Wednesday | October 04, 2006

Jesus in the Catholic Mass...

This is an expanded version of this post here (http://www.sonlight-forums.com/showp...&postcount=245) at the request of MomtoEli who asked me to fill in where I had “lightened up” and as long as this is (be careful what you ask for), I assure you there is still more, much more, that could be said. As I worked on this, I was constantly…continuously ….overwhelmed at the task of conveying into finite words the infinite that is only glimpsed in the Mass. The more I said, the more I knew could be said and the more I realized that as far as I have come in understanding these Mysteries, I have done nothing more than skim along the surface of impossibly deep richness. I would like to also state categorically that I am not worthy to do this. I am not trained in theology in any way; therefore, any errors in expression or theology should be blamed on me alone and not held against either the Roman Catholic Church that I love, nor my brothers and sisters in the Catholic faith. I hope that my brothers and sisters would not hesitate to correct me in the places where I have said things poorly or even incorrectly and I welcome them to add their own personal observations as well. In this version, I have tried to integrate the scripture references of the Mass taken from Scripture in the Mass and any other place I could get them with my extended remarks on what God says to me in the Mass and what I in return, offer up to Him. On a technical note, I found myself flummoxed with the use of pronouns. The Unity expressed in the Liturgy of the Mass is sometimes difficult to break away from; however, I recognize that not everyone in the congregation is as devout as I suspect Our Lord would like them to be. I tried to use the first person plural where my personal reflections do not substantially reflect some well-known traditional practice and in places where although I join the action of the community, I am particularly involved as an individual such as during the penitential rite. Some of this is rather strongly stated. I understand that may cause distress in my brothers and sisters who do not share my view of the Truth; however, in order to adequately convey what I have found in the worship of the Roman Catholic Church, I cannot shy away from those aspects of it that are less palatable to those who prefer a more symbolic approach to unity, authority, and sacrament. I understand that many disagree with me. Not that you need it, but I give you leave to think I am a crackpot and sadly and completely deluded. I am not trying to be gratuitously

Quote:
Originally Posted by MomtoEli
It is interesting that your faith is tied into the identity of the RC church. For me, my faith is dependent on Jesus Christ, period.

So much has been said in the last couple of weeks on Lifelong Learners. There have been so many hard hitting exchanges in here that you may find it odd that it that I suddenly took a break from all the other conversations in which I was participating to focus on these two sentences. But, for me, this strikes at the heart. So often I hear how the Roman Catholic Church puts things between me and Jesus, and that we substitute Mary and the Saints for where our focus really ought to be. Told that our identity isn’t really Jesus. That the faith of the Roman Catholic Church is empty, meaningless repetition and ritual. (I am not saying that’s what MomtoEli (or anyone else in particular) meant to say or even that if she (they) did, that you meant it to be hurtful or offensive.) I would like to set the record straight though. Unfortunately, it is a sad fact of the divisions in the Our Lord’s Church that sometimes we must use words other than simply “Christian” to define what we believe. I assure you that my “identity as a Roman Catholic” IS my faith in Jesus Christ. Period. I have said something about a “fullness of faith” in the Roman Catholic Church that is not present in any Protestant denomination that I have been a part of. I want to state for the record that I did not leave my Evangelical Roots because I was unhappy there. In fact, I left my Evangelical roots loudly protesting to the Lord that I was very happy where I was thank you very much and did He really think this was necessary. In fact, there was a time in my life when I would have said to me, exactly the same things you have said. I also said that I was pretty sure that you couldn’t be Catholic and be saved. Catholics didn’t know Sacred Scripture. They didn’t respect Sacred Scripture. They believed in Saints and Mary not Jesus. Some of them even worshipped Mary. In fact, I have heard very little said about Catholics here on this forum that I did not say myself at one time. What I found in the Roman Catholic Church instead was a deep love and respect for Sacred Scripture. In fact, in the context of the Liturgy which is simultaneously drawn from and serves to explain scripture, I found a fullness of Sacred Scripture that I never had before. I found that far from elevating Sacred Scripture, the doctrine of sola scriptura had the effect of subordinating it to the intellect of the individual. In spite of the fact that I am no longer sola scriptura, the scriptures mean more to me now than ever before and I have the sense of believing it all instead of turning away from the uncomfortable parts. It is ironic to me that I gave the Lord my idols of my intellect and the scriptures and He gave them back to me breathed full of a new life. When I submitted to the authority that He deemed best for His Church and for me his daughter, I found a freedom I never had before. Just as I when I submit to the other authority structures created by God, in my family as a daughter and in my marriage as a wife…life just works better.

And I found Jesus everywhere I looked. Every nook and cranny. In the very air I breathed. The Mass that I had heard was empty of Jesus and nothing more than meaningless words and purposeless gestures from beginning to end, was suffused with Jesus.

I would like to tell you about The Mass because I want to show you in my own paltry pathetic words how I can say that my faith is dependent on Jesus Christ. Period. And how my RC faith supports that and does not detract from it.

Quote:
The ritual of the Mass could not possible be aught but sublime and beautiful because it has been fashioned by the Holy Ghost to be the one true worship in God’s one true Church. The same may be said of all the authorized ceremonial of the Catholic Church for all her liturgical services: It enshrines and adorns the inward offering of the faithful; it is the setting, the framework, so to call it, encircling some doctrinal truth, some revealed truth of God; it is the divinely appointed ceremony and form of giving back to God that which he himself first taught us. It is the belief of Catholics (as it is a fact) that Almighty God has shown us not only the right faith, but also the right form of worship. He has prescribed a method for offering him public adoration. He has not left us to haphazard or chance. Mass, then, is the liturgy that Almighty God has willed as the chief act of Christian worship, we have no right to attempt any other. Must it not, therefore, be lovely and attractive? “From the Kirk to the Catholic Church” in Where We Got The Bible: Our Debt To The Catholic Church by Henry G. Graham

Let me start at the beginning and give you a little framework about how I believe Sacred Scripture to speak about the subject of worship. First, worship as seen in the Old Testament is defined by God. We don't know the specific instructions given to Adam but we do know that when Cain had his own ideas about the way things should be, he was corrected by God. I see in the Old Testament that God gave the form of worship in detail and that any time folks got a hankering to tinker with the rules (2 Chronicles 26:16-23; Exodus 30:36-38; Leviticus 10:1-3) there were consequences. I see that throughout the Old Testament, God never left it up to "us" when it comes to what He wants from us in the way of worship......fortunately for us, because the Bible is full of examples of what happens when we take matters into our own hands. Nowhere in scripture do I see any indication that God is leaving it up-to-us in the New Covenant. He defined worship in the Old Covenant; I am left with the expectation that He will do so in the New Covenant. So when Jesus says at the Last Supper, during the last moments He will have before His Sacrifice on the cross, "Do this in memory of me," I have to believe that it is significant. He is facing His execution. Time is short. Whatever He says and does in those moments is not going to be one of the little things.

Old Testament worship was not only the foreshadowing of the coming perfect sacrifice, it also prefigured worship in the New Covenant. Under the Old Covenant the sin sacrifices were offered over and over to remind the people of the coming of the Lamb of God that would take the place of Isaac. In the New Covenant, the Perfect Sacrifice is made present to us in the offering of the Mass simultaneously calling to mind the Incarnation and acting as a foreshadowing of the Second Coming and the Feast of the Lamb in Revelation. In the Old Testament, Melchizedek, a priest and king, offered bread and wine prefiguring the bread and wine offered by Jesus, priest and king in the New Testament. (Hebrews 7:1-7) The sacrifice of Jesus is also prefigured in Abraham’s sacrifice of Isaac. Isaac carried his own wood up hill to one of the hills of what would later become Jerusalem only to be told by God that He would provide Himself the Lamb. But those are not the only significant images of Old Testament worship that are fulfilled in Jesus and establishment of worship in the New Covenant. The deliverance of the Israelites from the land of Egypt (a land gripped with a religion of death itself and the Israelites literally in bondage to death) prefigures our deliverance from sin. This is God’s metaphor for salvation written into the very lives and experiences of his Chosen People. The Passover lamb was killed and eaten…not simply killed…the blood placed on the doors and the Angel of Death passed over their homes. God however, did not intend to save the Israelites from just the Angel of Death. This was a rescue mission. Action was required. They had to gird their loins, eat the Passover dinner while standing and ready to leave; and then, they had to leave the bloody door behind taking with them the riches they were given, and flee the land of death. To escape the pursuing Egyptians, the Israelites passed through the waters of the Red Sea (prefiguring Baptism) and entered into the desert. There they begin their long preparation for entering the Promised Land. While wandering in the desert, God fed them on manna a substance that resembles bread but acts like flesh (gets wormy and rots not molds -- Exodus 16:20). God decreed Passover as a perpetual ordinance and establishes the OT sacrificial worship system. Again, we see offerings of both fine (wheat) flour (bread) and animal sacrifice with a differentiation between the holocaust offering which was not eaten and the sin sacrifice that was.

Later God’s only son, identified in the first line of the New Testament as Abraham’s son, carried the wood of the cross up the hill to be the Lamb provided by God. The very circumstances of his birth in a stable with the animals, visited by the shepherds that watched the flocks of animals destined to become temple sacrifices called to mind his destiny as a sin sacrifice. Driven into Jerusalem on the day the Passover lambs were brought into the city, it is thought that Jesus died at the same time as the afternoon sin sacrifice in the Temple. The sin sacrifice is at the center of what God demands for our reconciliation with Him. At the Last Supper, Jesus, the Perfect Sin Sacrifice, decreed that in the New Covenant, worship would be centered on His Sacrifice. He tied all of the threads of Old Testament worship into one miraculous memorial. Priest and King and Lamb, Bread and Wine, Body and Blood and just as the Israelites were required to eat the Passover Lamb, to eat the sin sacrifice so are we required to do so in the New Covenant. Just as God provided bread that acted like flesh to feed them in the time from their deliverance from the land of death before their entrance to the Promised Land, He has done the same for us. The Apostles, steeped in the prophetic rituals and remembrances of the Old Testament would have understood what eating the flesh of Jesus meant. If Jesus meant for Holy Communion to be anything other than his literal Body and Blood, He would have needed to explain that. Not vice versa. The Gospels repeatedly speak of details that mark Jesus as the fulfillment of the Passover Lamb/Sin Sacrifice….no broken bones (Exodus 12:46), wine from hyssop (Exodus 12:22), and when speaking of Jesus garment at the time of crucifixion John uses the same term used for the priests’ vestments when offering a sacrifice. Just as Jesus didn’t back away from the hard words He spoke in John 6, He didn’t soften what He said in those last hours before His Passion.

Old Testament worship was transformed by the Perfect Sacrifice. The Temple was no longer necessary but all of the elements of Old Testament worship remained. Instead of the imperfect ram that substituted for Abraham’s son, and the animal sacrifices that were to be offered repeatedly; Jesus established a new form that fulfilled all the elements of the Old Testament prophecies and practice and itself foreshadows the worship of heaven. It is only in the mystical re-presentation of the sacrifice of Jesus in the Mass that the threads of worship seen in the Old Testament are all brought together, remembered, renewed, and present a renewed foreshadowing of what is to come in heaven (numerous references in Revelation). Well-educated, devout Catholics believe that in the Mass we literally enter into the eternal worship as pictured in the Book of Revelation (CCC 1089, 1090, 1136). Jesus as Priest and Victim is always present at the altar in heaven where the angels sing for eternity “Holy, Holy, Holy” and it is we…bound in time and on earth that come and go from that altar in worship in the Mass.

Quote:
When a Roman Catholic “goes to church”, he sees himself as joining himself to something that is already going on. He sets aside both the hurly-burly of his domestic or professional situation and any preoccupation he may have with such patently excellent concerns as fellowship or chat or even certain vitality in the air. He has been summoned to the unum necessarium. He here takes his place – literally, he believes – with angels and archangels and with all the company of heaven…. Thomas Howard in On Being Catholic

(I highly recommend The Lamb’s Supper: The Mass as Heaven on Earth by Scott Hahn and On Being Catholic by Thomas Howard.)

I have often heard non-Catholics say that they appreciate the sense of reverence in the Catholic Mass. Heck...I said it myself before I was Catholic. I tell you honestly, that the "appreciation" I had of that reverence only scratched the surface of what was really there. I knew that Catholics bowed and kneeled but I never really understood how specific those actions were and the whys behind them. Let me try to walk you through some of the details of the Catholic Mass to try and show you how Christ is to the believing Catholic in the Mass.

When we first walk through the door and into the church, we dip our fingers in holy water and make the sign of the cross. Why? To remind ourselves that we enter the church through the waters of baptism. To renew our baptismal promises. In this simple gesture we proclaim our belief in the Trinity ("In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.") and remind ourselves why we are here (the symbol of the Cross).

Before we take our place in the pews, we turn toward the Tabernacle (prefigured in the Old Testament by the Holy of Holies) which holds the reserved consecrated communion hosts and therefore, by our Catholic beliefs, contains the Real Presence of Christ, and genuflect (kneeling and making the sign of the cross). In this way we acknowledge Christ's presence in the Sanctuary and His Lordship over us. If for some reason the Blessed Sacrament has been removed from the Tabernacle (the candle which indicates the presence of the Blessed Sacrament in the Tabernacle will be extinguished), Catholics will still bow toward the altar in recognition of the Sacrifice that Christ made for us on the Cross that is re-presented in the Mass. Furthermore, if at any time during the Mass (or if you are in the Sanctuary for another reason) you cross the from one side of the church to the other, walk to the front of the church, or away from the front of the church, or walk in front of the Tabernacle (or altar) devout Catholics solemnly bow or genuflect....every. time. As an aside, Catholics are often considered unfriendly because they do not stay after Mass and "chat." Well they may be unfriendly, but the not staying and chatting in the church comes from reverence. It is considered inappropriate to "chit-chat" in the Sanctuary in the literal presence of Jesus. He is Our Lord and we are always to be mindful and respectful of that while in the Sanctuary.

Now that we are in and sitting, we are encouraged to take a few moments in prayer to prepare for Mass (again chit-chat is discouraged) and especially to examine our conscience in preparation. As we stand to begin the celebration of Mass (and prayerful, mindful attendance is known as “assisting” at Mass rather than merely “attending” CCC 1140, 1142, 1143) the procession makes its way down the aisle. Leading the procession is the cross…the visible sign of our salvation possibly flanked by servers carrying candles to remind us that this is our hope. There may be more people following the cross, but the Book of the Gospels is held aloft just ahead of the priest who will be the principle celebrant. Not a lectionary, not a catechism, the Gospels. The Gospels which are the heart of Sacred Scripture because they tell us about Jesus, His incarnation, His Ministry, and His Passion and they provide a visible reminder of the importance of Sacred Scripture.

Liturgy of the Word/Mass of the Catechumens


As the Mass begins we again make the sign of the cross and again acknowledge the Trinity in whose name the proceedings are to be conducted and our need for redemption by the sacrifice of Jesus on the Cross.

Quote:
Greeting:

Priest: In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. (Matt. 28:19)

People: Amen (1 Chr 16:36)

Priest: The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all. (2 Cor 13:13; 1 Corinthians 1:3)

People: And also with you.


After a brief greeting we acknowledge our sinfulness to God. It is a personal and public confession of guilt. I acknowledge that because of my sin Jesus had to come and suffer and die. My relationship to God as a sinner in need of redemption is reinforced and I ask "Blessed Mary, ever Virgin, all the angels and saints, and you my brothers and sisters to pray for me to the Lord our God." Notice that the relationship expressed in this pray is that I am a sinner in need of help and I am asking everyone around me to remember me to God who is offended by my sin. There is no blurriness regarding divinity....at least for me. Then I immediately ask mercy from the Trinity acknowledging that forgiveness comes from God and asking for peace (reconciliation in the forgiveness of my sins).

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Penitential Rite (Luke 23:48; Zechariah 12:10; Luke 18:13):

All: I confess to almighty God, and to you my brothers and sisters, that I have sinned through my own fault. (Jas. 5:16) In my thoughts and in my words, (Rom. 12:16) In what I have done and what I have failed to do; (Jas 3:6) and I ask the Blessed Virgin Mary, all the angel and saints, and you, my brothers and sisters, to pray for me to the Lord our God. (1 Thess 5:25)

Priest: May almighty God have mercy on us, forgive us our sins, and bring us to everlasting life. (1 John 1:9)

People: Amen (1 Chr 16:36)

All: Lord have mercy. (Tb 8:4) Christ have mercy. (1 Tim 1:2) Lord have mercy. (also Matthew 9:27-30; Matthew 15:22-28; Mark 10:46-52)


In the next instant we celebrate the granting of that peace and remember the coming of Jesus as a baby in Bethlehem with a hymn of praise (sometimes we even sing it, often though it is only recited) known as the "Gloria" The opening line of this hymn comes from the angels’ song at Jesus birth "Glory to God in the highest and peace to His people on earth.".....we are again celebrating Jesus as the source of our Peace. The Peace that is granted through the forgiveness of sin that He alone made possible.

Quote:
Gloria:

All: Glory to God in the highest, and peace to his people on earth. (Luke 2:14)

Lord God, heavenly King, almighty God and Father, (Rev 19:6) we worship you, (Rev. 22:9) we give you thanks, (Eph. 5:20)we praise you for your glory. (Rev 7:12)

Lord Jesus Christ, only Son of the Father, (2 John 3) Lord God, Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world: have mercy on us; (John 1:29) You are seated at the right hand of the Father, receive our prayer. (Rom 8:34)

For you alone are the Holy One, (Luke 4:34) You alone are Lord, You alone are the Most High, Jesus Christ, (Luke 1:32) with the Holy Spirit, in the glory of God the Father. (John 14:26)


And then, we act on the faith we have expressed in a loving and forgiving God who provided us the Word Incarnate and we pray. The text of the opening prayer varies from week to week. I will quote a sample here from May 7, 2006:

Quote:
Almighty and ever-living God,
Give us new strength
From the courage of Christ our shepherd,
And lead us to join the saints in heaven,
Where he lives and reigns with you
And the Holy Spirit,
One God, forever and ever.


Next comes the Liturgy of the Word. On an average Sunday we hear a reading from the Old Testament (Romans 15:4), one from the Psalms, one from the New Testament, and then the Gospel reading (Mark 14:9; Matthew 24:14; Revelation 14:6). The OT reading is always directly tied to the Gospel reading. (Easter Vigil Mass has up to ten large portions of scripture read.) The scripture is read from a special pulpit, called the ambo, that is set aside for the reading of the Word of God and the homilies. Announcements are not allowed from this pulpit....well at least they are not supposed to be made from there. Not everyone knows this rule and I suspect that dispensation is granted for very small churches without appropriate facilities. The point is that wherever possible we are to give a special place of honor to the reading and hearing of Sacred Scripture. The hearing of scripture is important in the Catholic Church because James 1:22-23 tells us that we are to not to just hear the word but we are to be doers of the word and Romans 10:17 tells us that faith comes through hearing (not reading) the Word. The Catechism of the Catholic Church strongly encourages faithful Catholics to read Sacred Scripture regularly; nevertheless, the Catholic Church is mindful that the literal sense of scripture cannot be ignored and that we must also hear the words of Sacred Scripture. For this reason if you attend Mass daily, you will hear very nearly the entire Bible read aloud to you in the course of three years and a very substantial portion if you only attend on Sundays. After the readings, the lector announces "The Word of the Lord" and the congregation affirms "Thanks be to God.” (Romans 6:17-18; Romans 7:24-25; 1 Corinthians 15:56-57; 2 Corinthians 2:14; 2 Corinthians 9:15) When the Gospel is read, the congregation stands in honor of Jesus because the Gospel is the life, ministry, and words of our Lord and Savior, Jesus. During Mass, only a Priest or a Deacon is allowed to read the Gospel (we are allowed to read the Gospels outside of Mass of course). Preceding the Gospel reading we trace the sign of the cross on our foreheads (calling to mind Revelation 7:3 and 14:1), our lips, and our hearts accompanied by a prayer that God would keep his words on in our hearts and minds and on our lips. (Luke 8:12)

Click here to get today’s liturgical readings from the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

After the homily (2 Tim 4:1-2) we recite a statement of faith usually in the form of the Nicene Creed.

Quote:
Profession of Faith (the Nicene (or Apostles) Creed)

All:

We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, (Gen 14:19) of all that is seen and unseen. (Col 1:16)

We believe in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only Son of God, (Luke 1:35) eternally begotten of the Father, God from God, Light from Light, True God from True God, begotten not made, one in being with the Father. (Heb 1:3) Through him all things were made. (John 1:2-3) For us men and for our salvation he came down from heaven: (John 3:13) by the power of the Holy Spirit he was born of the Virgin Mary, (Matt 1:18) and became man. For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate, (John 19:16) he suffered, died and was buried. On the third day he rose again in fulfillment of the Scriptures. (1 Cor 15:3-4) He ascended into heaven (Luke 24:51) and is seated at the right hand of the Father. (Col 3:1) He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead (2 Tim 4:1) and his kingdom will have no end. (Luke 1:33)

We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of Life, (Acts 2:17) who proceeds from the Father and the Son. (John 14:16) With the Father and Son he is worshiped and glorified. He has spoken through the prophets. (1 Peter 1:10-11)

We believe in one holy, catholic and apostolic Church. (Rom 12:5) We acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins. (Acts 2:38) We look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come. (Rom 6:5) Amen


The Apostle’s Creed (simpler) is generally reserved for Masses that are primarily for children. Again, the focus is on the Trinity and the means of our salvation through Jesus Christ. At the words "by the power of the Holy Spirit" we bow...in honor of the Holy Spirit. In a very real sense, Catholics pray a prayer of Salvation at every Mass. This is followed by prayers of the faithful. In an act of faith reinforcing what we have just said, we offer our petitions both general and private to God.

Now we are just getting to the part where we really focus on Jesus. What has gone before was just to remind us that we were sinners, that God provided His Son for our salvation.

I recall to mind the events on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13-35) where Jesus spoke to the Apostles on the road at length from the scriptures (Liturgy of the Word) and their hearts burned within them (v. 32) and so they asked Him to come and stay with them (v. 29) and they knew Him in the breaking of the Bread. (Liturgy of the Eucharist) (v. 35). I have had Our Lord speak to me from the scriptures both in the written form and in persona Christi as the Priest spoke to me to explain the Sacred Scripture just as Jesus did for the Apostles. (No…the Priest is not divine, nor is he actually Christ. He has only been given the authority to act in the place of Christ.) Now it is time to beg Jesus to remain with me and I joyfully await knowing Him in the breaking of the bread.

Liturgy of the Eucharist/Mass of the Faithful


The gifts (offering, bread, and wine) are brought to the altar and prepared. (Malachi 3:10) I try to remember the loaves and the fishes and wonder that God accepts our tiny gifts and does something marvelous with them. Without God all that we have is foul, but He takes our gifts…our possessions, our deeds, our hearts, our thoughts…all that we have and are, and purifies them. The offering is set to the side and the bread and wine are blessed and prepared. The priest takes a drop of water (which symbolizes humanity) and places it in the wine (symbolizing the divinity of Christ) the blessing said over the cup is derived from the Jewish Kiddush and in imitation of Christ at the Last Supper when He took the bread and wine and blessed it. The priest then washes his hands. This ritualizes the prayer of Psalm 51 from which he recites (usually inaudibly) “Lord wash away my sins, cleanse me from my iniquities” and recalls the act of Pilate at the condemnation of Jesus.

Quote:
Priest: Blessed are you, Lord, God of all creation. Through your goodness we have this bread to offer, which earth has given and human hands have made. (Eccl. 3:13) It will become for us the bread of life. (John 6:35)

People: Blessed be God forever. (Ps 68:36)

Priest: Blessed are you, Lord, God of all creation. Through your goodness we have this wine to offer, fruit of the vine and work of human hands. It will become our spiritual drink. (Luke 22:17-18)

People: Blessed be God forever. (Ps 68:36)

Priest: Pray, brethren, that our sacrifice may be acceptable to God, the almighty Father. (Heb. 12:28)

People: May the Lord accept the sacrifice at your hands for the praise and glory of his name, for our sake and the good of all his Church. (Ps 50:23)

The Eucharistic prayers that follow start with a preface. Here I will quote from Cyril of Jerusalem in 350 A.D. Notice that the words of the priest have hardly changed in the last 1700 years. In fact all of the elements of the Mass and very often the very words of the Mass that have been outlined show up in the earliest records of the Church:

Quote:
Originally Posted by St. Cyril
The priest cries out: “Lift up your hearts!” For in this most solemn hour it is necessary for us to have our hearts raised up with God, and not fixed below, on the earth and earthly things. It is as if the priest instructs us at this hour to dismiss all physical cares and domestic anxieties, and to have our hearts in heaven with the benevolent God. Then you answer: “We have lifted them up to the Lord,” giving assent to it by acknowledgment that you make. Let no one come here, then, who could say with his mouth, “We have lifted them up to the Lord,” while he is preoccupied with physical cares.

Quote:
Eucharistic Prayers:

Priest: Lift up your hearts.

People: We lift them up to the Lord. (Lam 3:41)

Priest: Let us give thanks to the Lord Our God. (Col 3:17)

People: It is right to give him thanks and praise. (Col 1:3)

This is followed by the acclamation we hear in Isaiah 6:3, Mark 11:9-10 and in heaven itself in Revelation 4:8 “Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord God Almighty…” Remember we believe that the praise and worship of The Lamb (Jesus) as Priest and Victim is eternally present in heaven and that through the Mass we enter into that very praise and worship of heaven. As Catholics, parousia, or the Second Coming has two simultaneous meanings. Christ literally comes to us in the Eucharist in every Mass and even so, we also look for the Second Coming described in Acts 1:11. As Catholics we are not only looking for that time when we are fully present, fully alive, and fully aware in heaven to join in that worship we also believe that in this life we join into the worship of heaven even if we do not perceive it with our senses every time we go to Mass. And because we believe we are about to literally enter the Presence of Jesus, we hit our knees, because we read in scripture that at “the name of Jesus every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus is Lord.”

Quote:
Preface acclamation:

All: Holy, holy, holy Lord, God of power and might, heaven and earth are full of your glory. (Is 6:3) Hosanna in the highest. Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord. Hosanna in the highest. (Mark 11:9-10)

And now comes the recitation of the events of the Last Supper, where Jesus set as a memorial for all time the bread and wine becoming His Body and Blood. He miraculously unites all the pieces of Old Testament worship: the bread and wine offered by priest and king, Melchizedek, with the sacrifices prefigured by Abraham, Passover, and the Temple; we join all the citizens of heaven in the worship of Jesus, simultaneously Priest and Victim eternally present at the altar of heaven; and we remember the terrible price He paid for our redemption. The cost of the blood on the doorposts prefigured so long ago.

Quote:
Eucharistic prayer:

[There are four of these, based on ancient prayers of the Church. Eucharistic Prayer Two follows as an example:]

Priest: Lord, you are holy indeed, the fountain of all holiness. (2 Macc. 14:36) Let your spirit come upon these gifts (water and wine and bread) to make them holy, so that they may become the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ. Before he was given up to death, (Phil 2:8) a death he freely accepted, (John 10:17-18) he took bread and gave you thanks. He broke the bread, gave it to his disciples, and said: Take this all of you, and eat it: this is my body which will be given up for you. When supper was ended, he took the cup. Again he gave thanks and praise, gave the cup to his disciples, and said: 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. Do this is memory of me. (Mark 14:22-25) Let us proclaim the mystery of faith.

All: Dying you destroyed our death, rising you restored our life, Lord Jesus, come in glory. (Heb 2:14-15)

Priest: In memory of his death and resurrection, we offer you, Father, this life-giving bread, this saving cup. (John 6:51) We thank you for counting us worthy to stand in your presence and serve you. May all of us who share in the body and blood of Christ be brought together in unity by the Holy Spirit. (1 Cor.10:17) Lord, remember your Church throughout the world; make us grow in love together with our Pope and our bishop, and all the clergy. Remember our brothers and sisters who have gone to their rest in the hope of rising again: bring them and all the departed into the light of your presence. (2 Macc 12:45-46) Have mercy on us all; make us worthy to share eternal life with Mary, the virgin Mother of God, with the apostles and with all the saints who have done your will throughout the ages. May we praise you in union with them, and give you glory though your Son, Jesus Christ. (2 Thes 1:4-5) Through him, with him, in him, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all glory and honor is yours, almighty Father, for ever and ever.

All: Amen. (Rom 11:36)

At the moment of consecration (where the Priest says the words “This is my Body” and “This is my Blood”) we bow our heads and pray silently “My Lord and My God.” The amen which closes the Eucharistic prayer is called the “Great Amen” because that Amen is repeated several times (usually in song) to give our assent and to show that we have been united with the Priest in all that He has done.

The Eucharistic Prayer is followed by a recitation of The Lord’s Prayer (Matthew 6:9-13; Luke 11:2-4). We pray again as an act of faith, that God in heaven hears us because of the reconciliation provided by Jesus. The Lord’s Prayer reminds us that our destination is with God in heaven (prefigured in the Mass) and that God will glorify His Name in answer to the prayer of Jesus (John 12:28); that although Jesus has already come to us in the Mass that the Second Coming is drawing near (Luke 21:31). We remind ourselves that we are dependant on him for our sustenance (Luke 14:15); that we are forgiven but that we must also extend the peace God has given us to others (Matthew 18:34-35). We ask to be kept from the final trial (Revelation 3:10) and delivered from evil (Luke 21:28).

Quote:
Communion Rite:

The Lord’s Prayer:

All: Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. (Matt 6:9-13)

Priest: Deliver us, Lord, from every evil and grant us peace in our day. In your mercy keep us from sin and protect us from all anxiety as we wait in joyful hope for the coming of our savior, Jesus Christ. (John 17:15)

All: For the kingdom the power and the glory are yours, now and forever. Amen

And then there is Peace. But the Peace that is granted to us by Our Lord is not for us alone. We must show it to others (Matthew 5:23-24; 1 Corinthians 16:20; 2 Corinthians 13:12; Romans 16:16; 1 Thessalonians 5:26) and in this part of the Mass, we reach out to our brothers and sisters in love and friendship. It is also a visible reminder that we must always be at peace with our brothers and sisters before approaching the altar of God (Matthew 5:23)

Quote:
Priest: Lord Jesus Christ, you said to your apostles; I leave you peace, my peace I give to you. (John 14:27) Look not on our sins, but on the faith of your Church, and grant us the peace and unity of your kingdom where you live forever and ever.

Priest: The peace of the Lord be with you always! (John 20:19)

People: And also with you!

[The priest then directs the people to exchange a sign, such as a handshake or a kiss, or a word of God’s peace to one another.]

Here the priest breaks the bread as Jesus did at the Last Supper (Luke 22:19). He also breaks off a small piece of a consecrated host and drops it into the chalice. This is called co-mingling. The bread and wine are consecrated separately representing the death of Our Lord. The co-mingling of the Body and Blood represents the Resurrection and Jesus’ victory over death. It also symbolizes the unity of the Church. In the early Church, a piece the Eucharist was taken from the Pope’s Mass to other churches and mingles with their Eucharistic species to show that all of the churches were one with each other. In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus prayed that we would be one as His Father and He were one that the world might believe. (John 17:20-23) Again we see in the Catholic Mass a stark lack of symbolism in that and a headlong plunge into the harsh literalness of Our Lord’s words.

Again I am reminded of the Road to Emmaus where they recognized Jesus in the breaking of the bread. (Luke 24:31)

Our response is in imitation of the centurion who tells Jesus that he is not worthy to receive him and that Jesus can heal his servant from a distance. (Luke 7:6-7) Jesus praises the centurion’s faith. (Luke 7:9)

Quote:
Breaking of the Bread:

All: Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world: have mercy on us. Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world: have mercy on us. Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, grant us peace. (John 1:29)

Where are the words to describe receiving my Lord in Holy Communion? To a certain extent I can describe why I believe the way that I do. I can even glance off the surface of the mysteries leading to this point. But to receive the Lamb of God, the Bread of Heaven, into my body? There are not words. My Passover Lamb, the sacrifice for my sins, Bread of Heaven…Manna for my time here in the wilderness and I long for the Feast Heaven. For the day when my Savior will welcome me home.

I am further blessed with the privilege of being allowed to serve Holy Communion in my parish. I raise the host for each communicant and declare “The Body of Christ” (or if I am a cup minister “The Blood of Christ”) and after bowing solemnly, the communicant responds with “Amen!” I am often struck in the course of these duties with a sense of Christ’s overwhelming love for each of these precious people and how very different they are. Each face, each set of eyes that meet mine, some devout, some appearing not to be, some with faces shining with joy and others bearing the traces of the stress of difficult lives….Jesus knows them each, the corners of their hearts, the secret places of their being, the very number of hairs on their heads and He meets them precisely where they are. I am humbled that I am allowed to be the tiniest of his servants and that He deigns to use me to serve His Body and Blood to others. Of course, the wonder of it all is that Our Creator uses any of us at all, ever, to accomplish his purposes.

Quote:
Communion:

Priest: This is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. Happy are those who are called to his supper. (Rev. 19:9)

People: Lord, I am not worthy to receive you, but only say the word and I shall be healed. (Matt 8:8)

[Communion is distributed to the faithful at the altar by the priest and lay ministers.]

After receiving Holy Communion, we take our places and kneel in a time of intimate prayer while the rest of the congregation receives. There are many, many prayers that have been composed for this time. I personally like the words of Simeon in Luke 2:29-32 "Now, Master, you may let your servant go in peace, according to your word, for my eyes have seen your salvation, which you prepared in sight of all the peoples, a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and glory for your people Israel." And then I spend time praying as the Lord leads and like Mary, pondering on these things in my heart. (Luke 2:19)

After Holy Communion has been distributed, the Priest, Deacon, and the Eucharistic ministers (the lay people who help distribute Holy Communion) see to the reposition of the Body and Blood. Because we believe that Our Lord is actually present in the Eucharist, it is treated with great reverence and precautions are taken to make sure that the consecrated hosts are not subject to careless treatment or sacrilege. Any extra consecrated hosts are placed in the Tabernacle where they are used to bring Holy Communion to the sick and homebound of the Parish and local nursing homes and hospitals. If there is remaining Precious Blood in the cup, it is consumed. The vessels used for serving are rinsed and because the rinse water still contains traces of the Body and Blood the rinse water is also consumed. After the Mass, the vessels receive a more thorough purification.

Finally, we reach the point of the Mass from which is derives its name. The blessing and dismissal. In Latin, the Mass ends with ite missa est. which means ‘go, it is sent’ with ‘it’ meaning the church. We have worked through the plan of salvation from sinfulness, to incarnation, to Jesus’ life (in the scriptures), His death, and resurrection. This part of the Mass that recalls Jesus final instructions at the Ascension when the disciples were sent into the world.

Quote:
Dismissal:

Priest: Blessed be the name of the Lord. Now and forever. (Dan 2:20) May almighty God bless you, the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. (Luke 24:51) Go in peace (Luke 7:50) to love and serve the Lord. (2 Chr 35:3)

[During the blessing the people make the Sign of the Cross, the traditional sign of the baptized and a public sign of their belief in the power of God.]

People: Thanks be to God. (2 Cor 9:15)

Usually a hymn is sung during concluding rites. The priest goes to the altar and kisses it. He joins the others ministers, bows, and then preceded by the cross, they exit the church.

As we leave the church (no chit-chatting) we again genuflect acknowledging the Lorship of Jesus and His presence in the Tabernacle. We bless ourselves again with holy water on the way out, again claiming our place in the family of God by right of our Baptism.

Quote:
O truly sublime and wonderful worship of the Roman Catholic Church! Beautiful outwardly, beautiful inwardly, made according to the pattern God himself has shown, no marvel is it that so many distracted and tempest-tossed souls have been riveted and fascinated and consoled by it. No wonder that is should have satisfied their heart and their intellect as well as their senses, for Jesus Christ, “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world,” is in it. He is the center of the worship of the Catholic Church, for he is the Sacrifice of the Church. Where We Got The Bible: Our Debt To The Catholic Church by Henry G. Graham

As a Catholic, the Mass completely focuses me on Jesus and the entire plan of salvation. It is the lynchpin of it all and that's where the worship is. The Liturgy explains the Sacred Scripture and Sacred Scripture illuminates the Liturgy and together they give a clearer picture of Jesus than either alone. Every detail....in many cases even the architecture of the Church…serve to show the mysteries of faith. I am in (Although recently we almost had Mass in the First Baptist Church in town when our air conditioner broke down. They are seriously and truly our sister church. We love them and they love us.) points to Jesus and His sacrifice on the cross. And as a Catholic there is much that we to believe to be the literal making present of the mysteries of Salvation. I remember that as a Protestant judging Catholics based on what I knew of the Catholic faith it was always easy for me to see just how "idolatrous" they were. Coming into the Catholic faith I have to say it wasn't education regarding Catholic teaching about "the saints" that made me realize how I had misjudged (although that certainly was also important), it was education about the Mass and the Eucharist that put things into perspective. Say what you will about me as a Catholic, I understand that you probably continue to take issue with lots of things that I believe, but please don’t hastily judge the place of Jesus in my worship or my life based on the words the divisions in Our Lord’s church have made necessary.

Now if any of you ever have a hankering to actually attend a Mass in the Catholic Church, I want to give you fair warning. The above description covers just one variation of The Mass. Some parts are always the same. Some parts have several variations from which to select such as the Eucharistic prayer and the penitential rite. Under some circumstances the celebrant might opt not to recite the creed and there are some portions which might be performed silently by the celebrant such as preparation of the gifts. There are also some small variations based on the liturgical season. For example, the Alleluia that precedes the gospel reading is omitted during Lent. Below I have listed some references that might be helpful to those who want to know what the Roman Catholic Church actually teaches and why:

Searchable Catechism of the Catholic Church: http://www.scborromeo.org/ccc.htm

Scripture Catholic: http://www.scripturecatholic.com/

Coming Home Network: http://www.chnetwork.org/

Catholic Bridge: http://www.catholicbridge.com/index.html

Bible Christian Society: http://www.biblechristiansociety.com/

Instruction Concerning Worship Of The Eucharistic Mystery: http://www.ewtn.com/library/PAPALDOC/JP2INAES.HTM

I will be happy to email this in the form of a Word document to anyone who would like it: redneckwomandesigns*at*yahoo*dot*com
Posted by Red Neck Woman at 21:04:13 | Permanent Link | Comments (2) |
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1 - I cant wait to go to Mass again, especially after reading this. I went with a friend last week and left with so many questions. Why do they dip their fingers in that water and then do the sign of the cross? What does it mean? Why do they bow and do the sign of the cross before entering the pews? I asked my husband who is catholic but he wasn't sure why. Now I know. Thank you for answering my questions.
Also, last week when I went, I was aware for the first time just how much the Mass is focused on Jesus. I had never noticed before because I was too busy judging catholics as idolators. My eyes were truly opened to the truth. Thank you for going into detail about each part of the Mass. It truly is Christ centered. It is all about Him. I cant wait to go again. This time with even greater understanding.

Debbijmc (Comment this)

Written by: Debbi at 2007/06/30 - 10:35:25
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2 - Dear Debbi, I am so happy for you!! And thrilled that anything you found here could play even a small part in helping you on your journey. Please give us a report on The Grill. I can't wait! (Comment this)

Written by: Red Neck Woman at 2007/06/30 - 11:40:14 in reply to: 1
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