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All Should Offer Their Bodies and Blood at Mass (Father Cantalamessa) [Catholic Caucus]
Zenit.org ^ | MARCH 12, 2010 | Father Raniero Cantalamessa

Posted on 03/14/2010 8:38:55 PM PDT by Salvation

All Should Offer Their Bodies and Blood at Mass


Preacher Explains Uniqueness of Christ's Sacrifice and Our Participation

VATICAN CITY, MARCH 12, 2010 (Zenit.org).- What makes Christ the Priest unlike any other priest, either from the Old Testament or from any other cult, is that his priestly sacrifice is he, himself.

But that uniqueness is also the calling shared by priests and laity, to "imitate that which is celebrated" every day at Mass.

This was the reflection offered today by Capuchin Father Raniero Cantalamessa, preacher of the Pontifical Household, in his second Lenten sermon of the year, given in the presence of Benedict XVI and the Roman Curia.  The Capuchin is focusing his homilies on the priesthood in this Year for Priests. In Advent he meditated on the priest as servant of Christ, in the power and the unction of the Holy Spirit. During Lent, he is looking at the priest as steward of the mysteries of God.

"To be a priest 'according to the order of Jesus Christ,' the presbyter must, like him, offer himself," Father Cantalamessa said. "On the altar, he does not only represent the Jesus [who is] 'high priest,' but also the Jesus [who is] 'supreme victim,' the two things being, moreover, inseparable. In other words he cannot be content to offer Christ to the Father in the sacramental signs of bread and wine, he must also offer himself with Christ to the Father."

The preacher shared his own experience of this sacrifice: "As a priest ordained by the Church, I pronounce the words of the consecration 'in persona Christi,' I believe that, thanks to the Holy Spirit, they have the power of changing the bread into the body of Christ and the wine into his blood; at the same time, as member of the body of Christ [...] I look at the brethren before me or, if I celebrate on my own, I think of them whom I must serve during the day and, turning to them, I say mentally together with Jesus: 'Brothers and sisters, take, eat, this is my body; take, drink, this is my blood.'"

Father Cantalamessa clarified that this mutual offering is necessary.

"The offering of the priest and of the whole Church, without that of Jesus, would neither be holy nor acceptable to God, because we are only sinful creatures," he said, "but Jesus' offering, without that of his body which is the Church, would also be incomplete and insufficient: not, be it understood, to procure salvation, but because we receive it and appropriate it. It is in this sense that the Church can say with St. Paul: 'in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions.'"

And the preacher offered a simple example to illustrate his point.

"Let us imagine," he said, "that in a family there is one child, the first born, most devoted to the father. He wishes to give him a present for his birthday. However, before presenting it to him he asks all his brothers and sisters secretly to add their signature on the gift. It then arrives in the hands of the father as the indistinct homage of all his children and as a sign of the esteem and love of them all but, in reality, only one has paid its price.
 
"And now the application. Jesus admires and loves the heavenly Father. He wishes to give him every day, until the end of the world, the most precious gift he can think of, that of his life itself. In the Mass he invites all his 'brothers,' who we are, to add their signature on the gift, so that it reaches God the Father as the indistinct gift of all his children. [...] But, in reality, we know that only one has paid the price of such a gift. And what a price!"

Laity, too

Father Cantalamessa proposed that laypeople, too, are called to offer themselves with Christ in the Mass.

"Let us try to imagine what would happen if also the laity, at the moment of the consecration, said silently: 'Take, eat, this is my body. Take, drink, this is my blood,'" he proposed. "A mother of a family thus celebrates her Mass, then she goes home and begins her day made up of a thousand little things. But what she does is not nothing: It is a eucharist together with Jesus! A [religious] sister also says in her heart at the moment of consecration: 'Take, eat ...'; then she goes to her daily work: children, the sick, the elderly. The Eucharist 'invades' her day which becomes a prolongation of the Eucharist."

The Pontifical Household preacher called for two categories of people to particularly take to heart his message: workers and young people.

"Do we teach the Christian laborer to offer in the Mass his body and his blood, that is, his time, sweat and toil," he reflected. Work in this way, he said, will not be confined to a Marxist focus on the product, but rather becomes sanctifying.

And youth, Father Cantalamessa said, have a special need to offer themselves at Mass.

He explained: "Suffice it for us to think of one thing: What does the world of boys and girls want today? The body, nothing else but the body! The body, in the mentality of the world, is essentially an instrument of pleasure and exploitation. Something to be sold, to squeeze while it is young and attractive, and then to be thrown out, together with the person, when it no longer serves these ends. Especially the woman's body has become merchandise of consumption.

"Do we teach Christian boys and girls to say, at the moment of consecration: 'Take, eat, this is my body, offered for you.' The body is thus consecrated, becomes something sacred, it can no longer be 'given to eat' to one's concupiscence and that of others, it can no longer be sold, because it has given itself. It has become Eucharist with Christ."

"The Apostle Paul," Father Cantalamessa reflected, made this exhortation to the Christians of Corinth: "The body is not meant for immorality, but for the Lord. ... So glorify God in your body.



TOPICS: Catholic; Prayer; Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: catholic; catholiclist; eucharist
Read the entire sermon. Some interesting aspects that I had not really considered in depth.
1 posted on 03/14/2010 8:38:55 PM PDT by Salvation
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To: nickcarraway; Lady In Blue; NYer; ELS; Pyro7480; livius; Catholicguy; RobbyS; markomalley; ...

**”The offering of the priest and of the whole Church, without that of Jesus, would neither be holy nor acceptable to God, because we are only sinful creatures,” he said, “but Jesus’ offering, without that of his body which is the Church, would also be incomplete and insufficient: not, be it understood, to procure salvation, but because we receive it and appropriate it. It is in this sense that the Church can say with St. Paul: ‘in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions.’”**

**”Do we teach Christian boys and girls to say, at the moment of consecration: ‘Take, eat, this is my body, offered for you.’ **

worth pondering.

Ping!


2 posted on 03/14/2010 8:42:03 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Salvation

bookmark


3 posted on 03/14/2010 9:52:17 PM PDT by GOP Poet (Obama is an OLYMPIC failure.)
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To: Salvation

I always have done this myself. Personally I have found it helpful during the mass.


4 posted on 03/15/2010 2:24:11 AM PDT by BenKenobi (And into this Ring he poured his cruelty, his malice and his will to dominate all life.)
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To: BenKenobi

I think the offertory is a much neglected part of the Mass. The confusion of the term offertory with what ought to be called the “collection” is just a sign of the neglect.

In the Episcopal Church, instead of prescribed offertory propers the celebrant is presented with an choice. My favorite was, “I beseech you brethren to present yourselves as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.”

Now that I’m a Catholic, I haven’t heard much teaching on this part/aspect of the Mass, so I’m delighted to read Fr. Cantalamessa’s thoughts. As members of the body we are participants in the oblation. In the breaking of the bread and the pouring out of wine, we are broken and poured out, because we are in Christ.

Or so it has seemed to me for a long time, longer than I’ve been Catholic.


5 posted on 03/15/2010 3:30:25 AM PDT by Mad Dawg (Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee.)
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To: Mad Dawg; Salvation

Written by the late Blessed Archbishop Fulton Sheen...

I give myself to God.
Here is my body. Take it.
Here is my blood. Take it.
Here is my Soul, my Will, my Energy, my Strength,
My Property, my Wealth - all that I have. It is Yours.
Take it! Offer it! Offer it with Thyself to the Heavenly Father
In order that He, looking down on this Great Sacrifice,
May see only Thee, His Beloved Son, in Whom He is well pleased.
Transmute the poor bread of my life into Thy Divine Life;
Thrill the wine of my wasted Life into Thy Divine Spirit;
Unite my broken Heart with Thy Heart;
Change my Cross into a Crucifix.

Let not my Abandonment, and my Sorrow, and my Bereavement go to waste.
Gather up the fragments,
And as the drop of water is absorbed by the Wine at the Offertory of the Mass,
Let my life be absorbed in Thee;
Let my little cross be entwined with Thy Great Cross,
so that I may purchase the Joys of Everlasting Happiness in union with Thee.

littlegoldcross.gif (962 bytes) Consecrate these Trials of my life which would go unrewarded unless united with Thee;
Transubstantiate me so that like bread which is now Thy Body,
And wine which is now Thy Blood, I too may be wholly Thee.
I care not if the Species remain, or that, like the bread and the wine,
I seem to all earthly eyes the same as before.
My Station in Life, my Routine Duties, my Work, my Family -
All these are but the Species of my life which may remain unchanged;
But the Substance of my life, my Soul, my Mind, my Will, my Heart -
Transubstantiate them, transform them wholly into Thy service,
So that through me all may know how sweet is the Love of Christ.

Amen


6 posted on 03/15/2010 6:36:45 AM PDT by stfassisi ((The greatest gift God gives us is that of overcoming self"-St Francis Assisi)))
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To: Mad Dawg

** The confusion of the term offertory with what ought to be called the “collection” is just a sign of the neglect.**

So true.


7 posted on 03/15/2010 9:56:13 AM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: stfassisi

Beautiful.


8 posted on 03/15/2010 9:56:33 AM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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