ecclesia de eucharistia
OF HIS HOLINESS
POPE JOHN PAUL II
TO THE BISHOPS
PRIESTS AND DEACONS
MEN AND WOMEN
IN THE CONSECRATED LIFE
AND ALL THE LAY FAITHFUL
ON THE EUCHARIST
IN ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE CHURCH
INTRODUCTION
1. The Church draws her life from the Eucharist. This truth does not
simply express a daily experience of faith, but recapitulates the heart
of the mystery of the Church. In a variety of ways she joyfully
experiences the constant fulfilment of the promise: “Lo, I am
with you always, to the close of the age” (Mt 28:20), but in
the Holy Eucharist, through the changing of bread and wine into the
body and blood of the Lord, she rejoices in this presence with unique
intensity. Ever since Pentecost, when the Church, the People of the New
Covenant, began her pilgrim journey towards her heavenly homeland, the
Divine Sacrament has continued to mark the passing of her days, filling
them with confident hope.
The Second Vatican Council rightly proclaimed that the Eucharistic
sacrifice is “the source and summit of the Christian
life”.1 “For the most holy Eucharist contains the
Church's entire spiritual wealth: Christ himself, our passover and
living bread. Through his own flesh, now made living and life-giving by
the Holy Spirit, he offers life to men”.2 Consequently the
gaze of the Church is constantly turned to her Lord, present in the
Sacrament of the Altar, in which she discovers the full manifestation
of his boundless love.
2. During the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000 I had an opportunity to
celebrate the Eucharist in the Cenacle of Jerusalem where, according to
tradition, it was first celebrated by Jesus himself. The Upper Room was
where this most holy Sacrament was instituted. It is there that Christ
took bread, broke it and gave it to his disciples, saying:
“Take this, all of you, and eat it: this is my body which
will be given up for you” (cf. Mk 26:26; Lk 22:19; 1 Cor
11:24). Then he took the cup of wine and said to them: “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, so that sins may be forgiven” (cf. Mt 14:24; Lk
22:20; 1 Cor 11:25). I am grateful to the Lord Jesus for allowing me to
repeat in that same place, in obedience to his command: “Do
this in memory of me” (Lk 22:19), the words which he spoke
two thousand years ago.
Did the Apostles who took part in the Last Supper understand the
meaning of the words spoken by Christ? Perhaps not. Those words would
only be fully clear at the end of the Triduum sacrum, the time from
Thursday evening to Sunday morning. Those days embrace the myste- rium
paschale; they also embrace the mysterium eucharisticum.
3. The Church was born of the paschal mystery. For this very reason the
Eucharist, which is in an outstanding way the sacrament of the paschal
mystery, stands at the centre of the Church's life. This is already
clear from the earliest images of the Church found in the Acts of the
Apostles: “They devoted themselves to the Apostles' teaching
and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers”
(2:42). The “breaking of the bread” refers to the
Eucharist. Two thousand years later, we continue to relive that
primordial image of the Church. At every celebration of the Eucharist,
we are spiritually brought back to the paschal Triduum: to the events
of the evening of Holy Thursday, to the Last Supper and to what
followed it. The institution of the Eucharist sacramentally anticipated
the events which were about to take place, beginning with the agony in
Gethsemane. Once again we see Jesus as he leaves the Upper Room,
descends with his disciples to the Kidron valley and goes to the Garden
of Olives. Even today that Garden shelters some very ancient olive
trees. Perhaps they witnessed what happened beneath their shade that
evening, when Christ in prayer was filled with anguish “and
his sweat became like drops of blood falling down upon the
ground” (cf. Lk 22:44). The blood which shortly before he had
given to the Church as the drink of salvation in the sacrament of the
Eucharist, began to be shed; its outpouring would then be completed on
Golgotha to become the means of our redemption: “Christ... as
high priest of the good things to come..., entered once for all into
the Holy Place, taking not the blood of goats and calves but his own
blood, thus securing an eternal redemption” (Heb 9:11- 12).
4. The hour of our redemption. Although deeply troubled, Jesus does not
flee before his “hour”. “And what shall I
say? 'Father, save me from this hour?' No, for this purpose I have come
to this hour” (Jn 12:27). He wanted his disciples to keep him
company, yet he had to experience loneliness and abandonment:
“So, could you not watch with me one hour? Watch and pray
that you may not enter into temptation” (Mt 26:40- 41). Only
John would remain at the foot of the Cross, at the side of Mary and the
faithful women. The agony in Gethsemane was the introduction to the
agony of the Cross on Good Friday. The holy hour, the hour of the
redemption of the world. Whenever the Eucharist is celebrated at the
tomb of Jesus in Jerusalem, there is an almost tangible return to his
“hour”, the hour of his Cross and glorification.
Every priest who celebrates Holy Mass, together with the Christian
community which takes part in it, is led back in spirit to that place
and that hour.
“He was crucified, he suffered death and was buried; he
descended to the dead; on the third day he rose again”. The
words of the profession of faith are echoed by the words of
contemplation and proclamation: “This is the wood of the
Cross, on which hung the Saviour of the world. Come, let us
worship”. This is the invitation which the Church extends to
all in the afternoon hours of Good Friday. She then takes up her song
during the Easter season in order to proclaim: “The Lord is
risen from the tomb; for our sake he hung on the Cross,
Alleluia”.
5. “Mysterium fidei! - The Mystery of Faith!”. When
the priest recites or chants these words, all present acclaim:
“We announce your death, O Lord, and we proclaim your
resurrection, until you come in glory”.
In these or similar words the Church, while pointing to Christ in the
mystery of his passion, also reveals her own mystery: Ecclesia de
Eucharistia. By the gift of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost the Church was
born and set out upon the pathways of the world, yet a decisive moment
in her taking shape was certainly the institution of the Eucharist in
the Upper Room. Her foundation and wellspring is the whole Triduum
paschale, but this is as it were gathered up, foreshadowed and
“concentrated' for ever in the gift of the Eucharist. In this
gift Jesus Christ entrusted to his Church the perennial making present
of the paschal mystery. With it he brought about a mysterious
“oneness in time” between that Triduum and the
passage of the centuries.
The thought of this leads us to profound amazement and gratitude. In
the paschal event and the Eucharist which makes it present throughout
the centuries, there is a truly enormous “capacity”
which embraces all of history as the recipient of the grace of the
redemption. This amazement should always fill the Church assembled for
the celebration of the Eucharist. But in a special way it should fill
the minister of the Eucharist. For it is he who, by the authority given
him in the sacrament of priestly ordination, effects the consecration.
It is he who says with the power coming to him from Christ in the Upper
Room: “This is my body which will be given up for you This is
the cup of my blood, poured out for you...”. The priest says
these words, or rather he puts his voice at the disposal of the One who
spoke these words in the Upper Room and who desires that they should be
repeated in every generation by all those who in the Church
ministerially share in his priesthood.
6. I would like to rekindle this Eucharistic
“amazement” by the present Encyclical Letter, in
continuity with the Jubilee heritage which I have left to the Church in
the Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte and its Marian crowning,
Rosarium Virginis Mariae. To contemplate the face of Christ, and to
contemplate it with Mary, is the “programme” which
I have set before the Church at the dawn of the third millennium,
summoning her to put out into the deep on the sea of history with the
enthusiasm of the new evangelization. To contemplate Christ involves
being able to recognize him wherever he manifests himself, in his many
forms of presence, but above all in the living sacrament of his body
and his blood. The Church draws her life from Christ in the Eucharist;
by him she is fed and by him she is enlightened. The Eucharist is both
a mystery of faith and a “mystery of light”.3
Whenever the Church celebrates the Eucharist, the faithful can in some
way relive the experience of the two disciples on the road to Emmaus:
“their eyes were opened and they recognized him”
(Lk 24:31).
7. From the time I began my ministry as the Successor of Peter, I have
always marked Holy Thursday, the day of the Eucharist and of the
priesthood, by sending a letter to all the priests of the world. This
year, the twenty-fifth of my Pontificate, I wish to involve the whole
Church more fully in this Eucharistic reflection, also as a way of
thanking the Lord for the gift of the Eucharist and the priesthood:
“Gift and Mystery”.4 By proclaiming the Year of the
Rosary, I wish to put this, my twenty-fifth anniversary, under the
aegis of the contemplation of Christ at the school of Mary.
Consequently, I cannot let this Holy Thursday 2003 pass without halting
before the “Eucharistic face” of Christ and
pointing out with new force to the Church the centrality of the
Eucharist.
From it the Church draws her life. From this “living
bread” she draws her nourishment. How could I not feel the
need to urge everyone to experience it ever anew?
8. When I think of the Eucharist, and look at my life as a priest, as a
Bishop and as the Successor of Peter, I naturally recall the many times
and places in which I was able to celebrate it. I remember the parish
church of Niegowic', where I had my first pastoral assignment, the
collegiate church of Saint Florian in Krakow, Wawel Cathedral, Saint
Peter's Basilica and so many basilicas and churches in Rome and
throughout the world. I have been able to celebrate Holy Mass in
chapels built along mountain paths, on lakeshores and seacoasts; I have
celebrated it on altars built in stadiums and in city squares... This
varied scenario of celebrations of the Eucharist has given me a
powerful experience of its universal and, so to speak, cosmic
character. Yes, cosmic! Because even when it is celebrated on the
humble altar of a country church, the Eucharist is always in some way
celebrated on the altar of the world. It unites heaven and earth. It
embraces and permeates all creation. The Son of God became man in order
to restore all creation, in one supreme act of praise, to the One who
made it from nothing. He, the Eternal High Priest who by the blood of
his Cross entered the eternal sanctuary, thus gives back to the Creator
and Father all creation redeemed. He does so through the priestly
ministry of the Church, to the glory of the Most Holy Trinity. Truly
this is the mysterium fidei which is accomplished in the Eucharist: the
world which came forth from the hands of God the Creator now returns to
him redeemed by Christ.
9. The Eucharist, as Christ's saving presence in the community of the
faithful and its spiritual food, is the most precious possession which
the Church can have in her journey through history. This explains the
lively concern which she has always shown for the Eucharistic mystery,
a concern which finds authoritative expression in the work of the
Councils and the Popes. How can we not admire the doctrinal expositions
of the Decrees on the Most Holy Eucharist and on the Holy Sacrifice of
the Mass promulgated by the Council of Trent? For centuries those
Decrees guided theology and catechesis, and they are still a dogmatic
reference-point for the continual renewal and growth of God's People in
faith and in love for the Eucharist. In times closer to our own, three
Encyclical Letters should be mentioned: the Encyclical Mirae Caritatis
of Leo XIII (28 May 1902),5 the Encyclical Mediator Dei of Pius XII (20
November 1947)6 and the Encyclical Mysterium Fidei of Paul VI (3
September 1965).7
The Second Vatican Council, while not issuing a specific document on
the Eucharistic mystery, considered its various aspects throughout its
documents, especially the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen
Gentium and the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum
Concilium.
I myself, in the first years of my apostolic ministry in the Chair of
Peter, wrote the Apostolic Letter Dominicae Cenae (24 February 1980),8
in which I discussed some aspects of the Eucharistic mystery and its
importance for the life of those who are its ministers. Today I take up
anew the thread of that argument, with even greater emotion and
gratitude in my heart, echoing as it were the word of the Psalmist:
“What shall I render to the Lord for all his bounty to me? I
will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the
Lord” (Ps 116:12-13).
10. The Magisterium's commitment to proclaiming the Eucharistic mystery
has been matched by interior growth within the Christian community.
Certainly the liturgical reform inaugurated by the Council has greatly
contributed to a more conscious, active and fruitful participation in
the Holy Sacrifice of the Altar on the part of the faithful. In many
places, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is also an important daily
practice and becomes an inexhaustible source of holiness. 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 brings joy to those who take part in it.
Other positive signs of Eucharistic faith and love might also be
mentioned.
Unfortunately, alongside these lights, there are also shadows. In some
places the practice of Eucharistic adoration has been almost completely
abandoned. In various parts of the Church abuses have occurred, leading
to confusion with regard to sound faith and Catholic doctrine
concerning this wonderful sacrament. At times one encounters an
extremely reductive understanding of the Eucharistic mystery. Stripped
of its sacrificial meaning, it is celebrated as if it were simply a
fraternal banquet. Furthermore, the necessity of the ministerial
priesthood, grounded in apostolic succession, is at times obscured and
the sacramental nature of the Eucharist is reduced to its mere
effectiveness as a form of proclamation. This has led here and there to
ecumenical initiatives which, albeit well-intentioned, indulge in
Eucharistic practices contrary to the discipline by which the Church
expresses her faith. How can we not express profound grief at all this?
The Eucharist is too great a gift to tolerate ambiguity and
depreciation.
It is my hope that the present Encyclical Letter will effectively help
to banish the dark clouds of unacceptable doctrine and practice, so
that the Eucharist will continue to shine forth in all its radiant
mystery.
CHAPTER ONE
THE MYSTERY OF FAITH
11. “The Lord Jesus on the night he was betrayed”
(1 Cor 11:23) instituted the Eucharistic Sacrifice of his body and his
blood. The words of the Apostle Paul bring us back to the dramatic
setting in which the Eucharist was born. The Eucharist is indelibly
marked by the event of the Lord's passion and death, of which it is not
only a reminder but the sacramental re-presentation. It is the
sacrifice of the Cross perpetuated down the ages.9 This truth is well
expressed by the words with which the assembly in the Latin rite
responds to the priest's proclamation of the “Mystery of
Faith”: “We announce your death, O Lord”.
The Church has received the Eucharist from Christ her Lord not as one
gift – however precious – among so many others, but
as the gift par excellence, for it is the gift of himself, of his
person in his sacred humanity, as well as the gift of his saving work.
Nor does it remain confined to the past, since “all that
Christ is – all that he did and suffered for all men
– participates in the divine eternity, and so transcends all
times”.10
When the Church celebrates the Eucharist, the memorial of her Lord's
death and resurrection, this central event of salvation becomes really
present and “the work of our redemption is carried
out”.11 This sacrifice is so decisive for the salvation of
the human race that Jesus Christ offered it and returned to the Father
only after he had left us a means of sharing in it as if we had been
present there. Each member of the faithful can thus take part in it and
inexhaustibly gain its fruits. This is the faith from which generations
of Christians down the ages have lived. The Church's Magisterium has
constantly reaffirmed this faith with joyful gratitude for its
inestimable gift.12 I wish once more to recall this truth and to join
you, my dear brothers and sisters, in adoration before this mystery: a
great mystery, a mystery of mercy. What more could Jesus have done for
us? Truly, in the Eucharist, he shows us a love which goes
“to the end” (cf. Jn 13:1), a love which knows no
measure.
12. This aspect of the universal charity of the Eucharistic Sacrifice
is based on the words of the Saviour himself. In instituting it, he did
not merely say: “This is my body”, “this
is my blood”, but went on to add: “which is given
for you”, “which is poured out for you”
(Lk 22:19-20). Jesus did not simply state that what he was giving them
to eat and drink was his body and his blood; he also expressed its
sacrificial meaning and made sacramentally present his sacrifice which
would soon be offered on the Cross for the salvation of all.
“The Mass is at the same time, and inseparably, the
sacrificial memorial in which the sacrifice of the Cross is perpetuated
and the sacred banquet of communion with the Lord's body and
blood”.13
The Church constantly draws her life from the redeeming sacrifice; she
approaches it not only through faith-filled remembrance, but also
through a real contact, since this sacrifice is made present ever anew,
sacramentally perpetuated, in every community which offers it at the
hands of the consecrated minister. The Eucharist thus applies to men
and women today the reconciliation won once for all by Christ for
mankind in every age. “The sacrifice of Christ and the
sacrifice of the Eucharist are one single sacrifice”.14 Saint
John Chrysostom put it well: “We always offer the same Lamb,
not one today and another tomorrow, but always the same one. For this
reason the sacrifice is always only one... Even now we offer that
victim who was once offered and who will never be
consumed”.15
The Mass makes present the sacrifice of the Cross; it does not add to
that sacrifice nor does it multiply it.16 What is repeated is its
memorial celebration, its “commemorative
representation” (memorialis demonstratio),17 which makes
Christ's one, definitive redemptive sacrifice always present in time.
The sacrificial nature of the Eucharistic mystery cannot therefore be
understood as something separate, independent of the Cross or only
indirectly referring to the sacrifice of Calvary.
13. By virtue of its close relationship to the sacrifice of Golgotha,
the Eucharist is a sacrifice in the strict sense, and not only in a
general way, as if it were simply a matter of Christ's offering himself
to the faithful as their spiritual food. The gift of his love and
obedience to the point of giving his life (cf. Jn 10:17-18) is in the
first place a gift to his Father. Certainly it is a gift given for our
sake, and indeed that of all humanity (cf. Mt 26:28; Mk 14:24; Lk
22:20; Jn 10:15), yet it is first and foremost a gift to the Father:
“asacrifice that the Father accepted, giving, in return for
this total self-giving by his Son, who 'became obedient unto death'
(Phil 2:8), his own paternal gift, that is to say the grant of new
immortal life in the resurrection”.18
In giving his sacrifice to the Church, Christ has also made his own the
spiritual sacrifice of the Church, which is called to offer herself in
union with the sacrifice of Christ. This is the teaching of the Second
Vatican Council concerning all the faithful: “Taking part in
the Eucharistic Sacrifice, which is the source and summit of the whole
Christian life, they offer the divine victim to God, and offer
themselves along with it”.19
14. Christ's passover includes not only his passion and death, but also
his resurrection. This is recalled by the assembly's acclamation
following the consecration: “We proclaim your
resurrection”. The Eucharistic Sacrifice makes present not
only the mystery of the Saviour's passion and death, but also the
mystery of the resurrection which crowned his sacrifice. It is as the
living and risen One that Christ can become in the Eucharist the
“bread of life” (Jn 6:35, 48), the
“living bread” (Jn 6:51). Saint Ambrose reminded
the newly-initiated that the Eucharist applies the event of the
resurrection to their lives: “Today Christ is yours, yet each
day he rises again for you”.20 Saint Cyril of Alexandria also
makes clear that sharing in the sacred mysteries “is a true
confession and a remembrance that the Lord died and returned to life
for us and on our behalf”.21
15. The sacramental re-presentation of Christ's sacrifice, crowned by
the resurrection, in the Mass involves a most special presence which
– in the words of Paul VI – “is called
'real' not as a way of excluding all other types of presence as if they
were 'not real', but because it is a presence in the fullest sense: a
substantial presence whereby Christ, the God-Man, is wholly and
entirely present”.22 This sets forth once more the
perennially valid teaching of the Council of Trent: “the
consecration of the bread and wine effects the change of the whole
substance of the bread into the substance of the body of Christ our
Lord, and of the whole substance of the wine into the substance of his
blood. And the holy Catholic Church has fittingly and properly called
this change transubstantiation”.23 Truly the Eucharist is a
mysterium fidei, a mystery which surpasses our understanding and can
only be received in faith, as is often brought out in the catechesis of
the Church Fathers regarding this divine sacrament: “Do not
see – Saint Cyril of Jerusalem exhorts – in the
bread and wine merely natural elements, because the Lord has expressly
said that they are his body and his blood: faith assures you of this,
though your senses suggest otherwise”.24
Adoro te devote, latens Deitas, we shall continue to sing with the
Angelic Doctor. Before this mystery of love, human reason fully
experiences its limitations. One understands how, down the centuries,
this truth has stimulated theology to strive to understand it ever more
deeply.
These are praiseworthy efforts, which are all the more helpful and
insightful to the extent that they are able to join critical thinking
to the “living faith” of the Church, as grasped
especially by the Magisterium's “sure charism of
truth” and the “intimate sense of spiritual
realities”25 which is attained above all by the saints. There
remains the boundary indicated by Paul VI: “Every theological
explanation which seeks some understanding of this mystery, in order to
be in accord with Catholic faith, must firmly maintain that in
objective reality, independently of our mind, the bread and wine have
ceased to exist after the consecration, so that the adorable body and
blood of the Lord Jesus from that moment on are really before us under
the sacramental species of bread and wine”.26
16. The saving efficacy of the sacrifice is fully realized when the
Lord's body and blood are received in communion. The Eucharistic
Sacrifice is intrinsically directed to the inward union of the faithful
with Christ through communion; we receive the very One who offered
himself for us, we receive his body which he gave up for us on the
Cross and his blood which he “poured out for many for the
forgiveness of sins” (Mt 26:28). We are reminded of his
words: “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). Jesus himself reassures us that this union, which he compares to
that of the life of the Trinity, is truly realized. The Eucharist is a
true banquet, in which Christ offers himself as our nourishment. When
for the first time Jesus spoke of this food, his listeners were
astonished and bewildered, which forced the Master to emphasize the
objective truth of his words: “Truly, truly, I say to you,
unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you
have no life within you” (Jn 6:53). This is no metaphorical
food: “My flesh is food indeed, and my blood is drink
indeed” (Jn 6:55).
17. Through our communion in his body and blood, Christ also grants us
his Spirit. Saint Ephrem writes: “He called the bread his
living body and he filled it with himself and his Spirit...
He who eats it with faith, eats Fire and Spirit... Take and eat this,
all of you, and eat with it the Holy Spirit. For it is truly my body
and whoever eats it will have eternal life”.27 The Church
implores this divine Gift, the source of every other gift, in the
Eucharistic epiclesis. In the Divine Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom,
for example, we find the prayer: “We beseech, implore and beg
you: send your Holy Spirit upon us all and upon these gifts... that
those who partake of them may be purified in soul, receive the
forgiveness of their sins, and share in the Holy Spirit”.28
And in the Roman Missal the celebrant prays: “grant that we
who are nourished by his body and blood may be filled with his Holy
Spirit, and become one body, one spirit in Christ”.29 Thus by
the gift of his body and blood Christ increases within us the gift of
his Spirit, already poured out in Baptism and bestowed as a
“seal” in the sacrament of Confirmation.
18. The acclamation of the assembly following the consecration
appropriately ends by expressing the eschatological thrust which marks
the celebration of the Eucharist (cf. 1 Cor 11:26): “until
you come in glory”. The Eucharist is a straining towards the
goal, a foretaste of the fullness of joy promised by Christ (cf. Jn
15:11); it is in some way the anticipation of heaven, the
“pledge of future glory”.30 In the Eucharist,
everything speaks of confident waiting “in joyful hope for
the coming of our Saviour, Jesus Christ”.31 Those who feed on
Christ in the Eucharist need not wait until the hereafter to receive
eternal life: they already possess it on earth, as the first-fruits of
a future fullness which will embrace man in his totality. For in the
Eucharist we also receive the pledge of our bodily resurrection at the
end of the world: “He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood
has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day”
(Jn 6:54). This pledge of the future resurrection comes from the fact
that the flesh of the Son of Man, given as food, is his body in its
glorious state after the resurrection. With the Eucharist we digest, as
it were, the “secret” of the resurrection. For this
reason Saint Ignatius of Antioch rightly defined the Eucharistic Bread
as “a medicine of immortality, an antidote to
death”.32
19. The eschatological tension kindled by the Eucharist expresses and
reinforces our communion with the Church in heaven. It is not by chance
that the Eastern Anaphoras and the Latin Eucharistic Prayers honour
Mary, the ever-Virgin Mother of Jesus Christ our Lord and God, the
angels, the holy apostles, the glorious martyrs and all the saints.
This is an aspect of the Eucharist which merits greater attention: in
celebrating the sacrifice of the Lamb, we are united to the heavenly
“liturgy” and become part of that great multitude
which cries out: “Salvation belongs to our God who sits upon
the throne, and to the Lamb!” (Rev 7:10). The Eucharist is
truly a glimpse of heaven appearing on earth. It is a glorious ray of
the heavenly Jerusalem which pierces the clouds of our history and
lights up our journey.
20. A significant consequence of the eschatological tension inherent in
the Eucharist is also the fact that it spurs us on our journey through
history and plants a seed of living hope in our daily commitment to the
work before us. Certainly the Christian vision leads to the expectation
of “new heavens” and “a new
earth” (Rev 21:1), but this increases, rather than lessens,
our sense of responsibility for the world today.33 I wish to reaffirm
this forcefully at the beginning of the new millennium, so that
Christians will feel more obliged than ever not to neglect their duties
as citizens in this world. Theirs is the task of contributing with the
light of the Gospel to the building of a more human world, a world
fully in harmony with God's plan.
Many problems darken the horizon of our time. We need but think of the
urgent need to work for peace, to base relationships between peoples on
solid premises of justice and solidarity, and to defend human life from
conception to its natural end. And what should we say of the thousand
inconsistencies of a “globalized” world where the
weakest, the most powerless and the poorest appear to have so little
hope! It is in this world that Christian hope must shine forth! For
this reason too, the Lord wished to remain with us in the Eucharist,
making his presence in meal and sacrifice the promise of a humanity
renewed by his love. Significantly, in their account of the Last
Supper, the Synoptics recount the institution of the Eucharist, while
the Gospel of John relates, as a way of bringing out its profound
meaning, the account of the “washing of the feet”,
in which Jesus appears as the teacher of communion and of service (cf.
Jn 13:1-20). The Apostle Paul, for his part, says that it is
“unworthy” of a Christian community to partake of
the Lord's Supper amid division and indifference towards the poor (cf.
1 Cor 11:17-22, 27-34).34
Proclaiming the death of the Lord “until he comes”
(1 Cor 11:26) entails that all who take part in the Eucharist be
committed to changing their lives and making them in a certain way
completely “Eucharistic”. It is this fruit of a
transfigured existence and a commitment to transforming the world in
accordance with the Gospel which splendidly illustrates the
eschatological tension inherent in the celebration of the Eucharist and
in the Christian life as a whole: “Come, Lord
Jesus!” (Rev 22:20).
CHAPTER TWO
THE EUCHARIST
BUILDS THE CHURCH
21. The Second Vatican Council teaches that the celebration of the
Eucharist is at the centre of the process of the Church's growth. After
stating that “the Church, as the Kingdom of Christ already
present in mystery, grows visibly in the world through the power of
God”,35 then, as if in answer to the question: “How
does the Church grow?”, the Council adds: “as often
as the sacrifice of the Cross by which 'Christ our pasch is sacrificed'
(1 Cor 5:7) is celebrated on the altar, the work of our redemption is
carried out. At the same time in the sacrament of the Eucharistic
bread, the unity of the faithful, who form one body in Christ (cf. 1
Cor 10:17), is both expressed and brought about”.36
A causal influence of the Eucharist is present at the Church's very
origins. The Evangelists specify that it was the Twelve, the Apostles,
who gathered with Jesus at the Last Supper (cf. Mt 26:20; Mk 14:17; Lk
22:14). This is a detail of notable importance, for the Apostles
“were both the seeds of the new Israel and the beginning of
the sacred hierarchy”.37 By offering them his body and his
blood as food, Christ mysteriously involved them in the sacrifice which
would be completed later on Calvary. By analogy with the Covenant of
Mount Sinai, sealed by sacrifice and the sprinkling of blood,38 the
actions and words of Jesus at the Last Supper laid the foundations of
the new messianic community, the People of the New Covenant.
The Apostles, by accepting in the Upper Room Jesus' invitation:
“Take, eat”, “Drink of it, all of
you” (Mt 26:26-27), entered for the first time into
sacramental communion with him. From that time forward, until the end
of the age, the Church is built up through sacramental communion with
the Son of God who was sacrificed for our sake: “Do this is
remembrance of me... Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance
of me” (1 Cor 11:24-25; cf. Lk 22:19).
22. Incorporation into Christ, which is brought about by Baptism, is
constantly renewed and consolidated by sharing in the Eucharistic
Sacrifice, especially by that full sharing which takes place in
sacramental communion. We can say not only that each of us receives
Christ, but also that Christ receives each of us. He enters into
friendship with us: “You are my friends” (Jn
15:14). Indeed, it is because of him that we have life: “He
who eats me will live because of me” (Jn 6:57). Eucharistic
communion brings about in a sublime way the mutual
“abiding” of Christ and each of his followers:
“Abide in me, and I in you” (Jn 15:4).
By its union with Christ, the People of the New Covenant, far from
closing in upon itself, becomes a “sacrament” for
humanity,39 a sign and instrument of the salvation achieved by Christ,
the light of the world and the salt of the earth (cf. Mt 5:13-16), for
the redemption of all.40 The Church's mission stands in continuity with
the mission of Christ: “As the Father has sent me, even so I
send you” (Jn 20:21). From the perpetuation of the sacrifice
of the Cross and her communion with the body and blood of Christ in the
Eucharist, the Church draws the spiritual power needed to carry out her
mission. The Eucharist thus appears as both the source and the summit
of all evangelization, since its goal is the communion of mankind with
Christ and in him with the Father and the Holy Spirit.41
23. Eucharistic communion also confirms the Church in her unity as the
body of Christ. Saint Paul refers to this unifying power of
participation in the banquet of the Eucharist when he writes to the
Corinthians: “The bread which we break, is it not a communion
in the body of Christ? Because there is one bread, we who are many are
one body, for we all partake of the one bread” (1 Cor
10:16-17). Saint John Chrysostom's commentary on these words is
profound and perceptive: “For what is the bread? It is the
body of Christ. And what do those who receive it become? The Body of
Christ – not many bodies but one body. For as bread is
completely one, though made of up many grains of wheat, and these,
albeit unseen, remain nonetheless present, in such a way that their
difference is not apparent since they have been made a perfect whole,
so too are we mutually joined to one another and together united with
Christ”.42 The argument is compelling: our union with Christ,
which is a gift and grace for each of us, makes it possible for us, in
him, to share in the unity of his body which is the Church. The
Eucharist reinforces the incorporation into Christ which took place in
Baptism though the gift of the Spirit (cf. 1 Cor 12:13, 27).
The joint and inseparable activity of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
which is at the origin of the Church, of her consolidation and her
continued life, is at work in the Eucharist. This was clearly evident
to the author of the Liturgy of Saint James: in the epiclesis of the
Anaphora, God the Father is asked to send the Holy Spirit upon the
faithful and upon the offerings, so that the body and blood of Christ
“may be a help to all those who partake of it ... for the
sanctification of their souls and bodies”.43 The Church is
fortified by the divine Paraclete through the sanctification of the
faithful in the Eucharist.
24. The gift of Christ and his Spirit which we receive in Eucharistic
communion superabundantly fulfils the yearning for fraternal unity
deeply rooted in the human heart; at the same time it elevates the
experience of fraternity already present in our common sharing at the
same Eucharistic table to a degree which far surpasses that of the
simple human experience of sharing a meal. Through her communion with
the body of Christ the Church comes to be ever more profoundly
“in Christ in the nature of a sacrament, that is, a sign and
instrument of intimate unity with God and of the unity of the whole
human race”.44
The seeds of disunity, which daily experience shows to be so deeply
rooted in humanity as a result of sin, are countered by the unifying
power of the body of Christ. The Eucharist, precisely by building up
the Church, creates human community.
25. The worship of the Eucharist outside of the Mass is of inestimable
value for the life of the Church. This worship is strictly linked to
the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice. The presence of Christ
under the sacred species reserved after Mass – a presence
which lasts as long as the species of bread and of wine remain 45
– derives from the celebration of the sacrifice and is
directed towards communion, both sacramental and spiritual.46 It is the
responsibility of Pastors to encourage, also by their personal witness,
the practice of Eucharistic adoration, and exposition of the Blessed
Sacrament in particular, as well as prayer of adoration before Christ
present under the Eucharistic species.47
It is pleasant to spend time with him, to lie close to his breast like
the Beloved Disciple (cf. Jn 13:25) and to feel the infinite love
present in his heart. If in our time Christians must be distinguished
above all by the “art of prayer”,48 how can we not
feel a renewed need to spend time in spiritual converse, in silent
adoration, in heartfelt love before Christ present in the Most Holy
Sacrament? How often, dear brother and sisters, have I experienced
this, and drawn from it strength, consolation and support!
This practice, repeatedly praised and recommended by the Magisterium,49
is supported by the example of many saints. Particularly outstanding in
this regard was Saint Alphonsus Liguori, who wrote: “Of all
devotions, that of adoring Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament is the
greatest after the sacraments, the one dearest to God and the one most
helpful to us”.50 The Eucharist is a priceless treasure: by
not only celebrating it but also by praying before it outside of Mass
we are enabled to make contact with the very wellspring of grace. A
Christian community desirous of contemplating the face of Christ in the
spirit which I proposed in the Apostolic Letters Novo Millennio Ineunte
and Rosarium Virginis Mariae cannot fail also to develop this aspect of
Eucharistic worship, which prolongs and increases the fruits of our
communion in the body and blood of the Lord.
CHAPTER THREE
THE APOSTOLICITY OF THE EUCHARIST
AND OF THE CHURCH
26. If, as I have said, the Eucharist builds the Church and the Church
makes the Eucharist, it follows that there is a profound relationship
between the two, so much so that we can apply to the Eucharistic
mystery the very words with which, in the Nicene-Constantinopolitan
Creed, we profess the Church to be “one, holy, catholic and
apostolic”. The Eucharist too is one and catholic. It is also
holy, indeed, the Most Holy Sacrament. But it is above all its
apostolicity that we must now consider.
27. The Catechism of the Catholic Church, in explaining how the Church
is apostolic – founded on the Apostles – sees three
meanings in this expression. First, “she was and remains
built on 'the foundation of the Apostles' (Eph 2:20), the witnesses
chosen and sent on mission by Christ himself”.51 The
Eucharist too has its foundation in the Apostles, not in the sense that
it did not originate in Christ himself, but because it was entrusted by
Jesus to the Apostles and has been handed down to us by them and by
their successors. It is in continuity with the practice of the
Apostles, in obedience to the Lord's command, that the Church has
celebrated the Eucharist down the centuries.
The second sense in which the Church is apostolic, as the Catechism
points out, is that “with the help of the Spirit dwelling in
her, the Church keeps and hands on the teaching, the 'good deposit',
the salutary words she has heard from the Apostles”.52 Here
too the Eucharist is apostolic, for it is celebrated in conformity with
the faith of the Apostles. At various times in the two-thousand-year
history of the People of the New Covenant, the Church's Magisterium has
more precisely defined her teaching on the Eucharist, including its
proper terminology, precisely in order to safeguard the apostolic faith
with regard to this sublime mystery. This faith remains unchanged and
it is essential for the Church that it remain unchanged.
28. Lastly, the Church is apostolic in the sense that she
“continues to be taught, sanctified and guided by the
Apostles until Christ's return, through their successors in pastoral
office: the college of Bishops assisted by priests, in union with the
Successor of Peter, the Church's supreme pastor”.53
Succession to the Apostles in the pastoral mission necessarily entails
the sacrament of Holy Orders, that is, the uninterrupted sequence, from
the very beginning, of valid episcopal ordinations.54 This succession
is essential for the Church to exist in a proper and full sense.
The Eucharist also expresses this sense of apostolicity. As the Second
Vatican Council teaches, “the faithful join in the offering
of the Eucharist by virtue of their royal priesthood”,55 yet
it is the ordained priest who, “acting in the person of
Christ, brings about the Eucharistic Sacrifice and offers it to God in
the name of all the people”.56 For this reason, the Roman
Missal prescribes that only the priest should recite the Eucharistic
Prayer, while the people participate in faith and in silence.57
29. The expression repeatedly employed by the Second Vatican Council,
according to which “the ministerial priest, acting in the
person of Christ, brings about the Eucharistic Sacrifice”,58
was already firmly rooted in papal teaching.59 As I have pointed out on
other occasions, the phrase in persona Christi “means more
than offering 'in the name of' or 'in the place of' Christ. In persona
means in specific sacramental identification with the eternal High
Priest who is the author and principal subject of this sacrifice of
his, a sacrifice in which, in truth, nobody can take his
place”.60 The ministry of priests who have received the
sacrament of Holy Orders, in the economy of salvation chosen by Christ,
makes clear that the Eucharist which they celebrate is a gift which
radically transcends the power of the assemblyand is in any event
essential for validly linking the Eucharistic consecration to the
sacrifice of the Cross and to the Last Supper. The assembly gathered
together for the celebration of the Eucharist, if it is to be a truly
Eucharistic assembly, absolutely requires the presence of an ordained
priest as its president. On the other hand, the community is by itself
incapable of providing an ordained minister. This minister is a gift
which the assembly receives through episcopal succession going back to
the Apostles. It is the Bishop who, through the Sacrament of Holy
Orders, makes a new presbyter by conferring upon him the power to
consecrate the Eucharist. Consequently, “the Eucharistic
mystery cannot be celebrated in any community except by an ordained
priest, as the Fourth Lateran Council expressly taught”.61
30. The Catholic Church's teaching on the relationship between priestly
ministry and the Eucharist and her teaching on the Eucharistic
Sacrifice have both been the subject in recent decades of a fruitful
dialogue in the area of ecumenism. We must give thanks to the Blessed
Trinity for the significant progress and convergence achieved in this
regard, which lead us to hope one day for a full sharing of faith.
Nonetheless, the observations of the Council concerning the Ecclesial
Communities which arose in the West from the sixteenth century onwards
and are separated from the Catholic Church remain fully pertinent:
“The Ecclesial Communities separated from us lack that
fullness of unity with us which should flow from Baptism, and we
believe that especially because of the lack of the sacrament of Orders
they have not preserved the genuine and total reality of the
Eucharistic mystery. Nevertheless, when they commemorate the Lord's
death and resurrection in the Holy Supper, they profess that it
signifies life in communion with Christ and they await his coming in
glory”.62
The Catholic faithful, therefore, while respecting the religious
convictions of these separated brethren, must refrain from receiving
the communion distributed in their celebrations, so as not to condone
an ambiguity about the nature of the Eucharist and, consequently, to
fail in their duty to bear clear witness to the truth. This would
result in slowing the progress being made towards full visible unity.
Similarly, it is unthinkable to substitute for Sunday Mass ecumenical
celebrations of the word or services of common prayer with Christians
from the aforementioned Ecclesial Communities, or even participation in
their own liturgical services. Such celebrations and services, however
praiseworthy in certain situations, prepare for the goal of full
communion, including Eucharistic communion, but they cannot replace it.
The fact that the power of consecrating the Eucharist has been
entrusted only to Bishops and priests does not represent any kind of
belittlement of the rest of the People of God, for in the communion of
the one body of Christ which is the Church this gift redounds to the
benefit of all.
31. If the Eucharist is the centre and summit of the Church's life, it
is likewise the centre and summit of priestly ministry. For this
reason, with a heart filled with gratitude to our Lord Jesus Christ, I
repeat that the Eucharist “is the principal and central
raison d'être of the sacrament of priesthood, which
effectively came into being at the moment of the institution of the
Eucharist”.63
Priests are engaged in a wide variety of pastoral activities. If we
also consider the social and cultural conditions of the modern world it
is easy to understand how priests face the very real risk of losing
their focus amid such a great number of different tasks. The Second
Vatican Council saw in pastoral charity the bond which gives unity to
the priest's life and work. This, the Council adds, “flows
mainly from the Eucharistic Sacrifice, which is therefore the centre
and root of the whole priestly life”.64 We can understand,
then, how important it is for the spiritual life of the priest, as well
as for the good of the Church and the world, that priests follow the
Council's recommendation to celebrate the Eucharist daily:
“for even if the faithful are unable to be present, it is an
act of Christ and the Church”.65 In this way priests will be
able to counteract the daily tensions which lead to a lack of focus and
they will find in the Eucharistic Sacrifice – the true centre
of their lives and ministry – the spiritual strength needed
to deal with their different pastoral responsibilities. Their daily
activity will thus become truly Eucharistic.
The centrality of the Eucharist in the life and ministry of priests is
the basis of its centrality in the pastoral promotion of priestly
vocations. It is in the Eucharist that prayer for vocations is most
closely united to the prayer of Christ the Eternal High Priest. At the
same time the diligence of priests in carrying out their Eucharistic
ministry, together with the conscious, active and fruitful
participation of the faithful in the Eucharist, provides young men with
a powerful example and incentive for responding generously to God's
call. Often it is the example of a priest's fervent pastoral charity
which the Lord uses to sow and to bring to fruition in a young man's
heart the seed of a priestly calling.
32. All of this shows how distressing and irregular is the situation of
a Christian community which, despite having sufficient numbers and
variety of faithful to form a parish, does not have a priest to lead
it. Parishes are communities of the baptized who express and affirm
their identity above all through the celebration of the Eucharistic
Sacrifice. But this requires the presence of a presbyter, who alone is
qualified to offer the Eucharist in persona Christi. When a community
lacks a priest, attempts are rightly made somehow to remedy the
situation so that it can continue its Sunday celebrations, and those
religious and laity who lead their brothers and sisters in prayer
exercise in a praiseworthy way the common priesthood of all the
faithful based on the grace of Baptism. But such solutions must be
considered merely temporary, while the community awaits a priest.
The sacramental incompleteness of these celebrations should above all
inspire the whole community to pray with greater fervour that the Lord
will send labourers into his harvest (cf. Mt 9:38). It should also be
an incentive to mobilize all the resources needed for an adequate
pastoral promotion of vocations, without yielding to the temptation to
seek solutions which lower the moral and formative standards demanded
of candidates for the priesthood.
33. When, due to the scarcity of priests, non-ordained members of the
faithful are entrusted with a share in the pastoral care of a parish,
they should bear in mind that – as the Second Vatican Council
teaches – “no Christian community can be built up
unless it has its basis and centre in the celebration of the most Holy
Eucharist”.66 They have a responsibility, therefore, 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.
CHAPTER FOUR
THE EUCHARIST
AND ECCLESIAL COMMUNION
34. The Extraordinary Assembly of the Synod of Bishops in 1985 saw in
the concept of an “ecclesiology of communion” the
central and fundamental idea of the documents of the Second Vatican
Council.67 The Church is called during her earthly pilgrimage to
maintain and promote communion with the Triune God and communion among
the faithful. For this purpose she possesses the word and the
sacraments, particularly the Eucharist, by which she
“constantly lives and grows”68 and in which she
expresses her very nature. It is not by chance that the term communion
has become one of the names given to this sublime sacrament.
The Eucharist thus appears as the culmination of all the sacraments in
perfecting our communion with God the Father by identification with his
only-begotten Son through the working of the Holy Spirit. With
discerning faith a distinguished writer of the Byzantine tradition
voiced this truth: in the Eucharist “unlike any other
sacrament, the mystery [of communion] is so perfect that it brings us
to the heights of every good thing: here is the ultimate goal of every
human desire, because here we attain God and God joins himself to us in
the most perfect union”.69 Precisely for this reason it is
good to cultivate in our hearts a constant desire for the sacrament of
the Eucharist. This was the origin of the practice of
“spiritual communion”, which has happily been
established in the Church for centuries and recommended by saints who
were masters of the spiritual life. Saint Teresa of Jesus wrote:
“When you do not receive communion and you do not attend
Mass, you can make a spiritual communion, which is a most beneficial
practice; by it the love of God will be greatly impressed on
you”.70
35. The celebration of the Eucharist, however, cannot be the
starting-point for communion; it presupposes that communion already
exists, a communion which it seeks to consolidate and bring to
perfection. The sacrament is an expression of this bond of communion
both in its invisible dimension, which, in Christ and through the
working of the Holy Spirit, unites us to the Father and among
ourselves, and in its visible dimension, which entails communion in the
teaching of the Apostles, in the sacraments and in the Church's
hierarchical order. The profound relationship between the invisible and
the visible elements of ecclesial communion is constitutive of the
Church as the sacrament of salvation.71 Only in this context can there
be a legitimate celebration of the Eucharist and true participation in
it. Consequently it is an intrinsic requirement of the Eucharist that
it should be celebrated in communion, and specifically maintaining the
various bonds of that communion intact.
36. Invisible communion, though by its nature always growing,
presupposes the life of grace, by which we become “partakers
of the divine nature” (2 Pet 1:4), and the practice of the
virtues of faith, hope and love. Only in this way do we have true
communion with the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Nor is faith
sufficient; we must persevere in sanctifying grace and love, remaining
within the Church “bodily” as well as “in
our heart”; 72 what is required, in the words of Saint Paul,
is “faith working through love” (Gal 5:6).
Keeping these invisible bonds intact is a specific moral duty incumbent
upon Christians who wish to participate fully in the Eucharist by
receiving the body and blood of Christ. The Apostle Paul appeals to
this duty when he warns: “Let a man examine himself, and so
eat of the bread and drink of the cup” (1 Cor 11:28). Saint
John Chrysostom, with his stirring eloquence, exhorted the faithful:
“I too raise my voice, I beseech, beg and implore that no one
draw near to this sacred table with a sullied and corrupt conscience.
Such an act, in fact, can never be called 'communion', not even were we
to touch the Lord's body a thousand times over, but 'condemnation',
'torment' and 'increase of punishment'”.73
Along these same lines, the Catechism of the Catholic Church rightly
stipulates that “anyone conscious of a grave sin must receive
the sacrament of Reconciliation before coming to
communion”.74 I therefore desire to reaffirm that in the
Church there remains in force, now and in the future, the rule by which
the Council of Trent gave concrete expression to the Apostle Paul's
stern warning when it affirmed that, in order to receive the Eucharist
in a worthy manner, “one must first confess one's sins, when
one is aware of mortal sin”.75
37. The two sacraments of the Eucharist and Penance are very closely
connected. Because the Eucharist makes present the redeeming sacrifice
of the Cross, perpetuating it sacramentally, it naturally gives rise to
a continuous need for conversion, for a personal response to the appeal
made by Saint Paul to the Christians of Corinth: “We beseech
you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God” (2 Cor 5:20).
If a Christian's conscience is burdened by serious sin, then the path
of penance through the sacrament of Reconciliation becomes necessary
for full participation in the Eucharistic Sacrifice.
The judgment of one's state of grace obviously belongs only to the
person involved, since it is a question of examining one's conscience.
However, in cases of outward conduct which is seriously, clearly and
steadfastly contrary to the moral norm, the Church, in her pastoral
concern for the good order of the community and out of respect for the
sacrament, cannot fail to feel directly involved. The Code of Canon Law
refers to this situation of a manifest lack of proper moral disposition
when it states that those who “obstinately persist in
manifest grave sin” are not to be admitted to Eucharistic
communion.76
38. Ecclesial communion, as I have said, is likewise visible, and finds
expression in the series of “bonds” listed by the
Council when it teaches: “They are fully incorporated into
the society of the Church who, possessing the Spirit of Christ, accept
her whole structure and all the means of salvation established within
her, and within her visible framework are united to Christ, who governs
her through the Supreme Pontiff and the Bishops, by the bonds of
profession of faith, the sacraments, ecclesiastical government and
communion”.77
The Eucharist, as the supreme sacramental manifestation of communion in
the Church, demands to be celebrated in a context where the outward
bonds of communion are also intact. In a special way, since the
Eucharist is “as it were the summit of the spiritual life and
the goal of all the sacraments”,78 it requires that the bonds
of communion in the sacraments, particularly in Baptism and in priestly
Orders, be real. It is not possible to give communion to a person who
is not baptized or to one who rejects the full truth of the faith
regarding the Eucharistic mystery. Christ is the truth and he bears
witness to the truth (cf. Jn 14:6; 18:37); the sacrament of his body
and blood does not permit duplicity.
39. Furthermore, given the very nature of ecclesial communion and its
relation to the sacrament of the Eucharist, it must be recalled that
“the Eucharistic Sacrifice, while always offered in a
particular community, is never a celebration of that community alone.
In fact, the community, in receiving the Eucharistic presence of the
Lord, receives the entire gift of salvation and shows, even in its
lasting visible particular form, that it is the image and true presence
of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church”.79 From this
it follows that a truly Eucharistic community cannot be closed in upon
itself, as though it were somehow self-sufficient; rather it must
persevere in harmony with every other Catholic community.
The ecclesial communion of the Eucharistic assembly is a communion with
its own Bishop and with the Roman Pontiff. The Bishop, in effect, is
the visible principle and the foundation of unity within his particular
Church.80 It would therefore be a great contradiction if the sacrament
par excellence of the Church's unity were celebrated without true
communion with the Bishop. As Saint Ignatius of Antioch wrote:
“That Eucharist which is celebrated under the Bishop, or
under one to whom the Bishop has given this charge, may be considered
certain”.81 Likewise, since “the Roman Pontiff, as
the successor of Peter, is the perpetual and visible source and
foundation of the unity of the Bishops and of the multitude of the
faithful”,82 communion with him is intrinsically required for
the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice. Hence the great truth
expressed which the Liturgy expresses in a variety of ways:
“Every celebration of the Eucharist is performed in union not
only with the proper Bishop, but also with the Pope, with the episcopal
order, with all the clergy, and with the entire people. Every valid
celebration of the Eucharist expresses this universal communion with
Peter and with the whole Church, or objectively calls for it, as in the
case of the Christian Churches separated from Rome”.83
40. The Eucharist creates communion and fosters communion. Saint Paul
wrote to the faithful of Corinth explaining how their divisions,
reflected in their Eucharistic gatherings, contradicted what they were
celebrating, the Lord's Supper. The Apostle then urged them to reflect
on the true reality of the Eucharist in order to return to the spirit
of fraternal communion (cf. 1 Cor 11:17- 34). Saint Augustine
effectively echoed this call when, in recalling the Apostle's words:
“You are the body of Christ and individually members of
it” (1 Cor 12: 27), he went on to say: “If you are
his body and members of him, then you will find set on the Lord's table
your own mystery. Yes, you receive your own mystery”.84 And
from this observation he concludes: “Christ the Lord...
hallowed at his table the mystery of our peace and unity. Whoever
receives the mystery of unity without preserving the bonds of peace
receives not a mystery for his benefit but evidence against
himself”.85
41. The Eucharist's particular effectiveness in promoting communion is
one of the reasons for the importance of Sunday Mass. I have already
dwelt on this and on the other reasons which make Sunday Mass
fundamental for the life of the Church and of individual believers in
my Apostolic Letter on the sanctification of Sunday Dies Domini.86
There I recalled that the faithful have the obligation to attend Mass,
unless they are seriously impeded, and that Pastors have the
corresponding duty to see that it is practical and possible for all to
fulfil this precept.87 More recently, in my Apostolic Letter Novo
Millennio Ineunte, in setting forth the pastoral path which the Church
must take at the beginning of the third millennium, I drew particular
attention to the Sunday Eucharist, emphasizing its effectiveness for
building communion. “It is” – I wrote
– “the privileged place where communion is
ceaselessly proclaimed and nurtured. Precisely through sharing in the
Eucharist, the Lord's Day also becomes the Day of the Church, when she
can effectively exercise her role as the sacrament of
unity”.88
42. The safeguarding and promotion of ecclesial communion is a task of
each member of the faithful, who finds in the Eucharist, as the
sacrament of the Church's unity, an area of special concern. More
specifically, this task is the particular responsibility of the
Church's Pastors, each according to his rank and ecclesiastical office.
For this reason the Church has drawn up norms aimed both 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. The care shown in promoting the faithful observance
of these norms becomes a practical means of showing love for the
Eucharist and for the Church.
43. In considering the Eucharist as the sacrament of ecclesial
communion, there is one subject which, due to its importance, must not
be overlooked: I am referring to the relationship of the Eucharist to
ecumenical activity. We should all give thanks to the Blessed Trinity
for the many members of the faithful throughout the world who in recent
decades have felt an ardent desire for unity among all Christians. The
Second Vatican Council, at the beginning of its Decree on Ecumenism,
sees this as a special gift of God.89 It was an efficacious grace which
inspired us, the sons and daughters of the Catholic Church and our
brothers and sisters from other Churches and Ecclesial Communities, to
set forth on the path of ecumenism.
Our longing for the goal of unity prompts us to turn to the Eucharist,
which is the supreme sacrament of the unity of the People of God, in as
much as it is the apt expression and the unsurpassable source of that
unity.90 In the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice the Church
prays that God, the Father of mercies, will grant his children the
fullness of the Holy Spirit so that they may become one body and one
spirit in Christ.91 In raising this prayer to the Father of lights,
from whom comes every good endowment and every perfect gift (cf. Jas
1:17), the Church believes that she will be heard, for she prays in
union with Christ her Head and Spouse, who takes up this plea of his
Bride and joins it to that of his own redemptive sacrifice.
44. Precisely because the Church's unity, which the Eucharist brings
about through the Lord's sacrifice and by communion in his body and
blood, absolutely requires full communion in the bonds of the
profession of faith, the sacraments and ecclesiastical governance, it
is not possible to celebrate together the same Eucharistic liturgy
until those bonds are fully re-established. Any such concelebration
would not be a valid means, and might well prove instead to be an
obstacle, to the attainment of full communion, by weakening the sense
of how far we remain from this goal and by introducing or exacerbating
ambiguities with regard to one or another truth of the faith. The path
towards full unity can only be undertaken in truth. In this area, the
prohibitions of Church law leave no room for uncertainty,92 in fidelity
to the moral norm laid down by the Second Vatican Council.93
I would like nonetheless to reaffirm what I said in my Encyclical
Letter Ut Unum Sint after having acknowledged the impossibility of
Eucharistic sharing: “And yet we do have a burning desire to
join in celebrating the one Eucharist of the Lord, and this desire
itself is already a common prayer of praise, a single supplication.
Together we speak to the Father and increasingly we do so 'with one
heart'”.94
45. While it is never legitimate to concelebrate in the absence of full
communion, the same is not true with respect to the administration of
the Eucharist under special circumstances, to individual persons
belonging to Churches or Ecclesial Communities not in full communion
with the Catholic Church. In this case, in fact, the intention is to
meet a grave spiritual need for the eternal salvation of an individual
believer, not to bring about an intercommunion which remains impossible
until the visible bonds of ecclesial communion are fully re-established.
This was the approach taken by the Second Vatican Council when it gave
guidelines for responding to Eastern Christians separated in good faith
from the Catholic Church, who spontaneously ask to receive the
Eucharist from a Catholic minister and are properly disposed.95 This
approach was then ratified by both Codes, which also consider
– with necessary modifications – the case of other
non-Eastern Christians who are not in full communion with the Catholic
Church.96
46. In my Encyclical Ut Unum Sint I expressed my own appreciation of
these norms, which make it possible to provide for the salvation of
souls with proper discernment: “It is a source of joy to note
that Catholic ministers are able, in certain particular cases, to
administer the sacraments of the Eucharist, Penance and Anointing of
the Sick to Christians who are not in full communion with the Catholic
Church but who greatly desire to receive these sacraments, freely
request them and manifest the faith which the Catholic Church professes
with regard to these sacraments. Conversely, in specific cases and in
particular circumstances, Catholics too can request these same
sacraments from ministers of Churches in which these sacraments are
valid”.97
These conditions, from which no dispensation can be given, must be
carefully respected, even though they deal with specific individual
cases, because the denial of one or more truths of the faith regarding
these sacraments and, among these, the truth regarding the need of the
ministerial priesthood for their validity, renders the person asking
improperly disposed to legitimately receiving them. And the opposite is
also true: Catholics may not receive communion in those communities
which lack a valid sacrament of Orders.98
The faithful observance of the body of norms established in this area
99 is a manifestation and, at the same time, a guarantee of our love
for Jesus Christ in the Blessed Sacrament, for our brothers and sisters
of different Christian confessions – who have a right to our
witness to the truth – and for the cause itself of the
promotion of unity.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE DIGNITY
OF THE EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION
47. Reading the account of the institution of the Eucharist in the
Synoptic Gospels, we are struck by the simplicity and the
“solemnity” with which Jesus, on the evening of the
Last Supper, instituted this great sacrament. There is an episode which
in some way serves as its prelude: the anointing at Bethany. A woman,
whom John identifies as Mary the sister of Lazarus, pours a flask of
costly ointment over Jesus' head, which provokes from the disciples
– and from Judas in particular (cf. Mt 26:8; Mk 14:4; Jn
12:4) – an indignant response, as if this act, in light of
the needs of the poor, represented an intolerable
“waste”. But Jesus' own reaction is completely
different. While in no way detracting from the duty of charity towards
the needy, for whom the disciples must always show special care
– “the poor you will always have with
you” (Mt 26, 11; Mk 14:7; cf. Jn 12:8) – he looks
towards his imminent death and burial, and sees this act of anointing
as an anticipation of the honour which his body will continue to merit
even after his death, indissolubly bound as it is to the mystery of his
person.
The account continues, in the Synoptic Gospels, with Jesus' charge to
the disciples to prepare carefully the “large upper
room” needed for the Passover meal (cf. Mk 14:15; Lk 22:12)
and with the narration of the institution of the Eucharist. Reflecting
at least in part the Jewish rites of the Passover meal leading up to
the singing of the Hallel (cf. Mt 26:30; Mk 14:26), the story presents
with sobriety and solemnity, even in the variants of the different
traditions, the words spoken by Christ over the bread and wine, which
he made into concrete expressions of the handing over of his body and
the shedding of his blood. All these details are recorded by the
Evangelists in the light of a praxis of the “breaking of the
bread” already well-established in the early Church. But
certainly from the time of Jesus on, the event of Holy Thursday has
shown visible traces of a liturgical “sensibility”
shaped by Old Testament tradition and open to being reshaped in
Christian celebrations in a way consonant with the new content of
Easter.
48. Like the woman who anointed Jesus in Bethany, the Church has feared
no “extravagance”, devoting the best of her
resources to expressing her wonder and adoration before the
unsurpassable gift of the Eucharist. No less than the first disciples
charged with preparing the “large upper room”, she
has felt the need, down the centuries and in her encounters with
different cultures, to celebrate the Eucharist in a setting worthy of
so great a mystery. In the wake of Jesus' own words and actions, and
building upon the ritual heritage of Judaism, the Christian liturgy was
born. Could there ever be an adequate means of expressing the
acceptance of that self-gift which the divine Bridegroom continually
makes to his Bride, the Church, by bringing the Sacrifice offered once
and for all on the Cross to successive generations of believers and
thus becoming nourishment for all the faithful? Though the idea of a
“banquet” naturally suggests familiarity, the
Church has never yielded to the temptation to trivialize this
“intimacy” with her Spouse by forgetting that he is
also her Lord and that the “banquet” always remains
a sacrificial banquet marked by the blood shed on Golgotha. The
Eucharistic Banquet is truly a “sacred” banquet, in
which the simplicity of the signs conceals the unfathomable holiness of
God: O sacrum convivium, in quo Christus sumitur! The bread which is
broken on our altars, offered to us as wayfarers along the paths of the
world, is panis angelorum, the bread of angels, which cannot be
approached except with the humility of the centurion in the Gospel:
“Lord, I am not worthy to have you come under my roof
” (Mt 8:8; Lk 7:6).
49. With this heightened sense of mystery, we understand how the faith
of the Church in the mystery of the Eucharist has found historical
expression not only in the demand for an interior disposition of
devotion, but also in outward forms meant to evoke and emphasize the
grandeur of the event being celebrated. This led progressively to the
development of a particular form of regulating the Eucharistic liturgy,
with due respect for the various legitimately constituted ecclesial
traditions. On this foundation a rich artistic heritage also developed.
Architecture, sculpture, painting and music, moved by the Christian
mystery, have found in the Eucharist, both directly and indirectly, a
source of great inspiration.
Such was the case, for example, with architecture, which witnessed the
transition, once the historical situation made it possible, from the
first places of Eucharistic celebration in the domus or
“homes” of Christian families to the solemn
basilicas of the early centuries, to the imposing cathedrals of the
Middle Ages, and to the churches, large and small, which gradually
sprang up throughout the lands touched by Christianity. The designs of
altars and tabernacles within Church interiors were often not simply
motivated by artistic inspiration but also by a clear understanding of
the mystery. The same could be said for sacred music, if we but think
of the inspired Gregorian melodies and the many, often great, composers
who sought to do justice to the liturgical texts of the Mass.
Similarly, can we overlook the enormous quantity of artistic
production, ranging from fine craftsmanship to authentic works of art,
in the area of Church furnishings and vestments used for the
celebration of the Eucharist?
It can be said that the Eucharist, while shaping the Church and her
spirituality, has also powerfully affected
“culture”, and the arts in particular.
50. In this effort to adore the mystery grasped in its ritual and
aesthetic dimensions, a certain “competition” has
taken place between Christians of the West and the East. How could we
not give particular thanks to the Lord for the contributions to
Christian art made by the great architectural and artistic works of the
Greco-Byzantine tradition and of the whole geographical area marked by
Slav culture? In the East, sacred art has preserved a remarkably
powerful sense of mystery, which leads artists to see their efforts at
creating beauty not simply as an expression of their own talents, but
also as a genuine service to the faith. Passing well beyond mere
technical skill, they have shown themselves docile and open to the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
The architectural and mosaic splendours of the Christian East and West
are a patrimony belonging to all believers; they contain a hope, and
even a pledge, of the desired fullness of communion in faith and in
celebration. This would presuppose and demand, as in Rublëv's
famous depiction of the Trinity, a profoundly Eucharistic Church in
which the presence of the mystery of Christ in the broken bread is as
it were immersed in the ineffable unity of the three divine Persons,
making of the Church herself an “icon” of the
Trinity.
Within this context of an art aimed at expressing, in all its elements,
the meaning of the Eucharist in accordance with the Church's teaching,
attention needs to be given to the norms regulating the construction
and decor of sacred buildings. As history shows and as I emphasized in
my Letter to Artists,100 the Church has always left ample room for the
creativity of artists. But sacred art must be outstanding for its
ability to express adequately the mystery grasped in the fullness of
the Church's faith and in accordance with the pastoral guidelines
appropriately laid down by competent Authority. This holds true both
for the figurative arts and for sacred music.
51. The development of sacred art and liturgical discipline which took
place in lands of ancient Christian heritage is also taking place on
continents where Christianity is younger. This was precisely the
approach supported by the Second Vatican Council on the need for sound
and proper “inculturation”. In my numerous Pastoral
Visits I have seen, throughout the world, the great vitality which the
celebration of the Eucharist can have when marked by the forms, styles
and sensibilities of different cultures. By adaptation to the changing
conditions of time and place, the Eucharist offers sustenance not only
to individuals but to entire peoples, and it shapes cultures inspired
by Christianity.
It is necessary, however, that this important work of adaptation be
carried out with a constant awareness of the ineffable mystery against
which every generation is called to measure itself. The
“treasure” is too important and precious to risk
impoverishment or compromise through forms of experimentation or
practices introduced without a careful review on the part of the
competent ecclesiastical authorities. Furthermore, the centrality of
the Eucharistic mystery demands that any such review must be undertaken
in close association with the Holy See. As I wrote in my Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Asia, “such cooperation is
essential because the Sacred Liturgy expresses and celebrates the one
faith professed by all and, being the heritage of the whole Church,
cannot be determined by local Churches in isolation from the universal
Church”.101
52. All of this makes clear the great responsibility which belongs to
priests in particular for the celebration of the Eucharist. 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 a part of every 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. A certain reaction against
“formalism” has led some, especially in certain
regions, to consider the “forms” chosen by the
Church's great liturgical tradition and her Magisterium as non-binding
and to introduce unauthorized innovations which are often completely
inappropriate.
I consider it my duty, therefore to appeal urgently that the liturgical
norms for the celebration of the Eucharist be observed with great
fidelity. These norms are a concrete expression of the authentically
ecclesial nature of the Eucharist; this is their deepest meaning.
Liturgy is never anyone's private property, be it of the celebrant or
of the community in which the mysteries are celebrated. The Apostle
Paul had to address fiery words to the community of Corinth because of
grave shortcomings in their celebration of the Eucharist resulting in
divisions (schismata) and the emergence of factions (haireseis) (cf. 1
Cor 11:17-34). Our time, too, calls for a renewed awareness and
appreciation of liturgical norms as a reflection of, and a witness to,
the one universal Church made present in every celebration of the
Eucharist. Priests who faithfully celebrate Mass according to the
liturgical norms, and communities which conform to those norms, quietly
but eloquently demonstrate their love for the Church. Precisely to
bring out more clearly this deeper meaning of liturgical norms, I have
asked the competent offices of the Roman Curia to prepare a more
specific document, including prescriptions of a juridical nature, on
this very important subject. No one is permitted to undervalue the
mystery entrusted to our hands: it is too great for anyone to feel free
to treat it lightly and with disregard for its sacredness and its
universality.
CHAPTER SIX
AT THE SCHOOL OF MARY,
“WOMAN OF THE EUCHARIST”
53. If we wish to rediscover in all its richness the profound
relationship between the Church and the Eucharist, we cannot neglect
Mary, Mother and model of the Church. In my Apostolic Letter Rosarium
Virginis Mariae, I pointed to the Blessed Virgin Mary as our teacher in
contemplating Christ's face, and among the mysteries of light I
included the institution of the Eucharist.102 Mary can guide us towards
this most holy sacrament, because she herself has a profound
relationship with it.
At first glance, the Gospel is silent on this subject. The account of
the institution of the Eucharist on the night of Holy Thursday makes no
mention of Mary. Yet we know that she was present among the Apostles
who prayed “with one accord” (cf. Acts 1:14) in the
first community which gathered after the Ascension in expectation of
Pentecost. Certainly Mary must have been present at the Eucharistic
celebrations of the first generation of Christians, who were devoted to
“the breaking of bread” (Acts 2:42).
But in addition to her sharing in the Eucharistic banquet, an indirect
picture of Mary's relationship with the Eucharist can be had, beginning
with her interior disposition. Mary is a “woman of the
Eucharist” in her whole life. The Church, which looks to Mary
as a model, is also called to imitate her in her relationship with this
most holy mystery.
54. Mysterium fidei! If the Eucharist is a mystery of faith which so
greatly transcends our understanding as to call for sheer abandonment
to the word of God, then there can be no one like Mary to act as our
support and guide in acquiring this disposition. In repeating what
Christ did at the Last Supper in obedience to his command:
“Do this in memory of me!”, we also accept Mary's
invitation to obey him without hesitation: “Do whatever he
tells you” (Jn 2:5). With the same maternal concern which she
showed at the wedding feast of Cana, Mary seems to say to us:
“Do not waver; trust in the words of my Son. If he was able
to change water into wine, he can also turn bread and wine into his
body and blood, and through this mystery bestow on believers the living
memorial of his passover, thus becoming the 'bread of life'”.
55. In a certain sense Mary lived her Eucharistic faith even before the
institution of the Eucharist, by the very fact that she offered her
virginal womb for the Incarnation of God's Word. The Eucharist, while
commemorating the passion and resurrection, is also in continuity with
the incarnation. At the Annunciation Mary conceived the Son of God in
the physical reality of his body and blood, thus anticipating within
herself what to some degree happens sacramentally in every believer who
receives, under the signs of bread and wine, the Lord's body and blood.
As a result, there is a profound analogy between the Fiat which Mary
said in reply to the angel, and the Amen which every believer says when
receiving the body of the Lord. Mary was asked to believe that the One
whom she conceived “through the Holy Spirit” was
“the Son of God” (Lk 1:30-35). In continuity with
the Virgin's faith, in the Eucharistic mystery we are asked to believe
that the same Jesus Christ, Son of God and Son of Mary, becomes present
in his full humanity and divinity under the signs of bread and wine.
“Blessed is she who believed” (Lk 1:45). Mary also
anticipated, in the mystery of the incarnation, the Church's
Eucharistic faith. When, at the Visitation, she bore in her womb the
Word made flesh, she became in some way a
“tabernacle” – the first
“tabernacle” in history – in which the
Son of God, still invisible to our human gaze, allowed himself to be
adored by Elizabeth, radiating his light as it were through the eyes
and the voice of Mary. And is not the enraptured gaze of Mary as she
contemplated the face of the newborn Christ and cradled him in her arms
that unparalleled model of love which should inspire us every time we
receive Eucharistic communion?
56. Mary, throughout her life at Christ's side and not only on Calvary,
made her own the sacrificial dimension of the Eucharist. When she
brought the child Jesus to the Temple in Jerusalem “to
present him to the Lord” (Lk 2:22), she heard the aged Simeon
announce that the child would be a “sign of
contradiction” and that a sword would also pierce her own
heart (cf. Lk 2:34-35). The tragedy of her Son's crucifixion was thus
foretold, and in some sense Mary's Stabat Mater at the foot of the
Cross was foreshadowed. In her daily preparation for Calvary, Mary
experienced a kind of “anticipated Eucharist”
– one might say a “spiritual communion”
– of desire and of oblation, which would culminate in her
union with her Son in his passion, and then find expression after
Easter by her partaking in the Eucharist which the Apostles celebrated
as the memorial of that passion.
What must Mary have felt as she heard from the mouth of Peter, John,
James and the other Apostles the words spoken at the Last Supper:
“This is my body which is given for you” (Lk
22:19)? The body given up for us and made present under sacramental
signs was the same body which she had conceived in her womb! For Mary,
receiving the Eucharist must have somehow meant welcoming once more
into her womb that heart which had beat in unison with hers and
reliving what she had experienced at the foot of the Cross.
57. “Do this in remembrance of me” (Lk 22:19). In
the “memorial” of Calvary all that Christ
accomplished by his passion and his death is present. Consequently all
that Christ did with regard to his Mother for our sake is also present.
To her he gave the beloved disciple and, in him, each of us:
“Behold, your Son!”. To each of us he also says:
“Behold your mother!” (cf. Jn 19: 26-27).
Experiencing the memorial of Christ's death in the Eucharist also means
continually receiving this gift. It means accepting – like
John – the one who is given to us anew as our Mother. It also
means taking on a commitment to be conformed to Christ, putting
ourselves at the school of his Mother and allowing her to accompany us.
Mary is present, with the Church and as the Mother of the Church, at
each of our celebrations of the Eucharist. If the Church and the
Eucharist are inseparably united, the same ought to be said of Mary and
the Eucharist. This is one reason why, since ancient times, the
commemoration of Mary has always been part of the Eucharistic
celebrations of the Churches of East and West.
58. In the Eucharist the Church is completely united to Christ and his
sacrifice, and makes her own the spirit of Mary. This truth can be
understood more deeply by re-reading the Magnificat in a Eucharistic
key. The Eucharist, like the Canticle of Mary, is first and foremost
praise and thanksgiving. When Mary exclaims: “My soul
magnifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour”,
she already bears Jesus in her womb. She praises God
“through” Jesus, but she also praises him
“in” Jesus and “with” Jesus.
This is itself the true “Eucharistic attitude”.
At the same time Mary recalls the wonders worked by God in salvation
history in fulfilment of the promise once made to the fathers (cf. Lk
1:55), and proclaims the wonder that surpasses them all, the redemptive
incarnation. Lastly, the Magnificat reflects the eschatological tension
of the Eucharist. Every time the Son of God comes again to us in the
“poverty” of the sacramental signs of bread and
wine, the seeds of that new history wherein the mighty are
“put down from their thrones” and “those
of low degree are exalted” (cf. Lk 1:52), take root in the
world. Mary sings of the “new heavens” and the
“new earth” which find in the Eucharist their
anticipation and in some sense their programme and plan. The Magnificat
expresses Mary's spirituality, and there is nothing greater than this
spirituality for helping us to experience the mystery of the Eucharist.
The Eucharist has been given to us so that our life, like that of Mary,
may become completely a Magnificat!
CONCLUSION
59. Ave, verum corpus natum de Maria Virgine! Several years ago I
celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of my priesthood. Today I have the
grace of offering the Church this Encyclical on the Eucharist on the
Holy Thursday which falls during the twenty-fifth year of my Petrine
ministry. As I do so, my heart is filled with gratitude. For over a
half century, every day, beginning on 2 November 1946, when I
celebrated my first Mass in the Crypt of Saint Leonard in Wawel
Cathedral in Krakow, my eyes have gazed in recollection upon the host
and the chalice, where time and space in some way
“merge” and the drama of Golgotha is re-presented
in a living way, thus revealing its mysterious
“contemporaneity”. Each day my faith has been able
to recognize in the consecrated bread and wine the divine Wayfarer who
joined the two disciples on the road to Emmaus and opened their eyes to
the light and their hearts to new hope (cf. Lk 24:13-35).
Allow me, dear brothers and sisters, to share with deep emotion, as a
means of accompanying and strengthening your faith, my own testimony of
faith in the Most Holy Eucharist. Ave verum corpus natum de Maria
Virgine, vere passum, immolatum, in cruce pro homine! Here is the
Church's treasure, the heart of the world, the pledge of the fulfilment
for which each man and woman, even unconsciously, yearns. A great and
transcendent mystery, indeed, and one that taxes our mind's ability to
pass beyond appearances. Here our senses fail us: visus, tactus, gustus
in te fallitur, in the words of the hymn Adoro Te Devote; yet faith
alone, rooted in the word of Christ handed down to us by the Apostles,
is sufficient for us. Allow me, like Peter at the end of the
Eucharistic discourse in John's Gospel, to say once more to Christ, in
the name of the whole Church and in the name of each of you:
“Lord to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal
life” (Jn 6:68).
60. At the dawn of this third millennium, we, the children of the
Church, are called to undertake with renewed enthusiasm the journey of
Christian living. As I wrote in my Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio
Ineunte, “it is not a matter of inventing a 'new programme'.
The programme already exists: it is the plan found in the Gospel and in
the living Tradition; it is the same as ever. Ultimately, it has its
centre in Christ himself, who is to be known, loved and imitated, so
that in him we may live the life of the Trinity, and with him transform
history until its fulfilment in the heavenly Jerusalem”.103
The implementation of this programme of a renewed impetus in Christian
living passes through the Eucharist.
Every commitment to holiness, every activity aimed at carrying out the
Church's mission, every work of pastoral planning, must draw the
strength it needs from the Eucharistic mystery and in turn be directed
to that mystery as its culmination. In the Eucharist we have Jesus, we
have his redemptive sacrifice, we have his resurrection, we have the
gift of the Holy Spirit, we have adoration, obedience and love of the
Father. Were we to disregard the Eucharist, how could we overcome our
own deficiency?
61. The mystery of the Eucharist – sacrifice, presence,
banquet – does not allow for reduction or exploitation; it
must be experienced and lived in its integrity, both in its celebration
and in the intimate converse with Jesus which takes place after
receiving communion or in a prayerful moment of Eucharistic adoration
apart from Mass. These are times when the Church is firmly built up and
it becomes clear what she truly is: one, holy, catholic and apostolic;
the people, temple and family of God; the body and bride of Christ,
enlivened by the Holy Spirit; the universal sacrament of salvation and
a hierarchically structured communion.
The path taken by the Church in these first years of the third
millennium is also a path of renewed ecumenical commitment. The final
decades of the second millennium, culminating in the Great Jubilee,
have spurred us along this path and called for all the baptized to
respond to the prayer of Jesus “ut unum sint ” (Jn
17:11). The path itself is long and strewn with obstacles greater than
our human resources alone can overcome, yet we have the Eucharist, and
in its presence we can hear in the depths of our hearts, as if they
were addressed to us, the same words heard by the Prophet Elijah:
“Arise and eat, else the journey will be too great for
you” (1 Kg 19:7). The treasure of the Eucharist, which the
Lord places before us, impels us towards the goal of full sharing with
all our brothers and sisters to whom we are joined by our common
Baptism. But if this treasure is not to be squandered, we need to
respect the demands which derive from its being the sacrament of
communion in faith and in apostolic succession.
By giving the Eucharist the prominence it deserves, and by being
careful not to diminish any of its dimensions or demands, we show that
we are truly conscious of the greatness of this gift. We are urged to
do so by an uninterrupted tradition, which from the first centuries on
has found the Christian community ever vigilant in guarding this
“treasure”. Inspired by love, the Church is anxious
to hand on to future generations of Christians, without loss, her faith
and teaching with regard to the mystery of the Eucharist. There can be
no danger of excess in our care for this mystery, for “in
this sacrament is recapitulated the whole mystery of our
salvation”.104
62. Let us take our place, dear brothers and sisters, at the school of
the saints, who are the great interpreters of true Eucharistic piety.
In them the theology of the Eucharist takes on all the splendour of a
lived reality; it becomes “contagious” and, in a
manner of speaking, it “warms our hearts”. Above
all, let us listen to Mary Most Holy, in whom the mystery of the
Eucharist appears, more than in anyone else, as a mystery of light.
Gazing upon Mary, we come to know the transforming power present in the
Eucharist. In her we see the world renewed in love. Contemplating her,
assumed body and soul into heaven, we see opening up before us those
“new heavens” and that “new
earth” which will appear at the second coming of Christ. Here
below, the Eucharist represents their pledge, and in a certain way,
their anticipation: “Veni, Domine Iesu!” (Rev
22:20).
In the humble signs of bread and wine, changed into his body and blood,
Christ walks beside us as our strength and our food for the journey,
and he enables us to become, for everyone, witnesses of hope. If, in
the presence of this mystery, reason experiences its limits, the heart,
enlightened by the grace of the Holy Spirit, clearly sees the response
that is demanded, and bows low in adoration and unbounded love.
Let us make our own the words of Saint Thomas Aquinas, an eminent
theologian and an impassioned poet of Christ in the Eucharist, and turn
in hope to the contemplation of that goal to which our hearts aspire in
their thirst for joy and peace:
Bone pastor, panis vere,
Iesu, nostri miserere...
Come then, good Shepherd, bread divine,
Still show to us thy mercy sign;
Oh, feed us, still keep us thine;
So we may see thy glories shine
in fields of immortality.
O thou, the wisest, mightiest, best,
Our present food, our future rest,
Come, make us each thy chosen guest,
Co-heirs of thine, and comrades blest
With saints whose dwelling is with thee.
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on 17 April, Holy Thursday, in the
year 2003, the Twenty- fifth of my Pontificate, the Year of the Rosary.
IOANNES PAULUS II
NOTES
1Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Lumen Gentium, 11.
2Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Ministry and Life of
Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis, 5.
3Cf. John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Rosarium Virginis Mariae (16
October 2002), 21: AAS 95 (2003), 19.
4This is the title which I gave to an autobiographical testimony issued
for my fiftieth anniversary of priestly ordination.
5Leonis XIII P.M. Acta, XXII (1903), 115-136.
6AAS 39 (1947), 521-595.
7AAS 57 (1965), 753-774.
8AAS 72 (1980), 113-148.
9Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 47: “... our Saviour instituted the Eucharistic
Sacrifice of his body and blood, in order to perpetuate the sacrifice
of the Cross throughout time, until he should return”.
10Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1085.
11Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 3.
12Cf. Paul VI, Solemn Profession of Faith, 30 June 1968, 24: AAS 60
(1968), 442; John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Dominicae Cenae (24
February 1980), 12: AAS 72 (1980), 142.
13Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1382.
14Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1367.
15In Epistolam ad Hebraeos Homiliae, Hom. 17,3: PG 63, 131.
16Cf. Ecumenical Council of Trent, Session XXII, Doctrina de ss. Missae
Sacrificio, Chapter 2: DS 1743: “It is one and the same
victim here offering himself by the ministry of his priests, who then
offered himself on the Cross; it is only the manner of offering that is
different”.
17Pius XII, Encyclical Letter Mediator Dei (20 November 1947): AAS 39
(1947), 548.
18John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Redemptor Hominis (15 March 1979),
20: AAS 71 (1979), 310.
19Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 11.
20De Sacramentis, V, 4, 26: CSEL 73, 70.
21In Ioannis Evangelium, XII, 20: PG 74, 726.
22Encyclical Letter Mysterium Fidei (3 September 1965): AAS 57 (1965),
764.
23Session XIII, Decretum de ss. Eucharistia, Chapter 4: DS 1642.
24Mystagogical Catecheses, IV, 6: SCh 126, 138.
25Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on Divine
Revelation Dei Verbum, 8.
26Solemn Profession of Faith, 30 June 1968, 25: AAS 60 (1968), 442-443.
27Sermo IV in Hebdomadam Sanctam: CSCO 413/Syr. 182, 55.
28Anaphora.
29Eucharistic Prayer III.
30Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ, Second Vespers, Antiphon
to the Magnificat.
31Missale Romanum, Embolism following the Lord's Prayer.
32Ad Ephesios, 20: PG 5, 661.
33Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 39.
34“Do you wish to honour the body of Christ? Do not ignore
him when he is naked. Do not pay him homage in the temple clad in silk,
only then to neglect him outside where he is cold and ill-clad. He who
said: 'This is my body' is the same who said: 'You saw me hungry and
you gave me no food', and 'Whatever you did to the least of my brothers
you did also to me' ... What good is it if the Eucharistic table is
overloaded with golden chalices when your brother is dying of hunger.
Start by satisfying his hunger and then with what is left you may adorn
the altar as well”: Saint John Chrysostom, In Evangelium S.
Matthaei, hom. 50:3-4: PG 58, 508-509; cf. John Paul II, Encyclical
Letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis (30 December 1987), 31: AAS 80 (1988),
553-556.
35Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 3.
36Ibid.
37Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Missionary Activity
of the Church Ad Gentes, 5.
38“Moses took the blood and threw it upon the people, and
said: 'Behold the blood of the Covenant which the Lord has made with
you in accordance with all these words'” (Ex 24:8).
39Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 1.
40Cf. ibid., 9.
41Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Life and
Ministry of Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis, 5. The same Decree, in No.
6, says: “No Christian community can be built up which does
not grow from and hinge on the celebration of the most holy
Eucharist”.
42In Epistolam I ad Corinthios Homiliae, 24, 2: PG 61, 200; Cf.
Didache, IX, 4: F.X. Funk, I, 22; Saint Cyprian, Ep. LXIII, 13: PL 4,
384.
43PO 26, 206.
44Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 1.
45Cf. Ecumenical Council of Trent, Session XIII, Decretum de ss.
Eucharistia, Canon 4: DS 1654.
46Cf. Rituale Romanum: De sacra communione et de cultu mysterii
eucharistici extra Missam, 36 (No. 80).
47Cf. ibid., 38-39 (Nos. 86-90).
48John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte (6 January
2001), 32: AAS 93 (2001), 288.
49“In the course of the day the faithful should not omit
visiting the Blessed Sacrament, which in accordance with liturgical law
must be reserved in churches with great reverence in a prominent place.
Such visits are a sign of gratitude, an expression of love and an
acknowledgment of the Lord's presence”: Paul VI, Encyclical
Letter Mysterium Fidei (3 September 1965): AAS 57 (1965), 771.
50Visite al SS. Sacramento e a Maria Santissima, Introduction: Opere
Ascetiche, Avellino, 2000, 295.
51No. 857.
52Ibid.
53Ibid.
54Cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter Sacerdotium
Ministeriale (6 August 1983), III.2: AAS 75 (1983), 1005.
55Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 10.
56Ibid.
57Cf. Institutio Generalis: Editio typica tertia, No. 147.
58Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 10 and 28;
Decree on the Ministry and Life of Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis, 2.
59“The minister of the altar acts in the person of Christ
inasmuch as he is head, making an offering in the name of all the
members”: Pius XII, Encyclical Letter Mediator Dei (20
November 1947): AAS 39 (1947), 556; cf. Pius X, Apostolic Exhortation
Haerent Animo (4 August 1908): Acta Pii X, IV, 16; Pius XI, Encyclical
Letter Ad Catholici Sacerdotii (20 December 1935): AAS 28 (1936), 20.
60Apostolic Letter Dominicae Cenae (24 February 1980), 8: AAS 72
(1980), 128-129.
61Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter Sacerdotium
Ministeriale (6 August 1983), III.4: AAS 75 (1983), 1006; cf. Fourth
Lateran Ecumenical Council, Chapter 1, Constitution on the Catholic
Faith Firmiter Credimus: DS 802.
62Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis
Redintegratio, 22.
63Apostolic Letter Dominicae Cenae (24 February 1980), 2: AAS 72
(1980), 115.
64Decree on the Life and Ministry of Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis, 14.
65Ibid., 13; cf. Code of Canon Law, Canon 904; Code of Canons of the
Eastern Churches, Canon 378.
66Decree on the Ministry and Life of Priests Presbytero- rum Ordinis, 6.
67Cf. Final Report, II.C.1: L'Osservatore Romano, 10 December 1985, 7.
68Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 26.
69Nicolas Cabasilas, Life in Christ, IV, 10: SCh 355, 270.
70Camino de Perfección, Chapter 35.
71Cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter to the Bishops
of the Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as
Communion Communionis Notio (28 May 1992), 4: AAS 85 (1993), 839-840.
72Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 14.
73Homiliae in Isaiam,6, 3: PG 56, 139.
74No. 1385; cf. Code of Canon Law, Canon 916; Code of Canons of the
Eastern Churches, Canon 711.
75Address to the Members of the Sacred Apostolic Penitentiary and the
Penitentiaries of the Patriarchal Basilicas of Rome (30 January 1981):
AAS 73 (1981), 203. Cf. Ecumenical Council of Trent, Sess. XIII,
Decretum de ss. Eucharistia, Chapter 7 and Canon 11: DS 1647, 1661.
76Canon 915; Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, Canon 712.
77Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 14.
78Saint Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, III, q. 73, a. 3c.
79Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter to the Bishops of
the Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as
Communion Communionis Notio (28 May 1992), 11: AAS 85 (1993), 844.
80Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 23.
81Ad Smyrnaeos, 8: PG 5, 713.
82Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 23.
83Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter to the Bishops of
the Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as
Communion Communionis Notio (28 May 1992), 14: AAS 85 (1993), 847.
84Sermo272: PL 38, 1247.
85Ibid., 1248.
86Cf. Nos. 31-51: AAS 90 (1998), 731-746.
87Cf. ibid., Nos. 48-49: AAS 90 (1998), 744.
88No. 36: AAS 93 (2001), 291-292.
89Cf. Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio, 1.
90Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 11.
91“Join all of us, who share the one bread and the one cup,
to one another in the communion of the one Holy Spirit”:
Anaphora of the Liturgy of Saint Basil.
92Cf. Code of Canon Law, Canon 908; Code of Canons of the Eastern
Churches, Canon 702; Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian
Unity, Ecumenical Directory, 25 March 1993, 122-125, 129-131: AAS 85
(1993), 1086-1089; Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter
Ad Exsequendam, 18 May 2001: AAS 93 (2001), 786.
93“Divine law forbids any common worship which would damage
the unity of the Church, or involve formal acceptance of falsehood or
the danger of deviation in the faith, of scandal, or of
indifferentism”: Decree on the Eastern Catholic Churches
Orientalium Ecclesiarum, 26.
94No. 45: AAS 87 (1995), 948.
95Decree on the Eastern Catholic Churches Orientalium Ecclesiarum, 27.
96Cf. Code of Canon Law, Canon 844 §§ 3-4; Code of
Canons of the Eastern Churches, Canon 671 §§ 3-4.
97No. 46: AAS 87 (1995), 948.
98Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis
Redintegratio, 22.
99Code of Canon Law, Canon 844; Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches,
Canon 671.
100Cf. AAS 91 (1999), 1155-1172.
101No. 22: AAS 92 (2000), 485.
102Cf. No. 21: AAS 95 (2003), 20.
103No. 29: AAS 93 (2001), 285.
104Saint Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, III, q. 83, a. 4c.
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