One of the Integrist complaints
concerning the Revised Roman Rite of Pope Paul VI (ie., the
Pauline Rite) is that it has decreased the number of overt
references within the text of the Mass to the nature of the Mass
as a sacrifice specifically in Eucharistic Prayer 2 (EP2). Since
EP2 is the shortest of the Eucharistic Prayers, it is the one
most often used even on Sundays. Many radical Integrists are even
questioning the validity of the Mass when EP2 is used. They claim
that there is no overt sacrificial terminology in EP2 and that it
does not support the Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist. They
have even gone so far as to call it a "Protestant"
corruption of the Mass. This brief essay hopes to respond to
these charges and briefly show that EP2 is sufficiently Catholic
in content to reflect the Church's immemorial understanding
of the Eucharist as a sacrifice and as the transubstantiated Body
and Blood of Christ.
1) When Jesus instituted the
Eucharist, he did so in the context of a Jewish Passover meal or
Seder. The Seder in Our Lord's time was a sacrificial meal
since in that meal the participants consumed a lamb that was a
sacrificial victim the blood of which was offered to God in the
Temple in Jerusalem. Furthermore, many experts consider the Seder
to be an example of a Todah sacrifice, which in Old Testament
times was often made to God in thanks for God's providence
or in anticipation of deliverance from some threat. The Todah
sacrifice was the only one in which the lay people who
commissioned the sacrifice were permitted – in fact required
– to partake of the flesh of the sacrificial victim. The
word 'todah' in Hebrew means 'thanksgiving.'
The Greek equivalent is 'eucharistia.' By its very
nature therefore the Last Supper and the Mass, which is derived
from it, represents a sacrificial meal, not merely a sacrifice.
Overemphasis on the sacrificial aspect to the neglect of the meal
aspect therefore detracts from what Our Lord was actually doing.
While the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist as Jesus instituted
it is clear for any unbiased person to see, he did not use any of
the overtly sacrificial terminology that the Integrists think is
lacking in EP2. In fact there is more sacrificial language in the
Mass using EP2 than in what is preserved of Jesus' words at
the Last Supper or in the traditional Jewish Seder liturgy.
2) Every Christian sacrament is
composed of matter and form. The matter of the Eucharist in the
Latin rite is grape wine and unleavened wheat bread. The form in
the Latin Rite consists solely in the words of institution. There
are several different compositions for the words of institution
in the Latin Rite, but the least common denominators among them
are the words "This is my Body" and "This is the
cup of my Blood." These words recited by a priest over the
appropriate matter with the intention of confecting the sacrament
are sufficient in themselves to validly confect the Holy
Eucharist. The overtly sacramental terminology that the
Integrists are concerned about is not required to validly confect
the Mass. The use of such terminology is only licit in the Mass
when it appears in an approved liturgical usage. As such, the
presence or absence of such terminology does not in and of itself
affect either the liciety or validity of a Mass.
3) Regardless of which Eucharistic
Prayer is used, every Mass in the Pauline Rite includes the
following prayers which contain explicit references to offering
sacrifice:{Presentation of the Gifts / Preparation of the
Altar:}Priest: Blessed are you, Lord, God of all creation.
Through your goodness we have this bread to offer, which earth
has given and human hands have made. It will become for us the
bread of life. All: Blessed be God for ever. The deacon (or the
priest) pours wine and a little water into the chalice, saying
quietly: By uniting this water and wine we ask to share in the
divinity of Christ, who humbled himself to share in our humanity.
Priest: Blessed are you, Lord, God of all creation. Through your
goodness we have this wine to offer, fruit of the vine and work
of human hands. It will become our spiritual drink. All: Blessed
be God for ever. The priest bows and says quietly: Lord God, we
ask you to receive us and be pleased with the sacrifice we offer
you with humble and contrite hearts.{Suscipiat} Priest: Pray, my
brothers and sisters, that our sacrifice may be acceptable to
God, the almighty Father. All: May the Lord accept the sacrifice
at your hands, for the praise and glory of his name, for our
good, and the good of all the Church.
4) In EP2, the ancient liturgical
prayer of Epiclesis was restored. It had been part of many
liturgies since the First Council of Constantinople in order to
emphasize the divinity of the Holy Spirit but dropped out of
western usage sometime in the first Christian Millennium. By the
time of the Leonnine Sacramentary in the 8th Century the Roman
liturgy clearly did not have an Epiclesis, but it has remained
part of the liturgies of the East to this very day. The Epiclesis
states: Priest: Let your Holy Spirit come upon these gifts to
make them holy, so that they may become for us the body and blood
of our Lord, Jesus Christ. This is a clear reference to the
Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation. There is no
corresponding prayer in the old Tridentine Rite. On this point,
EP2 actually has a prayer re-affirming the orthodox Catholic
doctrine of the Eucharist that the Roman Canon does not have.
5) The words of institution in and
of themselves are inherently sacrificial despite Protestant
sophisms to the contrary. They begin by offering the Body of
Christ, which was to be 'given up' in sacrifice. After
that, the blood of Christ is offered, which was 'shed'
by his sacrificial death for us. This shedding of blood was used
to seal a new covenant with God just as the blood of the Passover
Lamb initiated the Mosaic covenant in Egypt and the blood of oxen
sealed that covenant on Sinai in Exodus 24:8. There are also
overt references to sacrificial offering and transubstantiation
in the prayers that conclude this section of the liturgy. It is
these elements of EP2 that led to it being rejected by Protestant
denominations as being "too Catholic" for them to use.
In EP2 these are the official the words of institution (in bold)
with the prayers that immediately follow them: Priest: Take this
all of you and eat it; this is my body which will be given up for
you. Take this, all of you, and drink from it: this is the cup of
my blood, the blood of the new and everlasting covenant. It will
be shed for you and for all men so that sins may be forgiven. Do
this in memory of me. In memory of his death and resurrection, we
offer you, Father, this life giving bread, this saving cup. We
thank you for counting us worthy to stand in your presence and
serve you. May all of us who share in the body and blood of
Christ be brought together in unity by the Holy Spirit.
So in conclusion, the Pauline Rite
when using EP2 is overtly and unmistakably Catholic in its
doctrinal presuppositions supporting the dogmas of Eucharistic
Sacrifice and transubstantiation. The Integrist claims that EP2
is a 'protestant' corruption of the Mass are false.