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Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith
CONCERNING THE MINISTER OF THE EUCHARIST
Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church
on Certain Questions Concerning the Minister of the Eucharist
I. Introduction
1. In teaching that the priestly or hierarchical ministry differs
essentially and not only in degree from the common priesthood of the
faithful, the Second Vatican Council expressed the certainty of Faith
that only bishops and priests can confect the Eucharistic mystery.
Although all the faithful indeed share in the one and same priesthood
of Christ and participate in the offering of the Eucharist, it is only
the ministerial priest who, in virtue of the Sacrament of Holy Orders,
can confect the Eucharistic sacrifice in the Person of Christ and offer
it in the name of all Christian people.(1)
2. In recent years, however, certain opinions have come to be
promulgated, and at times translated into practice, which deny the
above teaching and consequently cause harm to the innermost life of the
Church. Such opinions, which are widespread in various forms and with
different lines of argument, have begun to attract some the faithful
themselves, either because they claim to be based on a scholarly
foundation, or because they are presented as responding to the needs of
the pastoral care and sacramental life of Christian communities.
3. This is why this Sacred Congregation, prompted by a desire to offer
its particular services to the bishops in true collegial spirit, wishes
to restate here some of the essential points of the Church's doctrine
on the minister the Eucharist, transmitted by her living Tradition and
expressed in previous documents of the Magisterium.(2) The Congregation
takes full account of the integral vision of the priestly ministry as
presented by the Second Vatican Council, but in the present situation
it considers it a matter of urgency to make clear the essential role of
the priest.
II. Erroneous Opinions
1. The promoters of these new opinions maintain that every Christian
community, from the very fact that it is united in the name of Christ
and thus enjoys His undivided presence (cf. Mt. 18:20), is endowed with
all the powers which the Lord wished to give to His Church.
It is asserted, moreover, that the Church is apostolic in the sense
that all those who have been washed in Baptism and incorporated into
her, having been made sharers in the priestly, prophetic and royal
office of Christ, are also truly successors of the Apostles. From the
fact that the whole Church was prefigured in the Apostles it would then
follow that the words of institution of the Eucharist addressed to them
were intended for everyone.
2. As a consequence, although necessary for the good ordering of the
Church, the ministry of bishops and priests would not differ from the
common priesthood of the faithful with respect to the participation in
the priesthood of Christ in the strict sense, but only insofar as its
exercise is concerned. The so-called role of moderating the
community--including also that of preaching and presiding at the
Eucharist--would, therefore, be only a simple mandate conferred for the
orderly functioning of the community itself, but it ought not to be
"sacralized." The call to such a ministry would not amount to a new
"priestly" capacity--strictly speaking--and for that reason the term
"priesthood" is generally avoided--nor would it impart any character
with ontological significance for the state of the ministers, but would
simply give expression before the community that the original power
conferred in the Sacrament of Baptism had become effective.
3. In virtue of the apostolicity of the single local
communities, in which Christ would be no less present than in an
episcopal structure, each community, no matter how small, in the event
of its being deprived for some time of such a constituent element as
the Eucharist, could "re-appropriate" its original powers. Also it
would have the right of designating its own president and animator and
conferring on him all the necessary faculties for leading the community
itself, including that of presiding at and consecrating the Eucharist.
It is moreover asserted that God Himself would not refuse, in such
circumstances, to grant, even without a sacramental rite, the power He
normally gives through sacramental ordination
Such is the conclusion also reached by the fact that the
celebration of the Eucharist is often understood simply as the action
of the local community, which is gathered together to commemorate, in
the breaking of the bread, the Last Supper of the Lord. It would
therefore be more a fraternal celebration in which the community comes
together and gives expression to its identity, than the sacramental
renewal of the sacrifice of Christ, whose saving power extends to
everyone, be they present or absent, living or dead.
4. Ironically, erroneous opinions regarding the necessity of ordained
ministers for the celebration of the Eucharist have even led some to
place less and less value upon the Sacraments of Orders and the
Eucharist in their catechesis.
III. The Doctrine of the Church
1. Although they may be expressed in various ways with different
nuances, all these opinions lead to the same conclusion: that the power
to confect the Sacrament of the Eucharist is not necessarily connected
with sacramental ordination. It is evident that such a conclusion is
absolutely incompatible with the Faith as it has been handed down,
since not only does it deny the power conferred on priests but it
undermines the entire apostolic structure of the Church and distorts
the sacramental economy of salvation itself.
2. According to the teaching of the Church, the word of the Lord
and the divine life which He has given to us have been destined from
the very beginning to be lived and shared in a single Body, which the
Lord builds up for Himself throughout the ages. This Body, which is the
Church of Christ, is continually endowed with the gifts of ministries
by Him "from whom the whole body, nourished and knit together through
its joints and sinews, grows with a growth that is from God" (Col.
2:19). (3)
This structure of ministries finds clear expression in Sacred
Tradition in the powers entrusted to the Apostles and their successors:
to sanctify, to teach and to govern in the name of Christ. The
apostolicity of the Church does not mean that all believers are
Apostles,(4) not even in a collective sense, and no community has the
power to confer apostolic ministry which is essentially bestowed by the
Lord Himself. Therefore, when the Church in her creeds calls herself
apostolic, she expresses, besides the doctrinal identity of her
teaching with that of the Apostles, the reality of the continuation of
the work of the Apostles by means of the structure of succession in
virtue of which the apostolic mission is to endure until the end of
time.(5)
This apostolic succession which constitutes the entire Church as
apostolic is part of the living Tradition which has been for the Church
from the beginning, and continues to be, her particular form of life.
And so, those who cite isolated texts of Scripture in opposition to
this living Tradition, in trying to justify new structures, have
strayed from the truth.
3. The Catholic Church, which has developed through the ages and
continues to grow by the life given to her by the Lord through the
outpouring of the Holy Spirit, has always maintained her apostolic
structure, faithful to the tradition of the Apostles which lives and
endures in her.
When she imposes hands on those to be ordained and invokes upon
them the Holy Spirit, she is conscious of handing on the power of the
Lord who makes the bishops, as successors of the Apostles, partakers in
a special way of His threefold priestly, prophetic and royal mission.
In turn, the bishops impart, in varying degrees, the office of their
ministry to various persons in the Church.(6)
And so, even though all the baptized enjoy the same dignity
before God, in the Christian community, which was deliberately
structured hierarchically by its divine Founder, there have existed
from its earliest days specific apostolic powers deriving from the
Sacrament of Holy Orders.
4. Included among these powers which Christ entrusted
exclusively to the Apostles and their successors is the power of
confecting the Eucharist. To the bishops alone, and to the priests they
have made sharers in their ministry which they themselves have
received, is reserved the power of renewing in the mystery of the
Eucharist what Christ did at the Last Supper.(7)
In order that they may be able to carry out their work,
especially a work so important as confecting the Eucharistic mystery,
our Lord marks out in a spiritual manner those whom He calls to the
episcopate and to the priesthood. He does this with a special sign
through the Sacrament of Orders, a sign also called a "character" in
solemn documents of the Church's Magisterium.(8) In this way, He so
configures them to Himself that, when they pronounce the words of
Consecration, they do not act on a mandate from the community but "'in
persona Christi' which means more than just 'in the name of Christ' or
'in the place of Christ' since the celebrant, by reason of this special
sacrament, identifies himself with the eternal High Priest, who is both
author and principal agent of His own sacrifice in which truly no one
can take His place."(9) Since it is of the very nature of the Church
that the power to consecrate the Eucharist is imparted only to the
bishops and priests who are constituted its ministers by the reception
of Holy Orders, the Church holds that the Eucharistic mystery cannot be
celebrated in any community except by an ordained priest, as expressly
taught by the Fourth Lateran Council.(10)
Individual faithful or communities who, because of persecution
or lack of priests, are deprived of the Holy Eucharist for either a
short or longer period of time, do not thereby lack the grace of the
Redeemer. If they are intimately animated by a desire for the sacrament
and united in prayer with the whole Church, and call upon the Lord and
raise their hearts to Him, by virtue of the Holy Spirit they live in
communion with the whole Church, the living Body of Christ, and with
the Lord Himself. Through their desire for the sacrament in union with
the Church, no matter how distant they may be physically, they are
intimately and really united to her and therefore receive the fruits of
the sacrament; whereas those who would wrongly attempt to take upon
themselves the right to confect the Eucharistic mystery end up by
having their community closed in on itself.(11)
None of this derogates from the responsibility of bishops and
priests and all members of the Church to pray that "the Lord of the
harvest" will send workers according to the needs of the people and the
times (cf. Mt. 9:37 ff.), and to work with all their energy to make the
Lord's call to the priestly ministry heard and welcomed, with humble
and generous heart.
IV. Call to Vigilance
In recalling these points to the attention of the pastors of the
Church, the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith desires
to assist them in the ministry of feeding the flock of the Lord with
the food of truth, of safeguarding the deposit of Faith and of keeping
intact the unity of the Church. It is necessary to be strong in faith
and to resist error even when it masquerades as piety, so that by
professing truth in love, we may embrace in the love of the Lord those
who have strayed (cf. Eph. 4:15).
Catholics who attempt to celebrate the Eucharist outside the
sacred bond of apostolic succession established by the Sacrament of
Orders exclude themselves from participating in the unity of the single
Body of the Lord: they neither nourish nor build up the community, they
tear it apart.
Therefore, it is the responsibility of the bishops to see to it
that the erroneous opinions mentioned above do not continue to be
spread either in catechetics or in the teaching of theology and, above
all, to see to it that such theories are not put into practice.
Whenever cases of this sort are discovered, it is their sacred
responsibility to denounce them as completely foreign to the
celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice and offensive to the community
of the Church. If they should find that some catechists are even
minimizing the central importance for the Church of the Sacraments of
Holy Orders and the Eucharist, they should likewise do all they can to
correct so distorted a teaching. For, in fact, it is to us that these
words were addressed: "Preach the word, be urgent in season and out of
season, convince, rebuke, and exhort, be unfailing in patience and in
teaching. . .always be steady, endure suffering, do the work of an
evangelist, fulfill your ministry" (2 Tm. 4:2, 5).
In these circumstances, therefore, let this collegial concern
find such a concrete application that the undivided Church, even in the
variety of local Churches working together,(12) may keep safe what was
entrusted to her by God through the Apostles. Fidelity to the will of
Christ and the Christian dignity itself require that the Faith handed
down remain the same so that it may bring peace to all believers (cf.
Rom. 15:13).
The Supreme Pontiff, John Paul II, in an audience granted to the
undersigned Cardinal Prefect, gave his approval to this letter, drawn
up in the ordinary session of this Sacred Congregation, and ordered its
publication.
At Rome, from the offices of the Sacred Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith, August 6, 1983, Feast of the Transfiguration of
our Lord.
JOSEPH CARDINAL RATZINGER Prefect
JEROME HAMER, O.P. Titular Archbishop of Lorium Secretary
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