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April 22, 2004 |
By Fr. Hathaway FSSP Mater Dei Latin Mass Community |
Passion Sunday
On the Fittingness of Sacrifice in Worship
“If the blood of goats and bulls and the
sprinkled ashes of a heifer sanctify the unclean unto the cleansing of
the flesh, how much more will the blood of Christ,... cleanse your
conscience from dead works to serve the living God?”
There is infinite difference between the
Old and New covenants but common to both is the idea of
sacrifice. This should be no surprise. Sacrifice is an
essential part of our present reality. It is a basis in objective
nature; it is part of the religious sense within man; it is commanded
by God in His covenants with man.
We will speak on the fittingness of sacrifice in worship.
First, what is sacrifice?
Simply taken, sacrifice is the offering made of one thing which is
destroyed for the sake of another; taken in a religious sense,
sacrifice is the offering made of a material thing which is destroyed
by a duly appointed minister to affirm the supremacy of God over
creation and man’s subjection to Him.
Sacrifice has two essential elements: an offering (oblation); and a
destruction (immolation).
How is sacrifice expressed?
In nature, there is the general idea of sacrifice, i.e. the mineral
gives itself to the plant, the plant to the rabbit, the rabbit to the
fox; in this exchange, one thing is offered then destroyed in order to
preserve the life of another.
In rational man, there is a higher order of sacrifice, the religious
sacrifice. Indeed, it accords with the religious nature of man to
pay homage to his God by sacrifice. So pagans throughout time and
place, offer sacrifice although sometimes it is wrongly expressed i.e.,
Canaanites burning their children to Moloch. More in accord with
man’s sensibilities, Adam’s sons, Cain and Abel, offered first fruits
of the land to the Lord(Gen.4:3,4); Noah, who survived the Flood, and
Abraham, whom God chose to be the father of many nations, both built
altars to the Lord (Gen.8:20;13:18); Melchesidek, king and high priest
of Salem (later called Jerusalem), offered an unbloody sacrifice of
bread and wine (Gen.14:18).
Besides sacrifice in nature and within the religious sense of man,
sacrifice is also given man by divine command. Among the many
sacrifices commanded by God to the Israelites one especially stands
out: the Paschal Sacrifice. Moses, divinely selected to free the
Israelites from slavery, directs the first Passover Sacrifice wherein
every Hebrew household was required to slay a lamb, sprinkle its blood
upon the doorpost, and eat the lamb (burning any remains) so that the
Angel of Death would ‘pass-over’ that household, sparing the
firstborn.
God commanded the Passover Feast to be repeated annually and to be kept
with an everlasting observance (Ex.12:14). When the children
asked, ‘what is the meaning of this service?’ the fathers were to
respond, ‘It is the victim of the passage of the Lord, when He passed
over the houses of the children of Israel in Egypt, striking the
Egyptians and saving our houses.’ (Ex.12:26-27)
To help Moses free Israel from bondage to
Pharaoh, the Lord
appoints Aaron, the Levite, (Ex.4:14) and thence the Levitical
priesthood arises. (Ex 28) After Israel’s liberation, Aaron and his
sons are chosen to be high priests; Moses consecrates their hands for
the office of priesthood; these men receive offerings of various
animals which they kill, first for their own sins and then for the sins
of the people. These bloody sacrifices were offered in praise to
God, forgive sin, commemorate covenants, celebrate harvests, express
thanksgiving... and practiced until the death of our Savior.
Sacrifice as expressed in the New Law.
The sacrifice of Jesus Christ 2000 years ago, ends only the bloody
aspect of sacrifice; now, the same Victim continues to be destroyed
mystically, by the separate consecration of the bread and wine; this
same Victim continues to be offered under the appearance of bread and
wine.
Again, Jesus Christ offered Himself once in a bloody manner; now He
offers Himself in an unbloody manner both on earth and in heaven.
In heaven, our Savior presents His sacred humanity continually to God
the Father, petitioning His mercy; on earth, He offers Himself under
the appearance of bread and wine on our altars, beckoning our
friendship,... so that He might feed us with His divine life... “unless
you eat My Flesh you have no life in you.” (Jn 6:54)
Thus, the Catholic Mass is a sacrifice which commemorates an event in
history as well as a means of perpetuating that Sacrifice for our
benefit; this same Sacrifice accords with nature (one thing dies to
give life to another); It accords with man’s religious desire to
sacrifice to His God; It heeds the divine command: “Do this for a
commemoration of Me.” (Lk 22:19)
Now some Christians will disagree with this idea. Indeed, the
average Protestant dismisses the necessity of penance in the Christian
warfare and the necessity of perpetuating the sacrifice of Christ with
the same dismissive “Once for all” mantra.
But we could ask him, “is it not fitting that if sacrifice is found in
nature wherein one life dies to preserve another; if pagan cultures
exhibit an natural impulse for sacrifice in religious ceremony; if in
both Old and New Testament worship sacrifices are divinely commanded...
if all this is true, it is not fitting that some manner of sacrificial
worship continue beyond Christ’s death on
Calvary?
In today’s Gospel Christ asks the Jews, “Which of you will convict me
of sin?” The Jews cannot accuse Him of any sin, so they call Him
names, ‘Thou are a Samaritan and has a devil.’ Our Lord is neither; He
alone is the Truth, the Spotless one; He alone is able to satisfy for
the sin of Adam... as St. Paul bears witness, ‘If the blood of goats
and bulls and the sprinkled ashes of a heifer could sanctify the flesh
of the unclean, how much more will blood of Christ cleanse the
soul.’
Catholics the world over now receive this saving Blood every time they
receive the Body of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament. Until the
end of the world, the Pure oblation from the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass
will be offered for the redemption of men as the prophet Malachi
promised, “From the rising of the sun even unto its setting, My
name is great among the gentiles and in every place there is sacrifice
to My name, a clean oblation. (Mal.1:11)