Eucharist
Sacramentum Caritatis [note: this document is almost
entirely devoted to the Eucharist, hence most of the document is reproduced
below]
INTRODUCTION
1. The sacrament of charity (1), the Holy Eucharist is the
gift that Jesus Christ makes of Himself, thus revealing to us God's infinite
love for every man and woman. This wondrous sacrament makes manifest that
"greater" love which led Him to "lay down His life for His
friends" (Jn 15:13). Jesus did indeed love them "to the end" (Jn
13:1). In those words the Evangelist introduces Christ's act of immense
humility: before dying for us on the Cross, He tied a towel around Himself and
washed the feet of His disciples. In the same way, Jesus continues, in the
sacrament of the Eucharist, to love us "to the end," even to offering
us His body and His blood. What amazement must the Apostles have felt in
witnessing what the Lord did and said during that Supper! What wonder must the
eucharistic mystery also awaken in our own hearts!
The food of truth
2. In the sacrament of the altar, the Lord meets us, men and
women created in God's image and likeness (cf. Gen 1:27), and becomes our
companion along the way. In this sacrament, the Lord truly becomes food for us,
to satisfy our hunger for truth and freedom. Since only the truth can make us
free (cf. Jn 8:32), Christ becomes for us the food of truth. With deep human
insight, Saint Augustine clearly showed how we are moved spontaneously, and not
by constraint, whenever we encounter something attractive and desirable. Asking
himself what it is that can move us most deeply, the saintly Bishop went on to
say: "What does our soul desire more passionately than truth?" (2)
Each of us has an innate and irrepressible desire for ultimate and definitive
truth. The Lord Jesus, "the way, and the truth, and the life" (Jn
14:6), speaks to our thirsting, pilgrim hearts, our hearts yearning for the
source of life, our hearts longing for truth. Jesus Christ is the Truth in
person, drawing the world to Himself. "Jesus is the lodestar of human
freedom: without Him, freedom loses its focus, for without the knowledge of
truth, freedom becomes debased, alienated and reduced to empty caprice. With
him, freedom finds itself." (3) In the sacrament of the Eucharist, Jesus
shows us in particular the truth about the love which is the very essence of
God. It is this evangelical truth which challenges each of us and our whole
being. For this reason, the Church, which finds in the Eucharist the very
center of her life, is constantly concerned to proclaim to all, opportune
importune (cf. 2 Tim 4:2), that God is love.(4) Precisely because Christ has
become for us the food of truth, the Church turns to every man and woman,
inviting them freely to accept God's gift.
The development of the eucharistic rite
3. If we consider the bimillenary history of God's Church,
guided by the wisdom of the Holy Spirit, we can gratefully admire the orderly
development of the ritual forms in which we commemorate the event of our
salvation. From the varied forms of the early centuries, still resplendent in
the rites of the Ancient Churches of the East, up to the spread of the Roman
rite; from the clear indications of the Council of Trent and the Missal of
Saint Pius V to the liturgical renewal called for by the Second Vatican
Council: in every age of the Church's history the eucharistic celebration, as
the source and summit of her life and mission, shines forth in the liturgical
rite in all its richness and variety. The
Eleventh Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, held from
October 2-23, 2005 in the Vatican, gratefully acknowledged the guidance of the
Holy Spirit in this rich history. In a particular way, the Synod Fathers
acknowledged and reaffirmed the beneficial influence on the Church's life of
the liturgical renewal which began with the
Second Vatican Ecumenical Council (5). The Synod of Bishops was able to
evaluate the reception of the renewal in the years following the Council. There
were many expressions of appreciation. The difficulties and even the occasional
abuses which were noted, it was affirmed, cannot overshadow the benefits and
the validity of the liturgical renewal, whose riches are yet to be fully
explored. Concretely, the changes which the Council called for need to be
understood within the overall unity of the historical development of the rite
itself, without the introduction of artificial discontinuities.(6)
The Synod of Bishops and the Year of the Eucharist
4. We should also emphasize the relationship between the
recent Synod of Bishops on the Eucharist and the events which have taken place
in the Church's life in recent years. First of all, we should recall the Great
Jubilee of the Year 2000, with which my beloved Predecessor, the Servant of God
John Paul II, led the Church into the third Christian millennium. The Jubilee
Year clearly had a significant eucharistic dimension. Nor can we forget that
the Synod of Bishops was preceded, and in some sense prepared for, by the Year of the Eucharist which John Paul II
had, with great foresight, wanted the whole Church to celebrate. That year,
which began with the International Eucharistic Congress in Guadalajara in
October 2004, ended on October 23, 2005, at the conclusion of the XI Synodal
Assembly, with the canonization of five saints particularly distinguished for
their eucharistic piety: Bishop Józef Bilczewski, Fathers Gaetano Catanoso,
Zygmunt Gorazdowski and Alberto Hurtado Cruchaga, and the Capuchin Fra Felice
da Nicosia. Thanks to the teachings proposed by John Paul II in the Apostolic Letter
Mane Nobiscum Domine (7) and to the helpful suggestions of the Congregation for
Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments,(8) many initiatives were
undertaken by Dioceses and various ecclesial groups in order to reawaken and
increase eucharistic faith, to improve the quality of eucharistic celebration,
to promote eucharistic adoration and to encourage a practical solidarity which,
starting from the Eucharist, would reach out to those in need. Finally, mention
should be made of the significance of my venerable Predecessor's last
Encyclical, Ecclesia de Eucharistia
(9), in which he left us a sure magisterial statement of the Church's teaching
on the Eucharist and a final testimony of the central place that this divine
sacrament had in his own life.
5. This Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation seeks to take up
the richness and variety of the reflections and proposals which emerged from
the recent Ordinary General Assembly of
the Synod of Bishops – from the Lineamenta to the Propositiones, along the way
of the Instrumentum Laboris, the Relationes ante and post disceptationem, the
interventions of the Synod Fathers, the auditores and the fraternal delegates –
and to offer some basic directions aimed at a renewed commitment to eucharistic
enthusiasm and fervor in the Church. Conscious of the immense patrimony of
doctrine and discipline accumulated over the centuries with regard to this
sacrament,(10) I wish here to endorse the wishes expressed by the Synod Fathers
(11) by encouraging the Christian people to deepen their understanding of the
relationship between the eucharistic mystery, the liturgical action, and the
new spiritual worship which derives from the Eucharist as the sacrament of
charity. Consequently, I wish to set the present Exhortation alongside my first
Encyclical Letter, Deus Caritas Est, in which I frequently mentioned the
sacrament of the Eucharist and stressed its relationship to Christian love,
both of God and of neighbor : "God incarnate draws us all to Himself. We
can thus understand how agape also became a term for the Eucharist: there God's
own agape comes to us bodily, in order to continue his work in us and through
us" (12).
6. "The mystery of faith!" With these words,
spoken immediately after the words of consecration, the priest proclaims the
mystery being celebrated and expresses his wonder before the substantial change
of bread and wine into the body and blood of the Lord Jesus, a reality which
surpasses all human understanding. The Eucharist is a "mystery of faith"
par excellence: "the sum and summary of our faith." (13) The Church's
faith is essentially a eucharistic faith, and it is especially nourished at the
table of the Eucharist. Faith and the sacraments are two complementary aspects
of ecclesial life. Awakened by the preaching of God's word, faith is nourished
and grows in the grace-filled encounter with the Risen Lord which takes place
in the sacraments: "faith is expressed in the rite, while the rite
reinforces and strengthens faith." (14) For this reason, the Sacrament of
the Altar is always at the heart of the Church's life: "thanks to the
Eucharist, the Church is reborn ever anew!" (15) The more lively the
eucharistic faith of the People of God, the deeper is its sharing in ecclesial
life in steadfast commitment to the mission entrusted by Christ to His
disciples. The Church's very history bears witness to this. Every great reform
has in some way been linked to the rediscovery of belief in the Lord's
eucharistic presence among His people.
The Blessed Trinity and the Eucharist
The bread come down from heaven
7. The first element of eucharistic faith is the mystery of
God Himself, trinitarian love. In Jesus' dialogue with Nicodemus, we find an
illuminating expression in this regard: "God so loved the world that He
gave His only Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have
eternal life. For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world,
but that the world might be saved through Him" (Jn 3:16-17). These words
show the deepest source of God's gift. In the Eucharist Jesus does not give us
a "thing," but Himself; He offers His own body and pours out His own
blood. He thus gives us the totality of His life and reveals the ultimate
origin of this love. He is the eternal Son, given to us by the Father. In the
Gospel we hear how Jesus, after feeding the crowds by multiplying the loaves
and fishes, says to those who had followed Him to the synagogue of Capernaum:
"My Father gives you the true bread from heaven; for the bread of God is
He who comes down from heaven, and gives life to the world" (Jn 6:32-33),
and even identifies Himself, His own flesh and blood, with that bread: "I
am the living bread which came down from heaven; if anyone eats of this bread,
he will live forever; and the bread which I shall give for the life of the
world is my flesh" (Jn 6:51). Jesus thus shows that He is the bread of
life which the eternal Father gives to mankind.
A free gift of the Blessed Trinity
8. The Eucharist reveals the loving plan that guides all of
salvation history (cf. Eph 1:10; 3:8- 11). There the Deus Trinitas, who is
essentially love (cf. 1 Jn 4:7-8), becomes fully a part of our human condition.
In the bread and wine under whose appearances Christ gives Himself to us in the
paschal meal (cf. Lk 22:14-20; 1 Cor 11:23-26), God's whole life encounters us
and is sacramentally shared with us. God is a perfect communion of love between
Father, Son and Holy Spirit. At creation itself, man was called to have some
share in God's breath of life (cf. Gen 2:7). But it is in Christ, dead and
risen, and in the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, given without measure (cf. Jn
3:34), that we have become sharers of God's inmost life. (16) Jesus Christ, who
"through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without blemish to God"
(Heb 9:14), makes us, in the gift of the Eucharist, sharers in God's own life.
This is an absolutely free gift, the superabundant fulfilment of God's
promises. The Church receives, celebrates and adores this gift in faithful
obedience. The "mystery of faith" is thus a mystery of trinitarian
love, a mystery in which we are called by grace to participate. We too should
therefore exclaim with Saint Augustine: "If you see love, you see the
Trinity." (17)
The Eucharist: Jesus the true Sacrificial lamb
The new and eternal covenant in the blood of the Lamb
9. The mission for which Jesus came among us was
accomplished in the Paschal Mystery. On the Cross from which He draws all
people to Himself (cf. Jn 12:32), just before "giving up the Spirit,"
He utters the words: "it is finished" (Jn 19:30). In the mystery of
Christ's obedience unto death, even death on a Cross (cf. Phil 2:8), the new
and eternal covenant was brought about. In His crucified flesh, God's freedom
and our human freedom met definitively in an inviolable, eternally valid pact.
Human sin was also redeemed once for all by God's Son (cf. Heb 7:27; 1 Jn 2:2;
4:10). As I have said elsewhere, "Christ's death on the Cross is the
culmination of that turning of God against Himself in which He gives Himself in
order to raise man up and save Him. This is love in its most radical
form." (18) In the Paschal Mystery, our deliverance from evil and death
has taken place. In instituting the Eucharist, Jesus had spoken of the
"new and eternal covenant" in the shedding of His blood (cf. Mt
26:28; Mk 14:24; Lk 22:20). This, the ultimate purpose of His mission, was
clear from the very beginning of His public life. Indeed, when, on the banks of
the Jordan, John the Baptist saw Jesus coming towards him, he cried out: "Behold,
the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world" (Jn 1:29). It is
significant that these same words are repeated at every celebration of Holy
Mass, when the priest invites us to approach the altar: "This is the Lamb
of God who takes away the sins of the world. Happy are those who are called to
His supper." Jesus is the true paschal lamb who freely gave Himself in
sacrifice for us, and thus brought about the new and eternal covenant. The
Eucharist contains this radical newness, which is offered to us again at every
celebration. (19)
The institution of the Eucharist
10. This leads us to reflect on the institution of the
Eucharist at the Last Supper. It took place within a ritual meal commemorating
the foundational event of the people of Israel: their deliverance from slavery
in Egypt. This ritual meal, which called for the sacrifice of lambs (cf. Ex
12:1-28, 43-51), was a remembrance of the past, but at the same time a
prophetic remembrance, the proclamation of a deliverance yet to come. The
people had come to realize that their earlier liberation was not definitive,
for their history continued to be marked by slavery and sin. The remembrance of
their ancient liberation thus expanded to the invocation and expectation of a
yet more profound, radical, universal and definitive salvation. This is the
context in which Jesus introduces the newness of His gift. In the prayer of
praise, the Berakah, he does not simply thank the Father for the great events
of past history, but also for His own "exaltation." In instituting
the sacrament of the Eucharist, Jesus anticipates and makes present the
sacrifice of the Cross and the victory of the resurrection. At the same time,
He reveals that He Himself is the true
sacrificial lamb, destined in the Father's plan from the foundation of
the world, as we read in The First Letter of Peter (cf. 1:18-20). By placing
His gift in this context, Jesus shows the salvific meaning of His death and
resurrection, a mystery which renews history and the whole cosmos. The
institution of the Eucharist demonstrates how Jesus' death, for all its
violence and absurdity, became in Him a supreme act of love and mankind's
definitive deliverance from evil.
Figura transit in veritatem
11. Jesus thus brings His own radical novum to the ancient
Hebrew sacrificial meal. For us Christians, that meal no longer need be
repeated. As the Church Fathers rightly say, figura transit in veritatem: the
foreshadowing has given way to the truth itself. The ancient rite has been
brought to fulfilment and definitively surpassed by the loving gift of the
incarnate Son of God. The food of truth, Christ sacrificed for our sake, dat
figuris terminum. (20) By His command to "do this in remembrance of
me" (Lk 22:19; 1 Cor 11:25), He asks us to respond to His gift and to make
it sacramentally present. In these words the Lord expresses, as it were, His
expectation that the Church, born of His sacrifice, will receive this gift,
developing under the guidance of the Holy Spirit the liturgical form of the
sacrament. The remembrance of His perfect gift consists not in the mere
repetition of the Last Supper, but in the Eucharist itself, that is, in the
radical newness of Christian worship. In this way, Jesus left us the task of
entering into His "hour." "The Eucharist draws us into Jesus'
act of self-oblation. More than just statically receiving the incarnate Logos,
we enter into the very dynamic of His self-giving." (21) Jesus "draws
us into Himself." (22) The substantial conversion of bread and wine into
His body and blood introduces within creation the principle of a radical
change, a sort of "nuclear fission," to use an image familiar to us
today, which penetrates to the heart of all being, a change meant to set off a
process which transforms reality, a process leading ultimately to the
transfiguration of the entire world, to the point where God will be all in all
(cf. 1 Cor 15:28).
The Holy Spirit and the Eucharist
Jesus and the Holy Spirit
12. With His word and with the elements of bread and wine,
the Lord Himself has given us the essentials of this new worship. The Church,
His Bride, is called to celebrate the eucharistic banquet daily in His memory.
She thus makes the redeeming sacrifice of her Bridegroom a part of human
history and makes it sacramentally present in every culture. This great mystery
is celebrated in the liturgical forms which the Church, guided by the Holy
Spirit, develops in time and space. (23) We need a renewed awareness of the
decisive role played by the Holy Spirit in the evolution of the liturgical form
and the deepening understanding of the sacred mysteries. The Paraclete,
Christ's first gift to those who believe, (24) already at work in Creation (cf.
Gen 1:2), is fully present throughout the life of the incarnate Word: Jesus
Christ is conceived by the Virgin Mary by the power of the Holy Spirit (cf. Mt
1:18; Lk 1:35); at the beginning of His public mission, on the banks of the
Jordan, He sees the Spirit descend upon Him in the form of a dove (cf. Mt 3:16
and parallels); He acts, speaks and rejoices in the Spirit (cf. Lk 10:21), and
He can offer Himself in the Spirit (cf. Heb 9:14). In the so-called
"farewell discourse" reported by John, Jesus clearly relates the gift
of His life in the paschal mystery to the gift of the Spirit to His own (cf. Jn
16:7). Once risen, bearing in His flesh the signs of the passion, He can pour
out the Spirit upon them (cf. Jn 20:22), making them sharers in His own mission
(cf. Jn 20:21). The Spirit would then teach the disciples all things and bring
to their remembrance all that Christ had said (cf. Jn 14:26), since it falls to
Him, as the Spirit of truth (cf. Jn 15:26), to guide the disciples into all
truth (cf. Jn 16:13). In the account in Acts, the Spirit descends on the
Apostles gathered in prayer with Mary on the day of Pentecost (cf. 2:1-4) and
stirs them to undertake the mission of proclaiming the Good News to all
peoples. Thus it is through the working of the Spirit that Christ Himself
continues to be present and active in His Church, starting with her vital
center which is the Eucharist.
The Eucharist, causal principle of the Church
14. Through the sacrament of the Eucharist Jesus draws the
faithful into His "hour;" He shows us the bond that He willed to
establish between Himself and us, between His own person and the Church.
Indeed, in the sacrifice of the Cross, Christ gave birth to the Church as His
Bride and His body. The Fathers of the Church often meditated on the
relationship between Eve's coming forth from the side of Adam as he slept (cf.
Gen 2:21-23) and the coming forth of the new Eve, the Church, from the open
side of Christ sleeping in death: from Christ's pierced side, John recounts,
there came forth blood and water (cf. Jn 19:34), the symbol of the sacraments
(30). A contemplative gaze "upon Him whom they have pierced" (Jn
19:37) leads us to reflect on the causal connection between Christ's sacrifice,
the Eucharist and the Church. The Church "draws her life from the
Eucharist" (31). Since the Eucharist makes present Christ's redeeming
sacrifice, we must start by acknowledging that "there is a causal
influence of the Eucharist at the Church's very origins" (32). The
Eucharist is Christ who gives Himself to us and continually builds us up as His
body. Hence, in the striking interplay between the Eucharist which builds up
the Church, and the Church herself which "makes" the Eucharist (33),
the primary causality is expressed in the first formula: the Church is able to
celebrate and adore the mystery of Christ present in the Eucharist precisely
because Christ first gave Himself to her in the sacrifice of the Cross. The
Church's ability to "make" the Eucharist is completely rooted in
Christ's self-gift to her. Here we can see more clearly the meaning of Saint
John's words: "He first loved us" (1 Jn 4:19). We too, at every
celebration of the Eucharist, confess the primacy of Christ's gift. The causal
influence of the Eucharist at the Church's origins definitively discloses both
the chronological and ontological priority of the fact that it was Christ who
loved us "first." For all eternity He remains the one who loves us
first.
The Eucharist and ecclesial communion
15. The Eucharist is thus constitutive of the Church's being
and activity. This is why Christian antiquity used the same words, Corpus
Christi, to designate Christ's body born of the Virgin Mary, His eucharistic
body and His ecclesial body.(34) This clear datum of the tradition helps us to
appreciate the inseparability of Christ and the Church. The Lord Jesus, by
offering Himself in sacrifice for us, in His gift effectively pointed to the
mystery of the Church. It is significant that the Second Eucharistic Prayer,
invoking the Paraclete, formulates its prayer for the unity of the Church as
follows: "may all of us who share in the body and blood of Christ be brought
together in unity by the Holy Spirit." These words help us to see clearly
how the res of the sacrament of the Eucharist is the unity of the faithful
within ecclesial communion. The Eucharist is thus found at the root of the
Church as a mystery of communion (35).
The relationship between Eucharist and communio had already
been pointed out by the Servant of God John Paul II in his Encyclical Ecclesia
de Eucharistia. He spoke of the memorial of Christ as "the supreme
sacramental manifestation of communion in the Church" (36). The unity of
ecclesial communion is concretely manifested in the Christian communities and
is renewed at the celebration of the Eucharist, which unites them and
differentiates them in the particular Churches, "in quibus et ex quibus
una et unica Ecclesia catholica exsistit" (37). The fact that the one
Eucharist is celebrated in each Diocese around its own Bishop helps us to see
how those particular Churches subsist in and ex Ecclesia. Indeed, "the
oneness and indivisibility of the eucharistic body of the Lord implies the
oneness of His mystical body, which is the one and indivisible Church. From the
eucharistic center arises the necessary openness of every celebrating
community, of every particular Church. By allowing itself to be drawn into the
open arms of the Lord, it achieves insertion into his one and undivided
body." (38) Consequently, in the celebration of the Eucharist, the
individual members of the faithful find themselves in their Church, that is, in
the Church of Christ. From this eucharistic perspective, adequately understood,
ecclesial communion is seen to be catholic by its very nature (39). An emphasis
on this eucharistic basis of ecclesial communion can also contribute greatly to
the ecumenical dialogue with the Churches and Ecclesial Communities which are
not in full communion with the See of Peter. The Eucharist objectively creates
a powerful bond of unity between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Churches,
which have preserved the authentic and integral nature of the eucharistic
mystery. At the same time, emphasis on the ecclesial character of the Eucharist
can become an important element of the dialogue with the Communities of the
Reformed tradition (40).
The Eucharist and the Sacraments
The sacramentality of the Church
16. The Second Vatican Council recalled that "all the
sacraments, and indeed all ecclesiastical ministries and works of the
apostolate, are bound up with the Eucharist and are directed towards it. For in
the most blessed Eucharist is contained the entire spiritual wealth of the
Church, namely Christ Himself our Pasch and our living bread, who gives life to
humanity through His flesh -- that flesh which is given life and gives life by
the Holy Spirit. Thus men and women are invited and led to offer themselves,
their works and all creation in union with Christ." (41) This close
relationship of the Eucharist with the other sacraments and the Christian life
can be most fully understood when we contemplate the mystery of the Church
herself as a sacrament. (42) The Council in this regard stated that "the
Church, in Christ, is a sacrament -- a sign and instrument -- of communion with
God and of the unity of the entire human race." (43) To quote Saint
Cyprian, as "a people made one by the unity of the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit," (44) she is the sacrament of trinitarian communion.
The fact that the Church is the "universal sacrament of
salvation" (45) shows how the sacramental economy ultimately determines
the way that Christ, the one Savior, through the Spirit, reaches our lives in
all their particularity. The Church receives and at the same time expresses
what she herself is in the seven sacraments, thanks to which God's grace
concretely influences the lives of the faithful, so that their whole existence,
redeemed by Christ, can become an act of worship pleasing to God. From this
perspective, I would like here to draw attention to some elements brought up by
the Synod Fathers which may help us to grasp the relationship of each of the
sacraments to the eucharistic mystery.
I. The Eucharist and Christian initiation
The Eucharist, the fullness of Christian initiation
17. If the Eucharist is truly the source and summit of the
Church's life and mission, it follows that the process of Christian initiation
must constantly be directed to the reception of this sacrament. As the Synod
Fathers said, we need to ask ourselves whether in our Christian communities the
close link between Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist is sufficiently
recognized. (46) It must never be forgotten that our reception of Baptism and
Confirmation is ordered to the Eucharist. Accordingly, our pastoral practice
should reflect a more unitary understanding of the process of Christian
initiation. The sacrament of Baptism, by which we were conformed to Christ,(47)
incorporated in the Church and made children of God, is the portal to all the
sacraments. It makes us part of the one Body of Christ (cf. 1 Cor 12:13), a
priestly people. Still, it is our participation in the Eucharistic sacrifice which
perfects within us the gifts given to us at Baptism. The gifts of the Spirit
are given for the building up of Christ's Body (1 Cor 12) and for ever greater
witness to the Gospel in the world. (48) The Holy Eucharist, then, brings
Christian initiation to completion and represents the center and goal of all
sacramental life. (49)
The order of the sacraments of initiation
18. In this regard, attention needs to be paid to the order
of the sacraments of initiation. Different traditions exist within the Church.
There is a clear variation between, on the one hand, the ecclesial customs of
the East (50) and the practice of the West regarding the initiation of adults,
(51) and, on the other hand, the procedure adopted for children. (52) Yet these
variations are not properly of the dogmatic order, but are pastoral in
character. Concretely, it needs to be seen which practice better enables the
faithful to put the sacrament of the Eucharist at the center, as the goal of
the whole process of initiation. In close collaboration with the competent
offices of the Roman Curia, Bishops' Conferences should examine the
effectiveness of current approaches to Christian initiation, so that the
faithful can be helped both to mature through the formation received in our
communities and to give their lives an authentically eucharistic direction, so
that they can offer a reason for the hope within them in a way suited to our
times (cf. 1 Pet 3:15).
II. The Eucharist and the Sacrament of Reconciliation
Their intrinsic relationship
20. The Synod Fathers rightly stated that a love for the
Eucharist leads to a growing appreciation of the sacrament of Reconciliation.
(54) Given the connection between these sacraments, an authentic catechesis on
the meaning of the Eucharist must include the call to pursue the path of
penance (cf. 1 Cor 11:27-29). We know that the faithful are surrounded by a
culture that tends to eliminate the sense of sin (55) and to promote a
superficial approach that overlooks the need to be in a state of grace in order
to approach sacramental communion worthily. (56) The loss of a consciousness of
sin always entails a certain superficiality in the understanding of God's love.
Bringing out the elements within the rite of Mass that express consciousness of
personal sin and, at the same time, of God's mercy, can prove most helpful to
the faithful.(57) Furthermore, the relationship between the Eucharist and the
sacrament of Reconciliation reminds us that sin is never a purely individual
affair; it always damages the ecclesial communion that we have entered through
Baptism. For this reason, Reconciliation, as the Fathers of the Church would
say, is laboriosus quidam baptismus; (58) they thus emphasized that the outcome
of the process of conversion is also the restoration of full ecclesial
communion, expressed in a return to the Eucharist. (59)
Some pastoral concerns
21. The Synod recalled that Bishops have the pastoral duty
of promoting within their Dioceses a reinvigorated catechesis on the conversion
born of the Eucharist, and of encouraging frequent confession among the
faithful. All priests should dedicate themselves with generosity, commitment
and competency to administering the sacrament of Reconciliation. (60) In this
regard, it is important that the confessionals in our churches should be
clearly visible expressions of the importance of this sacrament. I ask pastors
to be vigilant with regard to the celebration of the sacrament of
Reconciliation, and to limit the practice of general absolution exclusively to
the cases permitted, (61) since individual absolution is the only form intended
for ordinary use. (62) Given the need to rediscover sacramental forgiveness,
there ought to be a Penitentiary in every Diocese. (63) Finally, a balanced and
sound practice of gaining indulgences, whether for oneself or for the dead, can
be helpful for a renewed appreciation of the relationship between the Eucharist
and Reconciliation. By this means the faithful obtain "remission before
God of the temporal punishment due to sins whose guilt has already been
forgiven." (64) The use of indulgences helps us to understand that by our
efforts alone we would be incapable of making reparation for the wrong we have
done, and that the sins of each individual harm the whole community. Furthermore,
the practice of indulgences, which involves not only the doctrine of Christ's
infinite merits, but also that of the communion of the saints, reminds us
"how closely we are united to each other in Christ ... and how the
supernatural life of each can help others." (65) Since the conditions for
gaining an indulgence include going to confession and receiving sacramental
communion, this practice can effectively sustain the faithful on their journey
of conversion and in rediscovering the centrality of the Eucharist in the
Christian life.
III. The Eucharist and the Anointing of the sick
22. Jesus did not only send His disciples forth to heal the
sick (cf. Mt 10:8; Lk 9:2, 10:9); He also instituted a specific sacrament for
them: the Anointing of the Sick.(66) The Letter of James attests to the
presence of this sacramental sign in the early Christian community (cf.
5:14-16). If the Eucharist shows how Christ's sufferings and death have been
transformed into love, the Anointing of the Sick, for its part, unites the sick
with Christ's self-offering for the salvation of all, so that they too, within
the mystery of the communion of saints, can participate in the redemption of
the world. The relationship between these two sacraments becomes clear in
situations of serious illness: "In addition to the Anointing of the Sick,
the Church offers those who are about to leave this life the Eucharist as
viaticum." (67) On their journey to the Father, communion in the Body and
Blood of Christ appears as the seed of eternal life and the power of
resurrection: "Anyone who eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal
life and I will raise him up on the last day" (Jn 6:54). Since viaticum
gives the sick a glimpse of the fullness of the Paschal Mystery, its
administration should be readily provided for. (68) Attentive pastoral care
shown to those who are ill brings great spiritual benefit to the entire
community, since whatever we do to one of the least of our brothers and
sisters, we do to Jesus himself (cf. Mt 25:40).
IV. The Eucharist and the Sacrament of Holy Orders
In persona Christi capitis
23. The intrinsic relationship between the Eucharist and the
sacrament of Holy Orders clearly emerges from Jesus' own words in the Upper
Room: "Do this in memory of me" (Lk 22:19). On the night before He
died, Jesus instituted the Eucharist and at the same time established the
priesthood of the New Covenant. He is priest, victim and altar: the mediator
between God the Father and His people (cf. Heb 5:5-10), the victim of atonement
(cf. 1 Jn 2:2, 4:10) who offers Himself on the altar of the Cross. No one can
say "this is my body" and "this is the cup of my blood"
except in the name and in the person of Christ, the one high priest of the new
and eternal Covenant (cf. Heb 8-9).
Earlier meetings of the Synod of Bishops had considered the question of the
ordained priesthood, both with regard to the nature of the ministry (69) and
the formation of candidates.(70) Here, in the light of the discussion that took
place during the last Synod, I consider it important to recall several
important points about the relationship between the sacrament of the Eucharist
and Holy Orders. First of all, we need to stress once again that the connection
between Holy Orders and the Eucharist is seen most clearly at Mass, when the
Bishop or priest presides in the person of Christ the Head.
The Church teaches that priestly ordination is the
indispensable condition for the valid celebration of the Eucharist.(71) Indeed,
"in the ecclesial service of the ordained minister, it is Christ Himself
who is present to His Church as Head of His Body, Shepherd of His flock, High
Priest of the redemptive sacrifice." (72) Certainly the ordained minister
also acts "in the name of the whole Church, when presenting to God the prayer
of the Church, and above all when offering the eucharistic sacrifice."
(73) As a result, priests should be conscious of the fact that in their
ministry they must never put themselves or their personal opinions in first
place, but Jesus Christ. Any attempt to make themselves the center of the
liturgical action contradicts their very identity as priests. The priest is
above all a servant of others, and he must continually work at being a sign
pointing to Christ, a docile instrument in the Lord's hands. This is seen particularly
in his humility in leading the liturgical assembly, in obedience to the rite,
uniting himself to it in mind and heart, and avoiding anything that might give
the impression of an inordinate emphasis on his own personality. I encourage
the clergy always to see their eucharistic ministry as a humble service offered
to Christ and his Church. The priesthood, as Saint Augustine said, is amoris
officium, (74) it is the office of the good shepherd, who offers his life for
his sheep (cf. Jn 10:14-15).
The Eucharist and priestly celibacy
24. The Synod Fathers wished to emphasize that the
ministerial priesthood, through ordination, calls for complete configuration to
Christ. While respecting the different practice and tradition of the Eastern
Churches, there is a need to reaffirm the profound meaning of priestly
celibacy, which is rightly considered a priceless treasure, and is also
confirmed by the Eastern practice of choosing Bishops only from the ranks of
the celibate. These Churches also greatly esteem the decision of many priests
to embrace celibacy. This choice on the part of the priest expresses in a
special way the dedication which conforms him to Christ and his exclusive
offering of himself for the Kingdom of God. (75) The fact that Christ Himself,
the eternal priest, lived His mission even to the sacrifice of the Cross in the
state of virginity constitutes the sure point of reference for understanding
the meaning of the tradition of the Latin Church. It is not sufficient to
understand priestly celibacy in purely functional terms. Celibacy is really a
special way of conforming oneself to Christ's own way of life. This choice has
first and foremost a nuptial meaning; it is a profound identification with the
heart of Christ the Bridegroom who gives His life for His Bride. In continuity
with the great ecclesial tradition, with the
Second Vatican Council (76) and with my predecessors in the papacy, (77)
I reaffirm the beauty and the importance of a priestly life lived in celibacy
as a sign expressing total and exclusive devotion to Christ, to the Church and
to the Kingdom of God, and I therefore confirm that it remains obligatory in
the Latin tradition. Priestly celibacy lived with maturity, joy and dedication
is an immense blessing for the Church and for society itself.
The clergy shortage and the pastoral care of vocations
25. In the light of the connection between the sacrament of
Holy Orders and the Eucharist, the Synod considered the difficult situation
that has arisen in various Dioceses which face a shortage of priests. This
happens not only in some areas of first evangelization, but also in many
countries of long-standing Christian tradition. Certainly a more equitable
distribution of clergy would help to solve the problem. Efforts need to be made
to encourage a greater awareness of this situation at every level. Bishops
should involve Institutes of Consecrated Life and the new ecclesial groups in
their pastoral needs, while respecting their particular charisms, and they
should invite the clergy to become more open to serving the Church wherever
there is need, even if this calls for sacrifice. (78) The Synod also discussed
pastoral initiatives aimed at promoting, especially among the young, an
attitude of interior openness to a priestly calling. The situation cannot be
resolved by purely practical decisions. On no account should Bishops react to
real and understandable concerns about the shortage of priests by failing to
carry out adequate vocational discernment, or by admitting to seminary formation
and ordination candidates who lack the necessary qualities for priestly
ministry (79). An insufficiently formed clergy, admitted to ordination without
the necessary discernment, will not easily be able to offer a witness capable
of evoking in others the desire to respond generously to Christ's call. The
pastoral care of vocations needs to involve the entire Christian community in
every area of its life. (80) Obviously, this pastoral work on all levels also
includes exploring the matter with families, which are often indifferent or
even opposed to the idea of a priestly vocation. Families should generously
embrace the gift of life and bring up their children to be open to doing God's
will. In a word, they must have the courage to set before young people the radical
decision to follow Christ, showing them how deeply rewarding it is.
V. The Eucharist and Matrimony
The Eucharist, a nuptial sacrament
27. The Eucharist, as the sacrament of charity, has a
particular relationship with the love of man and woman united in marriage. A
deeper understanding of this relationship is needed at the present time. (83)
Pope John Paul II frequently spoke of the nuptial character of the Eucharist
and its special relationship with the sacrament of Matrimony: "The Eucharist
is the sacrament of our redemption. It is the sacrament of the Bridegroom and
of the Bride." (84) Moreover, "the entire Christian life bears the
mark of the spousal love of Christ and the Church. Already Baptism, the entry
into the People of God, is a nuptial mystery; it is so to speak the nuptial
bath which precedes the wedding feast, the Eucharist." (85) The Eucharist
inexhaustibly strengthens the indissoluble unity and love of every Christian
marriage. By the power of the sacrament, the marriage bond is intrinsically
linked to the eucharistic unity of Christ the Bridegroom and his Bride, the
Church (cf. Eph 5:31-32). The mutual consent that husband and wife exchange in
Christ, which establishes them as a community of life and love, also has a
eucharistic dimension. Indeed, in the theology of Saint Paul, conjugal love is
a sacramental sign of Christ's love for his Church, a love culminating in the
Cross, the expression of his "marriage" with humanity and at the same
time the origin and heart of the Eucharist. For this reason the Church
manifests her particular spiritual closeness to all those who have built their
family on the sacrament of Matrimony. (86) The family -- the domestic Church
(87) -- is a primary sphere of the Church's life, especially because of its
decisive role in the Christian education of children. (88) In this context, the
Synod also called for an acknowledgment of the unique mission of women in the
family and in society, a mission that needs to be defended, protected and
promoted. (89) Marriage and motherhood represent essential realities which must
never be denigrated.
The Eucharist and the unicity of marriage
28. In the light of this intrinsic relationship between
marriage, the family and the Eucharist, we can turn to several pastoral problems.
The indissoluble, exclusive and faithful bond uniting Christ and the Church,
which finds sacramental expression in the Eucharist, corresponds to the basic
anthropological fact that man is meant to be definitively united to one woman
and vice versa (cf. Gen 2:24, Mt 19:5). With this in mind, the Synod of Bishops
addressed the question of pastoral practice regarding people who come to the
Gospel from cultures in which polygamy is practice d. Those living in this
situation who open themselves to Christian faith need to be helped to integrate
their life-plan into the radical newness of Christ. During the catechumenate,
Christ encounters them in their specific circumstances and calls them to
embrace the full truth of love, making whatever sacrifices are necessary in
order to arrive at perfect ecclesial communion. The Church accompanies them
with a pastoral care that is gentle yet firm, (90) above all by showing them
the light shed by the Christian mysteries on nature and on human affections.
The Eucharist and the indissolubility of marriage
29. If the Eucharist expresses the irrevocable nature of
God's love in Christ for His Church, we can then understand why it implies,
with regard to the sacrament of Matrimony, that indissolubility to which all
true love necessarily aspires. (91) There was good reason for the pastoral
attention that the Synod gave to the painful situations experienced by some of
the faithful who, having celebrated the sacrament of Matrimony, then divorced
and remarried. This represents a complex and troubling pastoral problem, a real
scourge for contemporary society, and one which increasingly affects the
Catholic community as well. The Church's pastors, out of love for the truth,
are obliged to discern different situations carefully, in order to be able to
offer appropriate spiritual guidance to the faithful involved.(92) The Synod of
Bishops confirmed the Church's practice, based on Sacred Scripture (cf. Mk
10:2- 12), of not admitting the divorced and remarried to the sacraments, since
their state and their condition of life objectively contradict the loving union
of Christ and the Church signified and made present in the Eucharist. Yet the
divorced and remarried continue to belong to the Church, which accompanies them
with special concern and encourages them to live as fully as possible the
Christian life through regular participation at Mass, albeit without receiving
communion, listening to the word of God, eucharistic adoration, prayer,
participation in the life of the community, honest dialogue with a priest or
spiritual director, dedication to the life of charity, works of penance, and
commitment to the education of their children.
When legitimate doubts exist about the validity of the prior
sacramental marriage, the necessary investigation must be carried out to
establish if these are well-founded. Consequently there is a need to ensure, in
full respect for canon law (93), the presence of local ecclesiastical
tribunals, their pastoral character, and their correct and prompt functioning (94).
Each Diocese should have a sufficient number of persons with the necessary
preparation, so that the ecclesiastical tribunals can operate in an expeditious
manner. I repeat that "it is a grave obligation to bring the Church's
institutional activity in her tribunals ever closer to the faithful" (95).
At the same time, pastoral care must not be understood as if it were somehow in
conflict with the law. Rather, one should begin by assuming that the
fundamental point of encounter between the law and pastoral care is love for
the truth: truth is never something purely abstract, but "a real part of
the human and Christian journey of every member of the faithful" (96).
Finally, where the nullity of the marriage bond is not declared and objective
circumstances make it impossible to cease cohabitation, the Church encourages
these members of the faithful to commit themselves to living their relationship
in fidelity to the demands of God's law, as friends, as brother and sister; in
this way they will be able to return to the table of the Eucharist, taking care
to observe the Church's established and approved practice in this regard. This
path, if it is to be possible and fruitful, must be supported by pastors and by
adequate ecclesial initiatives, nor can it ever involve the blessing of these
relations, lest confusion arise among the faithful concerning the value of
marriage (97).
Given the complex cultural context which the Church today
encounters in many countries, the Synod also recommended devoting maximum
pastoral attention to training couples preparing for marriage and to
ascertaining beforehand their convictions regarding the obligations required
for the validity of the sacrament of Matrimony. Serious discernment in this
matter will help to avoid situations where impulsive decisions or superficial
reasons lead two young people to take on responsibilities that they are then
incapable of honouring. (98) The good that the Church and society as a whole
expect from marriage and from the family founded upon marriage is so great as
to call for full pastoral commitment to this particular area. Marriage and the
family are institutions that must be promoted and defended from every possible
misrepresentation of their true nature, since whatever is injurious to them is
injurious to society itself.
The Eucharist and Eschatology
The Eucharist: a gift to men and women on their journey
30. If it is true that the sacraments are part of the
Church's pilgrimage through history (99) towards the full manifestation of the
victory of the risen Christ, it is also true that, especially in the liturgy of
the Eucharist, they give us a real foretaste of the eschatological fulfilment
for which every human being and all creation are destined (cf. Rom 8:19ff.).
Man is created for that true and eternal happiness which only God's love can
give. But our wounded freedom would go astray were it not already able to
experience something of that future fulfilment. Moreover, to move forward in
the right direction, we all need to be guided towards our final goal. That goal
is Christ himself, the Lord who conquered sin and death, and who makes himself
present to us in a special way in the eucharistic celebration. Even though we
remain "aliens and exiles" in this world (1 Pet 2:11), through faith
we already share in the fullness of risen life. The eucharistic banquet, by
disclosing its powerful eschatological dimension, comes to the aid of our
freedom as we continue our journey.
The eschatological banquet
31. Reflecting on this mystery, we can say that Jesus'
coming responded to an expectation present in the people of Israel, in the
whole of humanity and ultimately in creation itself. By his self-gift, he
objectively inaugurated the eschatological age. Christ came to gather together
the scattered People of God (cf. Jn 11:52) and clearly manifested his intention
to gather together the community of the covenant, in order to bring to
fulfilment the promises made by God to the fathers of old (cf. Jer 23:3; Lk
1:55, 70). In the calling of the Twelve, which is to be understood in relation
to the twelve tribes of Israel, and in the command He gave them at the Last
Supper, before His redemptive passion, to celebrate His memorial, Jesus showed
that He wished to transfer to the entire community which He had founded the
task of being, within history, the sign and instrument of the eschatological
gathering that had its origin in Him. Consequently, every eucharistic
celebration sacramentally accomplishes the eschatological gathering of the
People of God. For us, the eucharistic banquet is a real foretaste of the final
banquet foretold by the prophets (cf. Is
25:6-9) and described in the New Testament as "the marriage-feast
of the Lamb" (Rev 19:7-9), to be celebrated in the joy of the communion of
saints (100).
Prayer for the dead
32. The eucharistic celebration, in which we proclaim that
Christ has died and risen, and will come again, is a pledge of the future glory
in which our bodies too will be glorified. Celebrating the memorial of our
salvation strengthens our hope in the resurrection of the body and in the
possibility of meeting once again, face to face, those who have gone before us
marked with the sign of faith. In this context, I wish, together with the Synod
Fathers, to remind all the faithful of the importance of prayers for the dead,
especially the offering of Mass for them, so that, once purified, they can come
to the beatific vision of God. (101) A rediscovery of the eschatological
dimension inherent in the Eucharist, celebrated and adored, will help sustain us
on our journey and comfort us in the hope of glory (cf. Rom 5:2; Tit 2:13).
The Eucharist and the Virgin Mary
33. From the relationship between the Eucharist and the
individual sacraments, and from the eschatological significance of the sacred
mysteries, the overall shape of the Christian life emerges, a life called at
all times to be an act of spiritual worship, a self-offering pleasing to God.
Although we are all still journeying towards the complete fulfilment of our
hope, this does not mean that we cannot already gratefully acknowledge that
God's gifts to us have found their perfect fulfilment in the Virgin Mary,
Mother of God and our Mother. Mary's Assumption body and soul into heaven is
for us a sign of sure hope, for it shows us, on our pilgrimage through time,
the eschatological goal of which the sacrament of the Eucharist enables us even
now to have a foretaste.
In Mary most holy, we also see perfectly fulfilled the
"sacramental" way that God comes down to meet His creatures and
involves them in His saving work. From the Annunciation to Pentecost, Mary of
Nazareth appears as someone whose freedom is completely open to God's will. Her
immaculate conception is revealed precisely in her unconditional docility to
God's word. Obedient faith in response to God's work shapes her life at every
moment. A virgin attentive to God's word, she lives in complete harmony with
His will; she treasures in her heart the words that come to her from God and,
piecing them together like a mosaic, she learns to understand them more deeply
(cf. Lk 2:19, 51); Mary is the great Believer who places herself confidently in
God's hands, abandoning herself to His will. (102) This mystery deepens as she
becomes completely involved in the redemptive mission of Jesus. In the words of
the Second Vatican Council, "the blessed Virgin advanced in her pilgrimage
of faith, and faithfully persevered in her union with her Son until she stood
at the Cross, in keeping with the divine plan (cf. Jn 19:25), suffering deeply
with her only-begotten Son, associating herself with His sacrifice in her
mother's heart, and lovingly consenting to the immolation of the victim who was
born of her. Finally, she was given by the same Christ Jesus, dying on the
Cross, as a mother to His disciple, with these words: ‘Woman, behold your
Son."' (103) From the Annunciation to the Cross, Mary is the one who
received the Word, made flesh within her and then silenced in death. It is she,
lastly, who took into her arms the lifeless body of the one who truly loved His
own "to the end" (Jn 13:1).
Consequently, every time we approach the Body and Blood of
Christ in the eucharistic liturgy, we also turn to her who, by her complete
fidelity, received Christ's sacrifice for the whole Church. The Synod Fathers
rightly declared that "Mary inaugurates the Church's participation in the
sacrifice of the Redeemer." (104) She is the Immaculata, who receives
God's gift unconditionally and is thus associated with His work of salvation.
Mary of Nazareth, icon of the nascent Church, is the model for each of us,
called to receive the gift that Jesus makes of Himself in the Eucharist.
PART TWO: THE EUCHARIST, A MYSTERY TO BE CELEBRATED
"Truly, truly, I say to you, it was not Moses who gave
you the bread from heaven; my Father gives you the true bread from heaven"
(Jn 6:32)
Lex orandi and lex credendi
34. The Synod of Bishops reflected at length on the
intrinsic relationship between eucharistic faith and eucharistic celebration,
pointing out the connection between the lex orandi and the lex credendi, and
stressing the primacy of the liturgical action. The Eucharist should be
experienced as a mystery of faith, celebrated authentically and with a clear
awareness that "the intellectus fidei has a primordial relationship to the
Church's liturgical action." (105) Theological reflection in this area can
never prescind from the sacramental order instituted by Christ Himself. On the
other hand, the liturgical action can never be considered generically,
prescinding from the mystery of faith. Our faith and the eucharistic liturgy
both have their source in the same event: Christ's gift of himself in the
Paschal Mystery.
The Eucharistic celebration, the work of "Christus
Totus"
Christus totus in capite et in corpore
36. The "subject" of the liturgy's intrinsic
beauty is Christ Himself, risen and glorified in the Holy Spirit, who includes
the Church in His work. (109) Here we can recall an evocative phrase of Saint
Augustine which strikingly describes this dynamic of faith proper to the
Eucharist. The great Bishop of Hippo, speaking specifically of the eucharistic
mystery, stresses the fact that Christ assimilates us to Himself: "The
bread you see on the altar, sanctified by the word of God, is the body of
Christ. The chalice, or rather, what the chalice contains, sanctified by the
word of God, is the blood of Christ. In these signs, Christ the Lord willed to
entrust to us His body and the blood which He shed for the forgiveness of our
sins. If you have received them properly, you yourselves are what you have
received." (110) Consequently, "not only have we become Christians,
we have become Christ himself." (111) We can thus contemplate God's
mysterious work, which brings about a profound unity between ourselves and the
Lord Jesus: "one should not believe that Christ is in the head but not in
the body; rather He is complete in the head and in the body." (112)
The Eucharist and the risen Christ
37. Since the eucharistic liturgy is essentially an actio
Dei which draws us into Christ through the Holy Spirit, its basic structure is
not something within our power to change, nor can it be held hostage by the
latest trends. Here too Saint Paul's irrefutable statement applies: "no
one can lay any foundation other than the one that has been laid, which is Jesus
Christ" (1 Cor 3:11). Again it is the Apostle of the Gentiles who assures
us that, with regard to the Eucharist, He is presenting not his own teaching
but what he himself has received (cf. 1 Cor 11:23). The celebration of the
Eucharist implies and involves the living Tradition. The Church celebrates the
eucharistic sacrifice in obedience to Christ's command, based on her experience
of the Risen Lord and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. For this reason, from
the beginning, the Christian community has gathered for the fractio panis on
the Lord's Day. Sunday, the day Christ rose from the dead, is also the first
day of the week, the day which the Old Testament tradition saw as the beginning
of God's work of creation. The day of creation has now become the day of the
"new creation," the day of our liberation, when we commemorate Christ
who died and rose again (113).
The Bishop, celebrant par excellence
39. While it is true that the whole People of God
participates in the eucharistic liturgy, a correct ars celebrandi necessarily
entails a specific responsibility on the part of those who have received the
sacrament of Holy Orders. Bishops, priests, and deacons, each according to his
proper rank, must consider the celebration of the liturgy as their principal
duty (116). Above all, this is true of the Diocesan Bishop: as "the chief
steward of the mysteries of God in the particular Church entrusted to his care,
he is the moderator, promoter, and guardian of the whole of its liturgical
life" (117). This is essential for the life of the particular Church, not
only because communion with the Bishop is required for the lawfulness of every
celebration within his territory, but also because he himself is the celebrant
par excellence within his Diocese (118). It is his responsibility to ensure
unity and harmony in the celebrations taking place in his territory.
Consequently the Bishop must be "determined that the priests, the deacons,
and the lay Christian faithful grasp ever more deeply the genuine meaning of
the rites and liturgical texts, and thereby be led to an active and fruitful
celebration of the Eucharist" (119). I would ask that every effort be made
to ensure that the liturgies which the Bishop celebrates in his Cathedral are
carried out with complete respect for the ars celebrandi, so that they can be
considered an example for the entire Diocese (120).
Respect for the liturgical books and the richness of signs
40. Emphasizing the importance of the ars celebrandi also
leads to an appreciation of the value of the liturgical norms. (121) The ars
celebrandi should foster a sense of the sacred and the use of outward signs
which help to cultivate this sense, such as, for example, the harmony of the
rite, the liturgical vestments, the furnishings and the sacred space. The eucharistic
celebration is enhanced when priests and liturgical leaders are committed to
making known the current liturgical texts and norms, making available the great
riches found in the General Instruction of the Roman Missal and the Order of
Readings for Mass. Perhaps we take it for granted that our ecclesial
communities already know and appreciate these resources, but this is not always
the case. These texts contain riches which have preserved and expressed the
faith and experience of the People of God over its two-thousand-year history.
Equally important for a correct ars celebrandi is an attentiveness to the
various kinds of language that the liturgy employs: words and music, gestures
and silence, movement, the liturgical color s of the vestments. By its very
nature the liturgy operates on different levels of communication which enable
it to engage the whole human person. The simplicity of its gestures and the
sobriety of its orderly sequence of signs communicate and inspire more than any
contrived and inappropriate additions. Attentiveness and fidelity to the
specific structure of the rite express both a recognition of the nature of
Eucharist as a gift and, on the part of the minister, a docile openness to
receiving this ineffable gift.
Art at the service of the liturgy
41. The profound connection between beauty and the liturgy
should make us attentive to every work of art placed at the service of the
celebration. (122) Certainly an important element of sacred art is church
architecture, (123) which should highlight the unity of the furnishings of the
sanctuary, such as the altar, the crucifix, the tabernacle, the ambo and the
celebrant's chair. Here it is important to remember that the purpose of sacred
architecture is to offer the Church a fitting space for the celebration of the
mysteries of faith, especially the Eucharist. (124) The very nature of a
Christian church is defined by the liturgy, which is an assembly of the
faithful (ecclesia) who are the living stones of the Church (cf. 1 Pet 2:5).
This same principle holds true for sacred art in general,
especially painting and sculpture, where religious iconography should be
directed to sacramental mystagogy. A solid knowledge of the history of sacred
art can be advantageous for those responsible for commissioning artists and
architects to create works of art for the liturgy. Consequently it is essential
that the education of seminarians and priests include the study of art history,
with special reference to sacred buildings and the corresponding liturgical
norms. Everything related to the Eucharist should be marked by beauty. Special
respect and care must also be given to the vestments, the furnishings and the
sacred vessels, so that by their harmonious and orderly arrangement they will
foster awe for the mystery of God, manifest the unity of the faith and
strengthen devotion (125).
The structure of the Eucharistic Celebration
43. After mentioning the more significant elements of the
ars celebrandi that emerged during the Synod, I would now like to turn to some
specific aspects of the structure of the eucharistic celebration which require
special attention at the present time, if we are to remain faithful to the
underlying intention of the liturgical renewal called for by the Second Vatican Council, in continuity with
the great ecclesial tradition.
The intrinsic unity of the liturgical action
44. First of all, there is a need to reflect on the inherent
unity of the rite of Mass. Both in catechesis and in the actual manner of
celebration, one must avoid giving the impression that the two parts of the
rite are merely juxtaposed. The liturgy of the word and the Eucharistic
liturgy, with the rites of introduction and conclusion, "are so closely
interconnected that they form but one single act of worship." (132) There
is an intrinsic bond between the word of God and the Eucharist. From listening
to the word of God, faith is born or strengthened (cf. Rom 10:17); in the
Eucharist the Word made flesh gives himself to us as our spiritual food. (133)
Thus, "from the two tables of the word of God and the Body of Christ, the
Church receives and gives to the faithful the bread of life." (134)
Consequently it must constantly be kept in mind that the word of God, read and
proclaimed by the Church in the liturgy, leads to the Eucharist as to its own
connatural end.
The liturgy of the word
45. Together with the Synod, I ask that the liturgy of the
word always be carefully prepared and celebrated. Consequently I urge that
every effort be made to ensure that the liturgical proclamation of the word of
God is entrusted to well-prepared readers. Let us never forget that "when
the Sacred Scriptures are read in the Church, God Himself speaks to His people,
and Christ, present in His own word, proclaims the Gospel"(135). When
circumstances so suggest, a few brief words of introduction could be offered in
order to focus the attention of the faithful. If it is to be properly
understood, the word of God must be listened to and accepted in a spirit of
communion with the Church and with a clear awareness of its unity with the
sacrament of the Eucharist. Indeed, the word which we proclaim and accept is
the Word made flesh (cf. Jn 1:14); it is inseparably linked to Christ's person
and the sacramental mode of His continued presence in our midst. Christ does
not speak in the past, but in the present, even as He is present in the
liturgical action. In this sacramental context of Christian revelation (136),
knowledge and study of the word of God enable us better to appreciate,
celebrate and live the Eucharist. Here too, we can see how true it is that
"ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ" (137).
To this end, the faithful should be helped to appreciate the
riches of Sacred Scripture found in the lectionary through pastoral initiatives,
liturgies of the word and reading in the context of prayer (lectio divina).
Efforts should also be made to encourage those forms of prayer confirmed by
tradition, such as the Liturgy of the Hours, especially Morning Prayer, Evening
Prayer and Night Prayer, and vigil celebrations. By praying the Psalms, the
Scripture readings and the readings drawn from the great tradition which are
included in the Divine Office, we can come to a deeper experience of the
Christ-event and the economy of salvation, which in turn can enrich our
understanding and participation in the celebration of the Eucharist (138).
The presentation of the gifts
47. The Synod Fathers also drew attention to the
presentation of the gifts. This is not to be viewed simply as a kind of
"interval" between the liturgy of the word and the liturgy of the
Eucharist. To do so would tend to weaken, at the least, the sense of a single
rite made up of two interrelated parts. This humble and simple gesture is
actually very significant: in the bread and wine that we bring to the altar,
all creation is taken up by Christ the Redeemer to be transformed and presented
to the Father. (144) In this way we also bring to the altar all the pain and
suffering of the world, in the certainty that everything has value in God's
eyes. The authentic meaning of this gesture can be clearly expressed without
the need for undue emphasis or complexity. It enables us to appreciate how God
invites man to participate in bringing to fulfilment His handiwork, and in so
doing, gives human labor its authentic meaning, since, through the celebration
of the Eucharist, it is united to the redemptive sacrifice of Christ.
The Eucharistic Prayer
48. The Eucharistic Prayer is "the center and summit of
the entire celebration" (145). Its importance deserves to be adequately
emphasized. The different Eucharistic Prayers contained in the Missal have been
handed down to us by the Church's living Tradition and are noteworthy for their
inexhaustible theological and spiritual richness. The faithful need to be
enabled to appreciate that richness. Here the General Instruction of the Roman
Missal can help, with its list of the basic elements of every Eucharistic
Prayer: thanksgiving, acclamation, epiclesis, institution narrative and
consecration, anamnesis, offering, intercessions and final doxology (146). In a
particular way, eucharistic spirituality and theological reflection are
enriched if we contemplate in the anaphora the profound unity between the
invocation of the Holy Spirit and the institution narrative (147) whereby
"the sacrifice is carried out which Christ Himself instituted at the Last
Supper" (148). Indeed, "the Church implores the power of the Holy
Spirit that the gifts offered by human hands be consecrated, that is, become
Christ's Body and Blood, and that the spotless Victim to be received in
communion be for the salvation of those who will partake of it" (149).
The sign of peace
49. By its nature the Eucharist is the sacrament of peace.
At Mass this dimension of the eucharistic mystery finds specific expression in
the sign of peace. Certainly this sign has great value (cf. Jn 14:27). In our
times, fraught with fear and conflict, this gesture has become particularly
eloquent, as the Church has become increasingly conscious of her responsibility
to pray insistently for the gift of peace and unity for herself and for the
whole human family. Certainly there is an irrepressible desire for peace
present in every heart. The Church gives voice to the hope for peace and
reconciliation rising up from every man and woman of good will, directing it
towards the one who "is our peace" (Eph 2:14) and who can bring peace
to individuals and peoples when all human efforts fail. We can thus understand
the emotion so often felt during the sign of peace at a liturgical celebration.
Even so, during the Synod of Bishops there was discussion about the
appropriateness of greater restraint in this gesture, which can be exaggerated
and cause a certain distraction in the assembly just before the reception of
Communion. It should be kept in mind that nothing is lost when the sign of
peace is marked by a sobriety which preserves the proper spirit of the
celebration, as, for example, when it is restricted to one's immediate neighbor
s (150).
The distribution and reception of the Eucharist
50. Another moment of the celebration needing to be
mentioned is the distribution and reception of Holy Communion. I ask everyone,
especially ordained ministers and those who, after adequate preparation and in
cases of genuine need, are authorized to exercise the ministry of distributing
the Eucharist, to make every effort to ensure that this simple act preserves
its importance as a personal encounter with the Lord Jesus in the sacrament.
For the rules governing correct practice in this regard, I would refer to those
documents recently issued on the subject. (151) All Christian communities are
to observe the current norms faithfully, seeing in them an expression of the
faith and love with which we all must regard this sublime sacrament.
Furthermore, the precious time of thanksgiving after communion should not be
neglected: besides the singing of an appropriate hymn, it can also be most
helpful to remain recollected in silence. (152)
In this regard, I would like to call attention to a pastoral
problem frequently encountered nowadays. I am referring to the fact that on
certain occasions -- for example, wedding Masses, funerals and the like -- in
addition to practicing Catholics there may be others present who have long
since ceased to attend Mass or are living in a situation which does not permit
them to receive the sacraments. At other times members of other Christian
confessions and even other religions may be present. Similar situations can
occur in churches that are frequently visited, especially in tourist areas. In
these cases, there is a need to find a brief and clear way to remind those
present of the meaning of sacramental communion and the conditions required for
its reception. Wherever circumstances make it impossible to ensure that the
meaning of the Eucharist is duly appreciated, the appropriateness of replacing
the celebration of the Mass with a celebration of the word of God should be
considered. (153)
The dismissal: "Ite, missa est"
51. Finally, I would like to comment briefly on the
observations of the Synod Fathers regarding the dismissal at the end of the
eucharistic celebration. After the blessing, the deacon or the priest dismisses
the people with the words: Ite, missa est. These words help us to grasp the
relationship between the Mass just celebrated and the mission of Christians in
the world. In antiquity, missa simply meant "dismissal." However in
Christian usage it gradually took on a deeper meaning. The word
"dismissal" has come to imply a "mission." These few words
succinctly express the missionary nature of the Church. The People of God might
be helped to understand more clearly this essential dimension of the Church's
life, taking the dismissal as a starting- point. In this context, it might also
be helpful to provide new texts, duly approved, for the prayer over the people
and the final blessing, in order to make this connection clear (154).
Actuosa participatio
Authentic participation
52. The Second Vatican Council rightly emphasized the
active, full and fruitful participation of the entire People of God in the
eucharistic celebration (155). Certainly, the renewal carried out in these past
decades has made considerable progress towards fulfilling the wishes of the
Council Fathers. Yet we must not overlook the fact that some misunderstanding
has occasionally arisen concerning the precise meaning of this participation.
It should be made clear that the word "participation" does not refer
to mere external activity during the celebration. In fact, the active participation
called for by the Council must be understood in more substantial terms, on the
basis of a greater awareness of the mystery being celebrated and its
relationship to daily life. The conciliar Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium encouraged the
faithful to take part in the eucharistic liturgy not "as strangers or
silent spectators," but as participants "in the sacred action,
conscious of what they are doing, actively and devoutly" (156). This
exhortation has lost none of its force. The Council went on to say that the
faithful "should be instructed by God's word, and nourished at the table
of the Lord's Body. They should give thanks to God. Offering the immaculate
Victim, not only through the hands of the priest but also together with him,
they should learn to make an offering of themselves. Through Christ, the
Mediator, they should be drawn day by day into ever more perfect union with God
and each other" (157).
Participation and the priestly ministry
53. The beauty and the harmony of the liturgy find eloquent
expression in the order by which everyone is called to participate actively.
This entails an acknowledgment of the distinct hierarchical roles involved in
the celebration. It is helpful to recall that active participation is not per
se equivalent to the exercise of a specific ministry. The active participation
of the laity does not benefit from the confusion arising from an inability to
distinguish, within the Church's communion, the different functions proper to
each one. (158) There is a particular need for clarity with regard to the
specific functions of the priest. He alone, and no other, as the tradition of
the Church attests, presides over the entire eucharistic celebration, from the
initial greeting to the final blessing. In virtue of his reception of Holy
Orders, he represents Jesus Christ, the head of the Church, and, in a specific
way, also the Church herself. (159) Every celebration of the Eucharist, in
fact, is led by the Bishop, "either in person or through priests who are
his helpers."(160) He is helped by a deacon, who has specific duties
during the celebration: he prepares the altar, assists the priest, proclaims
the Gospel, preaches the homily from time to time, reads the intentions of the
Prayer of the Faithful, and distributes the Eucharist to the faithful. (161)
Associated with these ministries linked to the sacrament of Holy Orders, there
are also other ministries of liturgical service which can be carried out in a
praiseworthy manner by religious and properly trained laity. (162)
Personal conditions for an "active participation"
55. In their consideration of the actuosa participatio of
the faithful in the liturgy, the Synod Fathers also discussed the personal
conditions required for fruitful participation on the part of individuals.
(168) One of these is certainly the spirit of constant conversion which must
mark the lives of all the faithful. Active participation in the eucharistic
liturgy can hardly be expected if one approaches it superficially, without an
examination of his or her life. This inner disposition can be fostered, for
example, by recollection and silence for at least a few moments before the
beginning of the liturgy, by fasting and, when necessary, by sacramental
confession. A heart reconciled to God makes genuine participation possible. The
faithful need to be reminded that there can be no actuosa participatio in the
sacred mysteries without an accompanying effort to participate actively in the
life of the Church as a whole, including a missionary commitment to bring Christ's
love into the life of society.
Clearly, full participation in the Eucharist takes place
when the faithful approach the altar in person to receive communion (169). Yet
true as this is, care must be taken lest they conclude that the mere fact of their
being present in church during the liturgy gives them a right or even an
obligation to approach the table of the Eucharist. Even in cases where it is
not possible to receive sacramental communion, participation at Mass remains
necessary, important, meaningful and fruitful. In such circumstances it is
beneficial to cultivate a desire for full union with Christ through the
practice of spiritual communion, praised by Pope John Paul II (170) and
recommended by saints who were masters of the spiritual life (171).
Participation by Christians who are not Catholic
56. The subject of participation in the Eucharist inevitably
raises the question of Christians belonging to Churches or Ecclesial
Communities not in full communion with the Catholic Church. In this regard, it
must be said that the intrinsic link between the Eucharist and the Church's
unity inspires us to long for the day when we will be able to celebrate the
Holy Eucharist together with all believers in Christ, and in this way to
express visibly the fullness of unity that Christ willed for his disciples (cf.
Jn 17:21). On the other hand, the respect we owe to the sacrament of Christ's
Body and Blood prevents us from making it a mere "means" to be used
indiscriminately in order to attain that unity. (172) The Eucharist in fact not
only manifests our personal communion with Jesus Christ, but also implies full
communio with the Church. This is the reason why, sadly albeit not without
hope, we ask Christians who are not Catholic to understand and respect our
conviction, which is grounded in the Bible and Tradition. We hold that
eucharistic communion and ecclesial communion are so linked as to make it
generally impossible for non-Catholic Christians to receive the former without
enjoying the latter. There would be even less sense in actually concelebrating
with ministers of Churches or ecclesial communities not in full communion with
the Catholic Church. Yet it remains true that, for the sake of their eternal
salvation, individual non-Catholic Christians can be admitted to the Eucharist,
the sacrament of Reconciliation and the Anointing of the Sick. But this is
possible only in specific, exceptional situations and requires that certain
precisely defined conditions be met (173). These are clearly indicated in the Catechism of the Catholic Church (174) and
in its Compendium (175). Everyone is obliged to observe these norms faithfully.
Participation through the communications media
57. Thanks to the remarkable development of the
communications media, the word "participation" has taken on a broader
meaning in recent decades. We all gladly acknowledge that the media have also
opened up new possibilities for the celebration of the Eucharist. (176) This
requires a specific preparation and a keen sense of responsibility on the part
of pastoral workers in the sector. When Mass is broadcast on television, it
inevitably tends to set an example. Particular care should therefore be taken
to ensure that, in addition to taking place in suitable and well-appointed
locations, the celebration respects the liturgical norms in force.
Finally, with regard to the value of taking part in Mass via
the communications media, those who hear or view these broadcasts should be
aware that, under normal circumstances, they do not fulfil the obligation of
attending Mass. Visual images can represent reality, but they do not actually
reproduce it.(177) While it is most praiseworthy that the elderly and the sick
participate in Sunday Mass through radio and television, the same cannot be
said of those who think that such broadcasts dispense them from going to church
and sharing in the eucharistic assembly in the living Church.
Active participation by the sick
58. In thinking of those who cannot attend places of worship
for reasons of health or advanced age, I wish to call the attention of the
whole Church community to the pastoral importance of providing spiritual
assistance to the sick, both those living at home and those in hospital. Their
situation was often mentioned during the Synod of Bishops. These brothers and
sisters of ours should have the opportunity to receive sacramental communion
frequently. In this way they can strengthen their relationship with Christ,
crucified and risen, and feel fully involved in the Church's life and mission by
the offering of their sufferings in union with our Lord's sacrifice. Particular
attention needs to be given to the disabled. When their condition so permits,
the Christian community should make it possible for them to attend the place of
worship. Buildings should be designed to provide ready access to the disabled.
Finally, whenever possible, eucharistic communion should be made available to
the mentally handicapped, if they are baptized and confirmed: they receive the
Eucharist in the faith also of the family or the community that accompanies
them. (178)
Care for prisoners
59. The Church's spiritual tradition, basing itself on
Christ's own words (cf. Mt 25:36), has designated the visiting of prisoners as
one of the corporal works of mercy. Prisoners have a particular need to be
visited personally by the Lord in the sacrament of the Eucharist. Experiencing
the closeness of the ecclesial community, sharing in the Eucharist and
receiving holy communion at this difficult and painful time can surely
contribute to the quality of a prisoner's faith journey and to full social
rehabilitation. Taking up the recommendation of the Synod, I ask Dioceses to do
whatever is possible to ensure that sufficient pastoral resources are invested
in the spiritual care of prisoners. (179)
Migrants and participation in the Eucharist
60. Turning now to those people who for various reasons are
forced to leave their native countries, the Synod expressed particular
gratitude to all those engaged in the pastoral care of migrants. Specific
attention needs to be paid to migrants belonging to the Eastern Catholic
Churches; in addition to being far from home, they also encounter the
difficulty of not being able to participate in the eucharistic liturgy in their
own rite. For this reason, wherever possible, they should be served by priests
of their rite. In all cases I would ask Bishops to welcome these brothers and
sisters with the love of Christ. Contacts between the faithful of different
rites can prove a source of mutual enrichment. In particular, I am thinking of
the benefit that can come, especially for the clergy, from a knowledge of the
different traditions. (180)
Interior participation in the celebration
Mystagogical catechesis
64. The Church's great liturgical tradition teaches us that
fruitful participation in the liturgy requires that one be personally conformed
to the mystery being celebrated, offering one's life to God in unity with the
sacrifice of Christ for the salvation of the whole world. For this reason, the
Synod of Bishops asked that the faithful be helped to make their interior
dispositions correspond to their gestures and words. Otherwise, however
carefully planned and executed our liturgies may be, they would risk falling
into a certain ritualism. Hence the need to provide an education in eucharistic
faith capable of enabling the faithful to live personally what they celebrate.
Given the vital importance of this personal and conscious participatio, what
methods of formation are needed? The Synod Fathers unanimously indicated, in
this regard, a mystagogical approach to catechesis, which would lead the
faithful to understand more deeply the mysteries being celebrated. (186) In
particular, given the close relationship between the ars celebrandi and an
actuosa participatio, it must first be said that "the best catechesis on
the Eucharist is the Eucharist itself, celebrated well." (187) By its
nature, the liturgy can be pedagogically effective in helping the faithful to
enter more deeply into the mystery being celebrated. That is why, in the
Church's most ancient tradition, the process of Christian formation always had
an experiential character. While not neglecting a systematic understanding of
the content of the faith, it center d on a vital and convincing encounter with
Christ, as proclaimed by authentic witnesses. It is first and foremost the
witness who introduces others to the mysteries. Naturally, this initial
encounter gains depth through catechesis and finds its source and summit in the
celebration of the Eucharist. This basic structure of the Christian experience
calls for a process of mystagogy which should always respect three elements:
a) It interprets the rites in the light of the events of our
salvation, in accordance with the Church's living tradition. The celebration of
the Eucharist, in its infinite richness, makes constant reference to salvation
history. In Christ crucified and risen, we truly celebrate the one who has
united all things in Himself (cf. Eph 1:10). From the beginning, the Christian
community has interpreted the events of Jesus' life, and the Paschal Mystery in
particular, in relation to the entire history of the Old Testament.
b) A mystagogical catechesis must also be concerned with
presenting the meaning of the signs contained in the rites. This is
particularly important in a highly technological age like our own, which risks
losing the ability to appreciate signs and symbols. More than simply conveying
information, a mystagogical catechesis should be capable of making the faithful
more sensitive to the language of signs and gestures which, together with the
word, make up the rite.
c) Finally, a mystagogical catechesis must be concerned with
bringing out the significance of the rites for the Christian life in all its
dimensions -- work and responsibility, thoughts and emotions, activity and
repose. Part of the mystagogical process is to demonstrate how the mysteries
celebrated in the rite are linked to the missionary responsibility of the
faithful. The mature fruit of mystagogy is an awareness that one's life is
being progressively transformed by the holy mysteries being celebrated. The aim
of all Christian education, moreover, is to train the believer in an adult
faith that can make him a "new creation", capable of bearing witness
in his surroundings to the Christian hope that inspires him.
If we are to succeed in carrying out this work of education
in our ecclesial communities, those responsible for formation must be
adequately prepared. Indeed, the whole people of God should feel involved in this
formation. Each Christian community is called to be a place where people can be
taught about the mysteries celebrated in faith. In this regard, the Synod
Fathers called for greater involvement by communities of consecrated life,
movements and groups which, by their specific charisms, can give new impetus to
Christian formation. (188) In our time, too, the Holy Spirit freely bestows his
gifts to sustain the apostolic mission of the Church, which is charged with
spreading the faith and bringing it to maturity. (189)
Reverence for the Eucharist
65. A convincing indication of the effectiveness of
eucharistic catechesis is surely an increased sense of the mystery of God
present among us. This can be expressed in concrete outward signs of reverence
for the Eucharist which the process of mystagogy should inculcate in the
faithful. (190) I am thinking in general of the importance of gestures and
posture, such as kneeling during the central moments of the Eucharistic Prayer.
Amid the legitimate diversity of signs used in the context of different
cultures, everyone should be able to experience and express the awareness that
at each celebration we stand before the infinite majesty of God, who comes to
us in the lowliness of the sacramental signs.
Adoration and Eucharistic devotion
The intrinsic relationship between celebration and adoration
66. One of the most moving moments of the Synod came when we
gathered in Saint Peter's Basilica, together with a great number of the
faithful, for eucharistic adoration. In this act of prayer, and not just in
words, the assembly of Bishops wanted to point out the intrinsic relationship
between eucharistic celebration and eucharistic adoration. A growing
appreciation of this significant aspect of the Church's faith has been an important
part of our experience in the years following the liturgical renewal desired by
the Second Vatican Council. During the early phases of the reform, the inherent
relationship between Mass and adoration of the Blessed Sacrament was not always
perceived with sufficient clarity. For example, an objection that was
widespread at the time argued that the eucharistic bread was given to us not to
be looked at, but to be eaten. In the light of the Church's experience of
prayer, however, this was seen to be a false dichotomy. As Saint Augustine put
it: "nemo autem illam carnem manducat, nisi prius adoraverit; peccemus non
adorando -- no one eats that flesh without first adoring it; we should sin were
we not to adore it." (191) In the Eucharist, the Son of God comes to meet
us and desires to become one with us; eucharistic adoration is simply the
natural consequence of the eucharistic celebration, which is itself the
Church's supreme act of adoration. (192) Receiving the Eucharist means adoring
Him whom we receive. Only in this way do we become one with Him, and are given,
as it were, a foretaste of the beauty of the heavenly liturgy. The act of
adoration outside Mass prolongs and intensifies all that takes place during the
liturgical celebration itself. Indeed, "only in adoration can a profound
and genuine reception mature. And it is precisely this personal encounter with
the Lord that then strengthens the social mission contained in the Eucharist,
which seeks to break down not only the walls that separate the Lord and
ourselves, but also and especially the walls that separate us from one
another." (193)
The practice of eucharistic adoration
67. With the Synod Assembly, therefore, I heartily recommend
to the Church's pastors and to the People of God the practice of eucharistic
adoration, both individually and in community. (194) Great benefit would ensue
from a suitable catechesis explaining the importance of this act of worship,
which enables the faithful to experience the liturgical celebration more fully
and more fruitfully. Wherever possible, it would be appropriate, especially in
densely populated areas, to set aside specific churches or oratories for
perpetual adoration. I also recommend that, in their catechetical training, and
especially in their preparation for First Holy Communion, children be taught
the meaning and the beauty of spending time with Jesus, and helped to cultivate
a sense of awe before his presence in the Eucharist.
Here I would like to express appreciation and support for
all those Institutes of Consecrated Life whose members dedicate a significant
amount of time to eucharistic adoration. In this way they give us an example of
lives shaped by the Lord's real presence. I would also like to encourage those
associations of the faithful and confraternities specifically devoted to
eucharistic adoration; they serve as a leaven of contemplation for the whole
Church and a summons to individuals and communities to place Christ at the
center of their lives.
Forms of eucharistic devotion
68. The personal relationship which the individual believer
establishes with Jesus present in the Eucharist constantly points beyond itself
to the whole communion of the Church and nourishes a fuller sense of membership
in the Body of Christ. For this reason, besides encouraging individual
believers to make time for personal prayer before the Sacrament of the Altar, I
feel obliged to urge parishes and other church groups to set aside times for
collective adoration. Naturally, already existing forms of eucharistic piety
retain their full value. I am thinking, for example, of processions with the
Blessed Sacrament, especially the traditional procession on the Solemnity of
Corpus Christi, the Forty Hours devotion, local, national and international
Eucharistic Congresses, and other similar initiatives. If suitably updated and
adapted to local circumstances, these forms of devotion are still worthy of
being practiced today. (195)
The location of the tabernacle
69. In considering the importance of eucharistic reservation
and adoration, and reverence for the sacrament of Christ's sacrifice, the Synod
of Bishops also discussed the question of the proper placement of the
tabernacle in our churches. (196) The correct positioning of the tabernacle
contributes to the recognition of Christ's real presence in the Blessed
Sacrament. Therefore, the place where the eucharistic species are reserved,
marked by a sanctuary lamp, should be readily visible to everyone entering the
church. It is therefore necessary to take into account the building's
architecture: in churches which do not have a Blessed Sacrament chapel, and
where the high altar with its tabernacle is still in place, it is appropriate
to continue to use this structure for the reservation and adoration of the
Eucharist, taking care not to place the celebrant's chair in front of it. In
new churches, it is good to position the Blessed Sacrament chapel close to the
sanctuary; where this is not possible, it is preferable to locate the
tabernacle in the sanctuary, in a sufficiently elevated place, at the center of
the apse area, or in another place where it will be equally conspicuous.
Attention to these considerations will lend dignity to the tabernacle, which
must always be cared for, also from an artistic standpoint. Obviously it is
necessary to follow the provisions of the General Instruction of the Roman
Missal in this regard. (197) In any event, final judgment on these matters
belongs to the Diocesan Bishop.
PART THREE: THE EUCHARIST, A MYSTERY TO BE LIVED
"As the living Father sent me, and I live because of
the Father, so he who eats me will live
because of me" (Jn 6:57)
The Eucharistic form of the Christian life
Spiritual worship – logiké latreía (Rom 12:1)
70. The Lord Jesus, who became for us the food of truth and
love, speaks of the gift of his life and assures us that "if any one eats
of this bread, he will live for ever" (Jn 6:51). This "eternal
life" begins in us even now, thanks to the transformation effected in us
by the gift of the Eucharist: "He who eats me will live because of
me" (Jn 6:57). These words of Jesus make us realize how the mystery
"believed" and "celebrated" contains an innate power making
it the principle of new life within us and the form of our Christian existence.
By receiving the body and blood of Jesus Christ we become sharers in the divine
life in an ever more adult and conscious way. Here too, we can apply Saint
Augustine's words, in his Confessions, about the eternal Logos as the food of
our souls. Stressing the mysterious nature of this food, Augustine imagines the
Lord saying to him: "I am the food of grown men; grow, and you shall feed
upon me; nor shall you change me, like the food of your flesh, into yourself,
but you shall be changed into me." (198) It is not the eucharistic food
that is changed into us, but rather we who are mysteriously transformed by it.
Christ nourishes us by uniting us to Himself; "He draws us into
Himself."(199)
Here the eucharistic celebration appears in all its power as
the source and summit of the Church's life, since it expresses at once both the
origin and the fulfilment of the new and definitive worship of God, the logiké
latreía. (200) Saint Paul's exhortation to the Romans in this regard is a
concise description of how the Eucharist makes our whole life a spiritual
worship pleasing to God: "I appeal to you therefore, my brothers, by the
mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and
acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship" (Rom 12:1). In these
words the new worship appears as a total self-offering made in communion with
the whole Church. The Apostle's insistence on the offering of our bodies
emphasizes the concrete human reality of a worship which is anything but
disincarnate. The Bishop of Hippo goes on to say that "this is the
sacrifice of Christians: that we, though many, are one body in Christ. The
Church celebrates this mystery in the sacrament of the altar, as the faithful
know, and there she shows them clearly that in what is offered, she herself is
offered." (201) Catholic doctrine, in fact, affirms that the Eucharist, as
the sacrifice of Christ, is also the sacrifice of the Church, and thus of all
the faithful. (202) This insistence on sacrifice -- a "making sacred"
-- expresses all the existential depth implied in the transformation of our
human reality as taken up by Christ (cf. Phil 3:12).
The all-encompassing effect of eucharistic worship
71. Christianity's new worship includes and transfigures
every aspect of life: "Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do
all to the glory of God" (1 Cor 10:31). Christians, in all their actions,
are called to offer true worship to God. Here the intrinsically eucharistic
nature of Christian life begins to take shape. The Eucharist, since it embraces
the concrete, everyday existence of the believer, makes possible, day by day,
the progressive transfiguration of all those called by grace to reflect the
image of the Son of God (cf. Rom 8:29ff.). There is nothing authentically human
-- our thoughts and affections, our words and deeds -- that does not find in
the sacrament of the Eucharist the form it needs to be lived to the full. Here
we can see the full human import of the radical newness brought by Christ in
the Eucharist: the worship of God in our lives cannot be relegated to something
private and individual, but tends by its nature to permeate every aspect of our
existence. Worship pleasing to God thus becomes a new way of living our whole
life, each particular moment of which is lifted up, since it is lived as part
of a relationship with Christ and as an offering to God. The glory of God is
the living man (cf. 1 Cor 10:31). And the life of man is the vision of God.
(203)
Iuxta dominicam viventes – living in accordance with the
Lord's Day
72. From the beginning Christians were clearly conscious of
this radical newness which the Eucharist brings to human life. The faithful
immediately perceived the profound influence of the eucharistic celebration on
their manner of life. Saint Ignatius of Antioch expressed this truth when he called
Christians "those who have attained a new hope," and described them
as "those living in accordance with the Lord's Day" (iuxta dominicam
viventes). (204) This phrase of the great Antiochene martyr highlights the
connection between the reality of the Eucharist and everyday Christian life.
The Christians' customary practice of gathering on the first day after the
Sabbath to celebrate the resurrection of Christ -- according to the account of
Saint Justin Martyr(205) -- is also what defines the form of a life renewed by
an encounter with Christ. Saint Ignatius' phrase -- "living in accordance
with the Lord's Day" -- also emphasizes that this holy day becomes
paradigmatic for every other day of the week. Indeed, it is defined by
something more than the simple suspension of one's ordinary activities, a sort
of parenthesis in one's usual daily rhythm. Christians have always experienced
this day as the first day of the week, since it commemorates the radical
newness brought by Christ. Sunday is thus the day when Christians rediscover
the eucharistic form which their lives are meant to have. "Living in
accordance with the Lord's Day" means living in the awareness of the
liberation brought by Christ and making our lives a constant self-offering to
God, so that his victory may be fully revealed to all humanity through a
profoundly renewed existence.
Living the Sunday obligation
73. Conscious of this new vital principle which the
Eucharist imparts to the Christian, the Synod Fathers reaffirmed the importance
of the Sunday obligation for all the faithful, viewing it as a wellspring of
authentic freedom enabling them to live each day in accordance with what they
celebrated on "the Lord's Day." The life of faith is endangered when
we lose the desire to share in the celebration of the Eucharist and its
commemoration of the paschal victory. Participating in the Sunday liturgical
assembly with all our brothers and sisters, with whom we form one body in Jesus
Christ, is demanded by our Christian conscience and at the same time it forms
that conscience. To lose a sense of Sunday as the Lord's Day, a day to be
sanctified, is symptomatic of the loss of an authentic sense of Christian
freedom, the freedom of the children of God. (206) Here some observations made
by my venerable predecessor John Paul II in his Apostolic Letter Dies Domini
(207) continue to have great value. Speaking of the various dimensions of the
Christian celebration of Sunday, he said that it is Dies Domini with regard to
the work of creation, Dies Christi as the day of the new creation and the Risen
Lord's gift of the Holy Spirit, Dies Ecclesiae as the day on which the
Christian community gathers for the celebration, and Dies hominis as the day of
joy, rest and fraternal charity.
Sunday thus appears as the primordial holy day, when all
believers, wherever they are found, can become heralds and guardians of the
true meaning of time. It gives rise to the Christian meaning of life and a new
way of experiencing time, relationships, work, life and death. On the Lord's
Day, then, it is fitting that Church groups should organize, around Sunday
Mass, the activities of the Christian community: social gatherings, programs
for the faith formation of children, young people and adults, pilgrimages,
charitable works, and different moments of prayer. For the sake of these
important values – while recognizing that Saturday evening, beginning with
First Vespers, is already a part of Sunday and a time when the Sunday
obligation can be fulfilled – we need to remember that it is Sunday itself that
is meant to be kept holy, lest it end up as a day "empty of God."
(208)
Sunday assemblies in the absence of a priest
75. Rediscovering the significance of the Sunday celebration
for the life of Christians naturally leads to a consideration of the problem of
those Christian communities which lack priests and where, consequently, it is
not possible to celebrate Mass on the Lord's Day. Here it should be stated that
a wide variety of situations exists. The Synod recommended first that the faithful
should go to one of the churches in their Diocese where the presence of a
priest is assured, even when this demands a certain sacrifice. (211) Wherever
great distances make it practically impossible to take part in the Sunday
Eucharist, it is still important for Christian communities to gather together
to praise the Lord and to commemorate the Day set apart for him. This needs,
however, to be accompanied by an adequate instruction about the difference
between Mass and Sunday assemblies in the absence of a priest. The Church's
pastoral care must be expressed in the latter case by ensuring that the liturgy
of the word -- led by a deacon or a community leader to whom this ministry has
been duly entrusted by competent authority -- is carried out according to a
specific ritual prepared and approved for this purpose by the Bishops'
Conferences. (212) I reiterate that only Ordinaries may grant the faculty of
distributing holy communion in such liturgies, taking account of the need for a
certain selectiveness. Furthermore, care should be taken that these assemblies
do not create confusion about the central role of the priest and the sacraments
in the life of the Church. The importance of the role given to the laity, who
should rightly be thanked for their generosity in the service of their
communities, must never obscure the indispensable ministry of priests for the
life of the Church. (213) Hence care must be taken to ensure that such
assemblies in the absence of a priest do not encourage ecclesiological visions
incompatible with the truth of the Gospel and the Church's tradition. Rather,
they should be privileged moments of prayer for God to send holy priests after
His own heart. It is touching, in this regard, to read the words of Pope John
Paul II in his Letter to Priests for Holy Thursday 1979 about those places
where the faithful, deprived of a priest by a dictatorial regime, would meet in
a church or shrine, place on the altar a stole which they still kept and recite
the prayers of the eucharistic liturgy, halting in silence "at the moment
that corresponds to the transubstantiation," as a sign of how
"ardently they desire to hear the words that only the lips of a priest can
efficaciously utter." (214) With this in mind, and considering the
incomparable good which comes from the celebration of the Eucharist, I ask all
priests to visit willingly and as often as possible the communities entrusted
to their pastoral care, lest they remain too long without the sacrament of
love.
A eucharistic form of Christian life, membership in the
Church
76. The importance of Sunday as the Dies Ecclesiae brings us
back to the intrinsic relationship between Jesus' victory over evil and death,
and our membership in his ecclesial body. On the Lord's Day, each Christian
rediscovers the communal dimension of his life as one who has been redeemed.
Taking part in the liturgy and receiving the Body and Blood of Christ
intensifies and deepens our belonging to the one who died for us (cf. 1 Cor
6:19ff; 7:23). Truly, whoever eats of Christ lives for him. The eucharistic
mystery helps us to understand the profound meaning of the communio sanctorum.
Communion always and inseparably has both a vertical and a horizontal sense: it
is communion with God and communion with our brothers and sisters. Both
dimensions mysteriously converge in the gift of the Eucharist. "Wherever
communion with God, which is communion with the Father, with the Son and with
the Holy Spirit, is destroyed, the root and source of our communion with one
another is destroyed. And wherever we do not live communion among ourselves,
communion with the Triune God is not alive and true either."(215) Called
to be members of Christ and thus members of one another (cf. 1 Cor 12:27), we
are a reality grounded ontologically in Baptism and nourished by the Eucharist,
a reality that demands visible expression in the life of our communities.
The eucharistic form of Christian life is clearly an
ecclesial and communitarian form. Through the Diocese and the parish, the
fundamental structures of the Church in a particular territory, each individual
believer can experience concretely what it means to be a member of Christ's
Body. Associations, ecclesial movements and new communities – with their lively
charisms bestowed by the Holy Spirit for the needs of our time – together with
Institutes of Consecrated Life, have a particular responsibility for helping to
make the faithful conscious that they belong to the Lord (cf. Rom 14:8).
Secularization, with its inherent emphasis on individualism, has its most
negative effects on individuals who are isolated and lack a sense of belonging.
Christianity, from its very beginning, has meant fellowship, a network of
relationships constantly strengthened by hearing God's word and sharing in the
Eucharist, and enlivened by the Holy Spirit.
Spirituality and eucharistic culture
77. Significantly, the Synod Fathers stated that "the
Christian faithful need a fuller understanding of the relationship between the
Eucharist and their daily lives. Eucharistic spirituality is not just
participation in Mass and devotion to the Blessed Sacrament. It embraces the
whole of life." (216) This observation is particularly insightful, given
our situation today. It must be acknowledged that one of the most serious
effects of the secularization just mentioned is that it has relegated the
Christian faith to the margins of life as if it were irrelevant to everyday
affairs. The futility of this way of living -- "as if God did not
exist" -- is now evident to everyone. Today there is a need to rediscover
that Jesus Christ is not just a private conviction or an abstract idea, but a
real person, whose becoming part of human history is capable of renewing the
life of every man and woman. Hence the Eucharist, as the source and summit of
the Church's life and mission, must be translated into spirituality, into a
life lived "according to the Spirit" (Rom 8:4ff.; cf. Gal 5:16, 25). It is significant that Saint
Paul, in the passage of the Letter to the Romans where he invites his hearers
to offer the new spiritual worship, also speaks of the need for a change in
their way of living and thinking: "Do not be conformed to this world but
be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you may prove what is the will
of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect" (12:2). In this way the
Apostle of the Gentiles emphasizes the link between true spiritual worship and
the need for a new way of understanding and living one's life. An integral part
of the eucharistic form of the Christian life is a new way of thinking,
"so that we may no longer be children tossed to and fro and carried about
with every wind of doctrine" (Eph 4:14).
The Eucharist and the evangelization of cultures
78. From what has been said thus far, it is clear that the
eucharistic mystery puts us in dialogue with various cultures, but also in some
way challenges them. (217) The intercultural character of this new worship,
this logiké latreía, needs to be recognized. The presence of Jesus Christ and
the outpouring of the Holy Spirit are events capable of engaging every cultural
reality and bringing to it the leaven of the Gospel. It follows that we must be
committed to promoting the evangelization of cultures, conscious that Christ
Himself is the truth for every man and woman, and for all human history. The
Eucharist becomes a criterion for our evaluation of everything that
Christianity encounters in different cultures. In this important process of
discernment, we can appreciate the full meaning of Saint Paul's exhortation, in
his First Letter to the Thessalonians, to "test everything; and hold fast
to what is good" (5:21).
The Eucharist and the lay faithful
79. In Christ, Head of his Body, the Church, all Christians
are "a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people he claims
for his own, to declare his wonderful deeds" (1 Pet 2:9). The Eucharist,
as a mystery to be "lived", meets each of us as we are, and makes our
concrete existence the place where we experience daily the radical newness of
the Christian life. The eucharistic sacrifice nourishes and increases within us
all that we have already received at Baptism, with its call to holiness, (218)
and this must be clearly evident from the way individual Christians live their
lives. Day by day we become "a worship pleasing to God" by living our
lives as a vocation. Beginning with the liturgical assembly, the sacrament of
the Eucharist itself commits us, in our daily lives, to doing everything for
God's glory.
And because the world is "the field" (Mt 13:38) in
which God plants his children as good seed, the Christian laity, by virtue of
their Baptism and Confirmation, and strengthened by the Eucharist, are called
to live out the radical newness brought by Christ wherever they find
themselves. (219) They should cultivate a desire that the Eucharist have an
ever deeper effect on their daily lives, making them convincing witnesses in
the workplace and in society at large. (220) I encourage families in particular
to draw inspiration and strength from this sacrament. The love between man and
woman, openness to life, and the raising of children are privileged spheres in
which the Eucharist can reveal its power to transform life and give it its full
meaning. (221) The Church's pastors should unfailingly support, guide and
encourage the lay faithful to live fully their vocation to holiness within this
world which God so loved that he gave his Son to become its salvation (cf. Jn
3:16).
The Eucharist and priestly spirituality
80. The eucharistic form of the Christian life is seen in a
very special way in the priesthood. Priestly spirituality is intrinsically
eucharistic. The seeds of this spirituality are already found in the words
spoken by the Bishop during the ordination liturgy: "Receive the oblation
of the holy people to be offered to God. Understand what you do, imitate what
you celebrate, and conform your life to the mystery of the Lord's Cross."
(222) In order to give an ever greater eucharistic form to his existence, the
priest, beginning with his years in the seminary, should make his spiritual
life his highest priority. (223) He is called to seek God tirelessly, while
remaining attuned to the concerns of his brothers and sisters. An intense
spiritual life will enable him to enter more deeply into communion with the
Lord and to let himself be possessed by God's love, bearing witness to that
love at all times, even the darkest and most difficult. To this end I join the
Synod Fathers in recommending "the daily celebration of Mass, even when
the faithful are not present." (224) This recommendation is consistent
with the objectively infinite value of every celebration of the Eucharist, and
is motivated by the Mass's unique spiritual fruitfulness. If celebrated in a
faith-filled and attentive way, Mass is formative in the deepest sense of the
word, since it fosters the priest's configuration to Christ and strengthens him
in his vocation.
The Eucharist and the consecrated life
81. The relationship of the Eucharist to the various
ecclesial vocations is seen in a particularly vivid way in "the prophetic
witness of consecrated men and women, who find in the celebration of the
Eucharist and in eucharistic adoration the strength necessary for the radical
following of Christ, obedient, poor and chaste." (225) Though they provide
many services in the area of human formation and care for the poor, education
and health care, consecrated men and women know that the principal purpose of
their lives is "the contemplation of things divine and constant union with
God in prayer." (226) The essential contribution that the Church expects
from consecrated persons is much more in the order of being than of doing. Here
I wish to reaffirm the importance of the witness of virginity, precisely in
relation to the mystery of the Eucharist. In addition to its connection to
priestly celibacy, the eucharistic mystery also has an intrinsic relationship
to consecrated virginity, inasmuch as the latter is an expression of the
Church's exclusive devotion to Christ, whom she accepts as her Bridegroom with
a radical and fruitful fidelity.(227 In the Eucharist, consecrated virginity
finds inspiration and nourishment for its complete dedication to Christ. From
the Eucharist, moreover, it draws encouragement and strength to be a sign, in
our own times too, of God's gracious and fruitful love for humanity. Finally,
by its specific witness, consecrated life becomes an objective sign and
foreshadowing of the "wedding- feast of the Lamb" (Rev 19:7-9) which
is the goal of all salvation history. In this sense, it points to that eschatological
horizon against which the choices and life decisions of every man and woman
should be situated.
The Eucharist and moral transformation
82. In discovering the beauty of the eucharistic form of the
Christian life, we are also led to reflect on the moral energy it provides for
sustaining the authentic freedom of the children of God. Here I wish to take up
a discussion that took place during the Synod about the connection between the
eucharistic form of life and moral transformation. Pope John Paul II stated
that the moral life "has the value of a 'spiritual worship' (Rom 12:1; cf.
Phil 3:3), flowing from and nourished by that inexhaustible source of holiness
and glorification of God which is found in the sacraments, especially in the
Eucharist: by sharing in the sacrifice of the Cross, the Christian partakes of
Christ's self-giving love and is equipped and committed to live this same
charity in all his thoughts and deeds" (228). In a word, "'worship'
itself, eucharistic communion, includes the reality both of being loved and of
loving others in turn. A Eucharist which does not pass over into the concrete
practice of love is intrinsically fragmented" (229).
This appeal to the moral value of spiritual worship should
not be interpreted in a merely moralistic way. It is before all else the
joy-filled discovery of love at work in the hearts of those who accept the
Lord's gift, abandon themselves to him and thus find true freedom. The moral
transformation implicit in the new worship instituted by Christ is a heartfelt
yearning to respond to the Lord's love with one's whole being, while remaining
ever conscious of one's own weakness. This is clearly reflected in the Gospel
story of Zacchaeus (cf. Lk 19:1-10). After welcoming Jesus to his home, the tax
collector is completely changed: he decides to give half of his possessions to
the poor and to repay fourfold those whom he had defrauded. The moral urgency
born of welcoming Jesus into our lives is the fruit of gratitude for having
experienced the Lord's unmerited closeness.
Eucharistic consistency
83. Here it is important to consider what the Synod Fathers
described as eucharistic consistency, a quality which our lives are objectively
called to embody. Worship pleasing to God can never be a purely private matter,
without consequences for our relationships with others: it demands a public
witness to our faith. Evidently, this is true for all the baptized, yet it is
especially incumbent upon those who, by virtue of their social or political
position, must make decisions regarding fundamental values, such as respect for
human life, its defence from conception to natural death, the family built upon
marriage between a man and a woman, the freedom to educate one's children and
the promotion of the common good in all its forms (230). These values are not
negotiable. Consequently, Catholic politicians and legislators, conscious of
their grave responsibility before society, must feel particularly bound, on the
basis of a properly formed conscience, to introduce and support laws inspired
by values grounded in human nature (231). There is an objective connection here
with the Eucharist (cf. 1 Cor 11:27-29). Bishops are bound to reaffirm
constantly these values as part of their responsibility to the flock entrusted
to them (232).
The Eucharist, a mystery to be proclaimed
The Eucharist and mission
84. In my homily at the eucharistic celebration solemnly
inaugurating my Petrine ministry, I said that "there is nothing more
beautiful than to be surprised by the Gospel, by the encounter with Christ.
There is nothing more beautiful than to know him and to speak to others of our
friendship with him." (233) These words are all the more significant if we
think of the mystery of the Eucharist. The love that we celebrate in the sacrament
is not something we can keep to ourselves. By its very nature it demands to be
shared with all. What the world needs is God's love; it needs to encounter
Christ and to believe in him. The Eucharist is thus the source and summit not
only of the Church's life, but also of her mission: "an authentically
eucharistic Church is a missionary Church." (234) We too must be able to
tell our brothers and sisters with conviction: "That which we have seen
and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you may have fellowship with
us" (1 Jn 1:3). Truly, nothing is more beautiful than to know Christ and
to make him known to others. The institution of the Eucharist, for that matter,
anticipates the very heart of Jesus' mission: he is the one sent by the Father
for the redemption of the world (cf. Jn 3:16-17; Rom 8:32). At the Last Supper,
Jesus entrusts to his disciples the sacrament which makes present his
self-sacrifice for the salvation of us all, in obedience to the Father's will.
We cannot approach the eucharistic table without being drawn into the mission
which, beginning in the very heart of God, is meant to reach all people.
Missionary outreach is thus an essential part of the eucharistic form of the
Christian life.
The Eucharist and witness
85. The first and fundamental mission that we receive from
the sacred mysteries we celebrate is that of bearing witness by our lives. The
wonder we experience at the gift God has made to us in Christ gives new impulse
to our lives and commits us to becoming witnesses of His love. We become
witnesses when, through our actions, words and way of being, Another makes
Himself present. Witness could be described as the means by which the truth of
God's love comes to men and women in history, inviting them to accept freely
this radical newness. Through witness, God lays Himself open, one might say, to
the risk of human freedom. Jesus Himself is the faithful and true witness (cf.
Rev 1:5; 3:14), the one who came to testify to the truth (cf. Jn 18:37). Here I
would like to reflect on a notion dear to the early Christians, which also
speaks eloquently to us today: namely, witness even to the offering of one's
own life, to the point of martyrdom. Throughout the history of the Church, this
has always been seen as the culmination of the new spiritual worship:
"Offer your bodies" (Rom 12:1). One thinks, for example, of the
account of the martyrdom of Saint Polycarp of Smyrna, a disciple of Saint John:
the entire drama is described as a liturgy, with the martyr himself becoming
Eucharist. (235) We might also recall the eucharistic imagery with which Saint
Ignatius of Antioch describes his own imminent martyrdom: he sees himself as
"God's wheat" and desires to become in martyrdom "Christ's pure
bread." (236) The Christian who offers his life in martyrdom enters into
full communion with the Pasch of Jesus Christ and thus becomes Eucharist with
him. Today too, the Church does not lack martyrs who offer the supreme witness
to God's love. Even if the test of martyrdom is not asked of us, we know that
worship pleasing to God demands that we should be inwardly prepared for it.
(237) Such worship culminates in the joyful and convincing testimony of a
consistent Christian life, wherever the Lord calls us to be his witnesses.
Christ Jesus, the one Savior
86. Emphasis on the intrinsic relationship between the
Eucharist and mission also leads to a rediscovery of the ultimate content of
our proclamation. The more ardent the love for the Eucharist in the hearts of
the Christian people, the more clearly will they recognize the goal of all
mission: to bring Christ to others. Not just a theory or a way of life inspired
by Christ, but the gift of his very person. Anyone who has not shared the truth
of love with his brothers and sisters has not yet given enough. The Eucharist,
as the sacrament of our salvation, inevitably reminds us of the unicity of
Christ and the salvation that he won for us by his blood. The mystery of the
Eucharist, believed in and celebrated, demands a constant catechesis on the
need for all to engage in a missionary effort centered on the proclamation of
Jesus as the one Savior . (238) This will help to avoid a reductive and purely
sociological understanding of the vital work of human promotion present in
every authentic process of evangelization.
The Eucharist, a mystery to be offered to the world
The Eucharist, bread broken for the life of the world
88. "The bread I will give is my flesh, for the life of
the world" (Jn 6:51). In these words the Lord reveals the true meaning of
the gift of His life for all people. These words also reveal His deep
compassion for every man and woman. The Gospels frequently speak of Jesus'
feelings towards others, especially the suffering and sinners (cf. Mt 20:34; Mk
6:34; Lk 19:41). Through a profoundly human sensibility he expresses God's
saving will for all people -- that they may have true life. Each celebration of
the Eucharist makes sacramentally present the gift that the crucified Lord made
of his life, for us and for the whole world. In the Eucharist Jesus also makes
us witnesses of God's compassion towards all our brothers and sisters. The
eucharistic mystery thus gives rise to a service of charity towards neighbor ,
which "consists in the very fact that, in God and with God, I love even
the person whom I do not like or even know. This can only take place on the
basis of an intimate encounter with God, an encounter which has become a
communion of will, affecting even my feelings. Then I learn to look on this
other person not simply with my eyes and my feelings, but from the perspective
of Jesus Christ." (240) In all those I meet, I recognize brothers or
sisters for whom the Lord gave his life, loving them "to the end" (Jn
13:1). Our communities, when they celebrate the Eucharist, must become ever more
conscious that the sacrifice of Christ is for all, and that the Eucharist thus
compels all who believe in him to become "bread that is broken" for
others, and to work for the building of a more just and fraternal world.
Keeping in mind the multiplication of the loaves and fishes, we need to realize
that Christ continues today to exhort his disciples to become personally
engaged: "You yourselves, give them something to eat" (Mt 14:16).
Each of us is truly called, together with Jesus, to be bread broken for the
life of the world.
The social implications of the eucharistic mystery
89. The union with Christ brought about by the Eucharist
also brings a newness to our social relations: "this sacramental
‘mysticism' is social in character." Indeed, "union with Christ is
also union with all those to whom he gives himself. I cannot possess Christ
just for myself; I can belong to him only in union with all those who have
become, or who will become, his own."(241) The relationship between the
eucharistic mystery and social commitment must be made explicit. The Eucharist
is the sacrament of communion between brothers and sisters who allow themselves
to be reconciled in Christ, who made of Jews and pagans one people, tearing
down the wall of hostility which divided them (cf. Eph 2:14). Only this
constant impulse towards reconciliation enables us to partake worthily of the
Body and Blood of Christ (cf. Mt 5:23-24). (242) In the memorial of his
sacrifice, the Lord strengthens our fraternal communion and, in a particular
way, urges those in conflict to hasten their reconciliation by opening
themselves to dialogue and a commitment to justice. Certainly, the restoration
of justice, reconciliation and forgiveness are the conditions for building true
peace.(243) The recognition of this fact leads to a determination to transform
unjust structures and to restore respect for the dignity of all men and women,
created in God's image and likeness. Through the concrete fulfilment of this
responsibility, the Eucharist becomes in life what it signifies in its
celebration. As I have had occasion to say, it is not the proper task of the
Church to engage in the political work of bringing about the most just society
possible; nonetheless she cannot and must not remain on the sidelines in the
struggle for justice. The Church "has to play her part through rational
argument and she has to reawaken the spiritual energy without which justice,
which always demands sacrifice, cannot prevail and prosper." (244)
In discussing the social responsibility of all Christians,
the Synod Fathers noted that the sacrifice of Christ is a mystery of liberation
that constantly and insistently challenges us. I therefore urge all the
faithful to be true promoters of peace and justice: "All who partake of
the Eucharist must commit themselves to peacemaking in our world scarred by
violence and war, and today in particular, by terrorism, economic corruption
and sexual exploitation." (245) All these problems give rise in turn to
others no less troubling and disheartening. We know that there can be no
superficial solutions to these issues. Precisely because of the mystery we
celebrate, we must denounce situations contrary to human dignity, since Christ
shed his blood for all, and at the same time affirm the inestimable value of
each individual person.
The Church's social teaching
91. The mystery of the Eucharist inspires and impels us to
work courageously within our world to bring about that renewal of relationships
which has its inexhaustible source in God's gift. The prayer which we repeat at
every Mass: "Give us this day our daily bread," obliges us to do
everything possible, in cooperation with international, state and private
institutions, to end or at least reduce the scandal of hunger and malnutrition
afflicting so many millions of people in our world, especially in developing
countries. In a particular way, the Christian laity, formed at the school of
the Eucharist, are called to assume their specific political and social
responsibilities. To do so, they need to be adequately prepared through
practical education in charity and justice. To this end, the Synod considered
it necessary for Dioceses and Christian communities to teach and promote the
Church's social doctrine. (248) In this precious legacy handed down from the
earliest ecclesial tradition, we find elements of great wisdom that guide
Christians in their involvement in today's burning social issues. This
teaching, the fruit of the Church's whole history, is distinguished by realism
and moderation; it can help to avoid misguided compromises or false utopias.
The sanctification of the world and the protection of
creation
92. Finally, to develop a profound eucharistic spirituality
that is also capable of significantly affecting the fabric of society, the
Christian people, in giving thanks to God through the Eucharist, should be
conscious that they do so in the name of all creation, aspiring to the
sanctification of the world and working intensely to that end.(249) The
Eucharist itself powerfully illuminates human history and the whole cosmos. In
this sacramental perspective we learn, day by day, that every ecclesial event
is a kind of sign by which God makes himself known and challenges us. The
eucharistic form of life can thus help foster a real change in the way we
approach history and the world. The liturgy itself teaches us this, when,
during the presentation of the gifts, the priest raises to God a prayer of
blessing and petition over the bread and wine, "fruit of the earth,"
"fruit of the vine" and "work of human hands." With these
words, the rite not only includes in our offering to God all human efforts and
activity, but also leads us to see the world as God's creation, which brings
forth everything we need for our sustenance. The world is not something
indifferent, raw material to be utilized simply as we see fit. Rather, it is
part of God's good plan, in which all of us are called to be sons and daughters
in the one Son of God, Jesus Christ (cf. Eph 1:4-12). The justified concern
about threats to the environment present in so many parts of the world is
reinforced by Christian hope, which commits us to working responsibly for the
protection of creation. (250) The relationship between the Eucharist and the
cosmos helps us to see the unity of God's plan and to grasp the profound
relationship between creation and the "new creation" inaugurated in
the resurrection of Christ, the new Adam. Even now we take part in that new
creation by virtue of our Baptism (cf. Col 2:12ff.). Our Christian life,
nourished by the Eucharist, gives us a glimpse of that new world -- new heavens
and a new earth -- where the new Jerusalem comes down from heaven, from God,
"prepared as a bride adorned for her husband" (Rev 21:2).
The usefulness of a Eucharistic Compendium
93. At the conclusion of these reflections, in which I have
taken up a number of themes raised at the Synod, I also wish to accept the
proposal which the Synod Fathers advanced as a means of helping the Christian
people to believe, celebrate and live ever more fully the mystery of the Eucharist.
The competent offices of the Roman Curia will publish a Compendium which will
assemble texts from the Catechism of the Catholic Church, prayers, explanations
of the Eucharistic Prayers of the Roman Missal and other useful aids for a
correct understanding, celebration and adoration of the Sacrament of the Altar
(251). It is my hope that this book will help make the memorial of the Passover
of the Lord increasingly the source and summit of the Church's life and
mission. This will encourage each member of the faithful to make his or her
life a true act of spiritual worship.
CONCLUSION
94. Dear brothers and sisters, the Eucharist is at the root
of every form of holiness, and each of us is called to the fullness of life in
the Holy Spirit. How many saints have advanced along the way of perfection
thanks to their eucharistic devotion! From Saint Ignatius of Antioch to Saint
Augustine, from Saint Anthony Abbot to Saint Benedict, from Saint Francis of
Assisi to Saint Thomas Aquinas, from Saint Clare of Assisi to Saint Catherine
of Siena, from Saint Paschal Baylon to Saint Peter Julian Eymard, from Saint
Alphonsus Liguori to Blessed Charles de Foucauld, from Saint John Mary Vianney
to Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, from Saint Pius of Pietrelcina to Blessed Teresa of
Calcutta, from Blessed Piergiorgio Frassati to Blessed Ivan Mertz, to name only
a few, holiness has always found its center in the sacrament of the Eucharist.
This most holy mystery thus needs to be firmly believed,
devoutly celebrated and intensely lived in the Church. Jesus' gift of himself
in the sacrament which is the memorial of his passion tells us that the success
of our lives is found in our participation in the trinitarian life offered to
us truly and definitively in him. The celebration and worship of the Eucharist
enable us to draw near to God's love and to persevere in that love until we are
united with the Lord whom we love. The offering of our lives, our fellowship
with the whole community of believers and our solidarity with all men and women
are essential aspects of that logiké latreía, spiritual worship, holy and
pleasing to God (cf. Rom 12:1), which transforms every aspect of our human
existence, to the glory of God. I therefore ask all pastors to spare no effort
in promoting an authentically eucharistic Christian spirituality. Priests,
deacons and all those who carry out a eucharistic ministry should always be
able to find in this service, exercized with care and constant preparation, the
strength and inspiration needed for their personal and communal path of
sanctification. I exhort the lay faithful, and families in particular, to find
ever anew in the sacrament of Christ's love the energy needed to make their
lives an authentic sign of the presence of the risen Lord. I ask all consecrated
men and women to show by their eucharistic lives the splendor and the beauty of
belonging totally to the Lord.
95. At the beginning of the fourth century, Christian
worship was still forbidden by the imperial authorities. Some Christians in
North Africa, who felt bound to celebrate the Lord's Day, defied the
prohibition. They were martyred after declaring that it was not possible for
them to live without the Eucharist, the food of the Lord: sine dominico non
possumus. (252) May these martyrs of Abitinae, in union with all those saints
and beati who made the Eucharist the center of their lives, intercede for us
and teach us to be faithful to our encounter with the risen Christ. We too
cannot live without partaking of the sacrament of our salvation; we too desire
to be iuxta dominicam viventes, to reflect in our lives what we celebrate on
the Lord's Day. That day is the day of our definitive deliverance. Is it
surprising, then, that we should wish to live every day in that newness of life
which Christ has brought us in the mystery of the Eucharist?
96. May Mary Most Holy, the Immaculate Virgin, ark of the
new and eternal covenant, accompany us on our way to meet the Lord who comes.
In her we find realized most perfectly the essence of the Church. The Church
sees in Mary -- "Woman of the Eucharist," as she was called by the
Servant of God John Paul II (253) -- her finest icon, and she contemplates Mary
as a singular model of the eucharistic life. For this reason, the priest,
standing in the presence of the verum Corpus natum de Maria Virgine on the
altar and speaking in the name of the liturgical assembly, says in the words of
the canon: "We honor Mary, the ever- virgin mother of Jesus Christ our
Lord and God." (254) Her holy name is also invoked and venerated in the
canons of the Eastern Christian traditions. The faithful, for their part,
"commend to Mary, Mother of the Church, their lives and the work of their
hands. Striving to have the same sentiments as Mary, they help the whole
community to become a living offering pleasing to the Father." (255) She
is the tota pulchra, the all-beautiful, for in her the radiance of God's glory
shines forth. The beauty of the heavenly liturgy, which must be reflected in
our own assemblies, is faithfully mirrored in her. From Mary we must learn to
become men and women of the Eucharist and of the Church, and thus to present
ourselves, in the words of Saint Paul, "holy and blameless" before
the Lord, even as he wished us to be from the beginning (cf. Col 1:22; Eph 1:4).
(256)
97. Through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, may
the Holy Spirit kindle within us the same ardour experienced by the disciples
on the way to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13-35) and renew our "eucharistic
wonder" through the splendor and beauty radiating from the liturgical
rite, the efficacious sign of the infinite beauty of the holy mystery of God.
Those disciples arose and returned in haste to Jerusalem in order to share
their joy with their brothers and sisters in the faith. True joy is found in
recognizing that the Lord is still with us, our faithful companion along the
way. The Eucharist makes us discover that Christ, risen from the dead, is our
contemporary in the mystery of the Church, his body. Of this mystery of love we
have become witnesses. Let us encourage one another to walk joyfully, our
hearts filled with wonder, towards our encounter with the Holy Eucharist, so
that we may experience and proclaim to others the truth of the words with which
Jesus took leave of his disciples: "Lo, I am with you always, until the
end of the world" (Mt 28:20).
Redemptionis Sacramentum
Preamble
[1.] In the Most Holy Eucharist, Mother Church with
steadfast faith acknowledges the Sacrament of redemption,1 joyfully takes it to
herself, celebrates it and reveres it in adoration, proclaiming the death of
Christ Jesus and confessing His Resurrection until He comes in glory2 to hand
over, as unconquered Lord and Ruler, eternal Priest and King of the Universe, a
kingdom of truth and life to the immense majesty of the Almighty Father.3
[2.] The Church's doctrine regarding the Most Holy
Eucharist, in which the whole spiritual wealth of the Church is contained --
namely Christ, our Paschal Lamb4 -- the Eucharist which is the source and
summit of the whole of Christian life,5 and which lies as a causative force
behind the very origins of the Church,6 has been expounded with thoughtful care
and with great authority over the course of the centuries in the writings of
the Councils and the Supreme Pontiffs. Most recently, in fact, the Supreme
Pontiff John Paul II, in the Encyclical Letter Ecclesia de Eucharistia, set
forth afresh certain elements of great importance on this subject in view of
the ecclesial circumstances of our times.7
In order that especially in the celebration of the Sacred
Liturgy the Church might duly safeguard so great a mystery in our own time as
well, the Supreme Pontiff has mandated that this Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments,8 in collaboration with the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, should prepare this Instruction
treating of certain matters pertaining to the discipline of the Sacrament of
the Eucharist. Those things found in this Instruction are therefore to be read
in the continuity with the above-mentioned Encyclical Letter, Ecclesia de
Eucharistia.
It is not at all the intention here to prepare a compendium
of the norms regarding the Most Holy Eucharist, but rather, to take up within
this Instruction some elements of liturgical norms that have been previously
expounded or laid down and even today remain in force in order to assure a
deeper appreciation of the liturgical norms;9 to establish certain norms by
which those earlier ones are explained and complemented; and also to set forth
for Bishops, as well as for Priests, Deacons and all the lay Christian
faithful, how each should carry them out in accordance with his own
responsibilities and the means at his disposal.
[6.] For abuses
"contribute to the obscuring of the Catholic faith and doctrine concerning
this wonderful sacrament".14 Thus, they also hinder the faithful from
"re-living in a certain way the experience of the two disciples of Emmaus:
'and their eyes were opened, and they recognized Him'".15 For in the
presence of God's power and divinity16 and the splendor of His goodness, made
manifest especially in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, it is fitting that all
the faithful should have and put into practice that power of acknowledging
God's majesty that they have received through the saving Passion of the
Only-Begotten Son.17
[8.] It is therefore
to be noted with great sadness that "ecumenical initiatives which are
well-intentioned, nevertheless indulge at times in Eucharistic practices
contrary to the discipline by which the Church expresses her faith". Yet
the Eucharist "is too great a gift to tolerate ambiguity or
depreciation". It is therefore necessary that some things be corrected or
more clearly delineated so that in this respect as well "the Eucharist
will continue to shine forth in all its radiant mystery".19
[11.] The Mystery of
the Eucharist "is too great for anyone to permit himself to treat it
according to his own whim, so that its sacredness and its universal ordering
would be obscured".27 On the contrary, anyone who acts thus by giving free
rein to his own inclinations, even if he is a Priest, injures the substantial
unity of the Roman Rite, which ought to be vigorously preserved,28 and becomes
responsible for actions that are in no way consistent with the hunger and
thirst for the living God that is experienced by the people today. Nor do such
actions serve authentic pastoral care or proper liturgical renewal; instead,
they deprive Christ's faithful of their patrimony and their heritage. For
arbitrary actions are not conducive to true renewal,29 but are detrimental to
the right of Christ's faithful to a liturgical celebration that is an
expression of the Church's life in accordance with her tradition and
discipline. In the end, they introduce elements of distortion and disharmony
into the very celebration of the Eucharist, which is oriented in its own lofty
way and by its very nature to signifying and wondrously bringing about the
communion of divine life and the unity of the People of God.30 The result is
uncertainty in matters of doctrine, perplexity and scandal on the part of the
People of God, and, almost as a necessary consequence, vigorous opposition, all
of which greatly confuse and sadden many of Christ's faithful in this age of
ours when Christian life is often particularly difficult on account of the
inroads of "secularization" as well.31
[12.] On the contrary, it is the right of all of Christ's
faithful that the Liturgy, and in particular the celebration of Holy Mass,
should truly be as the Church wishes, according to her stipulations as
prescribed in the liturgical books and in the other laws and norms. Likewise,
the Catholic people have the right that the Sacrifice of the Holy Mass should
be celebrated for them in an integral manner, according to the entire doctrine
of the Church's Magisterium. Finally, it is the Catholic community's right that
the celebration of the Most Holy Eucharist should be carried out for it in such
a manner that it truly stands out as a sacrament of unity, to the exclusion of
all blemishes and actions that might engender divisions and factions in the
Church.32
17.] "The
Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments attends to
those matters that pertain to the Apostolic See as regards the regulation and
promotion of the Sacred Liturgy, and especially the Sacraments, with due regard
for the competence of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. It
fosters and enforces sacramental discipline, especially as regards their
validity and their licit celebration". Finally, it "carefully seeks
to ensure that the liturgical regulations are observed with precision, and that
abuses are prevented or eliminated whenever they are detected".37 In this
regard, according to the tradition of the universal Church, pre-eminent
solicitude is accorded the celebration of Holy Mass, and also to the worship
that is given to the Holy Eucharist even outside Mass.
1. The Diocesan
Bishop, High Priest of his Flock
[19.] The diocesan Bishop, the first steward of the
mysteries of God in the particular Church entrusted to him, is the moderator,
promoter and guardian of her whole liturgical life.39 For "the Bishop, endowed with the fullness of the Sacrament
of Order, is 'the steward of the grace of the high Priesthood',40 especially in
the Eucharist which he either himself offers or causes to be offered,41 by
which the Church continually lives and grows".42
[20.] Indeed, the pre-eminent manifestation of the Church is
found whenever the rites of Mass are celebrated, especially in the Cathedral
Church, "with the full and active participation of the entire holy People
of God, joined in one act of prayer, at one altar at which the Bishop
presides", surrounded by his presbyterate with the Deacons and
ministers.43 Furthermore, "every lawful celebration of the Eucharist is
directed by the Bishop, to whom is entrusted the office of presenting the
worship of the Christian religion to the Divine Majesty and ordering it
according to the precepts of the Lord and the laws of the Church, further
specified by his own particular judgement for the Diocese".44
[22.] The Bishop governs the particular Church entrusted to
him,47 and it is his task to regulate, to direct, to encourage, and sometimes
also to reprove;48 this is a sacred task that he has received through episcopal
Ordination,49 which he fulfills in order to build up his flock in truth and
holiness.50 He should elucidate the inherent meaning of the rites and the
liturgical texts, and nourish the spirit of the Liturgy in the Priests, Deacons
and lay faithful51 so that they are all led to the active and fruitful
celebration of the Eucharist,52 and in like manner he should take care to
ensure that the whole body of the Church is able to grow in the same
understanding, in the unity of charity, in the diocese, in the nation and in
the world. 53
[30.] The office "that belongs to Priests in particular
in the celebration of the Eucharist" is a great one, "for it is their
responsibility to preside at the Eucharist in persona Christi and to provide a
witness to and a service of communion not only for the community directly
taking part in the celebration, but also for the universal Church, which is
always brought into play within the context of the Eucharist. It must be
lamented that, especially in the years following the post-Conciliar liturgical
reform, as a result of a misguided sense of creativity and adaptation, there
have been a number of abuses which have been a source of suffering for
many".70
[31.] In keeping with the solemn promises that they have
made in the rite of Sacred Ordination and renewed each year in the Mass of the
Chrism, let Priests celebrate "devoutly and faithfully the mysteries of
Christ for the praise of God and the sanctification of the Christian people,
according to the tradition of the Church, especially in the Eucharistic
Sacrifice and in the Sacrament of Reconciliation".71 They ought not to
detract from the profound meaning of their own ministry by corrupting the
liturgical celebration either through alteration or omission, or through
arbitrary additions.72 For as Saint
Ambrose said, "It is not in herself ... but in us that the Church is
injured. Let us take care so that our own failure may not cause injury to the
Church".73 Let the Church of God not be injured, then, by Priests who have
so solemnly dedicated themselves to the ministry. Indeed, under the Bishop's
authority let them faithfully seek to prevent others as well from committing
this type of distortion.
32.] "Let the Parish Priest strive so that the Most
Holy Eucharist will be the center of the parish congregation of the faithful;
let him work to ensure that Christ's faithful are nourished through the devout
celebration of the Sacraments, and in particular, that they frequently approach
the Most Holy Eucharist and the Sacrament of Penance; let him strive,
furthermore, to ensure that the faithful are encouraged to offer prayers in
their families as well, and to participate consciously and actively in the
Sacred Liturgy, which the Parish Priest, under the authority of the diocesan
Bishop, is bound to regulate and supervise in his parish lest abuses
occur".74 Although it is appropriate that he should be assisted in the
effective preparation of the liturgical celebrations by various members of
Christ's faithful, he nevertheless must not cede to them in any way those
things that are proper to his own office.
[37.] All of Christ's faithful, freed from their sins and
incorporated into the Church through Baptism, are deputed by means of a
sacramental character for the worship of the Christian religion,92 so that by
virtue of their royal priesthood,93 persevering in prayer and praising God,94
they may offer themselves as a living and holy sacrifice pleasing to God and
attested to others by their works,95 giving witness to Christ throughout the
earth and providing an answer to those who ask concerning their hope of eternal
life that is in them.96 Thus the participation of the lay faithful too in the
Eucharist and in the other celebrations of the Church's rites cannot be equated
with mere presence, and still less with a passive one, but is rather to be
regarded as a true exercise of faith and of the baptismal dignity.
[38.] The constant teaching of the Church on the nature of
the Eucharist not only as a meal, but also and pre-eminently as a Sacrifice, is
therefore rightly understood to be one of the principal keys to the full
participation of all the faithful in so great a Sacrament.97 For when
"stripped of its sacrificial meaning, the mystery is understood as if its
meaning and importance were simply that of a fraternal banquet".98
[40.] Nevertheless, from the fact that the liturgical
celebration obviously entails activity, it does not follow that everyone must
necessarily have something concrete to do beyond the actions and gestures, as
if a certain specific liturgical ministry must necessarily be given to the
individuals to be carried out by them. Instead, catechetical instruction should
strive diligently to correct those widespread superficial notions and practices
often seen in recent years in this regard, and ever to instill anew in all of
Christ's faithful that sense of deep wonder before the greatness of the mystery
of faith that is the Eucharist, in whose celebration the Church is forever
passing from what is obsolete into newness of life: "in novitatem a
vetustate".101 For in the celebration of the Eucharist, as in the whole
Christian life which draws its power from it and leads toward it, the Church,
after the manner of Saint Thomas the Apostle, prostrates herself in adoration
before the Lord who was crucified, suffered and died, was buried and arose, and
perpetually exclaims to Him who is clothed in the fullness of His divine
splendor: "My Lord and my God!"102
[41.] For encouraging, promoting and nourishing this
interior understanding of liturgical participation, the continuous and
widespread celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours, the use of the sacramentals
and exercises of Christian popular piety are extremely helpful. These latter
exercises -- which "while not belonging to the Liturgy in the strict
sense, possess nonetheless a particular importance and dignity" -- are to
be regarded as having a certain connection with the liturgical context,
especially when they have been lauded and attested by the Magisterium
itself,103 as is the case especially of the Marian Rosary.104 Furthermore,
since these practices of piety lead the Christian people both to the reception
of the sacraments - especially the Eucharist - and "to meditation on the
mysteries of our Redemption and the imitation of the excellent heavenly
examples of the Saints, they are therefore not without salutary effects for our
participation in liturgical worship".105
[42.] It must be acknowledged that the Church has not come
together by human volition; rather, she has been called together by God in the
Holy Spirit, and she responds through faith to His free calling (thus the word
ekklesia is related to klesis, or "calling").106 Nor is the
Eucharistic Sacrifice to be considered a "concelebration", in the
univocal sense, of the Priest along with the people who are present.107 On the
contrary, the Eucharist celebrated by the Priests "is a gift which
radically transcends the power of the community.... The community that gathers
for the celebration of the Eucharist absolutely requires an ordained Priest,
who presides over it so that it may truly be a Eucharistic convocation. On the
other hand, the community is by itself incapable of providing an ordained
minister".108 There is pressing need of a concerted will to avoid all
ambiguity in this matter and to remedy the difficulties of recent years.
Accordingly, terms such as "celebrating community" or
"celebrating assembly" (in other languages "asamblea
celebrante", "assemblée célébrante", "assemblea celebrante")
and similar terms should not be used injudiciously.
1. The Matter of the
Most Holy Eucharist
[48.] The bread used in the celebration of the Most Holy
Eucharistic Sacrifice must be unleavened, purely of wheat, and recently made so
that there is no danger of decomposition.123 It follows therefore that bread
made from another substance, even if it is grain, or if it is mixed with
another substance different from wheat to such an extent that it would not
commonly be considered wheat bread, does not constitute valid matter for
confecting the Sacrifice and the Eucharistic Sacrament.124 It is a grave abuse
to introduce other substances, such as fruit or sugar or honey, into the bread
for confecting the Eucharist. Hosts should obviously be made by those who are
not only distinguished by their integrity, but also skilled in making them and
furnished with suitable tools.125
[49.] By reason of the sign, it is appropriate that at least
some parts of the Eucharistic Bread coming from the fraction should be
distributed to at least some of the faithful in Communion. "Small hosts
are, however, in no way ruled out when the number of those receiving Holy
Communion or other pastoral needs require it",126 and indeed small hosts
requiring no further fraction ought customarily to be used for the most part.
[50.] The wine that is used in the most sacred celebration
of the Eucharistic Sacrifice must be natural, from the fruit of the grape, pure
and incorrupt, not mixed with other substances.127 During the celebration
itself, a small quantity of water is to be mixed with it. Great care should be
taken so that the wine intended for the celebration of the Eucharist is well
conserved and has not soured.128 It is altogether forbidden to use wine of
doubtful authenticity or provenance, for the Church requires certainty regarding
the conditions necessary for the validity of the sacraments. Nor are other
drinks of any kind to be admitted for any reason, as they do not constitute
valid matter.
2. The Eucharistic Prayer
[51.] Only those Eucharistic Prayers are to be used which
are found in the Roman Missal or are legitimately approved by the Apostolic
See, and according to the manner and the terms set forth by it. "It is not
to be tolerated that some Priests take upon themselves the right to compose
their own Eucharistic Prayers"129 or to change the same texts approved by
the Church, or to introduce others composed by private individuals.130
[52.] The proclamation of the Eucharistic Prayer, which by
its very nature is the climax of the whole celebration, is proper to the Priest
by virtue of his Ordination. It is therefore an abuse to proffer it in such a
way that some parts of the Eucharistic Prayer are recited by a Deacon, a lay
minister, or by an individual member of the faithful, or by all members of the
faithful together. The Eucharistic Prayer, then, is to be recited by the Priest
alone in full.131
[53.] While the Priest proclaims the Eucharistic Prayer
"there should be no other prayers or singing, and the organ or other
musical instruments should be silent",132 except for the people's
acclamations that have been duly approved, as described below.
[54.] The people, however, are always involved actively and
never merely passively: for they "silently join themselves with the Priest
in faith, as well as in their interventions during the course of the
Eucharistic Prayer as prescribed, namely in the responses in the Preface
dialogue, the Sanctus, the acclamation after the consecration and the
"Amen" after the final doxology, and in other acclamations approved
by the Conference of Bishops with the recognitio of the Holy See".133
[55.] In some places there has existed an abuse by which the
Priest breaks the host at the time of the consecration in the Holy Mass. This
abuse is contrary to the tradition of the Church. It is reprobated and is to be
corrected with haste.
[56.] The mention of the name of the Supreme Pontiff and the
diocesan Bishop in the Eucharistic Prayer is not to be omitted, since this is a
most ancient tradition to be maintained, and a manifestation of ecclesial
communion. For "the coming together of the eucharistic community is at the
same time a joining in union with its own Bishop and with the Roman
Pontiff".134
[58.] All of Christ's faithful likewise have the right to a
celebration of the Eucharist that has been so carefully prepared in all its
parts that the Word of God is properly and efficaciously proclaimed and
explained in it; that the faculty for selecting the liturgical texts and rites
is carried out with care according to the norms; and that their faith is duly
safeguarded and nourished by the words that are sung in the celebration of the
Liturgy.
[60.] In the celebration of Mass, the Liturgy of the Word
and the Liturgy of the Eucharist are intimately connected to one another, and
form one single act of worship. For this reason it is not licit to separate one
of these parts from the other and celebrate them at different times or
places.135 Nor is it licit to carry out the individual parts of Holy Mass at
different times of the same day.
[65.] It should be borne in mind that any previous norm that
may have admitted non-ordained faithful to give the homily during the
Eucharistic celebration is to be considered abrogated by the norm of canon 767
§1.145 This practice is reprobated, so that it cannot be permitted to attain
the force of custom.
70.] The offerings that Christ's faithful are accustomed to
present for the Liturgy of the Eucharist in Holy Mass are not necessarily
limited to bread and wine for the Eucharistic celebration, but may also include
gifts given by the faithful in the form of money or other things for the sake
of charity toward the poor. Moreover, external gifts must always be a visible
expression of that true gift that God expects from us: a contrite heart, the
love of God and neighbor by which we are conformed to the sacrifice of Christ,
who offered Himself for us. For in the Eucharist, there shines forth most
brilliantly that mystery of charity that Jesus brought forth at the Last Supper
by washing the feet of the disciples. In order to preserve the dignity of the
Sacred Liturgy, in any event, the external offerings should be brought forward
in an appropriate manner. Money, therefore, just as other contributions for the
poor, should be placed in an appropriate place which should be away from the Eucharistic
table.150 Except for money and occasionally a minimal symbolic portion of other
gifts, it is preferable that such offerings be made outside the celebration of
Mass.
[71.] The practice of the Roman Rite is to be maintained
according to which the peace is extended shortly before Holy Communion. For
according to the tradition of the Roman Rite, this practice does not have the
connotation either of reconciliation or of a remission of sins, but instead
signifies peace, communion and charity before the reception of the Most Holy
Eucharist.151 It is rather the Penitential Act to be carried out at the
beginning of Mass (especially in its first form) which has the character of
reconciliation among brothers and sisters.
[73.] In the celebration of Holy Mass the breaking of the
Eucharistic Bread - done only by the Priest celebrant, if necessary with the
help of a Deacon or of a concelebrant - begins after the exchange of peace,
while the Agnus Dei is being recited. For the gesture of breaking bread "carried
out by Christ at the Last Supper, which in apostolic times gave the whole
Eucharistic action its name, signifies that the faithful, though they are many,
are made one Body in the communion of the one Bread of Life who is Christ, who
died and rose for the world's salvation" (cf. I Cor 10:17).153 For this
reason the rite must be carried out with great reverence.154 Even so, it should
be brief. The abuse that has prevailed in some places, by which this rite is
unnecessarily prolonged and given undue emphasis, with laypersons also helping
in contradiction to the norms, should be corrected with all haste.155
4. On the Joining of
Various Rites with the Celebration of Mass
[75.] On account of
the theological significance inherent in a particular rite and the Eucharistic
Celebration, the liturgical books sometimes prescribe or permit the celebration
of Holy Mass to be joined with another rite, especially one of those pertaining
to the Sacraments.157 The Church does
not permit such a conjoining in other cases, however, especially when it is a
question of trivial matters.
[78.] It is not
permissible to link the celebration of Mass to political or secular events, nor
to situations that are not fully consistent with the Magisterium of the
Catholic Church. Furthermore, it is altogether to be avoided that the
celebration of Mass should be carried out merely out of a desire for show, or
in the manner of other ceremonies including profane ones, lest the Eucharist
should be emptied of its authentic meaning.
1. Dispositions for
the Reception of Holy Communion
[80.] The Eucharist is to be offered to the faithful, among
other reasons, "as an antidote, by which we are freed from daily faults
and preserved from mortal sins",160 as is brought to light in various
parts of the Mass. As for the Penitential Act placed at the beginning of Mass,
it has the purpose of preparing all to be ready to celebrate the sacred
mysteries;161 even so, "it lacks the efficacy of the Sacrament of
Penance",162 and cannot be regarded as a substitute for the Sacrament of
Penance in remission of graver sins. Pastors of souls should take care to
ensure diligent catechetical instruction, so that Christian doctrine is handed
on to Christ's faithful in this matter.
[81.] The Church's custom shows that it is necessary for
each person to examine himself at depth,163 and that anyone who is conscious of
grave sin should not celebrate or receive the Body of the Lord without prior
sacramental confession, except for grave reason when the possibility of
confession is lacking; in this case he will remember that he is bound by the
obligation of making an act of perfect contrition, which includes the intention
to confess as soon as possible".164
[82.] Moreover, "the Church has drawn up norms aimed at
fostering the frequent and fruitful access of the faithful to the Eucharistic
table and at determining the objective conditions under which Communion may not
be given".165
[87.] The First Communion of children must always be
preceded by sacramental confession and absolution.169 Moreover First Communion
should always be administered by a Priest and never outside the celebration of
Mass. Apart from exceptional cases, it is not particularly appropriate for
First Communion to be administered on Holy Thursday of the Lord's Supper.
Another day should be chosen instead, such as a Sunday between the Second and
the Sixth Sunday of Easter, or the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ,
or the Sundays of Ordinary Time, since Sunday is rightly regarded as the day of
the Eucharist.170 "Children who have not attained the age of reason, or
those whom" the Parish Priest "has determined to be insufficiently
prepared" should not come forward to receive the Holy Eucharist.171 Where
it happens, however, that a child who is exceptionally mature for his age is
judged to be ready for receiving the Sacrament, the child must not be denied
First Communion provided he has received sufficient instruction.
2. The distribution
of Holy Communion
[88.] The faithful
should normally receive sacramental Communion of the Eucharist during Mass
itself, at the moment laid down by the rite of celebration, that is to say,
just after the Priest celebrant's Communion.172 It is the Priest celebrant's
responsibility to minister Communion, perhaps assisted by other Priests or
Deacons; and he should not resume the Mass until after the Communion of the
faithful is concluded. Only when there is a necessity may extraordinary
ministers assist the Priest celebrant in accordance with the norm of law.173
[91.] In distributing
Holy Communion it is to be remembered that "sacred ministers may not deny
the sacraments to those who seek them in a reasonable manner, are rightly
disposed, and are not prohibited by law from receiving them".177 Hence any
baptized Catholic who is not prevented by law must be admitted to Holy
Communion. Therefore, it is not licit to deny Holy Communion to any of Christ's
faithful solely on the grounds, for example, that the person wishes to receive
the Eucharist kneeling or standing.
[92.] Although each
of the faithful always has the right to receive Holy Communion on the tongue,
at his choice,178 if any communicant should wish to receive the Sacrament in
the hand, in areas where the Bishops' Conference with the recognitio of the
Apostolic See has given permission, the sacred host is to be administered to
him or her. However, special care should be taken to ensure that the host is
consumed by the communicant in the presence of the minister, so that no one
goes away carrying the Eucharistic species in his hand. If there is a risk of
profanation, then Holy Communion should not be given in the hand to
thefaithful.179
[95.] A lay member
of Christ's faithful "who has already received the Most Holy Eucharist may
receive it again on the same day only within a Eucharistic Celebration in which
he or she is participating, with due regard for the prescriptions of Can. 921 §
2."182
[96.] The practice
is reprobated whereby either unconsecrated hosts or other edible or inedible
things are distributed during the celebration of Holy Mass or beforehand after
the manner of Communion, contrary to the prescriptions of the liturgical books.
For such a practice in no way accords with the tradition of the Roman Rite, and
carries with it the danger of causing confusion among Christ's faithful
concerning the Eucharistic doctrine of the Church. Where there exists in
certain places by concession a particular custom of blessing bread after Mass
for distribution, proper catechesis should very carefully be given concerning
this action. In fact, no other similar practices should be introduced, nor
should unconsecrated hosts ever be used for this purpose.
4. Communion under
Both Kinds
[100.] So that the
fullness of the sign may be made more clearly evident to the faithful in the
course of the Eucharistic banquet, lay members of Christ's faithful, too, are
admitted to Communion under both kinds, in the cases set forth in the
liturgical books, preceded and continually accompanied by proper catechesis
regarding the dogmatic principles on this matter laid down by the Ecumenical
Council of Trent.186
[102.] The chalice
should not be ministered to lay members of Christ's faithful where there is
such a large number of communicants189 that it is difficult to gauge the amount
of wine for the Eucharist and there is a danger that "more than a
reasonable quantity of the Blood of Christ remain to be consumed at the end of
the celebration".190 The same is true wherever access to the chalice would
be difficult to arrange, or where such a large amount of wine would be required
that its certain provenance and quality could only be known with difficulty, or
wherever there is not an adequate number of sacred ministers or extraordinary
ministers of Holy Communion with proper formation, or where a notable part of
the people continues to prefer not to approach the chalice for various reasons,
so that the sign of unity would in some sense be negated.
[107.] In accordance
with what is laid down by the canons, "one who throws away the consecrated
species or takes them away or keeps them for a sacrilegious purpose, incurs a
latae sententiae excommunication reserved to the Apostolic See; a cleric,
moreover, may be punished by another penalty, not excluding dismissal from the
clerical state".194 To be regarded as pertaining to this case is any
action that is voluntarily and gravely disrespectful of the sacred species.
Anyone, therefore, who acts contrary to these norms, for example casting the
sacred species into the sacrarium or in an unworthy place or on the ground,
incurs the penalties laid down.195 Furthermore all will remember that once the
distribution of Holy Communion during the celebration of Mass has been
completed, the prescriptions of the Roman Missal are to be observed, and in
particular, whatever may remain of the Blood of Christ must be entirely and
immediately consumed by the Priest or by another minister, according to the
norms, while the consecrated hosts that are left are to be consumed by the
Priest at the altar or carried to the place for the reservation of the
Eucharist.196
1. The Place for the
Celebration of Holy Mass
[108.] "The
celebration of the Eucharist is to be carried out in a sacred place, unless in
a particular case necessity requires otherwise. In this case the celebration must
be in a decent place".197 The diocesan Bishop shall be the judge for his
diocese concerning this necessity, on a case-by-case basis.
[109.] It is never
lawful for a Priest to celebrate in a temple or sacred place of any
non-Christian religion.
2. Various
Circumstances Relating to the Mass
[110.]
"Remembering always that in the mystery of the Eucharistic
Sacrifice the work of redemption is constantly being carried out, Priests
should celebrate frequently. Indeed, daily celebration is earnestly recommended,
because, even if it should not be possible to have the faithful present, the
celebration is an act of Christ and of the Church, and in carrying it out,
Priests fulfill their principal role".198
[111.] A Priest is
to be permitted to celebrate or concelebrate the Eucharist "even if he is
not known to the rector of the church, provided he presents commendatory
letters" (i.e., a celebret) not more than a year old from the Holy See or
his Ordinary or Superior "or unless it can be prudently judged that he is
not impeded from celebrating".199 Let the Bishops take measures to put a
stop to any contrary practice.
[112.] Mass is
celebrated either in Latin or in another language, provided that liturgical
texts are used which have been approved according to the norm of law. Except in
the case of celebrations of the Mass that are scheduled by the ecclesiastical
authorities to take place in the language of the people, Priests are always and
everywhere permitted to celebrate Mass in Latin.200
[113.] When Mass is
concelebrated by several Priests, a language known both to all the
concelebrating Priests and to the gathered people should be used in the
recitation of the Eucharist Prayer. Where it happens that some of the Priests
who are present do not know the language of the celebration and therefore are
not capable of pronouncing the parts of the Eucharistic Prayer proper to them,
they should not concelebrate, but instead should attend the celebration in
choral dress in accordance with the norms.201
[114.] "At
Sunday Masses in parishes, insofar as parishes are 'Eucharistic communities',
it is customary to find different groups, movements, associations, and even the
smaller religious communities present in the parish".202 While it is
permissible that Mass should be celebrated for particular groups according to
the norm of law,203 these groups are nevertheless not exempt from the faithful
observance of the liturgical norms.
[115.] The abuse is
reprobated by which the celebration of Holy Mass for the people is suspended in
an arbitrary manner contrary to the norms of the Roman Missal and the healthy tradition of the Roman Rite, on the
pretext of promoting a "fast from the Eucharist".
[116.] Masses are
not to be multiplied contrary to the norm of law, and as regards Mass stipends,
all those things are to be observed which are otherwise laid down by law.204
[117.] Sacred
vessels for containing the Body and Blood of the Lord must be made in strict
conformity with the norms of tradition and of the liturgical books.205 The
Bishops' Conferences have the faculty to decide whether it is appropriate, once
their decisions have been given the recognitio by the Apostolic See, for sacred
vessels to be made of other solid materials as well. It is strictly required,
however, that such materials be truly noble in the common estimation within a
given region,206 so that honor will be given to the Lord by their use, and all
risk of diminishing the doctrine of the Real Presence of Christ in the
Eucharistic species in the eyes of the faithful will be avoided. Reprobated,
therefore, is any practice of using for the celebration of Mass common vessels,
or others lacking in quality, or devoid of all artistic merit or which are mere
containers, as also other vessels made from glass, earthenware, clay, or other
materials that break easily. This norm is to be applied even as regards metals
and other materials that easily rust or deteriorate.207
4. Liturgical
Vesture
[121.] "The
purpose of a variety of color of the sacred vestments is to give effective
expression even outwardly to the specific character of the mysteries of faith
being celebrated and to a sense of Christian life's passage through the course
of the liturgical year".210 On the other hand, the variety "of
offices in the celebration of the Eucharist is shown outwardly by the diversity
of sacred vestments. In fact, these "sacred vestments should also
contribute to the beauty of the sacred action itself".211
[128.] Holy Mass and
other liturgical celebrations, which are acts of Christ and of the people of
God hierarchically constituted, are ordered in such a way that the sacred
ministers and the lay faithful manifestly take part in them each according to
his own condition. It is preferable therefore that "Priests who are present
at a Eucharistic Celebration, unless excused for a good reason, should as a
rule exercise the office proper to their Order and thus take part as
concelebrants, wearing the sacred vestments. Otherwise, they wear their proper
choir dress or a surplice over a cassock".218 It is not fitting, except in
rare and exceptional cases and with reasonable cause, for them to participate
at Mass, as regards to externals, in the manner of the lay faithful.
Chapter VI
THE RESERVATION OF THE MOST HOLY EUCHARIST AND EUCHARISTIC
WORSHIP OUTSIDE MASS
1. The Reservation
of the Most Holy Eucharist
[129.] "The
celebration of the Eucharist in the Sacrifice of the Mass is truly the origin
and end of the worship given to the Eucharist outside the Mass. Furthermore the
sacred species are reserved after Mass principally so that the faithful who
cannot be present at Mass, above all the sick and those advanced in age, may be
united by sacramental Communion to Christ and His Sacrifice which is offered in
the Mass".219 In addition, this reservation also permits the practice of
adoring this great Sacrament and offering it the worship due to God.
Accordingly, forms of adoration that are not only private but also public and
communitarian in nature, as established or approved by the Church herself, must
be greatly promoted.220
[130.]
"According to the structure of each church building and in
accordance with legitimate local customs, the Most Holy Sacrament is to be
reserved in a tabernacle in a part of the church that is noble, prominent, readily
visible, and adorned in a dignified manner" and furthermore "suitable
for prayer" by reason of the quietness of the location, the space
available in front of the tabernacle, and also the supply of benches or seats
and kneelers.221 In addition, diligent attention should be paid to all the
prescriptions of the liturgical books and to the norm of law,222 especially as
regards the avoidance of the danger of profanation.223
[131.] Apart from
the prescriptions of Canon 934 § 1, it is forbidden to reserve the Blessed
Sacrament in a place that is not subject in a secure way to the authority of
the diocesan Bishop, or where there is a danger of profanation. Where such is
the case, the diocesan Bishop should immediately revoke any permission for
reservation of the Eucharist that may already have been granted.224
[132.] No one may carry the Most Holy Eucharist to his or
her home, or to any other place contrary to the norm of law. It should also be
borne in mind that removing or retaining the consecrated species for a
sacrilegious purpose or casting them away are graviora delicta, the absolution
of which is reserved to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.225
[133.] A Priest or
Deacon, or an extraordinary minister who takes the Most Holy Eucharist when an
ordained minister is absent or impeded in order to administer it as Communion
for a sick person, should go insofar as possible directly from the place where
the Sacrament is reserved to the sick person's home, leaving aside any profane
business so that any danger of profanation may be avoided and the greatest
reverence for the Body of Christ may be ensured. Furthermore the Rite for the
administration of Communion to the sick, as prescribed in the Roman Ritual, is
always to be used.226
2. Certain Forms of
Worship of the Most Holy Eucharist Outside Mass
[134.] "The
worship of the Eucharist outside the Sacrifice of the Mass is a tribute of
inestimable value in the life of the Church. Such worship is closely linked to
the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice".227 Therefore both public
and private devotion to the Most Holy Eucharist even outside Mass should be
vigorously promoted, for by means of it the faithful give adoration to Christ,
truly and really present,228 the "High Priest of the good things to
come"229 and Redeemer of the whole world. "It is the responsibility
of sacred Pastors, even by the witness of their life, to support the practice
of Eucharistic worship and especially exposition of the Most Holy Sacrament, as
well as prayer of adoration before Christ present under the Eucharistic
species".230
[135.] The faithful
"should not omit making visits during the day to the Most Holy Sacrament,
as a proof of gratitude, a pledge of love, and a debt of the adoration due to
Christ the Lord who is present in it".231 For the contemplation of Jesus
present in the Most Holy Sacrament, as a communion of desire, powerfully joins
the faithful to Christ, as is splendidly evident in the example of so many
Saints.232 "Unless there is a grave reason to the contrary, a church in
which the Most Holy Eucharist is reserved should be open to the faithful for at
least some hours each day, so that they can spend time in prayer before the
Most HolySacrament".233
[136.] The Ordinary
should diligently foster Eucharistic adoration, whether brief or prolonged or
almost continuous, with the participation of the people. For in recent years in
so many places "adoration of the Most Holy Sacrament is also an important
daily practice and becomes an inexhaustible source of holiness", although
there are also places "where there is evident almost a total lack of
regard for worship in the form of Eucharistic adoration".234
[137.] Exposition of the Most Holy Eucharist must always be
carried out in accordance with the prescriptions of the liturgical books.235
Before the Most Holy Sacrament either reserved or exposed, the praying of the
Rosary, which is admirable "in its simplicity and even its
profundity", is not to be excluded either.236 Even so, especially if there
is Exposition, the character of this kind of prayer as a contemplation of the
mystery of the life of Christ the Redeemer and the Almighty Father's design of
salvation should be emphasized, especially by making use of readings taken from
Sacred Scripture.237
[138.] Still, the
Most Holy Sacrament, when exposed, must never be left unattended even for the
briefest space of time. It should therefore be arranged that at least some of
the faithful always be present at fixed times, even if they take alternating
turns.
[139.] Where the
diocesan Bishop has sacred ministers or others whom he can assign to this
purpose, the faithful have a right to visit the Most Holy Sacrament of the
Eucharist frequently for adoration, and to take part in adoration before the
Most Holy Eucharist exposed at least at some time in the course of any given
year.
[140.] It is highly
recommended that at least in the cities and the larger towns the diocesan
Bishop should designate a church building for perpetual adoration; in it,
however, Holy Mass should be celebrated frequently, even daily if possible,
while the Exposition should rigorously be interrupted while Mass is being
celebrated.238 It is fitting that the host to be exposed for adoration should
be consecrated in the Mass immediately preceding the time of adoration, and
that it should be placed in the monstrance upon the altar after Communion.239
[141.] The diocesan
Bishop should acknowledge and foster insofar as possible the right of the
various groups of Christ's faithful to form guilds or associations for the
carrying out of adoration, even almost continuous adoration. Whenever such
associations assume an international character, it pertains to the Congregation
for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments to erect them and to
approve their statutes.240
[143.]
"Wherever it is possible in the judgement of the diocesan Bishop, a
procession through the public streets should be held, especially on the
Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ as a public witness of reverence for
the Most Holy Sacrament",242 for the "devout participation of the
faithful in the Eucharistic procession on the Solemnity of the Body and Blood
of Christ is a grace from the Lord which yearly fills with joy those who take
part in it".243
[144.] Although this
cannot be done in some places, the tradition of holding Eucharistic processions
should not be allowed to be lost. Instead, new ways should be sought of holding
them in today's conditions: for example, at shrines, or in public gardens if
the civil authority agrees.
[145.] The pastoral
value of Eucharistic Congresses should be highly esteemed, and they
"should be a genuine sign of faith and charity".244 Let them be
diligently prepared and carried out in accordance with what has been laid
down,245 so that Christ's faithful may have the occasion to worship the sacred
mysteries of the Body and Blood of the Son of God in a worthy manner, and that
they may continually experience within themselves the fruits of the
Redemption.246
[146.] There can be
no substitute whatsoever for the ministerial Priesthood. For if a Priest is
lacking in the community, then the community lacks the exercise and sacramental
function of Christ the Head and Shepherd, which belongs to the essence of its
very life.247 For "the only minister who can confect the sacrament of the
Eucharist in persona Christi is a validly ordained Priest".248
1. The Extraordinary
Minister of Holy Communion
[154.] As has
already been recalled, "the only minister who can confect the Sacrament of
the Eucharist in persona Christi is a validly ordained Priest".254 Hence
the name "minister of the Eucharist" belongs properly to the Priest
alone. Moreover, also by reason of their sacred Ordination, the ordinary
ministers of Holy Communion are the Bishop, the Priest and the Deacon,255 to
whom it belongs therefore to administer Holy Communion to the lay members of
Christ's faithful during the celebration of Mass. In this way their ministerial
office in the Church is fully and accurately brought to light, and the sign value
of the Sacrament is made complete.
[155.] In addition
to the ordinary ministers there is the formally instituted acolyte, who by
virtue of his institution is an extraordinary minister of Holy Communion even
outside the celebration of Mass. If, moreover, reasons of real necessity prompt
it, another lay member of Christ's faithful may also be delegated by the
diocesan Bishop, in accordance with the norm of law,256 for one occasion or for
a specified time, and an appropriate formula of blessing may be used for the
occasion. This act of appointment, however, does not necessarily take a
liturgical form, nor, if it does take a liturgical form, should it resemble
sacred Ordination in any way. Finally, in special cases of an unforeseen
nature, permission can be given for a single occasion by the Priest who
presides at the celebration of the Eucharist.257
[156.] This function
is to be understood strictly according to the name by which it is known, that
is to say, that of extraordinary minister of Holy Communion, and not
"special minister of Holy Communion" nor "extraordinary minister
of the Eucharist" nor "special minister of the Eucharist", by
which names the meaning of this function is unnecessarily and improperly
broadened.
[157.] If there is
usually present a sufficient number of sacred ministers for the distribution of
Holy Communion, extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion may not be appointed.
Indeed, in such circumstances, those who may have already been appointed to
this ministry should not exercise it. The practice of those Priests is
reprobated who, even though present at the celebration, abstain from
distributing Communion and hand this function over to laypersons.258
[158.] Indeed, the
extraordinary minister of Holy Communion may administer Communion only when the
Priest and Deacon are lacking, when the Priest is prevented by weakness or
advanced age or some other genuine reason, or when the number of faithful
coming to Communion is so great that the very celebration of Mass would be
unduly prolonged.259 This, however, is to be understood in such a way that a
brief prolongation, considering the circumstances and culture of the place, is
not at all a sufficient reason.
[159.] It is never
allowed for the extraordinary minister of Holy Communion to delegate anyone
else to administer the Eucharist, as for example a parent or spouse or child of
the sick person who is the communicant.
[160.] Let the
diocesan Bishop give renewed consideration to the practice in recent years
regarding this matter, and if circumstances call for it, let him correct it or
define it more precisely. Where such extraordinary ministers are appointed in a
widespread manner out of true necessity, the diocesan Bishop should issue
special norms by which he determines the manner in which this function is to be
carried out in accordance with the law, bearing in mind the tradition of the
Church.
3. Particular
Celebrations carried out in the Absence of a Priest
[162.] On the day
known as the Lord's Day, the Church faithful gathers together to commemorate
the Lord's Resurrection and the whole Paschal Mystery, especially by the
celebration of Mass.263 For "no Christian community is built up unless it
is rooted in and hinges upon the celebration of the Most Holy Eucharist".264
Hence it is the Christian people's right to have the Eucharist celebrated for
them on Sunday, and whenever holy days of obligation or other major feasts
occur, and even daily insofar as this is possible. Therefore when it is
difficult to have the celebration of Mass on a Sunday in a parish church or in
another community of Christ's faithful, the diocesan Bishop together with his
Priests should consider appropriate remedies.265 Among such solutions will be
that other Priests be called upon for this purpose, or that the faithful
transfer to a church in a nearby place so as to participate in the Eucharistic
mystery there.266
[163.] All Priests,
to whom the Priesthood and the Eucharist are entrusted for the sake of
others,267 should remember that they are enjoined to provide the faithful with
the opportunity to satisfy the obligation of participating at Mass on
Sundays.268 For their part, the lay faithful have the right, barring a case of
real impossibility, that no Priest should ever refuse either to celebrate Mass for
the people or to have it celebrated by another Priest if the people otherwise
would not be able to satisfy the obligation of participating at Mass on Sunday
or the other days of precept.
[164.] "If
participation at the celebration of the Eucharist is impossible on account of
the absence of a sacred minister or for some other grave cause",269 then
it is the Christian people's right that the diocesan Bishop should provide as
far as he is able for some celebration to be held on Sundays for that community
under his authority and according to the Church's norms. Sunday celebrations of
this specific kind, however, are to be considered altogether extraordinary. All
Deacons or lay members of Christ's faithful who are assigned a part in such
celebrations by the diocesan Bishop should strive "to keep alive in the
community a genuine 'hunger' for the Eucharist, so that no opportunity for the
celebration of Mass will ever be missed, also taking advantage of the
occasional presence of a Priest who is not impeded by Church law from
celebrating Mass".270
[165.] It is
necessary to avoid any sort of confusion between this type of gathering and the
celebration of theEucharist.271 The diocesan Bishops, therefore, should
prudently discern whether Holy Communion ought to be distributed in these
gatherings. The matter would appropriately be determined in view of a more
ample co-ordination in the Bishops' Conference, to be put into effect after the
recognitio of the acts by the Apostolic See through the Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments. It will be preferable, moreover,
when both a Priest and a Deacon are absent, that the various parts be
distributed among several faithful rather than having a single lay member of
the faithful direct the whole celebration alone. Nor is it ever appropriate to
refer to any member of the lay faithful as "presiding" over the
celebration.
[166.] Likewise,
especially if Holy Communion is distributed during such celebrations, the
diocesan Bishop, to whose exclusive competence this matter pertains, must not
easily grant permission for such celebrations to be held on weekdays,
especially in places where it was possible or would be possible to have the
celebration of Mass on the preceding or the following Sunday. Priests are
therefore earnestly requested to celebrate Mass daily for the people in one of
the churches entrusted to their care.
[167.]
"Similarly, it is unthinkable on the Lord's Day to substitute for
Holy Mass either ecumenical celebrations of the Word or services of common
prayer with Christians from the ... Ecclesial Communities, or even
participation in these Communities' liturgical services".272 Should the
diocesan Bishop out of necessity authorize the participation of Catholics for a
single occasion, let pastors take care lest confusion arise among the Catholic
faithful concerning the necessity of taking part at Mass at another hour of the
day even in such circumstances, on account of the obligation.273
1. Graviora delicta
[172.] Graviora
delicta against the sanctity of the Most August Sacrifice and Sacrament of the
Eucharist are to be handled in accordance with the 'Norms concerning graviora
delicta reserved to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith',280 namely:
a) taking away or retaining the consecrated species for
sacrilegious ends, or the throwing them away;281
b) the attempted celebration of the liturgical action of the
Eucharistic Sacrifice or the simulation of
the same;282
c) the forbidden concelebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice
with ministers of Ecclesial Communities that do not have the apostolic
succession nor acknowledge the sacramental dignity of priestly Ordination;283
d) the consecration for sacrilegious ends of one matter
without the other in the celebration of the Eucharist or even of both outside
the celebration of the Eucharist.284
2. Grave Matters
[173.] Although the
gravity of a matter is to be judged in accordance with the common teaching of
the Church and the norms established by her, objectively to be considered among
grave matters is anything that puts at risk the validity and dignity of the
Most Holy Eucharist: namely, anything that contravenes what is set out above in
nn. 48-52, 56, 76-77, 79, 91-92, 94, 96, 101-102, 104, 106, 109, 111, 115, 117,
126, 131-133, 138, 153 and 168. Moreover, attention should be given to the
other prescriptions of the Code of Canon Law, and especially what is laid down
by canons 1364, 1369, 1373, 1376, 1380, 1384, 1385, 1386, and 1398.
178.] Hence whenever
a local Ordinary or the Ordinary of a religious Institute or of a Society of
apostolic life receives at least a plausible notice of a delict or abuse
concerning the Most Holy Eucharist, let him carefully investigate, either
personally or by means of another worthy cleric, concerning the facts and the
circumstances as well as the imputability.
[179.] Delicts
against the faith as well as graviora delicta committed in the celebration of
the Eucharist and the other Sacraments are to be referred without delay to the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which "examines [them] and, if
necessary, proceeds to the declaration or imposition of canonical sanctions
according to the norm of common or proper law".288
5. The Apostolic See
[181.] Whenever the
Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments receives
at least a plausible notice of a delict or an abuse concerning the Most Holy
Eucharist, it informs the Ordinary so that he may investigate the matter. When
the matter turns out to be serious, the Ordinary should send to the same
Dicastery as quickly as possible a copy of the acts of the inquiry that has
been undertaken, and where necessary, the penalty imposed.
6. Complaints
Regarding Abuses in Liturgical Matters
[183.] In an
altogether particular manner, let everyone do all that is in their power to
ensure that the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist will be protected from any
and every irreverence or distortion and that all abuses be thoroughly
corrected. This is a most serious duty incumbent upon each and every one, and
all are bound to carry it out without any favoritism.
[184.] Any Catholic,
whether Priest or Deacon or lay member of Christ's faithful, has the right to
lodge a complaint regarding a liturgical abuse to the diocesan Bishop or the competent
Ordinary equivalent to him in law, or to the Apostolic See on account of the
primacy of the Roman Pontiff.290 It is fitting, however, insofar as possible,
that the report or complaint be submitted first to the diocesan Bishop. This is
naturally to be done in truth and charity.
CONCLUSION
[185.] "Against the seeds of discord which daily
experience shows to be so deeply ingrained in human nature as a result of sin,
there stands the creative power of the unity of Christ's body. For it is
precisely by building up the Church that the Eucharist establishes fellowship
among men".291 It is therefore the hope of this Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments that also, by the diligent
application of those things that are recalled in this Instruction, human
weakness may come to pose less of an obstacle to the action of the Most Holy
Sacrament of the Eucharist, and that with all distortion set aside and every
reprobated practice removed,292 through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin
Mary, "Woman of the Eucharist", the saving presence of Christ in the
Sacrament of His Body and Blood may shine brightly upon all people.
[186.] Let all
Christ's faithful participate in the Most Holy Eucharist as fully, consciously
and actively as they can,293 honoring it lovingly by their devotion and the
manner of their life. Let Bishops, Priests and Deacons, in the exercise of the
sacred ministry, examine their consciences as regards the authenticity and
fidelity of the actions they have performed in the name of Christ and the
Church in the celebration of the Sacred Liturgy. Let each one of the sacred
ministers ask himself, even with severity, whether he has respected the rights
of the lay members of Christ's faithful, who confidently entrust themselves and
their children to him, relying on him to fulfill for the faithful those sacred
functions that the Church intends to carry out in celebrating the sacred
Liturgy at Christ's command.294 For each one should always remember that he is
a servant of the Sacred Liturgy.295
All things to the contrary notwithstanding.
Chirograph of John Paul II—no references
JPII Address—no references
Paschale Solemnitatis
9. In Lent, there should be catechesis for those adults who,
although baptized when infants, were not brought up in the faith and,
consequently, have not been confirmed nor have they received the Eucharist.
During this period, penitential services should be arranged to help prepare
them for the sacrament of reconciliation.
19. The chants to be sung in celebrations, especially of the
Eucharist, and also at devotional exercises should be in harmony with the
spirit of the season and the liturgical texts.
35. The Chrism Mass, which the bishop concelebrates with his
presbyterium, and at which the Holy Chrism is consecrated and the oils blessed,
manifests the communion of the priests with their bishop in the same priesthood
and ministry of Christ. [38] The priests who concelebrate with the bishop
should come to this Mass from different parts of the diocese, thus showing in
the consecration of the Chrism to be his witnesses and cooperators, just as in
their daily ministry, they are his helpers and counselors.
The faithful are also to be encouraged to participate in
this Mass and to receive the sacrament of the Eucharist.
Traditionally, the Chrism Mass is celebrated on the Thursday
of Holy Week. If, however, it should prove to be difficult for the clergy and
people to gather with the bishop, this rite can be transferred to another day,
but one always close to Easter. [39] The Chrism and the oil of catechumens is
to be used in the celebration of the sacraments of initiation on Easter night.
IV. Holy Thursday Evening Mass of the Lord's Supper
44. With the celebration of Mass on the evening of Holy
Thursday, "the Church begins the Easter Triduum and recalls the Last
Supper in which the Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, showing his love
for those who were his own in the world, he gave his body and blood under the
species of bread and wine offering to his Father and giving them to the
Apostles so that they might partake of them, and he commanded them and their
successors in the priesthood to perpetuate this offering." [50]
45. Careful attention should be given to the mysteries that
are commemorated in this Mass: the institution of the Eucharist, the
institution of the priesthood, and Christ's command of brotherly love; the
homily should explain these points.
53. It is more appropriate that the Eucharist be borne
directly from the altar by the deacons or acolytes, or extraordinary ministers,
at the moment of communion for the sick and infirm who must communicate at
home, so that, in this way, they may be more closely united to the celebrating
Church.
54. After the postcommunion prayer, the procession forms
with the crossbearer at its head. The Blessed Sacrament, accompanied by lighted
candles and incense, is carried through the church to the place of reservation,
to the singing of the hymn "Pange lingua" or some other eucharistic
song. [60] This rite of transfer of the Blessed Sacrament may not be carried
out if the liturgy of the Lord's passion will not be celebrated in that same
church on the following day.
55. The Blessed Sacrament should be reserved in a closed
tabernacle or pyx. Under no circumstances may it be exposed in a monstrance.
The place where the tabernacle or pyx is situated must not
be made to resemble a tomb, and the expression tomb is to be avoided: for the
chapel of repose is not prepared so as to represent the Lord's burial but for
the custody of the eucharistic bread that will be distributed in communion on
Good Friday.
56. After the Mass of the Lord's Supper, the faithful should
be encouraged to spend a suitable period of time during the night in the church
in adoration before the Blessed Sacrament that has been solemnly reserved.
Where appropriate, this prolonged eucharistic adoration may be accompanied by
the reading of some part of the gospel of Saint John (ch. 13-17).
From midnight onward, however, the adoration should be made
without external solemnity, for the day of the Lord's passion has begun.
V. Good Friday
58. On this day, when "Christ our passover was
sacrificed," [63] the Church mediates on the passion of her Lord and
Spouse, adores the cross, commemorates her origin from the side of Christ
asleep on the cross, and intercedes for the salvation of the whole world.
59. On this day, in accordance with ancient tradition, the
Church does not celebrate the Eucharist: Holy Communion is distributed to the
faithful during the celebration of the Lord's passion alone, though it may be
brought at any time of the day to the sick who cannot take part in the
celebration.
71. After the celebration, the altar is stripped; the cross
remains, however with four candles. An appropriate place (for example, the
chapel of repose used for reservation of the Eucharist on Maundy Thursday) can
be prepared within the church, and there the Lord's cross is placed so that the
faithful may venerate and kiss it and spend some time in meditation.
[Section on Easter Vigil]
90. The celebration of the Eucharist forms the fourth part
of the Vigil and marks its high point, for it is in the fullest sense the
Easter sacrament, that is to say, the commemoration of the sacrifice of the
cross and the presence of the risen Christ, the completion of Christian
initiation, and the foretaste of the eternal pasch.
91. Great care should be taken that this eucharistic liturgy
is not celebrated in haste, indeed, all the rites and words must be given their
full force: the general intercessions, in which the neophytes for the first
time as members of the faithful exercise their priesthood; [99] the procession
at the offertory, in which the neophytes, if there are any, take part; the
first, second, or third Eucharistic Prayer, preferably sung, with the proper
embolisms; [100] and finally eucharistic communion as the moment of full
participation in the mystery that is being celebrated. It is appropriate that
at communion there be sung Psalm 117 with the antiphon "Pascha nostrum"
or Psalm 33 with the antiphon "Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia" or some
other song of Easter exultation.
92. It is fitting that in the communion of the Easter Vigil,
full expression be given to the symbolism of the Eucharist, namely, by
consuming the Eucharist under the species of both bread and wine. The local
ordinaries will consider the appropriateness of such a concession and its
ramifications.
102. For adults who have received Christian initiation
during the Easter Vigil, the whole of this period is given over to mystagogical
catechesis. Therefore, wherever there are neophytes, the prescriptions of the
Ordo initiationis Christianae adultorum, nn. 37-40 and 235-239, should be
observed. Intercession should be made in the Eucharistic Prayer for the newly baptized
through the Easter octave in all places.
104. During Easter time, pastors should instruct the
faithful who have been already initiated into the Eucharist on the meaning of
the Church's precept concerning the reception of Holy Communion during this period.
[109] It is highly recommended that communion also be brought to the sick,
especially during the Easter octave.
1975 GIRM
1. When Christ the Lord was about to celebrate the Passover
meal with his disciples and institute the sacrifice of his body and blood, he
directed them to prepare a large room, arranged for the supper (Lk 22:12).
The Church has always regarded this command of Christ as
applying to itself when it gives directions about the preparation of the
sentiments of the worshipers, the place, rites, and texts for the celebration
of the eucharist. The current norms, laid down on the basis of the intent of
Vatican Council II, and the new Missal that will be used henceforth in the
celebration of Mass by the Church of the Roman Rite, are fresh evidence of the
great care, faith, and unchanged love that the Church shows toward the
eucharist. They attest as well to its coherent tradition, continuing amid the
introduction of some new elements.
2. The sacrificial nature of the Mass was solemnly proclaimed
by the Council of Trent in agreement with the whole tradition of the Church.[1]
Vatican Council II reaffirmed this teaching in these significant words:
"At the Last Supper our Savior instituted the eucharistic sacrifice of his
body and blood. He did this in order to perpetuate the sacrifice of the cross
throughout the centuries until he should come again and in this way to entrust
to his beloved Bride, the Church, a memorial of his death and
resurrection."[2]
The Council's teaching is expressed constantly in the
formularies of the Mass. This teaching, in the concise words of the Leonine
Sacramentary, is that "the work of our redemption is carried out whenever
we celebrate the memory of this sacrifice";[3] it is aptly and accurately
brought out in the eucharistic prayers. At the anamnesis or memorial, the
priest, addressing God in the name of all the people, offers in thanksgiving
the holy and living sacrifice: the Church's offering and the Victim whose death
has reconciled us with God.[4] The priest also prays that the body and blood of
Christ may be a sacrifice acceptable to the Father, bringing salvation to the
whole world.[5]
In this new Missal, then, the Church's rule of prayer
("lex orandi") corresponds to its constant rule of faith ("lex
credendi"). This rule of faith instructs us that the sacrifice of the
cross and its sacramental renewal in the Mass, which Christ instituted at the
Last Supper and commanded his apostles to do in his memory, are one and the
same, differing only in the manner of offering and that consequently the Mass
is at once a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, of reconciliation and
expiation.
3. The celebration of Mass also proclaims the sublime
mystery of the Lord's real presence under the eucharistic elements, which
Vatican Council II[6] and other documents of the Church's magisterium[7] have
reaffirmed in the same sense and as the same teaching that the Council of Trent
had proposed as a matter of faith.[8] The Mass does this not only by means of
the very words of consecration, by which Christ becomes present through
transubstantiation, but also by that spirit and expression of reverence and
adoration in which the eucharistic liturgy is carried out. For the same reason
the Christian people are invited in Holy Week on Holy Thursday and on the
solemnity of Corpus Christi to honor this wonderful sacrament in a special way
by their adoration.
5. In addition, the ministerial priesthood puts into its
proper light another reality of which much should be made, namely, the royal
priesthood of believers. Through the ministry of presbyters the people's
spiritual sacrifice to God is brought to completeness in union with the
sacrifice of Christ, our one and only Mediator.[9] For the celebration of the
eucharist is the action of the whole Church; in it all should do only, but all
of, those parts that belong to them in virtue of their place within the people
of God. In this way greater attention will be given to some aspects of the
eucharistic celebration that have sometimes been neglected in the course of
time. For these people are the people of God, purchased by Christ's blood,
gathered together by the Lord, nourished by his word.
They are a people called to offer God the prayers of the
entire human family, a people giving thanks in Christ for the mystery of
salvation by offering his sacrifice. Finally, they are a people growing
together into unity by sharing in Christ's body and blood.
These people are holy by their origin, but becoming ever
more holy by conscious, active, and fruitful participation in the mystery of
the Eucharist.
7. The older Missal belongs to the difficult period of
attacks against Catholic teaching on the sacrificial nature of the Mass, the
ministerial priesthood, and the real and permanent presence of Christ under the
eucharistic elements. St. Pius V was therefore especially concerned with
preserving the relatively recent developments in the Church's tradition, then
unjustly being assailed, and introduced only very slight changes into the
sacred rites. In fact, the Roman Missal of 1570 differs very little from the
first printed edition of 1474, which in turn faithfully follows the Missal used
at the time of Pope Innocent III (1198-1216). Manuscripts in the Vatican
Library provided some verbal emendations, but they seldom allowed research into
"ancient and approved authors" to extend beyond the examination of a
few liturgical commentaries of the Middle Ages.
8. Today, on the other hand, countless studies of scholars
have enriched the "tradition of the Fathers" that the revisers of the
Missal under St. Pius V followed. After the Gregorian Sacramentary was first
published in 1571, many critical editions of other ancient Roman and Ambrosian
sacramentaries appeared. Ancient Spanish and Gallican liturgical books also
became available, bringing to light many prayers of profound spirituality that
had hitherto been unknown.
Traditions dating back to the first centuries before the
formation of the Eastern and Western rites are also better known today because
so many liturgical documents have been discovered.
The continuing progress in patristic studies has also
illumined eucharistic theology through the teachings of such illustrious saints
of Christian antiquity as Irenaeus, Ambrose, Cyril of Jerusalem, and John
Chrysostom.
11. The Council of Trent recognized the great catechetical
value of the celebration of Mass, but was unable to bring out all its
consequences for the actual life of the Church.
Many were pressing for permission to use the vernacular in
celebrating the eucharistic sacrifice, but the Council, judging the conditions
of that age, felt bound to answer such a request with a reaffirmation of the
Church's traditional teaching. This teaching is that the eucharistic sacrifice
is, first and foremost, the action of Christ himself and therefore the manner
in which the faithful take part in the Mass does not affect the efficacy
belonging to it. The Council thus stated in firm but measured words:
"Although the Mass contains much instruction for the faithful, it did not
seem expedient to the Fathers that as a general rule it be celebrated in the
vernacular."[12] The Council accordingly anathematized anyone maintaining
that "the rite of the Roman Church, in which part of the canon and the
words of consecration are spoken in a low voice, should be condemned or that
the Mass must be celebrated only in the vernacular."[13] Although the
Council of Trent on the one hand prohibited the use of the vernacular in the
Mass, nevertheless, on the other, it did direct pastors to substitute appropriate
catechesis: "Lest Christ's flock go hungry. . .the Council commands
pastors and others having the care of souls that either personally or through
others they frequently give instructions during Mass, especially on Sundays and
holydays, on what is read at Mass and that among their instructions they
include some explanation of the mystery of this sacrifice."
13. The use of the vernacular in the liturgy may certainly
be considered an important means for presenting more clearly the catechesis on
the mystery that is part of the celebration itself. Nevertheless, Vatican
Council II also ordered the observance of certain directives, prescribed by the
Council of Trent but not obeyed everywhere.
Among these are the obligatory homily on Sundays and
holydays[17] and the permission to interpose some commentary during the sacred
rites themselves.[18]
Above all, Vatican Council II strongly endorsed "that
more complete form of participation in the Mass by which the faithful, after
the priest's communion, receive the Lord's body from the same
sacrifice."[19] Thus the Council gave impetus to the fulfillment of the
further desire of the Fathers of Trent that for fuller participation in the
holy eucharist "the faithful present at each Mass should communicate not only
by spiritual desire but also by sacramental communion."
14. Moved by the same spirit and pastoral concern, Vatican
Council II was able to reevaluate the Tridentine norm on communion under both
kinds. No one today challenges the doctrinal principles on the completeness of
eucharistic communion under the form of bread alone. The Council thus gave
permission for the reception of communion under both kinds on some occasions,
because this more explicit form of the sacramental sign offers a special means
of deepening the understanding of the mystery in which the faithful are taking
part.
1. The celebration of Mass, the action of Christ and the
people of God arrayed hierarchically, is for the universal and the local Church
as well as for each person the center of the whole Christian life.[1] In the
Mass we have the high point of the work that in Christ God accomplishes to
sanctify us and the high point of the worship that in adoring God through
Christ, his Son, we offer to the Father.[2] During the cycle of the year, moreover,
the mysteries of redemption are recalled in the Mass in such a way that they
are somehow made present.[3] All other liturgical rites and all the works of
the Christian life are linked with the eucharistic celebration, flow from it,
and have it as their end.[4]
2. Therefore, it is of the greatest importance that the
celebration of the Mass, the Lord's Supper, be so arranged that the ministers
and the faithful who take their own proper part in it may more fully receive
its good effects.[5] This is the reason why Christ the Lord instituted the
eucharistic sacrifice of his body and blood and entrusted it to the Church, his
beloved Bride, as the memorial of his passion and resurrection.[6]
3. This purpose will best be accomplished if, after due
regard for the nature and circumstances of each assembly, the celebration is
planned in such a way that it brings about in the faithful a participation in
body and spirit that is conscious, active, full, and motivated by faith, hope,
and charity. The Church desires this kind of participation, the nature of the
celebration demands it, and for the Christian people it is a right and duty
they have by reason of their baptism.[7]
4. The presence and active participation of the people bring
out more plainly the ecclesial nature of the celebration.[8] But even when
their participation is not possible, the eucharistic celebration still retains
its effectiveness and worth because it is the action of Christ and the
Church,[9] in which the priest always acts on behalf of the people's salvation.
5. The celebration of the eucharist, like the entire
liturgy, involves the use of outward signs that foster, strengthen, and express
faith.[10] There must be the utmost care therefore to choose and to make wise
use of those forms and elements provided by the Church which, in view of the
circumstances of the people and the place, will best foster active and full
participation and serve the spiritual well-being of the faithful.
6. The purpose of this Instruction is to give the general
guidelines for planning the eucharistic celebration properly and to set forth
the rules for arranging the individual forms of celebration.[11] In accord with
the Constitution on the Liturgy, each conference of bishops has the power to
lay down norms for its own territory that are suited to the traditions and
character of peoples, regions, and various communities.
. At Mass or the Lord's Supper, the people of God are called
together, with a priest presiding and acting in the person of Christ, to
celebrate the memorial of the Lord or eucharistic sacrifice.[13] For this
reason Christ's promise applies supremely to such a local gathering together of
the Church: "Where two or three come together in my name, there am I in
their midst" (Mt. 18:20). For at the celebration of Mass, which
perpetuates the sacrifice of the cross,[14] Christ is really present to the
assembly gathered in his name; he is present in the person of the minister, in
his own word, and indeed substantially and permanently under the eucharistic
elements.[15]
8. The Mass is made up as it were of the liturgy of the word
and the liturgy of the eucharist, two parts so closely connected that they form
but one single act of worship.[16] For in the Mass the table of God's word and
of Christ's body is laid for the people of God to receive from it instruction
and food.[17] There are also certain rites to open and conclude the
celebration.
10. Among the parts assigned to the priest, the eucharistic
prayer is preeminent; it is the high point of the entire celebration. Next are
the prayers: the opening prayer or collect, the prayer over the gifts, and the
prayer after communion. The priest, presiding over the assembly in the person
of Christ, addresses these prayers to God in the name of the entire holy people
and all present.[19] Thus there is good reason to call them "the
presidential prayers."
11. It is also up to the priest in the exercise of his
office of presiding over the assembly to pronounce the instructions and words
of introduction and conclusion that are provided in the rites themselves. By
their very nature these introductions do not need to be expressed verbatim in
the form in which they are given in the Missal; at least in certain cases it
will be advisable to adapt them somewhat to the concrete situation of the
community.[20] It also belongs to the priest presiding to proclaim the word of
God and to give the final blessing. He may give the faithful a very brief
introduction to the Mass of the day (before the celebration begins), to the
liturgy of the word (before the readings), and to the eucharistic prayer
(before the preface); he may also make comments concluding the entire sacred
service before the dismissal.
24. The parts preceding the liturgy of the word, namely, the
entrance song, greeting, penitential rite, "Kyrie,"
"Gloria," and opening prayer or collect, have the character of a
beginning, introduction, and preparation.
The purpose of these rites is that the faithful coming
together take on the form of a community and prepare themselves to listen to
God's word and celebrate the eucharist properly.
43. The symbol or profession of faith in the celebration of
Mass serves as a way for the people to respond and to give their assent to the
word of God heard in the readings and through the homily and for them to call
to mind the truths of faith before thy begin to celebrate the eucharist.
C. Liturgy of the Eucharist
48. At the last supper Christ instituted the sacrifice and
paschal meal that make the sacrifice of the cross to be continuously present in
the Church, when the priest, representing Christ the Lord, carries out what the
Lord did and handed over to his disciples to do in his memory.[40]
Christ took the bread and the cup and gave thanks; he broke
the bread and gave it to his disciples, saying: "Take and eat, this is my
body." Giving the cup, he said: "Take and drink, this is the cup of
my blood. Do this in memory of me." Accordingly, the Church has planned
the celebration of the eucharistic liturgy around the parts corresponding to
these words and actions of Christ:
1. In the preparation of the gifts, the bread and the wine
with water are brought to the altar, that is, the same elements that Christ
used.
2. In the eucharistic prayer thanks is given to God for the
whole work of salvation and the gifts of bread and wine become the body and
blood of Christ.
3. Through the breaking of the one bread the unity of the
faithful is expressed and through communion they receive the Lord's body and
blood in the same way the apostles received them from Christ's own hands.
Preparation Of The Gifts
49. At the beginning of the liturgy of the eucharist the
gifts, which will become Christ's body and blood, are brought to the altar.
First the altar, the Lord's table, which is the center of
the whole eucharistic liturgy,[41] is prepared: the corporal, purificator,
missal, and chalice are placed on it (unless the chalice is prepared at a side
table).
The gifts are then brought forward. It is desirable for the
faithful to present the bread and wine, which are accepted by the priest or
deacon at a convenient place. The gifts are placed on the altar to the
accompaniment of the prescribed texts. Even though the faithful no longer, as
in the past, bring the bread and wine for the liturgy from their homes, the
rite of carrying up the gifts retains the same spiritual value and meaning.
This is also the time to receive money or other gifts for
the church or the poor brought by the faithful or collected at the Mass. These
are to be put in a suitable place but not on the altar.
50. The procession bringing the gifts is accompanied by the
presentation song, which continues at least until the gifts have been placed on
the altar. The rules for this song are the same as those for the entrance song
(no. 26). If it is not sung, the presentation antiphon is omitted.
51. The gifts on the altar and the altar itself may be
incensed. This is a symbol of the Church's offering and prayer going up to God.
Afterward the deacon or other minister may incense the priest and the people.
52. The priest then washes his hands as an expression of his
desire to be cleansed within.
53. Once the gifts have been placed on the altar and the
accompanying rites completed, the preparation of the gifts comes to an end
through the invitation to pray with the priest and the prayer over the gifts,
which are a preparation for the eucharistic prayer.
Eucharistic Prayer
54. Now the center and summit of the entire celebration
begins: the eucharistic prayer, a prayer of thanksgiving and sanctification.
The priest invites the people to lift up their hearts to the Lord in prayer and
thanks; he unites them with himself in the prayer he addresses in their name to
the Father through Jesus Christ. The meaning of the prayer is that the entire
congregation joins itself to Christ in acknowledging the great things God has
done and in offering the sacrifice.
55. The chief elements making up the eucharistic prayer are
these:
a. Thanksgiving (expressed especially in the preface): in
the name of the entire people of God, the priest praises the Father and gives
thanks to him for the whole work of salvation or for some special aspect of it
that corresponds to the day, feast, or season.
b. Acclamation: joining with the angels, the congregation
sings or recites the "Sanctus" This acclamation is an intrinsic part
of the eucharistic prayer and all the people join with the priest in singing or
reciting it.
c. Epiclesis: in special invocations the Church calls on
God's power and asks that the gifts offered by human hands be consecrated, that
is, become Christ's body and blood, and that the victim to be received in
communion be the source of salvation for those who will partake.
d. Institution narrative and consecration: in the words and
actions of Christ, that sacrifice is celebrated which he himself instituted at
the Last Supper, when, under the appearances of bread and wine, he offered his
body and blood, gave them to his apostles to eat and drink, then commanded that
they carry on this mystery.
e. Anamnesis: in fulfillment of the command received from
Christ through the apostles, the Church keeps his memorial by recalling
especially his passion, resurrection, and ascension.
f. Offering: in this memorial, the Church-and in particular
the Church here and now assembled-offers the spotless victim to the Father in
the Holy Spirit. The Church's intention is that the faithful not only offer
this victim but also learn to offer themselves and so to surrender themselves,
through Christ the Mediator, to an ever more complete union with the Father and
with each other, so that at last God may be all in all.[42]
g. Intercessions: the intercessions make it clear that the
eucharist is celebrated in communion with the entire Church of heaven and earth
and that the offering is made for the Church and all its members, living and
dead, who are called to share in the salvation and redemption purchased by
Christ's body and blood.
h. Final doxology: the praise of God is expressed in the
doxology, to which the people's acclamation is an assent and a conclusion.
The eucharistic prayer calls for all to listen in silent
reverence, but also to take part through the acclamations for which the rite
makes provision.
Communion Rite
56. Since the eucharistic celebration is the paschal meal,
it is right that the faithful who are properly disposed receive the Lord's body
and blood as spiritual food as he commanded.[43] This is the purpose of the
breaking of bread and the other preparatory rites that lead directly to the
communion of the people:
a. Lord's Prayer: this is a petition both for daily food,
which for Christians means also the eucharistic bread, and for the forgiveness
of sin, so that what is holy may be given to those who are holy. The priest
offers the invitation to pray, but all the faithful say the prayer with him; he
alone adds the embolism, "Deliver us," which the people conclude with
a doxology. The embolism, developing the last petition of the Lord's Prayer,
begs on behalf of the entire community of the faithful deliverance from the
power of evil. The invitation, the prayer itself, the embolism, and the
people's doxology are sung or are recited aloud.
b. Rite of peace: before they share in the same bread, the
faithful implore peace and unity for the Church and for the whole human family
and offer some sign of their love for one another.
The form the sign of peace should take is left to the
conference of bishops to determine, in accord with the culture and customs of
the people.
c. Breaking of the bread: in apostolic times this gesture of
Christ at the last supper gave the entire eucharistic action its name. This
rite is not simply functional, but is a sign that in sharing in the one bread
of life which is Christ we who are many are made one body (see 1 Cor 10:17).
d. Commingling: the celebrant drops a part of the host into
the chalice.
e. "Agnus Dei": during the breaking of the bread
and the commingling, the "Agnus Dei" is as a rule sung by the choir
or cantor with the congregation responding; otherwise it is recited aloud. This
invocation may be repeated as often as necessary to accompany the breaking of
the bread. The final reprise concludes with the words, "grant us
peace."
f. Personal preparation of the priest: the priest prepares
himself by the prayer, said softly, that he may receive Christ's body and blood
to good effect. The faithful do the same by silent prayer.
g. The priest then shows the eucharistic bread for communion
to the faithful and with them recites the prayer of humility in words from the
Gospels.
h. It is most desirable that the faithful receive the Lord's
body from hosts consecrated at the same Mass and that, in the instances when it
is permitted, they share in the chalice. Then even through the signs communion
will stand out more clearly as a sharing in the sacrifice actually being
celebrated.[44]
i. During the priest's and the faithful's reception of the
sacrament the communion song is sung. Its function is to express outwardly the
communicants' union in spirit by means of the unity of their voices, to give
evidence of joy of heart, and to make the procession to receive Christ's body
more fully an act of community. The song begins when the priest takes communion
and continues for as long as seems appropriate while the faithful receive
Christ's body. But the communion song should be ended in good time whenever
there is to be a hymn after communion.
An antiphon from the "Graduale Romanum" may also
be used, with or without the psalm, or an antiphon with psalm from "The
Simple Gradual" or another suitable song approved by the conference of
bishops. It is sung by the choir alone or by the choir or cantor with the
congregation.
If there is no singing, the communion antiphon in the Missal
is recited either by the people, by some of them, or by a reader. Otherwise the
priest himself says it after he has received communion and before he gives
communion to the faithful.
j. After communion, the priest and people may spend some
time in silent prayer. If desired, a hymn, psalm, or other song of praise may
be sung by the entire congregation.
k. In the prayer after communion, the priest petitions for
the effects of the mystery just celebrated and by their acclamation, Amen, the
people make the prayer their own.
59. Every authentic celebration of the eucharist is directed
by the bishop, either in person or through the presbyters, who are his
helpers.[47]
Whenever he is present at a Mass with a congregation, it is
fitting that the bishop himself preside over the assembly and associate the
presbyters with himself in the celebration, if possible by concelebrating with
them.
This is done not to add external solemnity, but to express
in a clearer light the mystery of the Church, which is the sacrament of
unity.[48]
Even if the bishop is not the celebrant of the eucharist but
assigns someone else, he should preside over the liturgy of the word and give
the blessing at the end of Mass.
60. Within the community of believers, the presbyter is
another who possesses the power of orders to offer sacrifice in the person of
Christ.[49] He therefore presides over the assembly and leads its prayer,
proclaims the message of salvation, joins the people to himself in offering the
sacrifice to the Father through Christ in the Spirit, gives them the bread of
eternal life, and shares in it with them. At the eucharist he should, then,
serve God and the people with dignity and humility; by his bearing and by the
way he recites the words of the liturgy he should communicate to the faithful a
sense of the living presence of Christ.
65. The acolyte is instituted to serve at the altar and to
assist the priest and deacon. In particular it is for him to prepare the altar
and the vessels and, as a special minister of the eucharist, to give communion
to the faithful.
Voluntati Obsequens—no references
Liturgicae Instaurationes
The liturgical reforms put into effect thus far as
applications of Vatican Council II's Constitution on the Liturgy have to do
primarily with the celebration of the mystery of the Eucharist. "For the
Eucharist contains the Church's entire spiritual wealth, that is, Christ
Himself. He is our Passion and living bread; through His flesh, made living and
life-giving by the Holy Spirit, He is bringing life to people and thereby
inviting them to offer themselves together with Him, as well as their labors
and all created things."[1] The repeated celebration of the sacrifice of
the Mass in our worshipping communities stands as evidence that the Mass is the
center of the Church's entire life, the focal point of all other activities,
and that the purpose of the ritual renewal is to inspire a pastoral ministry
that has the liturgy as its crown and source and that is a living-out of the
paschal mystery of Christ.
The work of reform, accomplished step by step over the past
six years, has served as a passage from the earlier to a new liturgy,
presented, since publication of the Roman Missal with its Order of Mass and
General Instruction, in such a clearer and fuller form that it truly opens a
new path for pastoral-liturgical life, permitting great achievements. In
addition, the recently published Mass Lectionary together with the wealth of
prayer forms contained in the Roman Missal provide a wide range of options for
celebrations of the eucharist.
With a view to making the bishop's function more effective
for an exact application of liturgical norms, especially those of the General
Instruction of the Roman Missal, as well as for the sake of restoring
discipline and order in the celebration of the eucharist, center of the
Church's life, "a sign of unity and a bond of charity", [7] it seems
worthwhile to review the following principles and suggestions.
2. Of all the texts read in the liturgical assembly the
books of sacred Scripture possess the primacy of a unique dignity: in them God
is speaking to His people; Christ, in his own word, continues to proclaim his
Gospel. [10] Therefore:
a. The liturgy of the word demands cultivation with the
utmost attention. In no case is it allowed to substitute readings from other
sacred or profane authors, ancient or modern. The homily has as its purpose to
explain to the faithful the word of God just proclaimed ant to adapt it to the
mentality of the times. The priest, therefore, is the homilist; the
congregation is to refrain from comments, attempts at dialogue, or anything
similar. To have only a single reading is never allowed.
b. The liturgy of the word prepares and leads up to the
liturgy of the eucharist, forming with it the one act of worship [11] To
separate the two, therefore, or to celebrate them at different times or places
is not permitted. As for integrating some liturgical service or part of the
divine office before Mass with the liturgy of the word, the guidelines are the
norms laid down in the liturgical books for the case in question.
3. The liturgical texts themselves, composed by the Church,
are to be treated with the highest respect. No one, then, may take it on
himself to make changes, substitutions, deletions, or additions. [12]
a. There is special reason to keep the Order of Mass intact.
Under no consideration, not even the pretext of singing the Mass, may the
official translations of its formularies be altered. There are, of course,
optional forms, noted in the context of the various rites, for certain parts of
the Mass: the penitential rite, the eucharistic prayers, acclamations, final
blessing.
b. Sources for the entrance and communion antiphons are: the
Graduale romanum, The Simple Gradual, the Roman Missal, and the compilations
approved by the conferences of bishops. In choosing chants for Mass, the
conferences should take into account not only suitability to the times and
differing circumstances of the liturgical services, but also the needs of the
faithful using them.
c. Congregational singing is to be fostered by every means
possible, even by use of new types of music suited to the culture of the people
and to the contemporary spirit. The conferences of bishops should authorize a
list of songs that are to be used in Masses with special groups, for example,
with youth or children, and that in text, melody, rhythm, and instrumentation
are suited to the dignity and holiness of the place and of divine worship.
The Church does not bar any style of sacred music from the
liturgy [13]. Still, not every style or the sound of every song or instrument
deserves equal status as an aid to prayer and an expression of the mystery of
Christ. All musical elements have as their one purpose the celebration of
divine worship. They must, then, possess sacredness and soundness of form[14],
fit in with the spirit of the liturgical service and the nature of its particular
parts; they must not be a hindrance to an intense participation of the assembly
[15] but must direct the mind's attention and the heart's sentiments toward the
rites.
More specific determinations belong to the conferences of
bishops or where there are no general norms as yet, to the bishop within his
diocese [16]. Every attention is to be given to the choice of musical
instruments; limited in number and suited to the region and to community
culture, they should prompt devotion and not be too loud.
d. Broad options are given for the choice of prayers.
Especially on weekdays in Ordinary Time the sources are any one of the Mass
prayers from the thirty-four weeks of Ordinary Time or the prayers from the
Masses for Various Occasions [17] or from the votive Masses.
For translations of the prayers the conferences of bishops
are empowered to use the special norms in no. 34 of the Instruction on
translations of liturgical texts for celebrations with a congregation, issued
by the Consilium, January 25, 1969 [18].
e. As for readings, besides those assigned for every Sunday,
feast, and weekday, there are many others for use in celebrating the sacraments
or for other special occasions. In Masses for special groups the option is
granted to choose texts best suited to the particular celebration, as long as
they come from an authorized lectionary [19].
f. The priest may say a very few words to the congregation
at the beginning of the Mass and before the readings, the preface, and the
dismissal [20], but should give no instruction during the eucharistic prayer.
Whatever he says should be brief and to the point, thought out ahead of time.
Any other instructions that might be needed should be the responsibility of the
"moderator" of the assembly, who is to avoid going on and on and say
only what is strictly necessary.
g. The general intercessions in addition to the intentions
for the Church, the world, and those in need may properly include one pertinent
to the local community. That will forestall adding intentions to Eucharistic
Prayer I (Roman Canon) in the commemorations of the living and the dead.
Intentions for the general intercessions are to be prepared and written out
beforehand and in a form consistent with the genre of the prayer[21]. The
reading of the intentions may be assigned to one or more of those present at
the liturgy.
Used intelligently, these faculties afford such broad
options that there is no reason for resorting to individualistic creations
Accordingly priests are instructed to prepare their celebrations with their
mind on the actual circumstances and the spiritual needs of the people and with
faithful adherence to the limits set by the General Instruction of the Roman
Missal.
4. The eucharistic prayer more than any other part of the
Mass is, by reason of his office, the prayer of the priest alone [22].
Recitation of any part by a lesser minister the assembly, or any individual is
forbidden. Such a course conflicts with the hierarchic character of the liturgy
in which all are to do all but only those parts belonging to them [23]. The
priest alone, therefore, is to recite the entire eucharistic prayer.
5. The bread for eucharistic celebration is bread of wheat
and, in keeping with the age-old custom of the Latin Church, unleavened [24].
Its authenticity as sign requires that the bread have the
appearance of genuine food to be broken and shared in together. At the same
time the bread -- whether the small host for communion of the faithful or the
larger hosts to be broken into parts -- is always to be made in the traditional
shape, in keeping with the norm of the General Instruction of the Roman
Missal.[25]
The need for greater authenticity relates to color, taste,
and thickness rather than to shape. Out of reverence for the sacrament the
eucharistic bread should be baked with great care, so that the breaking can be
dignified and the eating not offensive to the sensibilities of the people.
Bread that tastes of uncooked flour or that becomes quickly so hard as to be
inedible is not to be used. As befits the sacrament, the breaking of the
consecrated bread, the taking of the consecrated bread and wine in communion,
and the consuming of leftover hosts after communion should be done with
reverence.
6. In its sacramental sign value communion under both kinds
expresses a more complete sharing by the faithful [27]. Its concession has as
limits the determinations of the General Instruction of the Roman Missal (no.
242) and the norm of the Instruction of the Congregation for Divine Worship,
Sacramentali Communione, on the extension of the faculty for administering
communion under both kinds, June 29, 1970. b
a. Ordinaries are not to grant blanket permission but,
within the limits set by the conference of bishops, are to specify the
instances and celebrations for this form of communion. To be excluded are
occasions when the number of communicants is great. The permission should be
for specific, structured, and homogeneous assemblies.
b. A thorough catechesis is to precede admittance to
communion under both kinds so that the people will fully perceive its
significance.
c. Priests, deacons, or acolytes who have received
institution should be present to offer communion from the chalice. If there are
none of these present, the rite is to be carried out by the celebrant as it is
set out in the General Instruction of the Roman Missal no. 245.c
c. The method of having the communicants pass the chalice
from one to another or having them go directly to the chalice to receive the
precious blood does not seem advisable. Instead of this, communion should be by
intinction.
d. The first minister of communion is the priest celebrant,
next deacons, then acolytes, in particular cases to be determined by the
competent authority. The Holy See has the power to permit the appointment of other
known and worthy persons as ministers, if they have received a mandate. Those
lacking this mandate cannot distribute communion or carry the vessels
containing the blessed sacrament.
The manner of distributing communion is to conform to the
directives of the General Instruction of the Roman Missal (nos. 244-252)d and
of the June 29, 1970 Instruction of this Congregation. Should there be any
concession of a manner of distribution differing from the usual, the conditions
the Apostolic See lays down are to be observed.
e. Wherever, for want of priests, other persons -- for
example, catechists in mission areas -- receive from the bishop, with the
concurrence of the Apostolic See, the right to celebrate the liturgy of the
word and distribute communion, they are to refrain absolutely from reciting the
eucharistic prayer. Should it seem desirable to read the institution narrative,
they should make it a reading in the liturgy of the word. In the kind of
assemblies in question, then, the recitation of the Lord's Prayer and the
distribution of holy communion with the prescribed rite immediately follow the
liturgy of the word.
f. Whatever the manner of distributing, great care is to be
taken for its dignified, devout, and decorous administration and for forestalling
any danger of irreverence. There is to be due regard for the character of the
liturgical assembly and for the age, circumstances, and degree of preparation
of the recipients [28].
9. The Eucharist is celebrated as a rule in a place of
worship.[34] Apart from cases of real need, as adjudged by the Ordinary for his
jurisdiction, celebration outside a church is not permitted. When the Ordinary
does allow this, there must be care that a worthy place is chosen and that the
Mass is celebrated on a suitable table. If at all possible, the celebration
should not take place in a dining room or on a dining-room table.
10. In applying the reform of the liturgy, bishops should
have special concern about the fixed and worthy arrangement of the place of
worship, especially the sanctuary, in conformity with the norms set forth in
the General Instruction of the Roman Missal [35] and the Instruction
Eucharisticum mysterium. [36]
Arrangements begun in recent years as temporary have tended
in the meantime to take en a permanent form. Even some repudiated by the
Consilium continue, though in fact they are in conflict with the sense of the
liturgy, aesthetic grace, and the smoothness and dignity of liturgical
celebration. [37]
Through the collaboration of diocesan commissions on liturgy
and on sacred art and, if necessary, through consultation with experts or even
with civil authorities, there should be a complete review of the blueprints for
new constructions and of the existing adaptations. The aim is to ensure a fixed
arrangement in all churches that will preserve ancient monuments where
necessary and to the fullest extent possible meet new needs.
12. Any liturgical experimentation that may seem necessary
or advantageous receives authorization from this Congregation alone, in
writing, with norms clearly set out, and subject to the responsibility of the
competent local authority
All earlier permissions for experimentation with the Mass,
granted in view of the liturgical reform as it was in progress, are to be
considered as no longer in effect. Since publication of the Missale Romanum the
norms and forms of eucharistic celebration are those given in the General
Instruction and the Order of Mass.
The conferences of bishops are to draw up in detail any
adaptations envisioned in the liturgical books and submit them for confirmation
to the Holy See.
Should further adaptations become necessary, in keeping with
the norm of the Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium art. 40,f the conference of
bishops is to examine the issue thoroughly, attentive to the character and
traditions of each people and to specific pastoral needs. When some form of
experimentation seems advisable, there is to be a precise delineation of its
limits and a testing within qualified groups by prudent and specially appointed
persons.
Experimentation should not take place in large-scale
celebrations nor be widely publicized. Experiments should be few and not last
beyond a year. A report then is to be sent to the Holy See. While a reply is
pending, use of the petitioned adaptation is forbidden. When changes in the
structure of rites or in the order of parts as set forth in the liturgical
books are involved, or any departure from the usual, or the introduction of new
texts, a point-by-point outline is to be submitted to the Holy See prior to the
beginning of any kind of experiment.
Such a procedure is called for and demanded by both the
Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium [39] and the importance of the issue.
Tres Abhinc—no references
Musicam Sacram
27. For the celebration of the Eucharist with the people,
especially on Sundays and feast days, a form of sung Mass (Missa in cantu) is
to be preferred as much as possible, even several times on the same day.
29. The following belong to the first degree:
(a) In the entrance rites: the greeting of the priest
together with the reply of the people; the prayer.
(b) In the Liturgy of the Word: the acclamations at the
Gospel.
(c) In the Eucharistic Liturgy: the prayer over the
offerings; the preface with its dialogue and the Sanctus; the final doxology of
the Canon, the Lord's Prayer with its introduction and embolism; the Pax
Domini; the prayer after the Communion; the formulas of dismissal.
30. The following belong to the second degree:
(a) the Kyrie, Gloria and Agnus Dei;
(b) the Creed;
(c) the prayer of the faithful.
31. The following belong to the third degree:
(a) the songs at the Entrance and Communion processions;
(b) the songs after the Lesson or Epistle;
(c) the Alleluia before the Gospel;
(d) the song at the Offertory;
(e) the readings of Sacred Scripture, unless it seems more
suitable to proclaim them without singing.
36. There is no reason why some of the Proper or Ordinary
should not be sung in said Masses. Moreover, some other song can also, on
occasions, be sung at the beginning, at the Offertory, at the Communion and at
the end of Mass. It is not sufficient, however, that these songs be merely
"Eucharistic" -- they must be in keeping with the parts of the Mass,
with the feast, or with the liturgical season.
Inter Oecumenici
6. Pastoral activity guided toward the liturgy has its power
in being a living experience of the paschal mystery, in which the Son of God,
incarnate and made obedient even to the death of the cross, has in his
resurrection and ascension been raised up in such a way that he communicates
his divine life to the world. Through this life those who are dead to sin and
conformed to Christ "may live no longer for themselves but for him who for
their sake died and was raised" (2 Cor 5:15).
Faith and the sacraments of faith accomplish this,
especially baptism (see SC art. 6) and the mystery of the eucharist (see SC
art. 47), the center of the other sacraments and sacramentals (see SC art. 61),
and of the cycle of celebrations that in the course of the year unfold Christ's
paschal mystery (see SC art. 102-107).
15. The eucharist, center of the whole spiritual life, is to
be celebrated daily and with the use of different forms of celebration best
suited to the condition of the participants.
On Sundays and on the other greater holydays a sung Mass
shall be celebrated, with all who live in the house participating; there is to
be a homily and, as far as possible, all who are not priests shall receive
communion. Once the new rite has been published, concelebration is permitted
for priests, especially on more solemn feasts, if pastoral needs do not require
individual celebration.
At least on the great festivals it would be well for
seminarians to participate in the eucharist gathered round the bishop in the
cathedral church.
95. The eucharist is to be reserved in a solid and secure
tabernacle, placed in the middle of the main altar or on a minor, but truly
worthy altar, or, in accord with lawful custom and in particular cases approved
by the local Ordinary, also in another, special, and properly adorned part of
the church.
It is lawful to celebrate Mass facing the people even on an
altar where there is a small but becoming tabernacle.
Sacram Liturgiam—no references
Sacrosanctum Concilium
NOTE: Chapter 2 is entirely devoted to the Eucharist, but
only the sections containing the word “Eucharist” or “Eucharistic” are
reproduced here.
2. For the Liturgy, "through which the work of our
redemption is accomplished",1 most of all in the Divine Sacrifice of the
Eucharist, is the outstanding means whereby the faithful may express in their
lives, and manifest to others, the mystery of Christ and the real nature of the
true Church. It is of the essence of the Church that she be both human and
divine, visible and yet invisibly equipped, eager to act and yet intent on
contemplation, present in this world and yet not at home in it; and she is all
these things in such wise that in her the human is directed and subordinated to
the divine, the visible likewise to the invisible, action to contemplation, and
this present world to that City yet to come, which we seek2. While the Liturgy
daily builds up those who are within into a Holy Temple of the Lord, into a
dwelling place for God in the Spirit3, to the mature measure of the fullness of
Christ4, at the same time it marvelously strengthens their power to preach
Christ, and thus shows forth the Church to those who are outside as a sign
lifted up among the nations5 under which the scattered children of God may be
gathered together6, until there is one sheepfold and one Shepherd7.
7. To accomplish so great a work, Christ is always present
in His Church, especially in her liturgical celebrations. He is present in the
Sacrifice of the Mass, not only in the person of His minister, "the same
now offering, through the ministry of priests, who formerly offered Himself on
the cross"20) but especially under the Eucharistic species. By His power
He is present in the sacraments, so that when a man baptizes it is really Christ
Himself who baptizes21. He is present in His word, since it is He Himself who
speaks when the Holy Scriptures are read in the Church. He is present, lastly,
when the Church prays and sings, for He promised: "Where two or three are
gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them" (Mt 18:20)
.
Christ indeed always associates the Church with Himself in
this great work wherein God is perfectly glorified and men are sanctified. The
Church is His beloved Bride who calls to her Lord, and through Him offers worship
to the Eternal Father.
Rightly, then, the Liturgy is considered as an exercise of
the Priestly Office of Jesus Christ. In the Liturgy the sanctification of the
man is signified by signs perceptible to the senses, and is effected in a way
which corresponds with each of these signs; in the Liturgy the whole public
worship is performed by the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ, that is, by the Head
and His members.
From this it follows that every liturgical celebration,
because it is an action of Christ the Priest and of His Body which is the
Church, is a sacred action surpassing all others; no other action of the Church
can equal its efficacy by the same title and to the same degree.
10. Nevertheless the Liturgy is the summit toward which the
activity of the Church is directed; at the same time it is the font from which
all her power flows. For the aim and object of apostolic works is that all who
are made sons of God by faith and baptism should come together to praise God in
the midst of His Church, to take part in the Sacrifice, and to eat the Lord's
Supper.
The liturgy in its turn moves the faithful, filled with
"the Paschal Sacraments", to be "one in holiness"26; it
prays that "they may hold fast in their lives to what they have grasped by
their faith"27; the renewal in the Eucharist of the covenant between the
Lord and man draws the faithful into the compelling love of Christ and sets
them on fire. From the Liturgy, therefore, and especially from the Eucharist,
as from a font, grace is poured forth upon us; and the sanctification of men in
Christ and the glorification of God, to which all other activities of the
Church are directed as toward their end, is achieved in the most efficacious
possible way.
41. The bishop is to be considered as the high priest of his
flock, from whom the life in Christ of his faithful is in some way derived and
dependent.
Therefore all should hold in great esteem the liturgical
life of the diocese centered around the bishop, especially in his cathedral
church; they must be convinced that the pre-eminent manifestation of the Church
consists in the full active participation of all God's holy people in these
liturgical celebrations, especially in the same Eucharist, in a single prayer,
at one altar, at which there presides the bishop surrounded by his college of
priests and by his ministers35.
47. At the Last Supper, on the night when He was betrayed,
our Savior instituted the Eucharistic sacrifice of His Body and Blood. He did
this in order to perpetuate the sacrifice of the Cross throughout the centuries
until He should come again, and so to entrust to His beloved Spouse, the
Church, a memorial of His death and resurrection: a sacrament of love, a sign
of unity, a bond of charity36, a Paschal banquet in which Christ is eaten, the
mind is filled with grace, and a pledge of future glory is given to us37.
56. The two parts which, in a certain sense, go to make up
the Mass, namely, the Liturgy of the Word and the Eucharistic Liturgy, are so
closely connected with each other that they form but one single act of worship.
Accordingly this sacred Synod strongly urges pastors of souls that, when
instructing the faithful, they insistently teach them to take their part in the
entire Mass, especially on Sundays and feasts of obligation.
83. Christ Jesus, High Priest of the New and Eternal
Covenant, taking human nature, introduced into this earthly exile that hymn
which is sung throughout all ages in the halls of Heaven. He joins the entire
community of mankind to Himself, associating it with His own singing of this
canticle of Divine Praise.
For he continues His priestly work through the agency of His
Church, which is ceaselessly engaged in praising the Lord and interceding for
the salvation of the whole world. She does this, not only by celebrating the
Eucharist, but also in other ways, especially by praying the Divine Office.
106. By a tradition handed down from the apostles which took
its origin from the very day of Christ's resurrection, the Church celebrates
the Paschal Mystery every eighth day; with good reason this, then, bears the
name of the Lord's Day, or Sunday. For on this day Christ's faithful are bound
to come together into one place so that; by hearing the Word of God and taking
part in the Eucharist, they may call to mind the passion, the resurrection and
the glorification of the Lord Jesus, and may thank God who "has begotten
them again, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, unto a
living hope" (I Pet 1:3). Hence the Lord's Day is the original feast day,
and it should be proposed to the piety of the faithful and taught to them so
that it may become in fact a day of joy and of freedom from work. Other
celebrations, unless they be truly of greatest importance, shall not have
precedence over the Sunday which is the foundation and kernel of the whole
liturgical year.
128. Along with the revision of the liturgical books, as
laid down in Art. 25, there is to be an early revision of the canons and
ecclesiastical statutes which govern the provision of material things involved
in sacred worship. These laws refer especially to the worthy and well planned
construction of sacred buildings, the shape and construction of altars, the
nobility, placing, and safety of the Eucharistic tabernacle, the dignity and
suitability of the baptistery, the proper ordering of sacred images,
embellishments, and vestments. Laws which seem less suited to the reformed
Liturgy are to be brought into harmony with it, or else abolished; and any
which are helpful are to be retained if already in use, or introduced where
they are lacking.
In accordance with the norm of Art. 22 of this Constitution,
the territorial bodies of bishops are empowered to adapt such things to the
needs and customs of their different regions; this applies especially to the
materials and form of sacred furnishings and vestments.
De Musica Sacra
22. By its very nature, the Mass requires that all present
take part in it, each having a particular function.
a) Interior participation is the most important; this
consists in paying devout attention, and in lifting up the heart to God in
prayer. In this way the faithful "are intimately joined with their High
Priest...and together with Him, and through Him offer (the Sacrifice), making
themselves one with Him" (Mediator Dei, Nov. 20, 1947: AAS 39 [1947] 552).
b) The participation of the congregation becomes more
complete, however, when, in addition to this interior disposition, exterior
participation is manifested by external acts, such as bodily position
(kneeling, standing, sitting), ceremonial signs, and especially responses,
prayers, and singing.
The Supreme Pontiff Pius XII, in his encyclical on the
sacred liturgy, Mediator Dei, recommended this form of participation:
"Those who are working for the exterior participation
of the congregation in the sacred ceremonies are to be warmly commended. This
can be accomplished in more than one way. The congregation may answer the words
of the priest, as prescribed by the rubrics, or sing hymns appropriate to the
different parts of the Mass, or do both. Also, at solemn ceremonies, they may
alternate in singing the liturgical chant (AAS 39 [1947] 560)".
When the papal documents treat of "active
participation" they are speaking of this general participation (Mediator
Dei: AAS 39 [1947] 530-537), of which the outstanding example is the priest,
and his ministers who serve at the altar with the proper interior dispositions,
and carefully observe the rubrics, and ceremonies.
c) Active participation is perfect when
"sacramental" participation is included. In this way "the people
receive the Holy Eucharist not only by spiritual desire, but also
sacramentally, and thus obtain greater benefit from this most holy
Sacrifice". (Council of Trent, Sess. 22, ch. 6; cf. also Mediator Dei: AAS
39 [1947] 565: "It is most appropriate, as the liturgy itself prescribes,
for the people to come to holy Communion after the priest has received at the
altar".)
d) Since adequate instruction is necessary before the
faithful can intelligently, and actively participate in the mass, it will help
to note here a very wise law enacted by the Council of Trent: "This holy
Council orders that pastors, and all those who are entrusted with the care of
souls shall frequently give a commentary on one of the texts used at Mass,
either personally or through others, and, in addition, explain some aspect of
the mystery of this holy Sacrifice; this should be done especially on Sundays,
and feast days in the sermon which follows the Gospel (or "when the people
are being instructed in the catechism)" (Council of Trent, Sess. 22, ch.
8; Musicæ sacræ disciplina: AAS 48 [1956] 17).
27. Also note the following points with regard to the sung
Mass:
a) If the priest and his ministers go in procession by a
long aisle, it would be permissible for the choir, after the singing of the
Introit antiphon, and its psalm verse, to continue singing additional verses of
the same psalm. The antiphon itself may be repeated after each verse or after
every other verse; when the celebrant has reached the altar, the psalm ceases,
and the Gloria Patri is sung, and finally the antiphon is repeated to conclude
the Introit procession.
b) After the Offertory antiphon is sung, it is also allowed
to sing the ancient Gregorian melodies of the original Offertory verses which
once were sung after the antiphon.
Additional Verses
But if the Offertory antiphon is taken from a psalm, it is
then permitted to sing additional verses of this same psalm. In this case, too,
the antiphon may be repeated after each verse of the psalm, or after every
second verse; when the offertory rite is finished at the altar the psalm is
ended with the Gloria Patri, and the antiphon is repeated. If the antiphon is
not taken from a psalm, then any psalm suited to the feast may be used. Another
possibility is that any Latin song may be used after the Offertory antiphon
provided it is suited to the spirit of this part of the Mass. The singing
should never last beyond the "Secret".
c) The proper time for the chanting of the Communion
antiphon is while the priest is receiving the holy Eucharist. But if the
faithful are also to go to Communion the antiphon should be sung while they
receive. If this antiphon, too, is taken from a psalm, additional verses of
this psalm may be sung. In this case, too, the antiphon is repeated after each,
or every second verse of the psalm; when distribution of Communion is finished,
the psalm is closed with the Gloria Patri, and the antiphon is once again
repeated. If the antiphon is not taken from a psalm, any psalm may be used
which is suited to the feast, and to this part of the mass.
After the Communion antiphon is sung, and the distribution
of Communion to the faithful still continues, it is also permitted to sing
another Latin song in keeping with this part of the Mass.
Before coming to Communion the faithful may recite the
three-fold Domine, non sum dignus together with the priest.
d) If the Sanctus-Benedictus are sung in Gregorian chant,
they should be put together without interruption; otherwise, the Benedictus
should be sung after the Consecration.
e) During the Consecration, the singing must stop, and there
should be no playing of instruments; if this has been the custom, it should be
discontinued.
f) Between the Consecration, and the Pater Noster a devout
silence is recommended.
g) While the priest is giving the blessing to the faithful
at the end of the Mass, there should be no organ playing; also, the celebrant
must pronounce the words of the blessing so that all the faithful can
understand them.
Musicae Sacrae
33. Saint Augustine, speaking of chants characterized by
"beautiful voice and most apt melody," says: "I feel that our
souls are moved to the ardor of piety by the sacred words more piously and
powerfully when these words are sung than when they are not sung, and that all the
affections of our soul in their variety have modes of their own in song and
chant by which they are stirred up by an indescribable and secret
sympathy."[17]
34. It is easy to infer from what has just been said that
the dignity and force of sacred music are greater the closer sacred music
itself approaches to the supreme act of Christian worship, the Eucharistic
sacrifice of the altar. There can be nothing more exalted or sublime than its
function of accompanying with beautiful sound the voice of the priest offering
up the Divine Victim, answering him joyfully with the people who are present
and enhancing the whole liturgical ceremony with its noble art.
47. Where, according to old or immemorial custom, some
popular hymns are sung in the language of the people after the sacred words of
the liturgy have been sung in Latin during the solemn Eucharistic sacrifice,
local Ordinaries can allow this to be done "if, in the light of the
circumstances of the locality and the people, they believe that (custom) cannot
prudently be removed."[21] The law by which it is forbidden to sing the
liturgical words themselves in the language of the people remains in force,
according to what has been said.
Mediator Dei
5. The majestic ceremonies of the sacrifice of the altar became
better known, understood and appreciated. With more widespread and more
frequent reception of the sacraments, with the beauty of the liturgical prayers
more fully savored, the worship of the Eucharist came to be regarded for what
it really is: the fountain-head of genuine Christian devotion. Bolder relief
was given likewise to the fact that all the faithful make up a single and very
compact body with Christ for its Head, and that the Christian community is in
duty bound to participate in the liturgical rites according to their station.
6. You are surely well aware that this Apostolic See has
always made careful provision for the schooling of the people committed to its
charge in the correct spirit and practice of the liturgy; and that it has been
no less careful to insist that the sacred rites should be performed with due
external dignity. In this connection We ourselves, in the course of our
traditional address to the Lenten preachers of this gracious city of Rome in
1943, urged them warmly to exhort their respective hearers to more faithful
participation in the eucharistic sacrifice. Only a short while previously, with
the design of rendering the prayers of the liturgy more correctly understood
and their truth and unction more easy to perceive, We arranged to have the Book
of Psalms, which forms such an important part of these prayers in the Catholic
Church, translated again into Latin from their original text.
17. No sooner, in fact, "is the Word made
flesh"[13] than he shows Himself to the world vested with a priestly
office, making to the Eternal Father an act of submission which will continue
uninterruptedly as long as He lives: "When He cometh into the world he
saith 'behold I come to do Thy Will."[14] This act He was to consummate
admirably in the bloody Sacrifice of the Cross: "It is in this will we are
sanctified by the oblation of the Body of Jesus Christ once."[15] He plans
His active life among men with no other purpose in view. As a child He is
presented to the Lord in the Temple. To the Temple He returns as a grown boy,
and often afterwards to instruct the people and to pray. He fasts for forty
days before beginning His public ministry. His counsel and example summon all
to prayer, daily and at night as well. As Teacher of the truth He "enlighteneth
every man"[16] to the end that mortals may duly acknowledge the immortal
God, "not withdrawing unto perdition, but faithful to the saving of the
soul."[17] As Shepherd He watches over His flock, leads it to life-giving
pasture, lays down a law that none shall wander from His side, off the straight
path He has pointed out, and that all shall lead holy lives imbued with His
spirit and moved by His active aid. At the Last Supper He celebrates a new
Pasch with solemn rite and ceremonial, and provides for its continuance through
the divine institution of the Eucharist. On the morrow, lifted up between
heaven and earth, He offers the saving sacrifice of His life, and pours forth,
as it were, from His pierced Heart the sacraments destined to impart the treasures
of redemption to the souls of men. All this He does with but a single aim: the
glory of His Father and man's ever greater sanctification.
20. This result is, in fact, achieved when Christ lives and
thrives, as it were, in the hearts of men, and when men's hearts in turn are
fashioned and expanded as though by Christ. This makes it possible for the
sacred temple, where the Divine Majesty receives the acceptable worship which
His law prescribes, to increase and prosper day by day in this land of exile of
earth. Along with the Church, therefore, her Divine Founder is present at every
liturgical function: Christ is present at the august sacrifice of the altar
both in the person of His minister and above all under the eucharistic species.
He is present in the sacraments, infusing into them the power which makes them
ready instruments of sanctification. He is present, finally, in prayer of
praise and petition we direct to God, as it is written: "Where there are
two or three gathered together in My Name, there am I in the midst of
them."[22] The sacred liturgy is, consequently, the public worship which
our Redeemer as Head of the Church renders to the Father, as well as the
worship which the community of the faithful renders to its Founder, and through
Him to the heavenly Father. It is, in short, the worship rendered by the
Mystical Body of Christ in the entirety of its Head and members.
20. This result is, in fact, achieved when Christ lives and
thrives, as it were, in the hearts of men, and when men's hearts in turn are
fashioned and expanded as though by Christ. This makes it possible for the
sacred temple, where the Divine Majesty receives the acceptable worship which
His law prescribes, to increase and prosper day by day in this land of exile of
earth. Along with the Church, therefore, her Divine Founder is present at every
liturgical function: Christ is present at the august sacrifice of the altar
both in the person of His minister and above all under the eucharistic species.
He is present in the sacraments, infusing into them the power which makes them
ready instruments of sanctification. He is present, finally, in prayer of
praise and petition we direct to God, as it is written: "Where there are
two or three gathered together in My Name, there am I in the midst of
them."[22] The sacred liturgy is, consequently, the public worship which
our Redeemer as Head of the Church renders to the Father, as well as the
worship which the community of the faithful renders to its Founder, and through
Him to the heavenly Father. It is, in short, the worship rendered by the
Mystical Body of Christ in the entirety of its Head and members.
51. Several causes, really have been instrumental in the
progress and development of the sacred liturgy during the long and glorious
life of the Church.
52. Thus, for example, as Catholic doctrine on the Incarnate
Word of God, the eucharistic sacrament and sacrifice, and Mary the Virgin
Mother of God came to be determined with greater certitude and clarity, new
ritual forms were introduced through which the acts of the liturgy proceeded to
reproduce this brighter light issuing from the decrees of the teaching
authority of the Church, and to reflect it, in a sense so that it might reach
the minds and hearts of Christ's people more readily.
53. The subsequent advances in ecclesiastical discipline for
the administering of the sacraments, that of penance for example; the
institution and later suppression of the catechumenate; and again, the practice
of eucharistic communion under a single species, adopted in the Latin Church;
these developments were assuredly responsible in no little measure for the
modification of the ancient ritual in the course of time, and for the gradual
introduction of new rites considered more in accord with prevailing discipline
in these matters.
54. Just as notable a contribution to this progressive
transformation was made by devotional trends and practices not directly related
to the sacred liturgy, which began to appear, by God's wonderful design, in
later periods, and grew to be so popular. We may instance the spread and ever
mounting ardor of devotion to the Blessed Eucharist, devotion to the most
bitter passion of our Redeemer, devotion to the most Sacred Heart of Jesus, to
the Virgin Mother of God and to her most chaste spouse.
59. The Church is without question a living organism, and as
an organism, in respect of the sacred liturgy also, she grows, matures,
develops, adapts and accommodates herself to temporal needs and circumstances,
provided only that the integrity of her doctrine be safeguarded. This
notwithstanding, the temerity and daring of those who introduce novel
liturgical practices, or call for the revival of obsolete rites out of harmony
with prevailing laws and rubrics, deserve severe reproof. It has pained Us
grievously to note, Venerable Brethren, that such innovations are actually
being introduced, not merely in minor details but in matters of major
importance as well. We instance, in point of fact, those who make use of the
vernacular in the celebration of the august eucharistic sacrifice; those who
transfer certain feast-days-which have been appointed and established after
mature deliberation-to other dates; those, finally, who delete from the prayer
books approved for public use the sacred texts of the Old Testament, deeming
them little suited and inopportune for modern times.
66. The mystery of the most Holy Eucharist which Christ, the
High Priest instituted, and which He commands to be continually renewed in the
Church by His ministers, is the culmination and center, as it were, of the
Christian religion. We consider it opportune in speaking about the crowning act
of the sacred liturgy, to delay for a little while and call your attention,
Venerable Brethren, to this most important subject.
70. Likewise the victim is the same, namely, our divine
Redeemer in His human nature with His true body and blood. The manner, however,
in which Christ is offered is different. On the cross He completely offered
Himself and all His sufferings to God, and the immolation of the victim was
brought about by the bloody death, which He underwent of His free will. But on
the altar, by reason of the glorified state of His human nature, "death
shall have no more dominion over Him,"[62] and so the shedding of His
blood is impossible; still, according to the plan of divine wisdom, the
sacrifice of our Redeemer is shown forth in an admirable manner by external
signs which are the symbols of His death. For by the
"transubstantiation" of bread into the body of Christ and of wine
into His blood, His body and blood are both really present: now the eucharistic
species under which He is present symbolize the actual separation of His body
and blood. Thus the commemorative representation of His death, which actually
took place on Calvary, is repeated in every sacrifice of the altar, seeing that
Jesus Christ is symbolically shown by separate symbols to be in a state of
victimhood.
71. Moreover, the appointed ends are the same. The first of
these is to give glory to the Heavenly Father. From His birth to His death
Jesus Christ burned with zeal for the divine glory; and the offering of His
blood upon the cross rose to heaven in an odor of sweetness. To perpetuate this
praise, the members of the Mystical Body are united with their divine Head in
the eucharistic sacrifice, and with Him, together with the Angels and
Archangels, they sing immortal praise to God[63] and give all honor and glory
to the Father Almighty.
72. The second end is duly to give thanks to God. Only the
divine Redeemer, as the eternal Father's most beloved Son whose immense love He
knew, could offer Him a worthy return of gratitude. This was His intention and
desire at the Last Supper when He "gave thanks."[65] He did not cease
to do so when hanging upon the cross, nor does He fail to do so in the august
sacrifice of the altar, which is an act of thanksgiving or a
"eucharistic" act; since this "is truly meet and just, right and
availing unto salvation."
75. It is easy, therefore, to understand why the holy
Council of Trent lays down that by means of the eucharistic sacrifice the
saving virtue of the cross is imparted to us for the remission of the sins we
daily commit.
78. The cooperation of the faithful is required so that
sinners may be individually purified in the blood of the Lamb. For though,
speaking generally, Christ reconciled by His painful death the whole human race
with the Father, He wished that all should approach and be drawn to His cross,
especially by means of the sacraments and the eucharistic sacrifice, to obtain
the salutary fruits produced by Him upon it. Through this active and individual
participation, the members of the Mystical Body not only become daily more like
to their divine Head, but the life flowing from the Head is imparted to the
members, so that we can each repeat the words of St. Paul, "With Christ I
am nailed to the cross: I live, now not I, but Christ liveth in me."[74]
We have already explained sufficiently and of set purpose on another occasion,
that Jesus Christ "when dying on the cross, bestowed upon His Church, as a
completely gratuitous gift, the immense treasure of the redemption. But when it
is a question of distributing this treasure, He not only commits the work of
sanctification to His Immaculate Spouse, but also wishes that, to a certain
extent, sanctity should derive from her activity."
80. It is, therefore, desirable, Venerable Brethren, that
all the faithful should be aware that to participate in the eucharistic
sacrifice is their chief duty and supreme dignity, and that not in an inert and
negligent fashion, giving way to distractions and day-dreaming, but with such
earnestness and concentration that they may be united as closely as possible
with the High Priest, according to the Apostle, "Let this mind be in you
which was also in Christ Jesus."[80] And together with Him and through Him
let them make their oblation, and in union with Him let them offer up
themselves.
82. The fact, however, that the faithful participate in the
eucharistic sacrifice does not mean that they also are endowed with priestly
power. It is very necessary that you make this quite clear to your flocks.
83. For there are today, Venerable Brethren, those who,
approximating to errors long since condemned[82] teach that in the New
Testament by the word "priesthood" is meant only that priesthood
which applies to all who have been baptized; and hold that the command by which
Christ gave power to His apostles at the Last Supper to do what He Himself had
done, applies directly to the entire Christian Church, and that thence, and
thence only, arises the hierarchical priesthood. Hence they assert that the
people are possessed of a true priestly power, while the priest only acts in
virtue of an office committed to him by the community. Wherefore, they look on
the eucharistic sacrifice as a "concelebration," in the literal
meaning of that term, and consider it more fitting that priests should
"concelebrate" with the people present than that they should offer
the sacrifice privately when the people are absent.
87. Moreover, the rites and prayers of the eucharistic
sacrifice signify and show no less clearly that the oblation of the Victim is
made by the priests in company with the people. For not only does the sacred
minister, after the oblation of the bread and wine when he turns to the people,
say the significant prayer: "Pray brethren, that my sacrifice and yours
may be acceptable to God the Father Almighty;"[86] but also the prayers by
which the divine Victim is offered to God are generally expressed in the plural
number: and in these it is indicated more than once that the people also
participate in this august sacrifice inasmuch as they offer the same. The
following words, for example, are used: "For whom we offer, or who offer
up to Thee We therefore beseech thee, O Lord, to be appeased and to receive
this offering of our bounded duty, as also of thy whole household We thy
servants, as also thy whole people do offer unto thy most excellent majesty, of
thine own gifts bestowed upon us, a pure victim, a holy victim, a spotless
victim."
96. They are mistaken in appealing in this matter to the
social character of the eucharistic sacrifice, for as often as a priest repeats
what the divine Redeemer did at the Last Supper, the sacrifice is really
completed. Moreover, this sacrifice, necessarily and of its very nature, has
always and everywhere the character of a public and social act, inasmuch as he
who offers it acts in the name of Christ and of the faithful, whose Head is the
divine Redeemer, and he offers it to God for the holy Catholic Church, and for
the living and the dead.[88] This is undoubtedly so, whether the faithful are
present -- as we desire and commend them to be in great numbers and with
devotion -- or are not present, since it is in no wise required that the people
ratify what the sacred minister has done.
104. Let the faithful, therefore, consider to what a high
dignity they are raised by the sacrament of baptism. They should not think it
enough to participate in the eucharistic sacrifice with that general intention
which befits members of Christ and children of the Church, but let them
further, in keeping with the spirit of the sacred liturgy, be most closely
united with the High Priest and His earthly minister, at the time the
consecration of the divine Victim is enacted, and at that time especially when
those solemn words are pronounced, "By Him and with Him and in Him is to
Thee, God the Father almighty, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, all honor and
glory for ever and ever";[101] to these words in fact the people answer,
"Amen." Nor should Christians forget to offer themselves, their
cares, their sorrows, their distress and their necessities in union with their
divine Savior upon the cross.
115. Now it cannot be over-emphasized that the eucharistic
sacrifice of its very nature is the unbloody immolation of the divine Victim,
which is made manifest in a mystical manner by the separation of the sacred
species and by their oblation to the eternal Father. Holy communion pertains to
the integrity of the Mass and to the partaking of the august sacrament; but
while it is obligatory for the priest who says the Mass, it is only something
earnestly recommended to the faithful.
118. But the desire of Mother Church does not stop here. For
since by feasting upon the bread of angels we can by a "sacramental"
communion, as we have already said, also become partakers of the sacrifice, she
repeats the invitation to all her children individually, "Take and eat Do
this in memory of Me"[105] so that "we may continually experience
within us the fruit of our redemption"[106] in a more efficacious manner.
For this reason the Council of Trent, reechoing, as it were, the invitation of
Christ and His immaculate Spouse, has earnestly exhorted "the faithful
when they attend Mass to communicate not only by a spiritual communion but also
by a sacramental one, so that they may obtain more abundant fruit from this
most holy sacrifice."[107] Moreover, our predecessor of immortal memory,
Benedict XIV, wishing to emphasize and throw fuller light upon the truth that
the faithful by receiving the Holy Eucharist become partakers of the divine
sacrifice itself, praises the devotion of those who, when attending Mass, not
only elicit a desire to receive holy communion but also want to be nourished by
hosts consecrated during the Mass, even though, as he himself states, they
really and truly take part in the sacrifice should they receive a host which
has been duly consecrated at a previous Mass. He writes as follows: "And
although in addition to those to whom the celebrant gives a portion of the
Victim he himself has offered in the Mass, they also participate in the same
sacrifice to whom a priest distributes the Blessed Sacrament that has been
reserved; however, the Church has not for this reason ever forbidden, nor does
she now forbid, a celebrant to satisfy the piety and just request of those who,
when present at Mass, want to become partakers of the same sacrifice, because
they likewise offer it after their own manner, nay more, she approves of it and
desires that it should not be omitted and would reprehend those priests through
whose fault and negligence this participation would be denied to the
faithful."
122. Still sometimes there may be a reason, and that not
infrequently, why holy communion should be distributed before or after Mass and
even immediately after the priest receives the sacred species -- and even
though hosts consecrated at a previous Mass should be used. In these
circumstances -- as we have stated above -- the people duly take part in the
eucharistic sacrifice and not seldom they can in this way more conveniently
receive holy communion. Still, though the Church with the kind heart of a
mother strives to meet the spiritual needs of her children, they, for their
part, should not readily neglect the directions of the liturgy and, as often as
there is no reasonable difficulty, should aim that all their actions at the
altar manifest more clearly the living unity of the Mystical Body.
123. When the Mass, which is subject to special rules of the
liturgy, is over, the person who has received holy communion is not thereby
freed from his duty of thanksgiving; rather, it is most becoming that, when the
Mass is finished, the person who has received the Eucharist should recollect
himself, and in intimate union with the divine Master hold loving and fruitful
converse with Him. Hence they have departed from the straight way of truth,
who, adhering to the letter rather than the sense, assert and teach that, when
Mass has ended, no such thanksgiving should be added, not only because the Mass
is itself a thanksgiving, but also because this pertains to a private and
personal act of piety and not to the good of the community.
125. Moreover, such personal colloquies are very necessary
that we may all enjoy more fully the supernatural treasures that are contained
in the Eucharist and according to our means, share them with others, so that
Christ our Lord may exert the greatest possible influence on the souls of all.
128. The divine Redeemer is ever repeating His pressing
invitation, "Abide in Me."[121] Now by the sacrament of the
Eucharist, Christ remains in us and we in Him, and just as Christ, remaining in
us, lives and works, so should we remain in Christ and live and work through
Him.
129. The Eucharistic Food contains, as all are aware,
"truly, really and substantially the Body and Blood together with soul and
divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ."[122] It is no wonder, then, that the
Church, even from the beginning, adored the body of Christ under the appearance
of bread; this is evident from the very rites of the august sacrifice, which
prescribe that the sacred ministers should adore the most holy sacrament by
genuflecting or by profoundly bowing their heads.
131. It is on this doctrinal basis that the cult of adoring
the Eucharist was founded and gradually developed as something distinct from
the sacrifice of the Mass. The reservation of the sacred species for the sick
and those in danger of death introduced the praiseworthy custom of adoring the
blessed Sacrament which is reserved in our churches. This practice of
adoration, in fact, is based on strong and solid reasons. For the Eucharist is
at once a sacrifice and a sacrament; but it differs from the other sacraments
in this that it not only produces grace, but contains in a permanent manner the
Author of grace Himself. When, therefore, the Church bids us adore Christ
hidden behind the eucharistic veils and pray to Him for spiritual and temporal
favors, of which we ever stand in need, she manifests living faith in her
divine Spouse who is present beneath these veils, she professes her gratitude
to Him and she enjoys the intimacy of His friendship.
132. Now, the Church in the course of centuries has
introduced various forms of this worship which are ever increasing in beauty
and helpfulness: as, for example, visits of devotion to the tabernacles, even
every day; benediction of the Blessed Sacrament; solemn processions, especially
at the time of Eucharistic Congress, which pass through cities and villages;
and adoration of the Blessed Sacrament publicly exposed. Sometimes these public
acts of adoration are of short duration. Sometimes they last for one, several
and even for forty hours. In certain places they continue in turn in different
churches throughout the year, while elsewhere adoration is perpetual day and
night, under the care of religious communities, and the faithful quite often
take part in them.
134. Nor is it to be admitted that by this Eucharistic cult
men falsely confound the historical Christ, as they say, who once lived on
earth, with the Christ who is present in the august Sacrament of the altar, and
who reigns glorious and triumphant in heaven and bestows supernatural favors.
On the contrary, it can be claimed that by this devotion the faithful bear
witness to and solemnly avow the faith of the Church that the Word of God is
identical with the Son of the Virgin Mary, who suffered on the cross, who is
present in a hidden manner in the Eucharist and who reigns upon His heavenly
throne. Thus, St. John Chrysostom states: "When you see It [the Body of
Christ] exposed, say to yourself: Thanks to this body, I am no longer dust and
ashes, I am no more a captive but a freeman: hence I hope to obtain heaven and
the good things that are there in store for me, eternal life, the heritage of
the angels, companionship with Christ; death has not destroyed this body which
was pierced by nails and scourged, this is that body which was once covered
with blood, pierced by a lance, from which issued saving fountains upon the
world, one of blood and the other of water This body He gave to us to keep and
eat, as a mark of His intense love."
136. Strive then, Venerable Brethren, with your customary
devoted care so the churches, which the faith and piety of Christian peoples
have built in the course of centuries for the purpose of singing a perpetual
hymn of glory to God almighty and of providing a worthy abode for our Redeemer
concealed beneath the eucharistic species, may be entirely at the disposal of
greater numbers of the faithful who, called to the feet of their Savior,
hearken to His most consoling invitation, "Come to Me all you who labor
and are heavily burdened, and I will refresh you."[129] Let your churches
be the house of God where all who enter to implore blessings rejoice in
obtaining whatever they ask[130] and find there heavenly consolation.
138. The ideal of Christian life is that each one be united
to God in the closest and most intimate manner. For this reason, the worship
that the Church renders to God, and which is based especially on the
eucharistic sacrifice and the use of the sacraments, is directed and arranged
in such a way that it embraces by means of the divine office, the hours of the
day, the weeks and the whole cycle of the year, and reaches all the aspects and
phases of human life.
201. Above all, try with your constant zeal to have all the
faithful attend the eucharistic sacrifice from which they may obtain abundant
and salutary fruit; and carefully instruct them in all the legitimate ways we
have described above so that they may devoutly participate in it. The Mass is
the chief act of divine worship; it should also be the source and center of
Christian piety. Never think that you have satisfied your apostolic zeal until
you see your faithful approach in great numbers the celestial banquet which is
a sacrament of devotion, a sign of unity and a bond of love.
205. These, Venerable Brethren, are the subjects We desired
to write to you about. We are moved to write that your children, who are also
Ours, may more fully understand and appreciate the most precious treasures
which are contained in the sacred liturgy: namely, the eucharistic sacrifice,
representing and renewing the sacrifice of the cross, the sacraments which are
the streams of divine grace and of divine life, and the hymn of praise, which
heaven and earth daily offer to God.
Divini Cultus—no references
Tra le Sollicitudini—no references