining the Sacrament of the true Body and Blood of
Christ, proves that the Sacrament of the Eucharist is something
essentially different from the Sacrifice of the Mass. In truth, the
Eucharist performs at once two functions: that of a sacrament and that
of a sacrifice. Though the inseparableness of the two is most clearly
seen in the fact that the consecrating sacrificial powers of the priest
coincide, and consequently that the sacrament is produced only in and
through the Mass, the real difference between them is shown in that the
sacrament is intended privately for the sanctification of the soul,
whereas the sacrifice serves primarily to glorify God by adoration,
thanksgiving, prayer, and expiation. The recipient of the one is God,
who receives the sacrifice of His only-begotten Son; of the other, man,
who receives the sacrament for his own good. Furthermore, the unbloody
Sacrifice of the Eucharistic Christ is in its nature a transient
action, while the Sacrament of the Altar continues as something
permanent after the sacrifice, and can even be preserved in monstrance
and ciborium. Finally, this difference also deserves mention: communion
under one form only is the reception of the whole sacrament, whereas,
without the use of the two forms of bread and wine (the symbolic
separation of the Body and Blood), the mystical slaying of the victim,
and therefore the Sacrifice of the Mass, does not take place.
The definition of the
Council of Trent supposes as self-evident the proposition that, along
with the "true and real Sacrifice of the Mass", there can be and are in
Christendom figurative and unreal sacrifices of various kinds, such as
prayers of praise and thanksgiving, alms, mortification, obedience, and
works of penance. Such offerings are often referred to in Holy
Scripture, e.g. in sacrifice"; and in Ps. cxl, 2: "Let my prayer be
directed as incense in thy sight, the lifting up of my hands as evening
sacrifice." These figurative offerings, however, necessarily presuppose
the real and true offering, just as a picture presupposes its subject
and a portrait its original. The Biblical metaphors -- a "sacrifice of
jubilation" (Ps. xxvi, 6), the "calves of our lips (Hosea 14:3), the
"sacrifice of praise" (Hebrews 13:15) -- expressions which apply
sacrificial terms to sacrifice (hostia, thysia). That there was such a
sacrifice, the whole sacrificial system of the Old Law bears witness.
It is true that we may and must recognize with St. Thomas (II-II:85:3),
as the principale sacrificium the sacrificial intent which, embodied in
the spirit of prayer, inspires and animates the external offerings as
the body animates the soul, and without which even the most perfect
offering has neither worth nor effect before God. Hence, the holy
psalmist says: "For if thou hadst desired sacrifice, I would indeed
have given it: with burnt-offerings thou wilt not be delighted. A
sacrifice to God is an afflicted spirit" (Ps. I, 18 sq.). This
indispensable requirement of an internal sacrifice, however, by no
means makes the external sacrifice superfluous in Christianity; indeed,
without a perpetual oblation deriving its value from the sacrifice once
offered on the Cross, Christianity, the perfect religion, would be
inferior not only to the Old Testament, but even to the poorest form of
natural religion. Since sacrifice is thus essential to religion, it is
all the more necessary for Christianity, which cannot otherwise fulfil
its duty of showing outward honour to God in the most perfect way.
Thus, the Church, as the mystical Christ, desires and must have her own
permanent sacrifice, which surely cannot be either an independent
addition to that of Golgotha or its intrinsic complement; it can only
be the one self-same sacrifice of the Cross, whose fruits, by an
unbloody offering, are daily made available for believers and
unbelievers and sacrificially applied to them.
If the Mass is to be a true
sacrifice in the literal sense, it must realize the philosophical
conception of sacrifice. Thus the last preliminary question arises:
What is a sacrifice in the proper sense of the term? Without attempting
to state and establish a comprehensive theory of sacrifice, it will
suffice to show that, according to the comparative history of
religions, four things are necessary to a sacrifice:
* a sacrificial gift (res oblata),
* a sacrificing minister (minister legitimus),
* a sacrificial action (actio sacrificica), and
* a sacrificial end or object (finis sacrificii).
In contrast with sacrifices
in the figurative or less proper sense, the sacrificial gift must exist
in physical substance, and must be really or virtually destroyed
(animals slain, libations poured out, other things rendered unfit for
ordinary uses), or at least really transformed, at a fixed place
ofsacrifice ( ara, altare), and offered up to God. As regards the
person offering, it is not permitted that any and every individual
should offer sacrifice on his own account. In the revealed religion, as
in nearly all heathen religions, only a qualified person (usually
called priest, sacerdos, lereus), who has been given the power by
commission or vocation, may offer up sacrifice in the name of the
community. After Moses, the priests authorized by law in the Old
Testament belonged to the tribe of Levi, and more especially to the
house of Aaron (Hebrews 5:4). But, since Christ Himself received and
exercised His high priesthood, not by the arrogation of authority but
in virtue of a Divine call, there is still greater need that priests
who represent Him should receive power and authority through the
Sacrament of Holy Orders to offer up the sublime Sacrifice of the New
Law. Sacrifice reaches its outward culmination in the sacrificial act,
in which we have to distinguish between the proximate matter and the
real form. The form lies, not in the real transformation or complete
destruction of the sacrificial gift, but rather in its sacrificial
oblation, in whatever way it may be transformed. Even where a real
destruction took place, as in the sacrificial slayings of the Old
Testament, the act of destroying was performed by the servants of the
Temple, whereas the proper oblation, consisting in the "spilling of
blood" (aspersio sanguinis), was the exclusive function of the priests.
Thus the real form of the Sacrifice of the Cross consisted neither in
the killing of Christ by the Roman soldiers nor in an imaginary
self-destruction on the part of Jesus, but in His voluntary surrender
of His blood shed by another's hand, and in His offering of His life
for the sins of the world. Consequently, the destruction or
transformation constitutes at most the proximate matter; the
sacrificial oblation, on the other hand, is the physical form of the
sacrifice. Finally, the object of the sacrifice, as significant of its
meaning, lifts the external offering beyond any mere mechanical action
into the sphere of the spiritual and Divine. The object is the soul of
the sacrifice, and, in a certain sense, its "metaphysicial form". In
all religions we find, as the essential idea of sacrifice, a complete
surrender to God for the purpose of union with Him; and to this idea
there is added, on the part of those who are in sin, the desire for
pardon and reconcillation. Hence at once arises the distinction between
sacrifices of praise and expiation (sacrificium latreuticum et
propitiatorium), and sacrifices of thanksgiving and petition
(sacrificium eucharisticum et impetratorium); hence also the obvious
inference that under pain of idolatry, sacrifice is to be offered to
God alone as the begining and end of all things. Rightly does St.
Augustine remark (De civit. Dei, X, iv): "Who ever thought of offering
sacrifice except to one whom he either knew, or thought, or imagined to
be God?".
If then we combine the four
constituent ideas in a definition, we may say: "Sacrifice is the
external oblation to God by an authorized minister of a
sense-perceptible object, either through its destruction or at least
through its real transformation, in acknowledgement of God's supreme
dominion and of the appeasing of His wrath." We shall demonstrate the
applicability of this definition to the Mass in the section devoted to
the nature of the sacrifice, after settling the question of its
existence.
A. Scriptural Proof
It is a notable fact that
the Divine institution of the Mass can be established, one might almost
say, with greater certainty by means of the Old Testament than by means
of the New.
1. Old Testament
The Old Testament
prophecies are recorded partly in types, partly in words. Following the
precedent of many Fathers of the Church (see Bellarmine, "De Euchar.",
v, 6), the Council of Trent especially (Sess. XXII, cap. i) laid stress
on the prophetical relation that undoubtedly exists between the
offering of bread and wine by Melchisedech and the Last Supper of
Jesus. The occurrence was briefly as follows: After Abraham (then still
called "Abram") with his armed men had rescued his nephew Lot from the
four hostile kings who had fallen on him and robbed him, Melchisedech,
King of Salem (Jerusalem), "bringing forth [proferens] bread and wine
for he was a priest of the Most High God, blessed him [Abraham] and
said: Blessed be Abram by the Most High God . . . And he [Abraham] gave
him the tithes of all" (Genesis 14:18-20). Catholic theologians (with
very few exceptions) have from the beginning rightly emphasized the
circumstance that Melchisedech brought out bread and wine, not merely
to provide refreshment for Abram's followers wearied after the battle,
for they were well supplied with provisions out of the booty they had
taken (Genesis 14:11, 16), but to present bread and wine as
food-offerings to Almighty God. Not as a host, but as "priest of the
Most High God", he brought forth bread and wine, blessed Abraham, and
received the tithes from him. In fact, the very reason for his
"bringing forth bread and wine" is expressly stated to have been his
priesthood: "for he was a priest". Hence, proferre must necessarily
become offerre, even if it were true that the Hiphil word is not an
hieratic sacrificial term; but even this is not quite certain (cf.
Judges 6:18 sq.). Accordingly, Melchisedech made a real food-offering
of bread and wine.
Now it is the express
teaching of Scripture that Christ is "a priest for ever according to
the order [kata ten taxin] of Melchisedech" (Psalm 109:4; Hebrews 5:5
sq.; 7:1 sqq.). Christ, however, in no way resembled his priestly
prototype in His bloody sacrifice on the Cross, but only and solely at
His Last Supper. On that occasion He likewise made an unbloody
food-offering, only that, as Antitype, He accomplished something more
than a mere oblation of bread and wine, namely the sacrifice of His
Body and Blood under the mere forms of bread and wine. Otherwise, the
shadows cast before by the "good things to come" would have been more
perfect than the things themselves, and the antitype at any rate no
richer in reality than the type. Since the Mass is nothing else than a
continual repetition, commanded by Christ Himself, of the Sacrifice
accomplished at the Last Supper, it follows that the Sacrifice of the
Mass partakes of the New testament fulfilment of the prophecy of
Melchisedech. (Concerning the Paschal Lamb as the second type of the
Mass, see Bellarmine, "De Euchar.", V, vii; cf. also von Cichowski,
"Das altestamentl. Pascha in seinem Verhaltnis zum Opfer Christi",
Munich, 1849.)
Passing over the more or
less distinct references to the Mass in other prophets (Psalm 21:27
sqq., Isaiah 66:18 sqq.), the best and clearest prediction concerning
the Mass is undoubtedly that of Malachias, who makes a threatening
announcement to the Levite priests in the name of God: "I have no
pleasure in you, saith the Lord of hosts: and I will not receive a gift
of your hand. For from the rising of the sun even to the down, my name
is great among the Gentiles [heathens, non-Jews], and in every place
there is sacrifice, and there is offered to my name a clean oblation:
for my name is great among Gentiles, saith the Lord of hosts" (Malachi
1:10-11). According to the unanimous interpretation of the Fathers of
the Church (see Petavius, "De incarn.", xii, 12), the prophet here
foretells the everlasting Sacrifice of the New Dispensation. For he
declares that these two things will certainly come to pass:
* The abolition of all Levitical sacrifices, and
* the institution of an entirely new sacrifice.
As God's determination to
do away with the sacrifices of the Levites is adhered to consistently
throughout the denunciation, the essential thing is to specify
correctly the sort of sacrifice that is promised in their stead. In
regard to this, the following propositions have to be established:
* that the new sacrifice is to come about in the days of the Messiah;
* that it is to be a true and real sacrifice, and
* that it does not coincide formally with the Sacrifice of the Cross.
It is easy to show that the
sacrifice referred to by Malachias did not signify a sacrifice of his
time, but was rather to be a future sacrifice belonging to the age of
the Messiah. For though the Hebrew participles of the original can be
translated by the present tense (there is sacrifice; it is offered),
the mere universality of the new sacrifice -- "from the rising to the
setting", "in every place", even "among the Gentiles", i.e. heathen
(non-Jewish) peoples -- is irrefragable proof that the prophet beheld
as present an event of the future. Wherever Jahwe speaks, as in this
case, of His glorification by the "heathen", He can, according to Old
Testament teaching (Psalm 21:28; 71:10 sqq.; Isaiah 11:9; 49:6; 60:9,
66:18 sqq.; Amos 9:12; Micah 4:2, etc.) have in mind only the kingdom
of the Messiah or the future Church of Christ; every other explanation
is shattered by the text. Least of all could a new sacrifice in the
time of the prophet himself be thought of. Nor could there be any idea
of is a sacrifice among the genuine heathens, as Hitzig has suggested,
for the sacrifices of the heathen, associated with idolatry and
impurity, are unclean and displeasing to God (1 Corinthians 10:20).
Again, it could not be a sacrifice of the dispersed Jews (Diaspora),
for apart from the fact that the existence of such sacrifices in the
Diaspora is rather problematic, they were certainly not offered the
world over, nor did they possess the unusual significance attaching to
special modes of honouring God. Consequently, the reference is
undoubtedly to some entirely distinctive sacrifice of the future. But
of what future? Was it to be a future sacrifice among genuine heathens,
such as the Aztecs or the native Africans? This is as impossible as in
the case of other heathen forms of idolatry. Perhaps then it was to be
a new and more perfect sacrifice among the Jews? This also is out of
the question, for since the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus (A.D.
70), the whole system of Jewish sacrifice is irrevocably a thing of the
past; and the new sacrifice moreover, is to be performed by a
priesthood of an origin other than Jewish (Isaiah 66:21). Everything,
therefore, points to Christianity, in which, as a matter of fact, the
Messiah rules over non-Jewish peoples.
The second question now
presents itself: Is the universal sacrifice thus promised "in every
place" to be only a purely spiritual offering of prayer, in other words
a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, such as Protestanism is content
with; or is it to be a true sacrifice in the strict sense, as the
Catholic Church maintains? It is forthwith clear that abolition and
substitution must correspond, and accordingly that the old real
sacrifice cannot be displaced by a new unreal sacrifice. Moreover,
prayer, adoration, thanksgiving, etc., are far from being a new
offering, for they are permanent realities common to every age, and
constitute the indispensable foundation of every religion whether
before or after the Messiah.
The last doubt is dispelled
by the Hebrew text, which has no fewer than three classic sacerdotal
declarations referring to the promised sacrifice, thus designedly doing
away with the possibility of interpreting it metaphorically. Especially
important is a substantive Hebrew for "sacrifice". Although in its
origin the generic term for every sacrifice, the bloody included (cf.
Genesis 4:4 sq.; 1 Samuel 2:17), it was not only never used to indicate
an unreal sacrifice (such as a prayer offering), but even became the
technical term for an unbloody sacrifice (mostly food offerings), in
contradistinction to the bloody sacrifice which is given the name of
Sebach.
As to the third and last
proposition, no lengthy demonstration is needed to show that the
sacrifice of Malachias cannot be formally identified with the Sacrifice
of the Cross. This interpretation is at once contradicted by the
Minchah, i.e. unbloody (food) offering. Then, there are other cogent
considerations based on fact. Though a real sacrifice, belonging to the
time of the Messiah and the most powerful means conceivable for
glorifying the Divine name, the Sacrifice of the Cross, so far from
being offered "in every place" and among non-Jewish peoples, was
confined to Golgotha and the midst of the Jewish people. Nor can the
Sacrifice of the Cross, which was accomplished by the Saviour in person
without the help of a human representative priesthood, be identified
with that sacrifice for the offering of which the Messiah makes use of
priests after the manner of the Levites, in every place and at all
times. Furthermore, he wilfully shuts his eyes against the light, who
denies that the prophecy of Malachias is fulfilled to the letter in the
Sacrifice of the Mass. In it are united all the characteristics of the
promised sacrifice: its unbloody sacrificial rite as genuine Minchah,
its universality in regard to place and time its extension to
non-Jewish peoples, its delegated priesthood differing from that of the
Jews, its essential unity by reason of the identity of the Chief Priest
and the Victim (Christ), and its intrinsic and essential purity which
no Levitical or moral uncleanliness can defile. Little wonder that the
Council of Trent should say (Sess XXII, cap.i): "This is that pure
oblation, which cannot be defiled by unworthiness and impiety on the
part of those who offer it, and concerning which God has predicted
through Malachias, that there would be offered up a clean oblation in
every place to His Name, which would be great among the Gentiles (see
Denzinger, n. 339).
2. New Testament
Passing now to the proofs
contained in the New Testament, we may begin by remarking that many
dogmatic writers see in the dialogue of Jesus with the Samaritan woman
at Jacob's well a prophetic reference to the Mass (John 4:21 sqq.):
Woman believe me, that the hour cometh, when you shall neither on this
mountain [Garizim] nor in Jerusalem, adore the Father.... But the hour
cometh and now is, when the true adorers shall adore the Father in
spirit and in truth." Since the point at issue between the Samaritans
and the Jews related, not to the ordinary, private offering of prayer
practised everywhere, but to the solemn, public worship embodied in a
real Sacrifice, Jesus really seems to refer to a future real sacrifice
of praise, which would not be confined in its liturgy to the city
Jerusalem but would captivate the whole world (see Bellarmine, "De
Euchar., v, 11). Not without good reason do most commentators appeal to
Hebrews 13:10: We have an altar [Thysiastesion, altare], whereof they
have no power to eat [Phagein, edere], who serve the tabernacle." Since
St. Paul has just contrasted the Jewish food offering (Bromasin, escis)
and Christian altar food, the partaking of which was denied to the
Jews, the inference is obvious: where is an altar, there is a
sacrifice. But the Eucharist is the food which the Christians alone are
permitted to eat: therefore there is a Eucharistic sacrifice. The
objection that, in Apostolic times, the term altar was not yet used in
the sense of the "Lord's table" (cf. 1 Corinthians 10:21) is clearly a
begging of the question, since Paul might well have been the first to
introduce the name, it being adopted from him by later writers (e.g.
Ignatius of Antioch died A.D. 107).
It can scarcely be denied
that the entirely mystical explanation of the "spiritual food from the
altar of the cross", favoured by St. Thomas Aquinas, Estius, and
Stentrup, is far-fetched. It might on the other hand appear still more
strange that in the passage of the Epistle to the Hebrews, where Christ
and Melchisedech are compared, the two food offerings should be only
not placed in prophetical relation with each other but not even
mentioned. The reason, however, is not far to seek: parallel lay
entirely outside the scope of the argument. All that St. Paul desired
to show was that the high priesthood of Christ was superior to the
Levitical priesthood of the Old Testament (cf. Hebrews 7:4 sqq.), and
this is fully demonstrated by proving that Aaron and his priesthood
stood far below the unattainable height of Melchisedech. So much the
more, therefore, must Christ as "priest according to the order of
Melchisedech" excel the Levitical priesthood. The peculiar dignity of
Melchisedech, however, was manifested not through the fact that he made
a food offering of bread and wine, a thing which the Levites also were
able to do, but chiefly through the fact that he blessed the great
"Father Abraham and received the tithes from him".
The main testimony of the
New Testament lies in the account of the institution of the Eucharist,
and most clearly in the words of consecration spoken over the chalice.
For this reason we shall consider these words first, since thereby,
owing to the analogy between the two formulas clearer light will be
thrown on the meaning of the words of consecration spoken over the
chalice. For this reason we shall consider these words first, since
thereby, owing to the analogy between the two formulae, clearer light
will be thrown on the meaning of the words of consecration pronounced
over the bread. For the sake of clearness and easy comparison we
subjoin the four passages in Greek and English:
* Matthew 26:28: Touto gar
estin to aima mou to tes [kaines] diathekes to peri pollon
ekchynnomenon eis aphesin amartion. For this is my blood of the new
testament, which shall be shed for many unto remission of sins.
* Mark 14:24: Touto estin
to aima mou tes kaines diathekes to yper pollon ekchynnomenon. This is
my blood of the new testament which shall be shed for many.
* Luke 22:20: Touto to
poterion he kaine diatheke en to aimati mou, to yper ymon
ekchynnomenon. This is the chalice, the new testament in my blood,
which shall be shed for you.
* 1 Corinthians 11:25:
Touto to poterion he kaine diatheke estin en to emo aimati. This
chalice is the new testament in my blood.
The Divine institution of the sacrifice of the altar is proved by showing
* that the "shedding of blood" spoken of in the text took place there and then and not for the first time on the cross;
* that it was a true and real sacrifice;
* that it was considered a permanent institution in the Church.
The present form of the
participle ekchynnomenon in conjunction with the present estin
establishes the first point. For it is a grammatical rule of New
Testament Greek, that, when the double present is used (that is, in
both the participle and the finite verb, as is the case here), the time
denoted is not the distant or near future, but strictly the present
(see Fr. Blass, "Grammatik des N.T. Griechisch", p. 193, Gottingen,
1896). This rule does not apply to other constructions of the present
tense, as when Christ says earlier (John 14:12): I go (poreuomai) to
the father". Alleged exceptions to the rule are not such in reality,
as, for instance, Matt., vi, 30: "And if the grass of the field, which
is today and tomorrow is cast into the oven (ballomenon) God doth so
clothe (amphiennysin): how much more you, O ye of little faith?" For in
this passage it is a question not of something in the future but of
something occurring every day. When the Vulgate translates the Greek
participles by the future (effundetur, fundetur), it is not at variance
with facts, considering that the mystical shedding of blood in the
chalice, if it were not brought into intimate relation with the
physical shedding of blood on the cross, would be impossible and
meaningless; for the one is the essential presupposition and foundation
of the other. Still, from the standpoint of philology, effunditur
(funditur) ought to be translated into the strictly present, as is
really done in many ancient codices. The accuracy of this exegesis is
finally attested in a striking way by the Greek wording in St. Luke: to
poterion . . . ekchynnomenon. Here the shedding of blood appears as
taking place directly in the chalice, and therefore in the present.
Overzealous critics, it is true, have assumed that there is here a
grammatical mistake, in that St. Luke erroneously connects the
"shedding" with the chalice (poterion), instead of with "blood" (to
aimati) which is in the dative. Rather than correct this highly
cultivated Greek, as though he were a school boy, we prefer to assume
that he intended to use synecdoche, a figure of speech known to
everybody, and therefore put the vessel to indicate its contents.
As to the establishment of
our second proposition, believing Protestants and Anglicans readily
admit that the phrase: "to shed one's blood for others unto the
remission of sins" is not only genuinely Biblical language relating to
sacrifice, but also designates in particular the sacrifice of expiation
(cf. Leviticus 7:14; 14:17; 17:11; Romans 3:25, 5:9; Hebrews 9:10,
etc.). They, however, refer this sacrifice of expiation not to what
took place at the Last Supper, but to the Crucifixion the day after.
From the demonstration given above that Christ, by the double
consecration of bread and wine mystically separated His Blood from His
Body and thus in a chalice itself poured out this Blood in a
sacramental way, it is at once clear that he wished to solemnize the
Last Supper not as a sacrament merely but also as a Eucharistic
Sacrifice. If the "pouring out of the chalice" is to mean nothing more
than the sacramental drinking of the Blood, the result is an
intolerable tautology: "Drink ye all of this, for this is my blood,
which is being drunk". As, however, it really reads "Drink ye all of
this, for this is my blood, which is shed for many (you) unto remission
of sins," the double character of the rite as sacrament and sacrifice
is evident. The sacrament is shown forth in the "drinking", the
sacrifice in the "shedding of blood". "The blood of the new testament",
moreover, of which all the four passages speak, has its exact parallel
in the analogous institution of the 0ld Testament through Moses. For by
Divine command he sprinkled the people with the true blood of an animal
and added, as Christ did, the words of institution (Exodus 24:8): "This
is the blood of the covenant (Sept.: idou to aima tes diathekes) which
the Lord hath made with you". St. Paul, however, (Hebrews 9:18 sq.)
after repeating this passage, solemnly demonstrates (ibid., ix, 11 sq)
the institution of the New Law through the blood shed by Christ at the
crucifixion; and the Savior Himself, with equal solemnity, says of the
chalice: This is My Blood of the new testament". It follows therefore
that Christ had intended His true Blood in the chalice not only to be
imparted as a sacrament, but to be also a sacrifice for the remission
of sins. With the last remark our third statement, viz. as to the
permanency of the institution in the Church, is also established. For
the duration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice is indissolubly bound up with
the duration of the sacrament. Christ's Last Supper thus takes on the
significance of a Divine institution whereby the Mass is established in
His Church. St. Paul (1 Corinthians 11:25), in fact, puts into the
mouth of the Savior the words: "This do ye, as often as you shall
drink, for the commemoration of me".
We are now in a position to
appreciate in their deeper sense Christ's words of consecration over
the bread. Since only St. Luke and St. Paul have made additions to the
sentence, "This is My Body", it is only on them that we can base our
demonstration.
* Luke 22:19: Hoc est
corpus meum, quod pro vobis datur; touto esti to soma mou to uper umon
didomenon; This is my body which is given for you.
* 1 Corinthians 11:24: Hoc
est corpus meum, quod pro vobis tradetur; touto mou esti to soma to
uper umon [klomenon]; This is my body which shall be broken for you.
Once more, we maintain that
the sacrifical "giving of the body" (in organic unity of course with
the "pouring of blood" in the chalice) is here to be interpreted as a
present sacrifice and as a permanent institution in the Church.
Regarding the decisive point, i.e. indication of what is actually
taking place, it is again St. Luke who speaks with greatest clearness,
for to soma he adds the present participle, didomenon by which he
describes the "giving of the body" as something happening in the
present, here and now, not as something to be done in the near future.
The reading klomenon in St.
Paul is disputed. According to the best critical reading (Tischendorf,
Lachmann) the participle is dropped altogether so that St. Paul
probably wrote: to soma to uper umon (the body for you, i.e. for your
salvation). There is good reason, however, for regarding the word
klomenon (from klan to break) as Pauline, since St. Paul shortly before
spoke of the "breaking of bread" (1 Corinthians 10:16), which for him
meant "to offer as food the true body of Christ". From this however we
may conclude that the "breaking of the body" not only confines Christ's
action to the strictly present, especially as His natural Body could
not be "broken" on the cross (cf. Exodus 12:46; John 19:32 sq.), but
also implies the intention of offering a "body broken for you" (uper
umon) i.e. the act constituted in itself a true food offering. All
doubt as to its sacrificial character is removed by the expresslon
didomenon in St. Luke, which the Vulgate this time quite correctly
translates into the present: "quod pro vobis datur." But "to give one's
body for others" is as truly a Biblical expression forsacrifice (cf.
John 6:52; Romans 7:4; Colossians 1:22; Hebrews 10:10, etc.) as the
parallel phrase, "the shedding of blood". Christ, therefore, at the
least Supper offered up His Body as an unbloodysacrifice. Finally, that
He commanded the renewal for all time of the Eucharistic sacrifice
through the Church is clear from the addition: "Do this for a
commemoration of me" (Luke 32:19; 1 Corinthians 11:24).
B. Proof from Tradition
Harnack is of opinion that
the early Church up to the time of Cyprian (d. 258) the contented
itself with the purely spiritual sacrifices of adoration and
thanksgiving and that it did not possess the sacrifice of the Mass, as
Catholicism now understands it. In a series of writings, Dr. Wieland, a
Catholic priest, likewise maintained in the face of vigorous opposition
from other theologians, that the early Christians confined the essence
of the Christian sacrifice to a subjective Eucharistic prayer of
thanksgiving, till Irenaeus (d. 202) brought forward the idea of an
objective offering of gifts, and especially of bread and wine. He,
according to this view, was the first to include in his expanded
conception of sacrifice, the entirely new idea of material offerings
(i.e. the Eucharistic elements) which up to that time the early Church
had formally repudiated.
Were this assertion
correct, the doctrine of the Council of Trent (Sess. XXII, c. ii),
according to which in the Mass "the priests offer up, in obedience to
the command of Christ, His Body and Blood" (see Denzinger, "Enchir", n.
949), could hardly take its stand on Apostolic tradition; the bridge
between antiquity and the present would thus have broken by the abrupt
intrusion of a completely contrary view. An impartial study of the
earliest texts seems indeed to make this much clear, that the early
Church paid most attention to the spiritual and subjective side of
sacrifice and laid chief stress on prayer and thanksgiving in the
Eucharistic function.
This admission, however, is
not identical with the statement that the early Church rejected out and
out the objective sacrifice, and acknowledged as genuine only the
spiritual sacrifice as expressed in the "Eucharistic thanksgiving".
That there has been an historical dogmatic development from the
indefinite to the definite, from the implicit to the explicit, from the
seed to the fruit, no one familiar with the subjectwill deny. An
assumption so reasonable, the only one in fact consistent with
Christianity, is, however, fundamently different from the hypothesis
that the Christian idea of sacrifice has veered from one extreme to the
other. This is a priori improbable and unproved in fact. In the Didache
or "Teaching of the Twelve Apostles", the oldest post-Biblical literary
monument (c. A.D. 96), not only is the "breaking of bread" (cf. Acts
20:7) referred to as a "sacrifice" (Thysia) and mention made of
reconciliation with one's enemy before the sacrifice (cf. Matthew
5:23), but the whole passage is crowned with an actual quotation of the
prophecy of Malachias, which referred, as is well known, to an
objective and real sacrifice (Didache, c. xiv). The early Christians
gave the name of "sacrifice"; not only to the Eucharistic
"thanksgiving," but also to the entire ritual celebration including the
liturgical "breaking of bread", without at first distinguishing clearly
between the prayer and the gift (Bread and Wine, Body and Blood). When
Ignatius of Antioch (d. 107), a disciple of the Apostles, says of the
Eucharist: "There is only one flesh of Our Lord Jesus Christ, only one
chalice containing His one Blood, one altar (en thysiasterion), as also
only one bishop with the priesthood and the deacons" (Ep., ad. Philad.
iv), he here gives to the liturgical Eucharistic celebration, of which
alone he speaks, by his reference to the "altar" an evidently
sacrificial meaning, often as he may use the word "altar" in other
contexts in a metaphorical sense.
A heated controversy had
raged round the conception of Justin Martyr (d. 166) from the fact that
in his "Dialogue with Tryphon" (c. 117) he characterizes "prayer and
thanksgiving" (euchai kai eucharistiai) as the "one perfect sacrifice
acceptable to God" (teleiai monai kai euarestoi thysiai). Did he intend
by thus emphasizing the interior spiritual sacrifice to exclude the
exterior real sacrifice of the Eucharist? Clearly he did not, for in
the same "Dialogue" (c. 41) he says the "food offering" of the lepers,
assuredly a real gift offering (cf. Leviticus 14), was a figure (typos)
of the bread of the Eucharist, which Jesus commanded to be offered
(poiein) in commemoration of His sufferings." He then goes on: "of the
sacrifices which you (the Jews) formerly offered, God through Malachias
said: 'I have no pleasure, etc'. By the sacrifices (thysion), however,
which we Gentiles present to Him in every place, that is (toutesti) of
the bread of Eucharist and likewise of the chalice Eucharist, he then
said that we glorify his name, while you dishonour him". Here "bread
and chalice" are by the use of toutesti clearly included as objective
gift offerings in the idea of the Christian sacrifice. If the other
apologists (Aristides, Athenagoras, Minucius Felix, Arnobius) vary the
thought a great deal -- God has no need of sacrifice; the best
sacrifice is the knowledge of the Creator; sacrifice and altars are
unknown to the Christians -- it is to be presumed not only that under
the imposed by the disciplina arcani they withheld the whole truth, but
also that they rightly repudiated all connection with pagan idolatry,
the sacrifice of animals, and heathen altars. Tertullian bluntly
declared: "we offer no sacrifice (non sacrificamus) because we cannot
eat both the Supper of God and that of demons" (De spectac., c., xiii).
And yet in another passage (De orat., c., xix) he calls Holy Communion
"participation in the sacrifice" (participatio sacrificii), which is
accomplished "on the altar of God" (ad aram Dei); he speaks (De cult
fem., II, xi) of a real, not a mere metaphorical, "offering up of
sacrifice" (sacrificium offertur); he dwells still further as a
Montanist (de pudicit, c., ix) as well on the "nourishing power of the
Lord's Body" (opimitate dominici corporis) as on the "renewal of the
immolation of Christ" (rursus illi mactabitur Christus).
With Irenaeus of Lyons
there comes a turning point, in as much as he, with conscious
clearness, first puts forward "bread and wine" as objective gift
offerings, but at the same time maintains that these elements become
the "body and blood" of the Word through consecration, and thus by
simply combining these two thoughts we have the Catholic Mass of today.
According to him (Adv. haer., iv, 18, 4) it is the Church alone "that
offers the pure oblation" (oblationem puram offert), whereas the Jews
"did not receive the Word, which is offered (or through whom an
offering is made) to God" (non receperunt Verbum quod [aliter, per
quod] offertur Deo). Passing over the teaching of the Alexandrine
Clement and Origen, whose love of allegory, together with the
restrictions of the disciplina arcani, involved their writings in
mystic obscurity, we make particular mention of Hippolytus of Rome (d.
235) whose celebrated fragment Achelis has wrongly characterized as
spurious. He writes (Fragm. in Prov., ix, i, P. G., LXXX, 593), "The
Word prepared His Precious and immaculate Body (soma) and His Blood
(aima), that daily kath'ekasten) are set forth as a sacrifice
(epitelountai thyomena) on the mystic and Divine table (trapeze) as a
memorial of that ever memorable first table of the mysterious supper of
the Lord". Since according to the judgment of even Protestant
historians of dogma, St. Cyprian (d. 258) is to be regarded as the
"herald" of Catholic doctrine on the Mass, we may likewise pass him
over, as well as Cyril of Jerusalem (d. 386) and Chrysostom (d. 407)
who have been charged with exaggerated "realism", and whose plain
discourses on the sacrifice rival those of Basil (d. 379), Gregory of
Nyssa (d. c. 394) and Ambrose (d. 397). Only about Augustine (d. 430)
must a word be said, since, in regard to the real presence of Christ in
the Eucharist he is cited as favouring the "symbolical" theory. Now it
is precisely his teaching on sacrifice that best serves to clear away
the suspicion that he inclined to a merely spiritual interpretation.
For Augustine nothing is
more certain than that every religion, whether true or false, must have
an exterior form of celebration and worship (Contra Faust., xix, 11).
This applies as well to Christians (l. c., xx, 18), who "commemorate
the sacrifice consummated (on the cross) by the holiest oblation and
participation of the Body and Blood of Christ" (celebrant sacrosancta
oblatione et participatione corporis et sanguinis Christi). The Mass
is, in his eyes (De Civ. Dei, X, 20), the "highest and true sacrifice"
(summum verumque sacrificium), Christ being at once "priest and victim"
(ipse offerens, ipse et oblatio) and he reminds the Jews (Adv. Jud, ix,
13) that the sacrifice of Malachias is now made in every place (in omni
loco offerri sacrificium Christianorum). He relates of his mother
Monica (Confess., ix, 13) that she had asked for prayers at the altar
(ad altare) for her soul and had attended Mass daily. From Augustine
onwards the current of the Church's tradition flows smoothly along in a
well-ordered channel, without check or disturbance, through the Middle
Ages to our own time. Even the powerful attempt made to stem it through
the Reformation had no effect.
A briefer demonstration of
the existence of the Mass is the so-called proof from prescription,
which is thus formulated: A sacrificial rite in the Church which is
older than the oldest attack made on it by heretics cannot be decried
as "idolatry", but must be referred back to the Founder of Christianity
as a rightful heritage of which He was the originator. Now the Church's
legitimate possession as regards the Mass can be traced back to the
beginnings of Christianity. It follows that the Mass was Divinely
instituted by Christ. Regarding the minor proposition, the proof of
which alone concerns us here, we may begin at once with the
Reformation, the only movement that utterly did away with the Mass.
Psychologically, it is quite intelligible that men like Zwingli,
Karlstadt and Oecolampadius should tear down the altars, for they
denied Christ's real presence in the Sacrament. Calvinism also in
reviling the "papistical mass" which the Heidelberg catechism
characterized as "cursed idolatry" was merely self-consistent since it
admitted only a "dynamic" presence. It is rather strange on the other
hand that, in spite of his belief in the literal meaning of the words
of consecration, Luther, after a violent "nocturnal disputation with
the devil", in 1521, should have repudiated the Mass. But it is exactly
these measures of violence that best show to what a depth the
institution of the Mass had taken root by that time in Church and
people. How long had it been taking root? The answer, to begin with is:
all through the Middle Ages back to Photius, the originator of the
Eastern Schism (869). Though Wycliffe protested against the teaching of
the Council of Constance (1414-18), which maintained that the Mass
could be proved from Scripture; and though the Albigenses and Waldenses
claimed for the laity also the power to offer sacrifice (cf. Denzinger,
"Enchir.", 585 and 430), it is none the less true that even the
schismatic Greeks held fast to the Eucharistic sacrifice as a precious
heritage from their Catholic past. In the negotiations for reunion at
Lyons (1274) and Florence (1439) they showed moreover that they had
kept it intact; and they have faithfully safeguarded it to this day.
From all which it is clear that the Mass existed in both Churches long
before Photius, a conclusion borne out by the monuments of Christian
antiquity.
Taking a long step
backwards from the ninth to the fourth century, we come upon the
Nestorians and Monophysites who were driven out of the Church during
the fifth century at Ephesus (431) and Chalcedon (451). From that day
to this they have celebrated in their solemn liturgy the sacrifice of
the New Law, and since they could only have taken it with them from the
old Christian Church, it follows that the Mass goes back in the Church
beyond the time of Nestorianism and Monophysitism. Indeed, the first
Nicene Council (325) in its celebrated eighteenth canon forbade priests
to receive the Eucharist from the hands of deacons for the very obvious
reason that "neither the canon nor custom have handed down to us, that
those, who have not the power to offer sacrifice (prospherein) may give
Christ's body to those who offer (prospherousi)". Hence it is plain
that for the celebration of the Mass there was required the dignity of
a special priesthood, from which the deacons as such were excluded.
Since, however, the Nicene Council speaks of a "custom that takes us at
once into the third century, we are already in the age of the Catacombs
with their Eucharistic pictures, which according to the best founded
opinions represent the liturgical celebration of the Mass. According to
Wilpert, the oldest representation of the Holy Sacrifice is the "Greek
Chapel" in the Catacomb of St. Priscilla (c. 150). The most convincing
evidence, however, from those early days is furnished by the liturgies
of the West and the East, the basic principles of which reach back to
Apostolic times and in whch the sacrifical idea of the Eucharistic
celebration found unadulterated and decisive expression (see
LITURGIES). We have therefore traced the Masses from the present to the
earliest times, thus establishing its Apostolic origin, which in turn
goes back again to the Last Supper.
II. THE NATURE OF THE MASS
In its denial of the true
Divinity of Christ and of every supernatural institution, modern
unbelief endeavours, by means of he so-called historico-religious
method, to explain the character of the Eucharist and the Eucharist
sacrifice as the natural result of a spontaneous process of development
in the Christian religion. In this connection it is interesting to
observe how these different and conflicting hypotheses refute one
another, with the rather startling result at the end of it all that a
new, great, and insoluble problem looms of the investigation. While
some discover the roots of the Mass in the Jewish funeral feasts (O.
Holtzmann) or in Jewish Essenism (Bousset, Heitmuller, Wernle), others
delve in the underground strata of pagan religions. Here, however, a
rich variety of hypotheses is placed at their disposal. In this age of
Pan-Babylonism it is not at all surprising that the germinal ideas of
the Christian communion should be located in Babylon, where in the
Adapa myth (on the tablet of Tell Amarna) mention has been found of
"water of life" and "food of life" (Zimmern). Others (e.g. Brandt)
fancy they have found a still more striking analogy in the "bread and
water" (Patha and Mambuha) of the Mandaean religion. The view most
widely held today among upholders of the historico-religious theory is
that the Eucharist and the Mass originated in the practices of the
Persian Mithraism (Dieterich, H. T. Holtzmann, Pfleiderer, Robertson,
etc.). "In the Mandaean mass" writes Cumont ("Mysterien des Mithra",
Leipzig, 1903, p.118), "the celebrant consecrated bread and water,
which he mixed with perfumed Haoma-juice, and ate this food while
performing the functions of divine service". Tertullian in anger
ascribed this mimicking of Christian rites to the "devil" and observed
in astonishment (De prescript haeret, C. xl): "celebrat (Mithras) et
panis oblationem." This is not the place to criticize in detail these
wild creations of an overheated imagination. Let it suffice to note
that all these explanations necessarily lead to impenetrable night, as
long as men refuse to believe in the true Divinity of Christ, who
commanded that His bloody sacrifice on the Cross should be daily
renewed by an unbloody sacrifice of His Body and Blood in the Mass
under the simple elements of bread and wine. This alone is the origin
and nature of the Mass.
A. The Physical Character of the Mass
In regard to the physical
character there arises not only the question as to the concrete
portions of the liturgy, in which the real offering lies hidden, but
also the question regarding the relation of the Mass to the bloody
sacrifice of the Cross. To begin with the latter question as much the
more important, Catholics and believing Protestants alike acknowledge
that as Christians we venerate in the bloody sacrifice of the Cross the
one, universal, absolute Sacrifice for the salvation of the world. And
this indeed is true in a double sense first, because among all the
sacrifices of the past and future the Sacrifice on the Cross alone
stands without any relation to, and absolutely independent of, any
other sacrifice, a complete totality and unity in itself; second
because every grace, means of grace and sacrifice, whether belonging to
the Jewish, Christian or pagan economy, derive their whole undivided
strength, value, and efficiency singly and alone from this absolute
sacrifice on the Cross. The first consideration implies that all the
sacrifices of the Old Testament, as well as the Sacrifice of the Mass,
bear the essential mark of relativity, in so far as they are
necessarily related to the Sacrifice of the Cross, as the periphery of
a circle to the centre. From the second consideration it follows that
all other Sacrifices, the Mass included, are empty, barren and void of
effect, so far and so long as they are not supplied from the mainstream
of merits (due to the suffering) of the Crucified. Let us deal briefly
with this double relationship.
Regarding the qualification
of relativity, which adheres to every sacrifice other than the
sacrifice of the Cross, there is no doubt that the sacrifices of the
Old Testament by their figurative forms and prophetic significance
point to the sacrifice of the Cross as their eventual fulfilment. The
Epistle to the Hebrews (viii-x) in particular develops grandly the
figurative character of the Old Testament. Not only was the Levitie
priesthood, as a "shadow of the things to come" a faint type of the
high priesthood of Christ, but the complex sacrificial cult, broadly
spread out in its parts, prefigured the one sacrifice of the Cross.
Serving only the legal "cleansing of the flesh" the Levitical
sacrifices could effect no true "forgiveness of sins"; by their very
inefficacy however they point prophetically to the perfect Sacrifice of
propitiation on Golgotha. Just for that reason their continual
repetition as well as their great diversity was essential to them, as a
means of keeping alive in the Jews the yearning for the true sacrifice
of expiation which the future was to bring. This longing was satiated
only by the single Sacrifice of the Cross, which was never again to be
repeated. Naturally the Mass, too, if it is to have the character of a
legitimate sacrifice must be in accord with this inviolable rule, no
longer Indeed as a type prophetic of future things, but rather as the
living realization and renewal of the past. Only the Last Supper,
standing midway as it were between the figure and its fulfilment, still
looked to the future, in so far as it was an anticipatory commemoration
of thesacrifice of the Cross. In the discourse in which the Eucharist
was instituted, the "giving of the body" and the "Shedding of the
Blood" were of necessity related to the physical separation of the
blood from the body on the Cross, without which the sacramental
immolation of Christ at the Last Supper would be inconceivable. The
Fathers of the Church, such as Cyprian (Ep., lxiii, 9), Ambrose (De
offic., I, xlviii), Augustine (Contra Faust., XX, xviii) and Gregory
the Great (Dial., IV, lviii), insist that the Mass in its essential
nature must be that which Christ Himself characterized as a
"commemoration" of Him (Luke 22:19) and Paul as the "showing of the
death of the Lord" (1 Corinthians 11:26).
Regarding the other aspect
of the Sacrifice on the Cross, viz. the impossibility of its renewal,
its singleness and its power, Paul again proclaimed with energy that
Christ on the Cross definitively redeemed the whole world, in that he
"by His own Blood, entered once into the holier having obtained eternal
redemption" (Hebrews 9:12). This does not mean that mankind is suddenly
and without the action of its own will brought back to the state of
innocence in Paradise and set above the necessity of working to secure
for itself the fruits of redemption. Otherwise children would be in no
need of baptism nor adults of justifying faith to win eternal
happiness. The "completion" spoken of by Paul can therefore refer only
to the objective side of redemption, which does not dispense with, but
on the contrary requires, the proper subjective disposition. The
sacrifice once offered on the Cross filled the infinite reservoirs to
overflowing with healing waters but those who thirst after justice must
come with their chalices and draw out what they need to quench their
thirst. In this important distinction between objective and subjective
redemption, which belongs to the essence of Christianity, lies not
merely the possibility, but also the justification of the Mass. But
here unfortunately Catholics and Protestants part company. The latter
can see in the Mass only a "denial of the one sacrifice of Jesus
Christ". This is a wrong view, for if the Mass can do and does no more
than convey the merits of Christ to mankind by means of a sacrifice
exactly as the sacraments do it without the use of sacrifice, it stands
to reason that the Mass is neither a second independent sacrifice
alongside of the sacrifice on the Cross, nor a substitute whereby the
sacrifice on the Cross is completed or its value enhanced.
The only distinction
between the Mass and the sacrament lies in this: that the latter
applies to the individual the fruits of the Sacrifice on the Cross by
simple distribution, the other by a specific offering. In both, the
Church draws upon the one Sacrifice on the Cross. This is and remains
the one Sun, that gives life, light and warmth to everything; the
sacraments and the Mass are only the planets that revolve round the
central body. Take the Sun away and the Mass is annihilated not one
whit less than the sacraments. On the other hand, without these two the
Sacrifice on the Cross would reign as independently as, conceivably the
sun without the planets. The Council of Trent (Sess. XXII, can. iv)
therefore rightly protested against the reproach that "the Mass is a
blasphemy against or a derogation from the Sacrifice on the Cross" (cf.
Denzinger, "Enchir.", 951). Must not the same reproach be cast upon the
Sacraments also? Does it not apply to baptism and communion among
Protestants? And how can Christ Himself put blasphemy and darkness in
the way of His Sacrifice on the Cross when He Himself is the High
Priest, in whose name and by whose commission His human representative
offers sacrifice with the words: "This is my Body, this is my Blood"?
It is the express teaching of the Church (cf. Trent, Sess. XXII, i)
that the Mass is in its very nature a "representation" (representatio),
a "commemoration" (memoria) and an "application" (applicatio) of the
Sacrifice of the Cross. When indeed the Roman Catechism (II, c. iv, Q.
70) as a fourth relation, adopts the daily repetition (instauratio), it
means that such a repetition is to be taken not in the sense of
multiplication, but simply of an application of the merits of the
Passion. Just as the Church repudiates nothing so much as the
suggestion that by the Mass the sacrifice on the Cross is as it were
set aside, so she goes a step farther and maintains the essential
identity of both sacrifices, holding that the main difference between
them is in the different manner of sacrifice -- the one bloody the
other unbloody (Trent, Sess. XXII, ii): "Una enim eademque est hostia
idem nunc offerens sacerdotum ministerio, qui seipsum tunc in cruce
obtulit, sofa offerendi ratione diversa". In as much as the sacrificing
priest (offerens) and the sacrificial victim (hostia) in both
sacrifices are Christ Himself, their same amounts even to a numerical
identity. In regard to the manner of the sacrifice (offerendi ratio) on
the other hand, it is naturally a question only of a specific identity
or unity that includes the possibility of ten, a hundred, or a thousand
masses.
B. The Constituent Parts of the Mass
Turning now to the other
question as to the constituent parts of the liturgy of the Mass in
which the real sacrifice is to be looked for we need only take into
consideration its three chief parts: the Offertory, the Consecration
and the Communion. The antiquated view of Johann Eck, according to
which the act of sacrifice was comprised in the prayer "Unde et memores
. . . offerimus", is thus excluded from our discussion, as is also the
of Melchior Canus, who held that the sacrifice is accomplished in the
symbolical ceremony of the breaking of the Host and its commingling
with the Chalice. The question therefore arises first: Is the sacrifice
comprised in the Offertory? From the wording of the prayer this much at
least is clear that bread and wine constitute the secondary sacrificial
elements of the Mass, since the priest in the true language of
sacrifice, offers to God bread as an unspotted host (immaculatam
hostiam) and wine as the chalice of salvation (calicem salutaris). But
the very significance of this language proves that attention is mainly
directed to the prospective transubstantiation of the Eucharistic
elements. Since the Mass is not a mere offering of bread and wine, like
the figurative food offering of Melchisedech, it is clear that only the
Body and Blood of Christ can be the primary matter of the sacrifice as
was the case at the Last Supper (cf. Trent, Sess. XXII, i, can. 2;
Denzinger, n. 938, 949). Consequently the sacrifice is not in the
Offertory. Does it consist then in the priest's Communion? There were
and are theologians who favour that view. They can be ranged in two
classes, according as they see in the Communion the essential or the
co-essentlal.
Those who belong to the
first category (Dominicus Soto, Renz, Bellord) had to beware of the
heretical doctrine proscribed by the Council of Trent (Sess. XXII, can.
1), viz., that Mass and Communion were identical. In American and
English circles the so-called "banquet theory" of the late Bishop
Bellord once created some stir (cf. The Ecclesiastical Review, XXXIII,
1905, 258 sq ). According to that view, the essence of the sacrifice
was not to be looked for in the offering of a gift to God, but solely
in the Communion. Without communion there was no sacrifice. Regarding
pagan sacrifices Döllinger ("Heidentum und Judentum", Ratisbon 1857)
had already demonstrated the incompatibility of this view. With the
complete shedding of blood pagan sacrifices ended, so that the supper
which sometimes followed it was expressive merely of the satisfaction
felt at the reconciliation with gods. Even the horrible human
sacrifices had as their object the death of the victim only and not a
cannibal feast. As to the Jews, only a few Levitical sacrifices, such
as the peace offering, had feasting connected with them; most, and
especially the burnt offerings (holocausta), were accomplished without
feasting (cf. Leviticus 6:9 sq.). Bishop Bellord, having cast in his
lot with the "banquet theory", could naturally find the essence of the
Mass in the priests' Communion only. He was indeed logically bound to
allow that the Crucifixion itself had the character of a sacrifice only
in conjunction with the Last Supper, at which alone food was taken; for
the Crucifixion excluded any ritual food offering. These disquieting
consequences are all the more serious in that they are devoid of any
scientific basis.
Harmless, even though
improbable, is that other view (Bellarmine, De Lugo, Tournély, etc.)
which includes the Communion as at least a co-essential factor in the
constitution of the Mass; for the consumption of the Host and of the
contents of the Chalice, being a kind of destruction, would appear to
accord with the conception of the sacrifice developed above. But only
in appearance; for the sacrificial transformation of the victim must
take place on the altar, and not in the body of the celebrant, while
the partaking of the two elements can at most represent the burial and
not the sacrificial death of Christ. The Last Supper also would have
been a true sacrifice only on condition that Christ had given the
Communion not only to His apostles but also to Himself. There is
however no evidence that such a Communion ever took place, probable as
it may appear. For the rest, the Communion of the priest is not the
sacrifice, but only the completion of, and participation in, the
sacrifice, it belongs therefore not to the essence, but to the
integrity of the sacrifice. And this integrity is also preserved
absolutely even in the so-called "private Mass" at which the priest
alone communicates; private Masses are allowed for that reason (cf.
Trent, Sess. XXII, can. 8). When the Jansenist Synod of Pistoia (1786),
proclaiming the false principle that "participation in the sacrifice is
essential to the sacrifice", demanded at least the making of a
"spiritual communion" on the part of the faithful as a condition of
allowing private Masses, it was denied by Pius VI in his Bull "Auctorem
fidei" (1796) (see Denzinger, n. 1528).
After the elimination of
the Offertory and Communion, there remains only the Consecration as the
part in which the true sacrifice is to be sought. In reality, that part
alone is to be regarded as the proper sacrificial act which is such by
Christ's own institution. Now the Lord's words are: "This is my Body;
this is my Blood." The Oriental Epiklesis cannot be considered as the
moment of consecration for the reason that it is absent in the Mass in
the West and is known to have first come into practice after Apostolic
times. The sacrifice must also be at the point where Christ personally
appears as High Priest and human celebrant acts only as his
representative. The priest does not however assume the personal part of
Christ either at the Offertory or Communion. He only does so when he
speaks the words: "This is My Body; this is My Blood", in which there
is no possible reference to the body and blood of the celebrant. While
the Consecration as such can be shown with certainty to be the act of
Sacrifice, the necessity of the twofold consecration can be
demonstrated only as highly probable. Not only older theologlans such
as Frassen, Gotti, and Bonacina, but also later theologians such as
Schouppen, Stentrup and Fr. Schmid, have supported the untenable theory
that when one of the consecrated elements is invalid, such as barley
bread or cider, the consecration of the valid element not only produces
the Sacrament, but also the (mutilated) sacrifice. Their chief argument
is that the sacrament in the Eucharist is inseparable in idea from the
sacrifice. But they entirely overlooked the fact that Christ positively
prescribed the twofold conscration for the sacrifice of the Mass (not
for the sacrament), and especially the fact that in the consecration of
one element only the intrinsically essential relation of the Mass to
the sacrifice of the Cross is not symbolically represented. Since it
was no mere death from suffocation that Christ suffered, but a bloody
death, in which His veins were emptied of their Blood, this condition
of separation must receive visible representation on the altar, as in a
sublime drama. This condition is fulfilled only by the double
consecration, which brings before our eyes the Body and the Blood in
the state of separation, and thus represents the mystical shedding of
blood. Consequently, the double consecration is an absolutely essential
element of the Mass as a relative sacrifice.
B. The Metaphysical Character of the Sacrifice of the Mass
The physical essence of the
Mass having been established in the consecration of the two species,
the metaphysical question arises as to whether and in what degree the
scientific concept of sacrifice is realized in this double
consecration. Since the three ideas, sacrificing priest, sacrificial
gift, and sacrificial object, present no difficulty to the
understanding, the problem is finally seen to lie entirely in the
determination of the real sacrificial act (actio sacrifica), and indeed
not so much in theform of this act as in the matter, since the
glorified Victim, in consequence of Its impassibility, cannot be really
transformed, much less destroyed. In their investigation of the idea of
destruction, the post-Tridentine theologians have brought into play all
their acuteness, often with brilliant results, and have elaborated a
series of theories concerning the Sacrifice of the Mass, of which,
however, we can discuss only the most notable and important. But first,
that we may have at hand a reliable, critical standard wherewith to
test the validity or invalidity of the various theories, we maintain
that a sound and satisfactory theory must satisfy the following four
conditions:
* the twofold consecration
must show not only the relative, but also the absolute moment of
sacrifice, so that the Mass will not consist in a mere relation, but
will be revealed as in itself a real sacrifice;
* the act of sacrifice
(actio sacrifica), veiled in the double consecration, must refer
directly to the sacrificial matter -- i.e. the Eucharistic Christ
Himself -- not to the elements of bread and wine or their unsubstantial
species;
* the sacrifice of Christ
must somehow result in a kenosis, not in a glorification, since this
latter is at most the object of the sacrifice, not the sacrifice itself;
* since this postulated
kenosis, however, can be no real, but only a mystical or sacramental
one, we must appraise intelligently those moments which approximate in
any degree the "mystical slaying" to a real exinanition, instead of
rejecting them.
With the aid of these four
criteria it is comparatively easy to arrive at a decision concerning
the probability or otherwise of the different theories concerning
thesacrifice of the Mass.
(i) The Jesuit Gabriel
Vasquez, whose theory was supported by Perrone in the last century,
requires for the essence of an absolute sacrifice only -- and thus, in
the present case, for the Sacrifice of the Cross -- a true destruction
or the real slaying of Christ, whereas for the idea of the relative
sacrifice of the Mass it suffices that the former slaying on the Cross
be visibly represented in the separation of Body and Blood on the
altar. This view soon found a keen critic in Cardinal de Lugo, who,
appealing to the Tridentine definition of the Mass as a true and proper
sacrifice, upbraided Vasquez for reducing the Mass to a purely relative
sacrifice. Were Jephta to arise again today with his daughter from the
grave, he argues (De Euchar, disp. xix, sect. 4, n. 58), and present
before our eyes a living dramatic reproduction of the slaying of his
daughter after the fashion of a tragedy, we would undoubtedly see
before us not a true sacrifice, but a historic or dramatic
representation of the former bloody sacrifice. Such may indeed satisfy
the notion of a relative sacrifice, but certainly not the notion of the
Mass which includes in itself both the relative and the absolute (in
opposition to the merely relative) sacrificial moment. If the Mass is
to be something more than an Ober-Ammergau Passion Play, then not only
must Christ appear in His real personality on the altar, but He must
also be in some manner really sacrificed on that very altar. The theory
of Vasquez thus fails to fulfil the first condition which we have named
above.
To a certain extent the
opposite of Vasquez's theory is that of Cardinal Cienfuegos, who, while
exaggerating the absolute moment of the Mass, undervalues the equally
essential relative moment of the sacrifice. The sacrificial destruction
of the Eucharistic Christ he would find in the voluntary suspension of
the powers of sense (especially of sight and hearing), which the
sacramental mode of existence implies, and which lasts from the
consecration to the mingling of the two Species. But, apart from the
fact that one may not constitute a hypothetical theologumenon the basis
of a theory, one can no longer from such a standpoint successfully
defend the indispensability of the double consecration. Equally
difficult is it to find in the Eucharistic Christ's voluntary surrender
of his sensitive functions the relative moment of sacrifice, i.e. the
representation of the bloody sacrifice of the Cross. The standpoint of
Francisco Suárez, adopted by Scheeben, is both exalting and imposing;
the real transformation of the sacrificial gifts he refers to the
destruction of the Eucharistic elements (in virtue of the
transubstantiation) at their conversion into the Precious Body and
Blood of Christ (immulatio perfectiva), just as, in the sacrifice of
incense in the Old Testament, the grains of incense were transformed by
fire into the higher and more precious form of the sweetest odour and
fragrance. But, since the antecedent destruction of the substance of
bread and wine can by no means be regarded as the sacrifice of the Body
and Blood of Christ, Francisco Suárez is finally compelled to identify
the substantial production of the Eucharistic Victim with the
sacrificing of the same. Herein is straightway revealed a serious
weakness, already clearly perceived by De Lugo. For the production of a
thing can never be identical with its sacrifice; otherwise one might
declare the gardener's production of plants or the farmer's raising of
cattle a sacrifice. Thus, the idea of kenosis which in the minds of all
men is intimately linked with the notion of sacrifice, and which we
have given above as our third condition, is wanting in the theory of
Francisco Suárez. To offer something as a sacrifice always means to
divest oneself of it, even though this self-divestment may finally lead
to exaltation.
In Germany the profound,
but poorly developed theory of Valentin Thalhofer found great favour.
We need not, however, develop it here, especially since it rests on the
false basis of a supposed "heavenly sacrifice" of Christ, which, as the
virtual continuation of the Sacrifice of the Cross, becomes a temporal
and spatial phenomenon in the Sacrifice of the Mass. But, as
practically all other theologians teach, the existence of this heavenly
sacrifice (in the strict sense) is only a beautiful theological dream,
and at any rate cannot be demonstrated from the Epistle to the Hebrews.
(ii) Disavowing the
above-mentioned theories concerning the Sacrifice of the Mass,
theologians of today are again seeking a closer approximation to the
pre-Tridentine conception, having realized that post-Tridentine
theology had perhaps for polemical reasons needlessly exaggerated the
idea of destruction in the sacrifice. The old conception, which our
catechisms even today proclaim to the people as the most natural and
intelligible, may be fearlessly declared the patristic and traditional
view; its restoration to a position of general esteem is the service of
Father Billot (De sacram., I, 4th ed., Rome, 1907, pp. 567 sqq.). Since
this theory refers the absolute moment of thesacrifice to the (active)
"sacramental mystical slaying", and the relative to the (passive)
"separation of Body and Blood", it has indeed made the "two-edged
sword" of the double consecration the cause from which the double
character of the Mass as an absolute (real in itself) and relative
sacrifice proceeds. We have an absolute sacrifice, for the Victim is --
not indeed in specie propria, but in specie aliena -- sacramentally
slain, we have also a relative sacrifice, since the sacramental
separation of Body and Blood represents perceptibly the former shedding
of Blood on the Cross.
While this view meets every
requirement of the metaphysical nature of the Sacrifice of the Mass, we
do not think it right to reject offhand the somewhat more elaborate
theory of Lessius instead of utilizing it in the spirit of the
traditional view for the extension of the idea of a "mystical slaying".
Lessius (De perfect. moribusque div. XII, xiii) goes beyond the old
explanation by adding the not untrue observation that the intrinsic
force of the double consecration would have as result an actual and
true shedding of blood on the altar, if this were not per accidens
impossible in consequence of the impassibility of the transfigured Body
of Christ. Since ex vi verborum the consecration of the bread makes
really present only the Body, and the consecration of the Chalice only
the Blood, the tendency or the double consecration is towards a formal
exclusion of the Blood from the Body. The mystical slaying thus
approaches nearer to a real destruction and the absolute sacrificial
moment of the Mass receives an important confirmation. In the light of
this view, the celebrated statement of St. Gregory of Nazianzus becomes
of special importance ("Ep. clxxi, ad Amphil." in P. G., XXXVII, 282):
"Hesitate not to pray for me . . . when with bloodless stroke
[anaimakto tome] thou separatest [temnes] the Body and Blood of the
Lord; having speech as a sword [phonen echon to Xiphos]." As an old
pupil of Cardinal Franzelin (De Euchar., p. II, thes. xvi, Rome, 1887),
the present writer may perhaps speak a good word for the once popular,
but recently combatted theory of Cardinal De Hugo, which Franzelin
revived after a long period of neglect; not however that he intends to
proclaim the theory in its present form as entirely satisfactory,
since, with much to recommend it, it has also serious defects. We
believe, however, that this theory, like that of Lessius, might be most
profitably utilized to develop, supplement, and deepen the traditional
view. Starting from the principle that theEucharistic destruction can
be, not a physical but only a moral one, De Lugo finds this exinanition
in the voluntary reduction of Christ to the condition of food (reductio
ad statum cibi el potus), in virtue of which the Saviour, after the
fashion of lifeless food, leaves himself at the mercy of mankind. That
this is really equivalent to a true kenosis no one can deny. Herein the
Christian pulpit has at its disposal a truly inexhaustible source of
lofty thoughts wherewith to illustrate in glowing language the humility
and love, the destitution and defencelessness of Our Saviour under the
sacramental veil, His magnanimous submission to irreverence, dishonour,
and sacrilege, and wherewith to emphasize that even today that fire of
self-sacrifice which once burned on the Cross, still sends forth its
tongues of flame in a mysterious manner from the Heart of Jesus to our
altars. While, in this incomprehenslble condescension, the absolute
moment of sacrifice is disclosed in an especially striking manner, one
is reluctantly compelled to recognize the absence of two of the other
requisites: in the first place, the necessity of the double
consecration is not made properly apparent, since a single consecration
would suffice to produce the condition of food, would therefore achieve
the sacrifice; secondly, the reduction to the state of articles of food
reveals not the faintest analogy to the blood -- shedding on the Cross,
and thus the relative moment of the Sacrifice of the Mass is not
properly dealt with. De Lugo's theory seems, therefore, of no service
in this connection. It renders, howover, the most useful service in
extending the traditional idea of a "mystical slaying", since indeed
the reduction of Christ to food is and purports to be nothing else than
the preparation of the mystically slain Victim for the sacrificial
feast in the Communion of the priest and the faithful.
III. THE CAUSALITY OF THE MASS
In this section we shall
treat: (a) the effects (effectus) of the Sacrifice of the Mass, which
practically coincide with the various ends for which the Sacrifice is
offered, namely adoration, thanksgiving, impetration, and expiation;
(b) the manner of its efficacy (modus efliciendi), which lies in part
objectively in the Sacrifice of the Mass itself (ex opere operato), and
partly depends subjectively on the personal devotion and piety of man
(ex opere operantis).
A. The Effects of the Sacrifice of the Mass
The Reformers found
themselves compelled to reject entirely the Sacrifice of the Mass,
since they recognized the Eucharist merely as a sacrament. Both their
views were founded on the reflection, properly appraised above that the
Bloody Sacrifice of the Cross was the sole Sacrifice of Christ and of
Christendom and thus does not admit of the Sacrifice of the Mass. As a
sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving in the symbolical or figurative
sense, they had earlier approved of the Mass, and Melanchthon resented
the charge that Protestants had entirely abolished it. What they most
bitterly opposed was the Catholic doctrine that the Mass is a sacrifice
not only of praise and thanksgiving, but also of impetration and
atonement, whose fruits may benefit others, while it is evident that a
sacrament as such can profit merely the recipient. Here the Council of
Trent interposed with a definition of faith (Sess. XXII, can. iii): "If
any one saith, that the Mass is only a sacrifice of praise and
thanksgiving. . . but not a propitiatory sacrifice; or, that it profits
only the recipient, and that it ought not to be offered for the living
and the dead for sins, punishments, satisfactions, and other
necessities; let him be anathema" (Denzinger, n. 950). In this canon,
which gives a summary of all the sacrificial effects in order, the
synod emphasizes the propitiatory and impetratory nature of the
sacrifice. Propitiation (propitiatio) and petition (impetratio) are
distinguishable from each other, in as much as the latter appeals to
the goodness and the former to the mercy of God. Naturally, therefore,
they differ also as regards their objects, since, while petition is
directed towards our spiritual and temporal concerns and needs of every
kind, propitiation refers to our sins (peccata) and to the temporal
punishments (poenae), which must be expiated by works of penance or
satisfaction (satisfactiones) in this life, or otherwise by a
corresponding suffering in purgatory. In all these respects the
impetratory and expiatory Sacrifice of the Mass is of the greatest
utility, both for the living and the dead.
Should a Biblical
foundation for the Tridentine doctrine be asked for, we might first of
all argue in general as follows: Just as there were in the Old
Testament, in addition to sacrifices of praise and thanksgiving,
propitiatory and impetratory sacrifices (cf. Leviticus 4 sqq.; 2 Samuel
24:21 sqq., etc.), the New Testament, as its antitype, must also have a
sacrifice which serves and suffices for all these objects. But,
according to the prophecy of Malachias, this is the Mass, which is to
be celebrated by the Church in all places and at all times.
Consequently, the Mass is the impetratory and propitiatory sacrifice.
As for special reference to the propitiatory character, the record of
instituation states expressly that the Blood of Christ is in the
chalice "unto remission of sins" (Matthew 26:28).
The chief source of our
doctrine, however, is tradition, which from the earliest times declares
the impetratory value of the Sacrifice of the Mass. According to
Tertullian (Ad scapula, ii), the Christians sacrificed "for the welfare
of the emperor" (pro salute imperatoris); according to Chrysostom (Hom.
xxi in Act. Apost., n. 4), "for the fruits of the earth and other
needs". St. Cyril of Jerusalem (d. 386)) describes the liturgy of the
Mass of his day as follows ("Catech. myst." v, n. 8, in P. G., XXXIII,
1115): "After the spritual Sacrifice [pneumatike thysia], the unbloody
service [anaimaktos latreia] is completed; we pray to God, over this
sacrifice of propitiation [epi tes thysias ekeines tou ilasmou] for the
universal peace of the churches, for the proper guidance of the world,
for the emperor, soldiers and companions, for the infirm and the sick,
for those stricken with trouble, and in general for all in need of help
we pray and offer up this sacrifice [tauten prospheromen ten thysian].
We then commemorate the patriarchs, prophets, apostles, martyrs, that
God may, at their prayers and intercessions graciously accept our
supplication. We afterwards pray for the dead . . . since we believe
that it will be of the greatest advantage [megisten onesin esesthai],
if we in the sight of the holy and most awesome Victim [tes hagias kai
phrikodestates thysias] discharge our prayers for them. The Christ, who
was slain for our sins, we sacrifice [Christon esphagmenon yper ton
emeteron amartematon prospheromen] to propitiate the merciful God for
those who are gone before and for ourselves." This beautiful passage,
which reads like a modern prayer-book, is of interest in more than one
connection. It proves in the first place that Christian antiquity
recognized the offering up of the Mass for the deceased, exactly as the
Church today recognizes requiem Masses -- a fact which is confirmed by
other independent witnesses, e.g. Tertullian (De monog., x), Cyprian
(Ep. lxvi, n. 2), and Augustine (Confess., ix, 12). In the second
place, it informs us that our so-called Masses of the Saints also had
their prototype among the primitive Christians, and for this view we
likewise find other testimonies -- e.g. Tertullian (De Cor., iii) and
Cyprian (Ep. xxxix, n. 3). By a Saint's Mass is meant, not the offering
up of the Sacrifice of the Mass to a saint which would be impossible
without most shameful idolatry, but a sacrifice, which, while offered
to God alone, on the one hand thanks Him for the triumphal coronation
of the saints, and on the other aims at procuring for us the saint's
efficacious intercession with God. Such is the authentic explanation of
the Council of Trent (Sess. XXII cap, iii, in Denzinger, n. 941). With
this threefold limitation, Masses "in honour of the saints" are
certainly no base "deception", but are morally allowable, as the
Council of Trent specifically declares (loc. cit. can. v); "If any one
saith, that it is an imposture to celebrate masses in honour of the
saints and for obtaining their intercession with God, as the Church
intends, let him be anathema". The general moral permissibility of
invoking the intercession of the saints, concerning which this is not
the place to speak, is of course assumed in the present instance.
While adoration and
thanksgiving are effects of the Mass which relate to God alone, the
success of impetration and expiation on the other hand reverts to man.
These last two effects are thus also called by theologians the "fruits
of the Mass" (fructus missae) and this distinction leads us to the
discussion of the difficult and frequently asked question as to whether
we are to impute infinite or finite value to the Sacrifice of the Mass.
This question is not of the kind which may be answered with a simple
yes or no. For, apart from the already indicated distinction between
adoration and thanksgiving on the one hand and impetration and
expiation on the other, we must also sharply distinguish between the
intrinsic and the extrinsic value of the Mass (valor intrinsecus,
extrinsecus). As for its intrinsic value, it seems beyond doubt that,
in view of the infinite worth of Christ as the Victim and High Priest
in one Person, the sacrifice must be regarded as of infinite value,
just as the sacrifice of the Last Supper and that of the Cross. Here
however, we must once more strongly emphasize the fact that the
ever-continued sacrificial activity of Christ in Heaven does not and
cannot serve to accumulate fresh redemptory merits and to assume new
objective value; it simply stamps into current coin, so to speak, the
redemptory merits definitively and perfectly obtained in the Sacrifice
of the Cross, and sets them into circulation among mankind. This also
is the teaching of the Council of Trent (Sess. XXII cap. ii): "of which
bloody oblation the fruits are most abundantly obtained through this
unbloody one [the Mass]." For, even in its character of a sacrifice of
adoration and thanksgiving, the Mass draws its whole value and all Its
power only from the Sacrifice of the Cross which Christ makes of
unceasing avail in Heaven (cf. Romans 8:34; Hebrews 7:25). There is,
however, no reason why this intrinsic value of the Mass derived from
the Sacrifice of the Cross, in so far as it represents a sacrifice of
adoration and thanksgiving, should not also operate outwardly to the
full extent of its infinity, for it seems inconceivable that the
Heavenly Father could accept with other than infinite satisfaction the
sacrifice of His only-begotten Son. Consequently God, as Malachias had
already prophesied, is in a truly infinite degree honoured, glorified,
and praised in the Mass; through Our Lord Jesus Christ he is thanked by
men for all his benefits in an infinite manner, in a manner worthy of
God.
But when we turn to the
Mass as a sacrifice of impetration and expiation, the case is
different. While we must always regard its intrinsic value as infinite,
since it is the sacrifice of the God-Man Himself, its extrinsic value
must necessarily be finite in consequence of the limitations of man.
The scope of the so-called "fruits of the Mass" is limited. Just as a
tiny chip of wood can not within it the whole energy of the sun, so
also, and in a still greater degree, is man incapable of converting the
boundless value of the impetratory and expiatory sacrifice into an
infinite effect for his soul. Wherefore, in practice, the impetratory
value of the sacrifice is always as limited as is its propitiatory and
satisfactory value. The greater or less measure of the fruits derived
will naturally depend very much on the pesonal efforts and worthiness,
the devotion and fervour of those who celebrate or are present at Mass.
This limitation of the fruits of the Mass must, however, not be
misconstrued to mean that the presence of a large congregationcauses a
diminution of the benefits derived from the Sacrifice by the
individual, as if such benefits were after some fashion divided into so
many aliquot parts. Neither the Church nor the Christian people has any
tolerance for the false principle: "The less the number of the faithful
in the church, the richer the fruits". On the contrary the Bride of
Christ desires for every Mass a crowded church, being rightly convinced
that from the unlimited treasures of the Mass much more grace win
result to the individual from a service participated in by a full
congregation, than from one attended merely by a few of the faithful.
This relative infinite value refers indeed only to the general fruit of
the Mass (fructus generalis), and not to the special (fructus
specialis) two terms whose distinction will be more clearly
characterized below. Here, however, we may remark that by the special
fruit of the Mass is meant that for the application of which according
to a special intention a priest may accept a stipend.
The question now arises
whether in this connection the applicable value of the Mass is to be
regarded as finite or infinite (or, more accurately, unlimited). This
question is of importance in view of the practical consequences it
involves. For, if we decide in favour of the unlimited value, a single
Mass celebrated for a hundred persons or intentions is as efficacious
as a hundred Masses celebrated for a single person or intention. On the
other hand, it is clear that, if we incline towards a finite value, the
special fruit is divided pro rata among the hundred persons. In their
quest for a solution of this question, two classes of theologians are
distinguished according to their tendencies: the minority (Gotti,
Billuart, Antonio Bellarini, etc.) are inclined to uphold the certainty
or at least the probability of the former view, arguing that the
infinite dignity of the High Priest Christ can not be limited by the
finite sacrificial activity of his human representative. But, since the
Church has entirely forbidden as a breach of strict justice that a
priest should seek to fulfil, by reading a single Mass, the obligations
imposed by several stipends (see Denzinger, n. 1110) these theologians
hasten to admit that their theory is not to be translated into
practice, unless the priest applies as many individual Masses for all
the intentions of the stipend-givers as he has received stipends. But
in as much as the Church has spoken of strict justice (justitia
commutativa), the overwhelming majority of theologians incline even
theoretically to the conviction that the satisfactory -- and, according
to many, also the propitiatory and impetratory -- value of a Mass for
which a stipend has been taken, is so strictly circumscribed and
limited from the outset, that it accrues pro rata (according to the
greater or less number of the living or the dead for whom the Mass is
offered) to each of the individuals. Only on such a hypothesis is the
custom prevailing among the faithful of having several Masses
celebrated for the deceased or for their intentions intelligible. Only
on such a hypothesis can one explain the widely established "Mass
Association", a pious union whose members voluntarily bind themselves
to read or get read at least one Mass annually for the poor souls in
purgatory. As early as the eighth century we find in Germany a
so-called "Totenbund" (see Pertz, "Monum. Germaniae hist.: Leg.", II,
i, 221). But probably the greatest of such societies is the Messbund of
Ingolstadt, founded in 1724; it was raised to a confraternity
(Confraternity of the Immaculate Conception) on 3 Feb., 1874, and at
present counts 680,000 members (cf. Beringer, "Die Ablasse, ihr Wesen
u. ihr Gebrauch", 13th ed., Paderborn, 1906, pp. 610 sqq.). Tournély
(De Euch. q. viii, a. 6) has also sought in favour of this view
important internal grounds of probability, for example by adverting to
the visible course of Divine Providence: all natural and supernatural
effects in general are seen to be slow and gradual, not sudden or
desultory, wherefore it is also the most holy intention of God that man
should, by his personal exertions, strive through the medium of the
greatest possible number of Masses to participate in the fruits of the
Sacrifice of the Cross.
B. The Manner of Efficacy of the Mass
In theological phrase an
effect "from the work of the action" (ex opere operato) signifies a
grace conditioned exclusively by the objective bringing into activity
of a cause of the supernatural order, in connection with which the
proper disposition of the subject comes subsequently into account only
as an indispensable antecedent condition (conditio sine qua non), but
not as a real joint cause (concausa). Thus, for example, baptism by its
mere ministration produces ex opere operato interior grace in each
recipient of the sacrament who in his heart opposes no obstacle (obez)
to the reception of the graces of baptism. On the other hand, all
supernatural effects, which, presupposing the state of grace are
accomplished by the personal actions and exertions of the subject (e.g.
everything obtained by simple prayer), are called effects "from the
work of the agent"; (ex opere operantis). we are now confronted with
the difficult question: In what manner does the Eucharistic Sacrifice
accomplish its effects and fruits? As the early scholastics gave
scarcely any attention to this problem, we are indebted for almost all
the light thrown upon it to the later scholastics.
(i) It is first of all
necessary to make clear that in every sacrifice of the Mass four
distinct categories of persons really participate.
At the head of all stands
of course the High Priest, Christ Himself; to make the Sacrifice of the
Cross fruitful for us and to secure its application, He offers Himself
as a sacrifice, which is quite independent of the merits or demerits of
the Church, the celebrant or the faithful present at the sacrifice, and
is for these an opus operatum.
Next after Christ and in
the second place comes the Church as a juridical person, who, according
to the express teaching of the Council of Trent (Sess. XXII, cap. i),
has received from the hands of her Divine Founder the institution of
the Mass and also the commission to ordain constantly priests and to
have celebrated by these the most venerable Sacrifice. This
intermediate stage between Christ and the celebrant may be neither
passed over nor eliminated, since a bad and immoral priest, as an
ecclesiastical official, does not offer up his own sacrifice -- which
indeed could only be impure -- but the immaculate Sacrifice of Christ
and his spotless Bride, which can be soiled by no wickedness of the
celebrant. But to this special sacrificial activity of the Church,
offering up the sacrifice together with Christ, must also correspond a
special ecclesiastico-human merit as a fruit, which, although in itself
an opus operantis of the Church, is yet entirely independent of the
worthiness of the celebrant and the faithful and therefore constitutes
for these an opus operatum. When, however, as De Lugo rightly points
out, an excommunicated or suspended priest celebrates in defiance of
the prohibition of the Church, this ecclesiastieal merit is always
lost, since such a priest no longer acts in the name and with the
commission of the Church. His sacrifice is nevertheless valid, since,
by virtue of his priestly ordination, he celebrates in the name of
Christ, even though in opposition to His wishes, and, as the
self-sacrifice of Christ, even such a Mass remains essentially a
spotless and untarnished sacrifice before God. We are thus compelled to
concur in another view of De Lugo, namely that the greatness and extent
of this ecclesiastical service is dependent on the greater or less
holiness of the reigning pope, the bishops, and the clergy throughout
the World, and that for this reason in times of ecclesiastical decay
and laxity of morals (especially at the papal court and among the
episcopate) the fruits of the Mass, resulting from the sacrificial
activity of the Church, might under certain circumstances easily be
very small.
With Christ and His Church
is associated in third place the celebrating priest, since he is the
representative through whom the real and the mystical Christ offer up
the sacrifice. If, therefore, the celebrant be a man of great personal
devotion, holiness, and purity, there will accrue an additional fruit
which will benefit not himself alone, but also those in whose favour he
applies the Mass. The faithful are thus guided by sound instinct when
they prefer to have Mass celebrated for their intentions by an upright
and holy priest rather than by an unworthy one, since, in addition to
the chief fruit of the Mass, they secure this special fruit which
springs ex opera operantis, from the piety of the celebrant.
Finally, in the fourth
place, must be mentioned those who participate actively in the
Sacrifice of the Mass, e.g., the servers, sacristan, organist, singers,
and the whole congregation joining in the sacrifice. The priest,
therefore, prays also in their name: Offerimus (i.e. we offer). That
the effect resulting from this (metaphorical) sacrificial activity is
entirely dependent on the worthiness and piety of those taking part
therein and thus results exclusively ex opere operantis is evident
without further demonstration. The more fervent the prayer, the richer
the fruit. Most intimate is the active participation in the Sacrifice
of those who receive Holy Communion during the Mass since in their case
the special fruits of the Communion are added to those of the Mass.
Should sacramental Communion be impossible, the Council of Trent (Sess.
XXII. cap. vi) advises the faithful to make at least a "spiritual
communion" (spirituali effectu communicare), which consists in the
ardent desire to receive the Eucharist. However, as we have already
emphasized, the omission of real or spiritual Communion on the part of
the faithful present does not render the Sacrifice of the Mass either
invalid or unlawful, wherefore the Church even permits "private
Masses", which may on reasonable grounds be celebrated in a chapel with
closed doors.
(ii) In addition to the
active, there are also passive participators in the Sacrifice of the
Mass. These are the persons in whose favour -- it may be even without
their knowledge and in opposition to their wishes -- the Holy Sacrifice
is offered. They fall into three categories: the community, the
celebrant, and the person (or persons) for whom the Mass is specially
applied. To each of these three classes corresponds ex opere operato a
special fruit of the Mass, whether the same be an impetratory effect of
the Sacrifice of Petition or a propitiatory and satisfactory effect of
the Sacrifice of Expiation. Although the development of the teaching
concerning the threefold fruit of the Mass begins only with Scotus
(Quaest. quodlibet, xx), it is nevertheless based on the very essence
of the Sacrifice itself. Since, according to the wording of the Canon
of the Mass, prayer and sacrifice is offered for all those present, the
whole Church, the pope, the diocesan bishop, the faithful living and
dead, and even "for the salvation of the whole world", there must first
of all result a "general fruit" (fructus generalis) for all mankind,
the bestowal of which lies immediately in the will of Christ and His
Church, and can thus be frustrated by no contrary intention of the
celebrant. In this fruit even the excommunicated, heretics, and
infidels participate, mainly that their conversion may thus be
effected. The second kind of fruit (fructus personalis, specialissimus)
falls to the personal share of the celebrant, since it were unjust that
he -- apart from his worthiness and piety (opus operantis) -- should
come empty-handed from the sacrifice. Between these two fruits lies the
third, the so-called "special fruit of the Mass" (fructus specialis,
medius, or ministerialis), which is usually applied to particular
living or deceased persons according to the intention of the celebrant
or the donor of a stipend. This "application" rests so exclusively in
the hands of the priest that even the prohibition of the Church cannot
render it inefficacious, although the celebrant would in such a case
sin through disobedience. For the existence of the special fruit of the
Mass, rightly defended by Pius VI against the Jansenistic Synod of
Pistoia (1786), we have the testimony also of Christian antiquity,
which offered the Sacrifice for special persons and intentions. To
secure in all cases the certain effect of this fructus specialis,
Francisco Suárez (De Euch., disp. lxxix, Sect. 10) gives priests the
wise advice that they should always add to the first a "second
intention" (intentio secunda), which, should the first be
inefficacious, will take its place.
(iii) A last and an
entirely separate problem is afforded by the special mode of efficacy
of the Sacrifice of Expiation. As an expiatory sacrifice, the Mass has
the double function of obliterating actual sins, especially mortal sins
(effectus stricte propitiatorius), and also of taking away, in the case
of those already in the state of grace, such temporal punishments as
may still remain to be endured (effectus satisfactorius). The main
question is: Is this double effect ex opere operato produced mediately
or immediately? As regards the actual forgiveness of sin, it must, in
opposition to earlier theologians (Aragon, Casalis, Gregory of
Valentia), be maintained as undoubtedly a certain principle, that the
expiatory sacrifice of the Mass can never accomplish the forgiveness of
mortal sins otherwise than by way of contrition and penance, and
therefore only mediately through procuring the grace of conversion (cf.
Council of Trent, Sess. XXII, cap. ii: "donum paenitentiae concedens").
With this limitation, however, the Mass is able to remit even the most
grievous sins (Council of Trent, 1. c., "Crimina et peccata etiam
ingentia dimittit"). Since, according to the present economy of
salvation, no sin whatsoever, grievous or trifling, can be forgiven
without an act of sorrow, we must confine the efficacy of the Mass,
even in the case of venial sins, to obtaining for Christians the grace
of contrition for less serious sins (Sess. XXII, cap. i). It is indeed
this purely mediate activity which constitutes the essential
distinction between the sacrifice and the sacrament. Could the Mass
remit sins immediately ex opere operato, like Baptism or Penance, it
would be a sacrament of the dead and cease to be a sacrifice.
Concerning the remission of the temporal punishment due to sin,
however, which appears to be effected in an immediate manner, our
judgment must be different. The reason lies in the intrinsic
distinction between sin and its punishment. Without the personal
cooperation and sorrow of the sinner, all forgiveness of sin by God is
impossible; this cannot however be said of a mere remission of
punishment. One person may validly discharge the debts or fines of
another, even without apprising the debtor of his intention. The same
rule may be applied to a just person, who, after his justification, is
still burdened with temporal punishment consequent on his sins. It is
certain that, only in this immediate way, can assistance be given to
the poor souls in purgatory through the Sacrifice of the Mass, since
they are henceforth powerless to perform personal works of satisfaction
(cf. Council of Trent, Sess. XXV, de purgat.). From this consideration
we derive by analogy the legitimate conclusion that the case exactly
the same as regards the living.
C. Practical Questions Concerning the Mass
From the exceedingly high
valuation, which the Church places on the Mass as the unbloody
Sacrifice of the God-Man, issue, as it were spontaneously all those
practical precepts of a positive or a negative nature, which are given
in the Rubrics of the Mass, in Canon Law, and in Moral Theology. They
may be conveniently divided into two categories, according as they are
intended to secure in the highest degree possible the objective dignity
of the Sacrifice or the subjective worthiness of the celebrant.
1. Precepts for the Promotion of the Dignity of the Sacrifice
(a) One of the most
important requisites for the worthy celebration of the Mass is that the
place in which the all-holy Mystery is to be celebrated should be a
suitable one. Since, in the days of the Apostolic Church, there were no
churches or chapels, private houses with suitable accommodation were
appointed for the solemnization of "the breaking of bread" (cf. Acts
2:46; 20:7 sq.; Colossians 4:15; Philemon 2). During the era of the
persecutions the Eucharistic services in Rome were transferred to the
catacombs, where the Christians believed themselves secure from
government agents. The first "houses of God" reach back certainly to
the end of the second century, as we learn from Tertullian (Adv.
Valent., iii) and Clement of Alexandria (Strom., I, i). In the second
half of the fourth century (A.D. 370), Optatus of Mileve (De Schism.
Donat. II, iv) could already reckon more than forty basilicas which
adorned the city of Rome. From this period dates the prohibition of the
Synod of Laodicea (can. lviii) to celebrate Mass in private houses.
Thenceforth the public churches were to be the sole places of worship.
In the Middle Ages the synods granted to bishops the right of allowing
house-chapels within their dioceses. According to the law of today
(Council of Trent, Sess. XXII, de reform.), the Mass may be celebrated
only in Chapels and public (or semi-public) oratories, which must be
consecrated or at least blessed. At present, private chapels may be
erected only in virtue of a special papal indult (S.C.C., 23 Jan.,
1847, 6 Sept., 1870). In the latter case, the real place of sacrifice
is the consecrated altar (or altar-stone), which must be placed in a
suitable room (cf. Missale Romanum, Rubr. gen., tit. xx). In times of
great need (e.g. war, persecution of Catholics), the priest may
celebrate outside the church, but naturally only in a becoming place,
provided with the most necessary utensils. On reasonable grounds the
bishop may, in virtue of the so-called "quinquennial faculties", allow
the celebration of Mass in the open air, but the celebration of Mass at
sea is allowed only by papal indult. In such an indult it is usually
provided that the sea be calm during the celebration, and that a second
priest (or deacon) be at hand to prevent the spilling of the chalice in
case of the rocking of the ship.
(b) For the worthy
celebration of Mass the circumstance of time is also of great
importance. In the Apostolic age the first Christians assembled
regularly on Sundays for "the breaking of bread" (Acts 20:7: "on the
first day of the week"), which day the "Didache" (c. xiv), and later
Justin Martyr (I Apol., lxvi), already name "the Lord's day".
Justin himself seems to be
aware only of the Sunday celebration, but Tertullian adds the fast-days
on Wednesday and Friday and the anniversaries of the martyrs ("De cor.
mil.", iii; "De orat.", xix). As Tertullian calls the whole paschal
season (until Pentcost) "one long feast", we may conclude with some
justice that during this period the faithful not only communicated
daily, but were also present at the Eucharistic Liturgy. As regards the
time of the day, there existed in the Apostolic age no fixed precepts
regarding the hour at which the Eucharistic celebration should take
place. The Apostle Paul appears to have on occasion "broken bread"
about midnight (Acts 20:7). But Pliny the Younger, Governor of Bithynia
(died A.D. 114), already states in his official report to Emperor
Trajan that the Christians assembled in the early hours of the morning
and bound themselves by a sacramentum (oath), by which we can
understand today only the celebration of the mysteries. Tertullian
gives as the hour of the assembly the time before dawn (De cor. mil.,
iii: antelucanis aetibus). When the fact was adverted to that the
Saviour's Resurrection occurred in the morning before sunrise, a change
of the hour set in, the celebration of Mass being postponed until this
time. Thus Cyprian writes of the Sunday celebration (Ep., lxiii): "we
celebrate the Resurrection of the Lord in the morning." Since the fifth
century the "third hour" (i.e. 9 a.m.) was regarded as "canonical" for
the Solemn Mass on Sundays and festivals. When the Little Hours (Prime,
Terce, Sext, None) began in the Middle Ages to lose their significance
as "canonical hours", the precepts governing the hour for the
conventual Mass received a new meaning. Thus, for example, the precepts
that the conventual Mass should be held after None on fast days does
not signify that it be held between midday and evening, but only that
"the recitation of None in choir is followed by the Mass". It is in
general left to the discretion of the priest to celebrate at any hour
between dawn and midday (ab aurora usque ad meridiem). It is proper
that he should read beforehand Matins and Lauds from his breviary.
The sublimity of the
Sacrifice of the Mass demands that the priest should approach the altar
wearing the sacred vestments (amice, stole, cincture, maniple, and
chasuble). Whether the priestly vestments are historical developments
from Judaism or paganism, is a question still discussed by
archaeologists. In any case the "Canones Hippolyti" require that at
Pontifical Mass the deacons and priests appear in "white vestments",
and that the lectors also wear festive garments. No priest may
celebrate Mass without light (usually two candles), except in case of
urgent necessity (e.g. to consecrate a Host as the Viaticum for a
person seriously ill). The altar-cross is also necessary as an
indication that the Sacrifice of the Mass is nothing else than the
unbloody reproduction of the Sacrifice of the Cross. Usually, also, the
priest must be attended at the altar by a server of the male sex. The
celebration of Mass without a server is allowed only in case of need
(e.g. to procure the Viaticum for a sick person, or to enable the
faithful to satisfy their obligation of hearing Mass). A person of the
female sex may not serve at the altar itself, e.g. transfer the missal,
present the cruets, etc. (S.R.C., 27 August, 1836). Women (especially
nuns) may, however, answer the celebrant from their places, if no male
server be at hand. During the celebration of Mass a simple priest may
not wear any head-covering -- whether biretta, pileolus, or full wig
(comae fictitiae) -- but the bishop may allow him to wear a plain
perruque as a protection for his hairless scalp.
(c) To preserve untarnished
the honour of the most venerable sacrifice, the Church has surrounded
with a strong rampart of special defensive regulations the institution
of "mass-stipends"; her intention is on the one hand to keep remote
from the altar all base avarice, and on the other, to ensure and
safeguard the right of the faithful to the conscientious celebration of
the Masses bespoken.
By a mass-stipend is meant
a certain monetary offering which anyone makes to the priest with the
accompaning obligation of celebrating a Mass in accordance with the
intentions of the donor (ad intentionem dantis). The obligation
incurred consists, concretely speaking, in the application of the
"special fruit of the Mass" (fructus specialis), the nature of which we
have alreadly described in detail (A, 3). The idea of the stipend
emanates from the earliest ages, and its justification lies
incontestably in the axiom of St. Paul (1 Corinthians 9:13): "They that
serve the altar, partake with the altar". Originally consisting of the
necessaries of life, the stipend was at first considered as "alms for a
Mass" (eleemosyna missarum), the object being to contribute to the
proper support of the clergy. The character of a pure alms has been
since lost by the stipend, since such may be accepted by even a wealthy
priest. But the Pauline principle applies to the wealthy priest just as
it does to the poor. The now customary money-offering, which was
introduced about the eighth century and was tacitly approved by the
Church, is to be regarded merely as the substitute or commutation of
the earlier presentation of the necessaries of life. In this very
point, also, a change from the ancient practice has been introduced,
since at present the individual priest receives the stipend personally,
whereas formerly all the clergy of the particular church shared among
them the total oblations and gifts. In their present form, the whole
matter of stipends has been officially taken by the Church entirely
under her protection, both by the Council of Trent (Sess. XXII, de ref.
) and by the dogmatic Bull "Auctorem fidei" (1796) of Pius VI
(Denzinger, n. 1554). Since the stipend, in its origin and nature,
claims to be and can be nothing else than a lawful contribution towards
the proper support of the clergy, the false and foolish views of the
ignorant are shown to be without foundation when they suppose that a
Mass may he simoniacally purchased with money (Cf. Summa Theologica
II-II:100:2). To obviate all abuses concerning of the amount of the
stipend, there exists in each diocese a fixed "mass-tax" (settled
either by ancient custom or by an episcopal regulation), which no
priest may exceed, unless extraordinary inconvenience (e.g. long
fasting or a long journey on foot) justifies a somewhat larger sum. To
eradicate all unworthy greed from among both laity and clergy in
connection with a thing so sacred, Pius IX in his Constitution
"Apostolicae Sedis" of 12 Oct., 1869, forbade under penalty of
excommunication the commercial traffic in stipends (mercimonium missae
stipendiorum). The trafficking consists in reducing the larger stipend
collected to the level of the "tax", and appropriating the surplus for
oneself. Into the category of shameful traffic in stipends also falls
the reprehensible practice of booksellers and tradesmen, who organize
public collections of stipends and retain the money contributions as
payment for books, merchandise, wines, etc., to be delivered to the
clergy (S.C.C., 31 Aug., 1874, 25 May, 1893). As special punishment for
this offence, suspensio a divinis reserved to the pope is proclaimed
against priests, irregularity against other clerics, and
excommunication reserved to the bishop, against the laity.
Another bulwark against
avarice is the strict regulation of the Church, binding under pain of
mortal sin, that priests shall not accept more intentions than they can
satisfy within a reasonable period (S.C.C, 1904). This regulation was
emphasized by the additional one which forbade stipends to be
transferred to priests of another diocese without the knowledge of
their ordinaries (S.C.C., 22 May, 1907). The acceptance of a stipend
imposes under pain of mortal sin the obligation not only of reading the
stipulated Mass, but also of fulfilling conscientiously all other
appointed conditions of an important character (e.g. the appointed day,
altar, etc.). Should some obstacle arise, the money must either be
returned to the donor or a substitute procured. In the latter case, the
substitute must be given, not the usual stipend, but the whole offering
received (cf. Prop. ix damn. 1666 ab Alex. VIII in Denzinger, n. 1109),
unless it be indisputably clear front the circumstances that the excess
over the usual stipend was meant by the donor for the first priest
alone. There is tacit condition which requires the reading of the
stipulated Mass as soon as possible. According to the common opinion of
moral theologians, a postponement of two months is in less urgent cases
admissible, even though no lawful impediment can be brought forward.
Should, however, a priest postpone a Mass for a happy delivery until
after the event, he is bound to return the stipends. However, since all
these precepts have been imposed solely in the interests of the
stipend-giver, it is evident that he enjoys the right of sanctioning
all unusual delays.
(d) To the kindred question
of "mass-foundations" the Church has, in the interests of the founder
and in her high regard for the Holy Sacrifice, devoted the same anxious
care as in the case of stipends. Mass-foundations (fundationes
missarum) are fixed bequests of funds or real property, the interest or
income from which is to procure for ever the celebration of Mass for
the founder or according to his intentions. Apart from anniversaries,
foundations of Masses are divided, according to the testamentary
arrangement of the testator, into monthly, weekly, and daily
foundations. As ecclesiastical property, mass-foundations are subject
to the administration of the ecclesiastical authorities, especially of
the diocesan bishop, who must grant hls permission for the acceptance
of such and must appoint for them the lowest rate. Only when episcopal
approval has been secured can the foundation be regarded as completed;
thenceforth it is unalterable for ever. In places where the acquirement
of ecclesiastical property is subject to the approval of the State
(e.g. in Austria), the establishment of a mass-foundation must also be
submitted to the secular authorities. The declared wishes of the
founder are sacred and decisive as to the manner of fulfillment. Should
no special intention be mentioned in the deed of foundation, the Mass
must be applied for the founder himself (S.C.C., 18 March, 1668). To
secure punctuality in the execution of thefoundation, Innocent XII
ordered in 1697 that a list of the mass-foundations, arranged according
to the months, be kept in each church possessing such endowments. The
administrators of pious foundations are bound under pain of mortal sin
to forward to the bishop at the end of each year a list of all founded
Masses left uncelebrated together with the money therefor (S.C.C., 25
May, 18 ).
The celebrant of a founded
Mass is entitled to the full amount of the foundation, unless it is
evident from the circumstances of the foundation or from the wording of
the deed that an exception is justifiable. Such is the case when the
foundation serves also as the endowment of a benefice, and consequently
in such a case the beneficiary is bound to pay his substitute only the
regular tax (S.C.C., 25 July, 1874). Without urgent reason, founded
Masses may not be celebrated in churches (or on altars) other than
those stipulated by the foundation. Permanent transference of such
Masses is reserved to the pope, but in isolated instances the
dispensation of the bishop suffices (cf. Council of Trent, Sess. XXI de
ref.; Sess. XXV de ref.). The unavoidable loss of the income of a
foundation puts an end to all obligations connected with it. A serious
diminution of the foundation capital, owing to the depreciation of
money or property in value, also the necessary increase of the
mass-tax, scarcity of priests, poverty of a church or of the clergy may
constiutute just grounds for the reduction of the number of Masses,
since it may be reasonably presumed that the deceased founder would not
under such difficult circumstance insist upon the obligation. On 21
June, 1625, the right of reduction, which the Council of Trent had
conferred on bishops, abbots, and the generals of religious orders, was
again reserved by Urban VIII to the Holy See.
2. Precepts to secure the Worthiness of the Celebrant
Although, as declared by
the Council of Trent (Sess. XXII, cap. i), the venerable, pure, and
sublime Sacrifice of the God-man "cannot be stained by any unworthiness
or impiety of the celebrant", still ecclesiastical legislation has long
regarded it as a matter of special concern that priests should fit
themselves for the celebration of the Holy Sacrifice by the cultivation
of integrity, purity of heart, and other qualities of a personal nature.
(a) In the first place it
may be asked: Who may celebrate Mass? Since for the validity of the
sacrifice the office of a special priesthood is essential, it is clear,
to begin with, that only bishops and priests (not deacons) are
qualified to offer up the Holy Sacrifice (see EUCHARIST). The fact that
even at the beginning of the second century the regular officiator at
the Eucharistic celebration seems to have been the bishop will be more
readily understood when we remember that at this early period there was
no strict distinction between the offices of bishop and priest. Like
the "Didache" (xv), Clement of Rome (Ad Cor., xl-xlii) speaks only of
the bishop and his deacon in connection with the sacrifice. Ignatius of
Antioch, indeed, who bears irrefutable testimony to the existence of
the three divisions of the hierarchy -- bishop (episkopos), priests
(presbyteroi) and deacons (diakonoi) -- confines to the bishop the
privilege of celebrating thanksgiving Divine Service when he says: "It
is unlawful to baptize or to hold the agape without the bishop." The
"Canones Hippolyti", composed probably about the end of the second
century, first contain the regulation (can. xxxii): "If, in the absence
of the bishop, a priest be at hand, all shall devolve upon him, and he
shall be honoured as the bishop is honoured. "Subsequent tradition
recognizes no other celebrant of the Mystery of the Eucharist than the
bishops and priests, who are validly ordained "according to the keys of
the Church," (secundum claves Ecclesiae). (Cf. Lateran IV, cap.
"Firmiter" in Denzinger, n. 430.)
But the Church demands
still more by insisting also on the personal moral worthiness of the
celebrant. This connotes not alone freedom from all ecclesiastical
censures (excommunication, suspension, interdict), but also a becoming
preparation of the soul and body of the priest before he approaches the
altar. To celebrate in the state of mortal sin has always been regarded
by the Church as an infamous sacrifice (cf. 1 Corinthians 11:27 sqq.).
For the worthy (not for the valid) celebration of the Mass it is,
therefore, especially required that the celebrant be in the state
ofgrace. To place him in this condition, the awakening of perfect
sorrow is no longer sufficient since the Council of Trent (Sess. XIII,
cap. vii in Denzinger, n. 880), for there is a strict eccleciastical
precept that the reaction of the Sacrament of Penance must precede the
celebration of Mass. This rule applies to all priests, even when they
are bound by their office (ex officio) to read Mass, e.g. on Sundays
for their parishioners. Only in instances when no confessor can be
procured, may they content themselves with reciting an act of perfect
sorrow (contritio), and they then incur the obligation of going to
confession "as early as possible" (quam primum), which in canon law,
signifies within three days at furthest. In addition to the pious
preparation for the Mass (accessus), there is prescribed a
correspondingly long thanksgiving after Mass (recessus), whose length
is fixed by moral theologians between fifteen minutes and half an hour,
although in this connection the particular official engagements of the
priest must be considered. As regards the length of the Mass itself,
the duration is naturally variable, according as a Solemn High Mass is
sung or a Low Mass celebrated. To perform worthily all the ceremonies
and pronounce clearly all the prayers in Low Mass requires on an
average about half an hour. Moral theologians justly declare that the
scandalous haste necessary to finish Mass in less than a quarter of an
hour is impossible without grievous sin.
With regard to the more
immediate preparation of the body, custom has declared from time
immemorial, and positive canon law since the Council of Constance
(1415), that the faithful, when receiving the Sacrament of Altar, and
priests, when celebrating the Holy Sacrifice, must be fasting (jejunium
naturale) which means that they must have partaken of no food or drink
whatsoever from midnight. Midnight begins with the first stroke of the
hour. In calculating the hour, the so-called "mean time" (or local
time) must be used: according to a recent decision (S.C.C., 12 July,
1893), Central-European time may be also employed, and, in North
America, "zone time". The movement recently begun among the German
clergy, favouring a mitigation of the strict regulation for weak or
overworked priests with the obligation of duplicating, has serious
objections, since a general relaxation of the ancient strictness might
easily result in lessening respect for the Blessed Sacrament and in a
harmful reaction among thoughtless members of the laity. The granting
of mitigations in general or in exceptional cases belongs to the Holy
See alone. To keep away from the altar irreverent adventurers and
unworthy priests, the Council of Trent (Sess. XXIII, de ref.) issued
the decree, made much more stringent in later times, that an unknown
priest without the Celebret may not be allowed to say Mass in any
church.
(b) A second question may
be asked: "Who must say Mass?" In the first place, if this question be
considered identical with the enquiry as to whether a general
obligation of Divine Law binds every priest by reason of his
ordination, the old Scholastics are divided in opinion. St. Thomas,
Durandus, Paludanus, and Anthony of Bologna certainly maintained the
existence of such an obligation; on the other hand, Richard of St.
Victor, Alexander of Hales, Bonaventure, Gabriel Biel, and Cardinal
Cajetan declared for the opposite view. Canon law teaches nothing on
the subject. In the absence of a decision, Francisco Suárez (De
Euchar., disp. lxxx, sect. 1, n. 4) believes that one who conforms to
the negative view, may be declared free from grievous sin. Of the
ancient hermits we know that they did not celebrate the Holy Sacrifice
in the desert, and St. Ignatius Loyola, guided by high motives,
abstained for a whole year from celebrating. Cardinal De Lugo (De
Euchar., disp. xx, sect. 1, n. 13) takes a middle course, by adopting
theoretically the milder opinion, while declaring that, in practice,
omission through lukewarmness and neglect may, on account of the
scandal caused, easily amount to mortal sin. This consideration
explains the teaching of the moral theologians that every priest is
bound under pain of mortal sin to celebrate at least a few times each
year (e.g. at Easter, Pentecost, Christmas, the Epiphany). The
obligation of hearing Mass on all Sundays and holy days of obligation
is of course not abrogated for such priests. The spirit of the Church
demands -- and it is today the practically universal custom -- that a
priest should celebrate daily, unless he prefers to omit his Mass
occasionally through motives of reverence.
Until far into the Middle
Ages it was left to the discretion of the priest, to his personal
devotion and his zeal for souls, whether he should read more than one
Mass on the same day. But since the twelfth century canon law declares
that he must in general content himself with one daily Mass, and the
synods of the thirteenth century allow, even in case of necessity, at
most a duplication (see BINATION). In the course of time this privilege
of celebrating the Holy Sacrifice twice on the same day was more and
more curtailed. According to the existing law, duplication is allowed,
under special conditions, only on Sundays and holy days, and then only
in the interests of the faithful, that they may be enabled to fulfil
their obligation of hearing Mass. For the feast of Christmas alone have
priests universally been allowed to retain the privilege of three
Masses, in Spain and Portugal this privilege was extended to All Souls'
Day (2 Nov.) by special Indult of Benedict XIV (1746). Such customs are
unknown in the East.
This general obligation of
a priest to celebrate Mass must not be confounded with the special
obligation which results from the acceptance of a Mass-stipend
(obligatio ex stipendio) or from the cure of souls (obligatio ex cura
animarum). Concerning the former sufficient has been already said. As
regards the claims of the cure of souls, the obligation of Divine Law
that parish priests and administrators of a parish should from time to
time celebrate Mass for their parishioners, arises from the relations
of pastor and flock. The Council of Trent (Sess. XXIII, de ref.) has
specified this duty of application more closely, by directing that the
parish priest should especially apply the Mass, for which no stipend
may be taken, for his flock on all Sundays and holy days (cf. Benedict
XIV, "Cum semper oblatas", 19 Aug., 1744). The obligation to apply the
Mass pro populo extends also to the holy days abrogated by the Bull of
Urban VIII, "Universa per orbem", of 13 Sept., 1642; for even today
these remain "canonically fixed feast days", although the faithful are
dispensed from the obligation of hearing Mass and may engage in servile
works. The same obligation of applying the Mass falls likewise on
bishops, as pastors of their dioceses, and on those abbots who exercize
over clergy and people a quasi-episcopal jurisdiction. Titular bishops
alone are escepted, although even in their case the application is to
be desired (cf. Leo XIII, "In supremacy", 10 June, 1882). As the
obligation itself is not only personal, but also real, the application
must, in case of an impediment arising either be made soon afterwards,
or be effected through a substitute, who has a right to a mass stipend
as regulated by the tax. Concerning this whole question, see Heuser,
"Die Verpflichtung der Pfarrer, die hl. Messe fur die Gemeinde zu
applicieren" (Düsseldorf 1850).
(c) For the sake of
completeness a third and last question must te touched on in this
section: For whom may Mass be celebrated? In general the answer may be
given: For all those and for those only, who are fitted to participate
in the fruits of the Mass as an impetratory, propitiatory, and
satisfactorysacrifice. From this as immediately derived the rule that
Mass may not be said for the damned in Hell or the blessed in Heaven,
since they are incapable of receiving the fruits of the Mass; for the
same reason children who die unbaptized are excluded from the benefits
of the Mass. Thus, there remain as the possible participants only the
living on earth and the poor souls in purgatory (cf. Trent, Sess. XXII,
can. iii; Sess. XXV, decret. de purgat.). Partly out of her great
veneration of the Sacrifice, however, and partly to avoid scandal, the
Church has surrounded with certain conditions, which priests are bound
in obedience to observe, the application of Mass for certain classes of
the living and dead. The first class are non-tolerated excommunicated
persons, who are to be avoided by the faithful (excommunicati vitandi).
Although, according to various authors, the priest is not forbidden to
offer up Mass for such unhappy persons in private and with a merely
mental intention, still to announce publicly such a Mass or to insert
the name of the excommunicated person in the prayers, even though he
may be in the state of grace owing to perfect sorrow or may have died
truly repentant, would be a "communicatio in divinis", and is strictly
forbidden under penalty of excommunication (cf. C. 28, de sent.
excomm., V, t. 39). It is likewise forbidden to offer the Mass publicly
and solemnly for deceased non-Catholics, even though they were princes
(Innoc. III C. 12, X 1. 3, tit. 28). On the other hand it is allowed,
in consideration of the welfare of the state, to celebrate for a
non-Catholicliving ruler even a public Solemn Mass. For living heretics
and schismatics also for the Jews, Turks, and heathens, Mass may be
privately applied (and even a stipend taken) with the object of
procuring for them the grace of conversion to the true Faith. For a
deceased heretic the private and hypothetical application of the Mass
is allowed only when the priest has good grounds for believing that the
deceased held his error in good faith (bona fide. Cf. S.C. Officii, 7
April, 1875). To celebrate Mass privately for deceased catechumens is
permissible, since we may assume that they are already justified by
their desire of Baptism and are in purgatory. In like manner Mass may
be celebrated privately for the souls of deceased Jews and heathens,
who have led an upright life, since the sacrifice is intended to
benefit all who are in purgatory. For further details see Göpfert,
"Moraltheologie", III (5th ed., Paderborn, 1906).
Written by J. Pohle. Transcribed by Joseph P. Thomas. In Memory of Fr. Joseph Paredom M.C.B.S.
The Catholic Encyclopedia,
Volume X. Published 1911. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Nihil
Obstat, October 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. +John
Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York