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The Catholic Tradition of Eucharistic Theology Towards The Third Millennium

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Theological Studies

55(1994)

THE CATHOLIC TRADITION OF EUCHARISTIC


THEOLOGY: TOWARDS THE THIRD MILLENNIUM
EDWARD J. KILMARTESr, S.J.
Pontifical Oriented Institute, Rome

HE of this article is that the prevailing official Catholic eu-


T THESIS
charistie theology that has its roots in the synthesis that began to
take on characteristic traits in the 12th and 13th centuries no longer
does justice to this central Christian mystery. Part 1 describes the key
historical stages of the development of this synthesis from the 12th to
the 20th century. Part 2 identifies the characteristic traits of the re-
sulting eucharistie theology along with the more significant weak-
nesses imposed by these traits. Part 3 consists of a brief assessment, in
which our demonstration of the insufficiencies of this prevailing Cath-
olic synthesis makes it clear that it is incapable of providing the start-
ing point for a truly comprehensive theology of the Eucharist.
Part 4 will take up the question: What path opens the way to the
formulation of a genuine systematic eucharistie theology? Our re-
sponse outlines the salient features of a systematic theology of eucha-
ristie sacrifice which would be more consistent with the Church's li-
turgical life of prayer, more consistent with the various aspects and
elements of the eucharistie mystery itself, and more consistent with
the way Catholics understand that in the Eucharist they are present to
Christ's salvific acts and participate in the mystery of God in Christ.
HISTORY OF THE PREVAILING SYNTHESIS
The average modern Catholic synthesis of eucharistie theology, the
one that receives support in the official teaching of the Roman magis-
terium, is a product of the Thomistic tradition but certainly not
equated with the eucharistie theology of St. Thomas Aquinas. Ele-
ments of the eucharistie theology of John Duns Scotus are included in
this average synthesis to the extent that they could be harmonized
with the so-called Thomistic approach.

From Scotus-Biel to the Thomistic Synthesis


The Western scholastic synthesis, inaugurated in the 12th and 13th
centuries, is a splinter tradition related especially to the first-
millennium eucharistie theologies of the Western churches, but clearly
distinguished from them in virtue of the process of reception in a new
historical and cultural context. Furthermore this new synthesis never
405
406 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

existed in a pure state. From the outset it gave birth to several dis-
tinctive theological approaches. Especially noteworthy is the eucharis-
tie theology of the 13th-century John Duns Scotus which was renewed
by Gabriel Biel at the end of the 15th century. This synthesis domi-
nated the field well into the 16th century. Since that time it has been
discarded in favor of a 16th- and 17th-century Thomistic elaboration.
The basic difference between the Scotus-Biel synthesis and the
Thomistic variation derives from the different ways in which the
Christological and ecclesiological dimensions are integrated with one
another. In the Scotus-Biel version the consecration of the elements of
bread and wine is attributed to the action of Christ which is mediated
by the presiding priest when he recites the ipsissima verba Christi
contained in the liturgical narrative of the institution of the Eucharist.
On the other hand the offering of the eucharistie sacrifice is attributed
to the presiding priest insofar as he represents the Church, the prin-
cipal offerer (offerens principalis). Thus the presiding priest is said to
represent Christ exclusively when he consecrates the bread and wine,
and to represent the Church, the "principal offerer," when he offers the
body and blood of Christ in the anamnesis-offering prayer.1 On the
contrary the later Thomistic synthesis explains that the moment of
consecration of the eucharistie elements by the priest acting as repre-
sentative of Christ is also the moment in which the priest offers the
eucharistie sacrifice under the same formality, that is, in persona
Christi.
Thomas's Synthesis and the Later Thomistic Synthesis
The position of the later Thomistic school, which is explained at
length below, should not be confused with the original teaching of
Thomas Aquinas. The intimate organic unity between the worship of
Christ, the High Priest of the Church's worship, and the worship of the
Church, as explained by Aquinas, is conditioned by the special role of
the presiding priest who proclaims the Eucharistie Prayer in the name
of the Church and consecrates the bread and wine, acting in the person
of Christ (in persona Christi). But it is not certain that Aquinas con-
sidered this moment of consecration of the eucharistie elements by the
priest acting as representative of Christ as also the moment in which
the priest offers the eucharistie sacrifice under the same formality,
that is, in persona Christi.
1
John Duns Scotus, Quaestiones cuodlibetales, Quaestio 20. Opera omnia 26 (Paris: L.
Vives, 1895) 298-331; Gabriellis Biel Canonis Missae Espositio, pars prima, lectiones
26-27, ed. Heiko A. Oberman and W. T. Courtenay (Wiesbaden: Steiner, 1963) 240-73.
See Edward J. Kilmartin, 'The One Fruit and the Many Fruits of the Mass," Proceedings
of the Catholic Theological Society of America 21 (1966) 37-69, at 50-51.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 407
It is at least questionable whether the later Thomistic understand-
ing of this relationship of the ecclesiological to the Christological di-
mension of the eucharistie sacrifice was taught by the Angelic Doctor
himself. Aquinas held that the consecrated elements of bread and
wine, described as the body given and the blood shed, represent sym-
bolically what happened on Calvary when the sacrificed body was
marked with the blood of the cross once and for all. Hence the Angelic
Doctor describes the twofold consecration as the image of the passion of
Christ, and the result of the consecration as the real presence of the
Christus passus under the forms of bread and wine.
An organic link is affirmed between the historical sacrifice of the
cross and the eucharistie sacrifice. It is understood to consist in the
identity of the victim of the cross; the presence of Christ under the
signs of the passion; the identity of the principal priest: Christ the high
priest of the worship of the Church; the application of the fruits of the
cross in and through the eucharistie sacrifice.2
This explanation of the connection between the historical sacrifice of
the cross and the eucharistie sacrifice was commonly taught among
contemporary theologians. Whether Aquinas strayed from this teach-
ing of the day which affirmed the effective presence of the past histor-
ical sacrifice of the cross in the Mass in virtue of the application of its
salutary effects is a matter of debate.

Vonier and Casel


Dom Odo Casel maintained that Aquinas held for a mystery pres-
ence of the historical sacrifice of the cross objectively realized in a
sacramental mode of existence on the altar. His dependence on Dom
Ansgar Vomer's systematic exposition of Aquinas's teaching on this
issue is well known.3
Vomer's point of departure for his interpretation of Aquinas is the
assertion of Aquinas that "this sacrament is called sacrifice." But how

2
The younger Aquinas taught that limited blessings are offered through the Mass ex
opere operato; the older Aquinas is alleged to have attributed the Mass fruits only to the
measure of the devotion of those who offer or for whom the Mass is offered. As regards
the offering for the dead, the fruits measured by the devotion of the offerers are under-
stood to be applied according to divine justice (Karl Rahner and Angelus Hâussling, The
Celebration of the Eucharist [New York: Herder & Herder, 1968] 47, 79, 81-82.
3
Ansgar Vonier, A Key to the Doctrine of the Eucharist (Westminster, Md.: Newman,
1948) passim. Dom Odo Casel himself claimed support from Aquinas on the ground of
Ansgar Vomer's systematic study. On the subject of the relation of Casel's theory to the
teaching of Thomas Aquinas, cf. Β. Paschmann, " 'Mysteriengegenwart' im Licht des hl.
Thomas," Theologische Quartalschrift 116 (1935) 53-115; J. Betz, Eucharistie in der Zeit
der griechischen Väter 1/1 (Freiburg im Br.: Herder, 1955) 248.
408 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

is the sacrament understood to be a sacrifice? Vonier interprets Aqui-


nas's thought in the following way. First there is the general principle
applicable to all sacraments: What is contained in the sacrament is
known through the signs that constitute the sacrament. As applied to
the Eucharist the sign signifies sacrifice, and the word of consecration
works sacramentally according to the power of signification.4 But the
eucharistie sacrament contains a representation of the broken Christ
on Calvary. Since the phase of Christ dead on the cross is represented
realistically, we have a memorial in the sense of the representation of
the real death of Christ which took place in historical time. This does
not mean that Christ is immolated anew. Rather the historical immo-
lation on Calvary is rendered present through the eucharistie body and
blood. There is one sacrifice of Christ of which the sacrament is the
representation of the natural sacrifice. The act is new, not the sacrifice.
There is the repetition of the thing in the sacramental sphere—the
thing that is immutable in itself.
Among those who agree with Vomer's interpretation of Aquinas on
this issue is Dom Burkhard Neunheuser, a modern representative of
the School of Maria Laach. Especially on the basis of ST 3, q. 79, a. 1
and q. 83, a. 1, Neunheuser summarizes Aquinas's teaching on the
Eucharist as sacrifice in this way: "The Eucharist is image (imago
repraesentativa) of the passion of Christ, but image full of effective
power."5 What this means is more clearly expressed by him as follows:
"The Eucharist is a sacrifice as sacrament of the body and blood of
Christ . . . for the accomplishment of the sacrament, i.e., the conver-
sion, the placing of the twofold form of the body and blood of Christ, is
simultaneously the sacrifice, celebrated by the consecrating priest,
who here, as instrument of the Lord offering himself historically on the
cross, represents the one sacrifice of Christ."6
Among those who question Casel's interpretation of Aquinas we can
mention Ferdinand Pratzner. Pratzner holds that Aquinas did not
stray from the contemporary view that the consecration of bread and

4
Thomas Aquinas, Summa theologiae (ST) 3, q. 78, a. 4 ad 3; a 2 ad 2.
5
Burkhard Neunheuser, Eucharistie in Mittelalter und Neuzeit. Handbuch der Dog*
mengeschichte IV 4b (Freiburg im Br.: Herder, 1963) 41. See Polycarp Wegenaer, Heils-
gegenwart: Das Heilswerk Christi und die virtus divina in den Sakramenten unter be-
sonderer Berücksichtigung von Eucharistie und Taufe. Liturgiegeschichtliche Quellen
und Forschungen 33 (Munster i. W., 1958) 63. Both Neunheuser and Wegenaer follow
the lead of D. Winzen who concluded that Aquinas maintained the sacramental presence
of the historical sacrifice of the cross on the basis that "the sacramental reality is strictly
determined by the sacramental form" (Anmerkungen und Kommentar zu Band 30 der
deutschen Thomas-Ausgabe: Die Geheimnis der Eucharistie [Salzburg: Pustet, 1938] 566).
6
B. Neunheuser, Eucharistie in Mittelalter und Neuzeit 40.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISÏÏC THEOLOGY 409
wine has the value of a commemorative sign which elicits the subjec-
tive recall of the historical passion.7
Going beyond the Evidence
There are three reasons which can be adduced to show that the
interpretation of the teaching of Aquinas by Casel and Vonier goes
beyond the evidence: the ambiguity of the textual evidence introduced
by Vonier; Aquinas's metaphysical explanation of the abiding presence
of the historical salvine acts of Christ; and the formal reason assigned
by the Angelic Doctor in the Commentary on the Sentences for the
ecclesiological role of the presiding priest in the offering of the eucha-
ristie sacrifice.
Ambiguity of the Textual Evidence. In ST 3, q. 83, a. 1, Aquinas asks
whether Christ is immolated in the sacrament. Two reasons are given.
First, the Augustinian saying that "the image of a thing bears the
name of the thing." On this point Aquinas has already stated that the
separation of the species is a "certain image representative of the pas-
sion of Christ, which is his true immolation."8 Second, Aquinas refers
to the fact that through the sacrament we are made participants of the
fruits of the passion.
As for the first mode, Aquinas recalls that Christ is also immolated
in the figures of the Old Covenant. As for the second mode, however, "it
is proper to this sacrament that in its celebration Christ is immolated."
Here Aquinas makes immolation coterminous with representation and
application. But he distinguishes between representation and applica-
tion because, while both of these belong to the New Covenant, only
representation belongs to the Old Covenant. Also in ST 3, q. 83, ad 2,
Aquinas says that the celebration of this sacrament is the "represen-
tative image of the passion . . . just as the altar represents the cross on
which Christ was immolated in his own nature." And in the same
article, ad 3, the priest is said to be the image of Christ, in whose place
and by whose power he pronounces the words that make the consecra-
tion, and so in a certain way the priest and victim are the same.

7
Ferdinand Pratzner, Messe und Kreuzesopfer: Die Krise der sakramentalen Idee bei
Luther und in der mittelalterlichen Scholastik. Wiener Beiträge zur Theologie 29 (Wien:
Herder, 1970) 70-75. Alexander Gerken agrees with Pratzner, but he attributes Aqui-
nas's position to the lack of a relational ontology of the person. According to Gerken such
an ontology implies the presence of the historical passion wherever the risen Lord is
present. Christ who became the man for others through the actualization of his rela-
tional nature is present sacramentally as the one who offered himself to the Father for
us. Person and act are inseparable ("Kann sich die Eucharistielehre ändern?" Zeitschrift
für katholische Theologie 97 [1975] 427 n. 17).
8
ST3,q. 79, a. 1.
410 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

Now none of these and similar texts introduced by Vonier prove his
thesis which corresponds to that of Casel, and which exercised a deci-
sive influence on Casel's systematic thinking. Rather such texts seem
to support Pratzner's conclusion. These texts witness more easily to the
common opinion of the day which maintained that the separate con-
secration of the bread and wine has the value of a commemorative sign
which elicits the subjective recall of the historical passion. Conse-
quently it follows that the ecclesiological aspect of the eucharistie sac-
rifice is not explainable as a corollary of the priest's role of represent-
ing Christ the head of the Church in the sacramental renewal of his
once-for-all self-offering on the cross at the moment of consecration of
the eucharistie gifts of bread and wine.
Aquinas's Metaphysical Explanation. However if Pratzner correctly
judges that Aquinas did not affirm the objective real presence of the
historical salvific acts of Christ on the altar at the moment of conse-
cration, this does not exclude, in another sense, what is axiomatic for
Aquinas. He maintained that the historical life and activity of Christ
is really present in all sacramental celebrations of the Church: a pres-
ence in which one or other event of Christ's life is highlighted and to
which corresponds the offer of the proper dispositions to respond to the
saving event which is represented. However this mystery presence of
the historical redemptive work of Christ is not conceived as grounded
on a timeless trait. The notion that the saving acts of Christ become
"eternalized," and therefore accessible to become sacramentally
present in an objective way in and through the sacramental liturgies of
the Church appears to be foreign to Aquinas's thought, or at least
marginal to his typical approach to the subject.
Aquinas explicitly teaches that because the humanity of Christ is
the instrument of the divinity in the economy of salvation (instrumen-
tum conjunctum), ex conséquente, all actions and passions of Christ
instrumentally work for human salvation in virtute divinitatis (ST 3,
q. 48, a. 6). Ultimately he bases the real presence of the historical
salvific acts of Jesus on the divine plan of salvation that the single
transitus of Jesus from suffering to glory is the way of salvation for all
humanity. Consequently, from the divine perspective, removes of
space and time are not relevant to the ultimate intelligibility of the
human life and activity of Jesus. The timeless God, before whom all
events are present,9 acts on a time-conditioned world. The time-
conditioned occurrences are the consequent terms of God's eternally
willing.10 Insofar as they are divine instruments of salvation the ac-
9
Summa contra gentiles 1.65-67; ST 1, q. 14, a. 13.
10
Summa contra gentiles 2.35.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 411
tual earthly life and activity of the incarnate Son do not participate in
the "eternity" of the divine knowing, willing, and acting. But this does
not mean that a real presence through contact of the life and activity
of Jesus is excluded in the event of the sanctification of willing sub-
jects.
Thomas explains that the actions and passions of Christ work for the
salvation of humanity in virtute divinitatis. He agrees that the passion
of Christ as corporeal cannot effectively cause the salvation of all hu-
manity at all times. The notion of instrumental cause operating the
effect at a distance, as actio in dis tans, is excluded. But he does not
agree that the passion of Jesus cannot act as instrumental cause of
salvation in virtue of the spiritual power of the divinity united to it.
Hence the passion of Christ is considered to be efficacious "according to
the divine disposition" through spiritual contact, namely through faith
and the sacraments of faith. In other words the instrumental cause is
"applied" (applicatur) spiritually by faith and the sacraments of
faith.11
The effect follows from the instrumental cause according to the con-
dition of the principal cause. Since God is the principal cause, and the
resurrection of Christ the instrumental cause of our resurrection, our
resurrection follows (sequitur) the resurrection of Christ "according to
the divine disposition at a certain time."12
This means that the principal cause, God, employs the instrumental
cause, the historical life and activity of Jesus, to produce the effect in
the beneficiary, and this effect is realized in and through the necessary
response of faith. According to Aquinas, the presence of the event of
the historical life and activity of Jesus signified by the particular sac-
rament is a presence in the participant of the sacramental celebration
in the sense of instrumental cause modifying the effect of the action of
the principal divine cause of sanctification; the peculiar effect being
the transmission of the attitudes of Christ conformed to the particular
historical event of Christ's life signified by the sacramental rite. More-
over in the perspective of realist metaphysics the principal cause, the
instrument of the agent and the effect are coexistent. Therefore it
follows that there is a real presence of the historical salvific acts of
Christ in the participant of the sacramental celebration, that is, a
presence metaphysically affirmed.
Aquinas ultimately grounds the notion of the efficacious presence of
the historical salvific acts of Jesus in the economy of salvation on the
revelation of the divine plan of salvation. He sheds further light on the

11
De ventate 27 .4. In 1 Cor 15, lect. 2.
412 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

question by explaining the role of this presence in effecting the con-


formity to Christ from the standpoint of realistic metaphysics. In this
realistic perspective the agent, the instrument, and the effect are si-
multaneously present. The "power" of the mysteries is identified with
the agent as agent,13 and with the action of the principal agent,14 and
is found in the effect. In short, the salvific acts of Jesus, as instrumen-
tal efficient causes employed by the principal efficient cause, namely
the action of God, co-exist with the principal cause; for in the perspec-
tive of a realist metaphysics, cause, instrument, and effect are co-
existent.15
This understanding of the mode of presence of the historical salvific
acts of Christ exists in a certain tension with the later notion of the
objective sacramental presence of these salvific acts at the moment of
consecration of the eucharistie gifts. According to the Thomistic theory
the structure is linear: prototype—image—effect. On the contrary,
according to the earlier thesis of Aquinas, we do not, as it were, come
upon the sacramental presence of the historical saving acts and then
insert ourselves into them somehow by faith. No, the image of the
prototype exists in and with the sacramental reality which is the effect
through imitation, or conformity, but so that this imitation is the shap-
ing power in the effect.
Ecclesiological Role of the Presiding Priest Regarding Aquinas's
view of the ecclesiological dimension of the eucharistie sacrifice, an
additional clue4s supplied in his Commentary on the Sentences of Peter
Lombard. Here Thomas does not suggest that the formal reason why
the priest is able to act as representative of the whole Church in the
offering of the eucharistie sacrifice is based on the fact that the priest
represents Christ the head of the Church. In other words, it is not
precisely because the priest offers the eucharistie sacrifice in the per-
son of Christ the head of the Church that he represents the Church of
which Christ is the head in the offering of the eucharistie sacrifice.

13 14
ST 3, q. 56, a. 1 ad 3. ST 1-2, q. 112, a. 1 ad 1.
15
The metaphysical analysis of efficient causality yields the following conclusions.
The agent and effect are simultaneously present to one another. The agent is not present
before the effect of the action is realized. The action is identical with the effect, and not
in the agent, nor between the agent and effect. "Power" is not really different from the
action, and so not from the effect. The instrument used by the agent is itself an agent
acting, insofar as it is used by the principal agent. Therefore the intelligibility of the
action is not to be sought in the instrument, but in the agent. From these considerations
it is concluded that efficient causality is the relation of effect to cause, and its reality is
found in the effect as proceedingfromthe cause. The change is the effect; the agent is not
changed by acting.
CATHOLIC EUCHAMSTIC THEOLOGY 413
Rather Aquinas states that the priest represents the whole Church in
the eucharistie offering because of the nature of the eucharistie sacra-
ment. It is because the Eucharist is accomplished for the whole
Church, because the Eucharist is the "sacrament of the universal
Church."16 Therefore it is by reason of the ecclesiological nature of the
Eucharist that the priest offers for the whole Church, not immediately
because he offers in the person of Christ, the head of the Church (in
persona Christi, capitis ecclesiae).
Since Aquinas offers no other solution to the question of how the
priest represents the Church, and since the solution he offers is at
home in the contemporary theology, we conclude to the probability
that he maintained this explanation unchanged throughout his life.
Later on in the Thomistic school the consecration of the eucharistie
gifts is understood not only to be a commemorative representation of
the once-for-all self-offering on the cross but also to include a sacra-
mental renewal of the self-offering of Christ through the ministry of
the priest. The idea that Christ offers himself to the Father as head of
the Church through the priest, acting in the person of Christ at the
moment of consecration of the eucharistie bread and wine, led to the
conclusion that the priest, in his sacramental role, also represents the
Church of which Christ is the head. In short the ecclesiological dimen-
sion of the sacrifice is conceived as included in the Christological. One
could formulate this outlook as follows: The Church offers the eucha-
ristie sacrifice "through the hands of the priest," insofar as he acts in
the person of Christ, the head of the Church.

Ecclesiology and Christology of the Eucharistie Sacrifice


The ecclesiological dimension of the eucharistie sacrifice was only
gradually absorbed into the Christological dimension over the period
from the 13th to the 16th century. This fact supplies an insight into the
more general outlook at the outset of the second millennium in which
the ecclesiological aspect of the eucharistie sacrifice was distinguished
more sharply from the Christological in theory and practice.17
16
Scriptum super libros Sententiarum 4, d. 24, q. 2, a. 2 ad 2.
17
Mary M. Schaefer, Twelfth Century Latin Commentaries on the Mass: Christological
and Ecclesiological Implications (Ann Arbor, Michigan: University Microfilms, 1983)
cites, among others, the following early-twelfth-century authors who hold that there is
no place for eucharistie sacrifice outside the Church: Odo of Cambrai (d. 1113), Expositio
in canonem missae (PL 160.1061D) 71 n. 200; Rupert of Deutz (1075-1129) 114-15 n.
349; Honorius Augustodiensis (fl. ca. 1098-1130), Eucharisticon chap. 5 (PL 172.1252D)
and chap. 6 (PL 172.1253B-C) 164; Stephen of Autun (bishop: 1112-1135, d. 1139/40),
Tractatus de sacramento altaris (PL 172.1273-1308) 361.
414 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

From Berengar to Trent


Even as late as the first part of the 12th century the degree of
membership in the Church enjoyed by a validly ordained presbyter or
bishop was considered relevant to his capacity to consecrate the bread
and wine and offer the eucharistie sacrifice in the name of the
Church.18 A sharp distinction was commonly made between the power
of the priest to consecrate the bread and wine whereby they become
sacraments of the body and blood of Christ, and the ability of the priest
to preside at the eucharistie sacrifice in the name of the Church. The
latter theological problem was still not settled during the next two
centuries. Various solutions were given to such questions as: How can
an excommunicated priest offer the eucharistie sacrifice as represen-
tative of the Church?
Ultimately the medieval development of the scholastic theory con-
fining the moment of consecration of the eucharistie gifts to the period
of recitation of the liturgical ipsissima verba Christi constituted the
most important cause of the absorption of the ecclesiological into the
Christological aspect of the eucharistie sacrifice. It is noteworthy that
this development was influenced significantly by the eleventh-century
controversy over the contents of the sacraments of the body and blood
of Christ initiated by Berengar of Tours (d. 1088).
The oath required of Berengar at the Council in Rome in 1059 dis-
tinguishes between two effects which obtain "after the consecration":
"namely the bread and wine which are placed on the altar after the
consecration [are] not only the sacrament (sacr-amentum), but also the
true body and blood of Jesus Christ our Lord."19 At the Council of

18
Gerhoh of Reichersberg argued that the sacraments of heretical and schismatical
priests are invalid (Epistola ad Innocentium Papam [A.D. 1131], in Lites imperatorum et
pontiftcum, ed. E. Sackur, Monumenta Germaniae histórica 3 [1897] 221-22). He was
opposed by Bernard of Clairvaux and called to Rome (1133) since the question was
disputed. The Summa sententiarum (Otto of Lucca, d. 1146) holds Masses celebrated by
excommunicated and manifest heretical priests to be invalid because the priest says, "we
offer"; one offers ex persona totius ecclesiae (Schaefer 332). Lothar of Segni (1160/61-
1216) understands that the priest sacrifices "in totius ecclesiae persona" (Schaefer 456)
"as long as the priest remains with the others in the Ark" and uses the form handed on
by the tradition (Schaefer 456). The Epistola de sacramentis hereticorum (ed. E. Sackur,
MGH 3.12-20) teaches that the heretical priest has the sacrament of the priesthood
intus, but loses the potestas et virtus of the priesthood foris. Hugo of St. Victor and Alger
of Liège maintain that priests outside the Church celebrate valid but not fruitful eu-
charistie sacrifices (Josef Finkenzeller, Die Lehre von den Sakramenten im Allgemeinen.
Handbuch der Dogmengeschichte IV/1 [Freiburg im Br.: Herder, 1988] 104-5).
19
DS 690 = Henricus Denzinger and Adolfus Schönmetzer, eds., Enchiridion Sym-
bolorum, 36th ed. (Barcelona/Rome: Herder, 1965) no. 690.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 415
Rome in 1079, under Pope Gregory Vu, Berengarius was required to
confess an alternative oath which identifies the source of the con-
version of the bread and wine as "the mystery of the holy prayer and
the words of our Redeemer (per mysterium sacrae orationis et verba
nostri Redemptoris)"20 The register of the Council of Rome of 1079
sheds some light on this latter confession. It is recorded that "the
majority affirmed that the bread and wine, through the words of the
sacred prayer (sacra oratio) and the consecration of the priest, the Holy
Spirit working invisibly, are converted .. ."21 Here the "words of the
sacred prayer and the consecration of the priest" are identified as
the instrumental means by which the Holy Spirit converts the bread
and wine.
In short, the first oath uses "consecration" to describe the action by
which the bread and wine become sacraments and also the "body and
blood of Christ." The second oath attributes the conversion of the bread
and wine to the "mystery of the holy prayer and the words of the
Redeemer." The Register of the council of 1079 supplies another for-
mulation which unpacks the meaning intended by this concise expres-
sion. Putting the two formulations together, the following result ob-
tains: "The bread and wine . .. are converted . . . through the mystery
(that is, through "the Holy Spirit working invisibly") of the holy prayer
and the words of the Redeemer" (that is, through the [instrumentality]
of the holy prayer [of the Church] and "through the consecration of the
priest," or through the "words of consecration of the Redeemer" spoken
by the priest).
The foregoing example of the teaching that awards consecratory
efficacy to the Eucharistie Prayer is not unique. In that regard it suf-
fices to recall the commentary of a representative contemporary theo-
logian, Odo of Cambrai (ca. 1050-d. 1113). In his Expositio in
Canonem Misssae22 Odo comments on the sanctificas of the Per quern
haec omnia of the Roman Canon. Here he says that "daily he (Domi-
nus) sanctifies by the prayer (oratio) of the priest and the cooperation
of the Holy Spirit."23 The prayer of the priest is the section of the
eucharistie prayer from the Quam oblationem through the Supplices.
This prayer is said to be spoken by the priest as representative of the
universal Church in the case of the private Mass. Otherwise Odo rec-
ognizes that the gathered community is first and foremost the cele-
brating Church. Hence Odo understands that the prayer of the priest
is the prayer of the Church. This prayer can only be carried out fruit-
21
DS 700. PL 148.811 ( = Concilium Romanum VI).
23
PL 160.1053-70. PL 168.1069A.
416 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

fully "with the cooperation of the Holy Spirit."24 Since the Holy Spirit
cooperates in this activity only within the Church, Odo concludes that
the Eucharist can only be celebrated in the Church. "For outside the
communion there is no place for offering to God true sacrifice."25 And
by this he means also that heretics cannot celebrate the Eucharist: The
"for us" of the Quam oblationem "excludes pagans, it excludes Jews, it
excludes heretics.... For there is no place of true sacrifice outside the
Catholic Church."26
The attribution of the efficacy of the Eucharistie Prayer to the co-
operation of the Holy Spirit working in and through the believing
Church is an example of "appropriation" of an activity of the whole
Trinity to one of the divine persons because it fits the peculiar trait of
that person. This also holds for the attribution of the conversion of the
bread and wine to the Holy Spirit which is frequently found in the
writings of early scholastics. However Rupert of Deutz (1075-1129)
probably provides one exception to this rule.27
The important place given to the efficacy of the Eucharistie Prayer
alongside the recitation of the eucharistie words of Christ at the Coun-
cils of Rome of 1059 and 1079 is probably due, at least in part, to a
broader concept of consecratio which remained fairly popular up to the

24
The phrase cooperante Spiritu soneto is found in the second communion prayer of
the priest in the Roman liturgy (Domine Iesu Christi), where it refers to the cooperation
of the Holy Spirit in the redemptive death of Jesus. It remains an optional prayer in the
Missal of Paul VI. This prayer first appeared in private prayer books of the late ninth
century: the Prayer Book of Charles the Bald and the mixed Gallican Sacramentary of
Amiens. In the eleventh century it is found in a version of communion devotions of
Monte Cassino as a prayer for communicants; see n. 65 below.
25 26
PL 168.1058. PL 168.1061D.
27
In his De Trinitate 1.5, Rupert of Deutz (1075-1129) holds the Western version of
the procession of the Spirit from the Father filioque (PL 167.1574D-E), but seems to
maintain the Eastern understanding of the personal and proper mission of the Holy
Spirit in the Incarnation. The Word is said to bestow the imago dei on his humanity,
while to the Spirit is attributed the effect similitudo dei, the likeness of the common love
of Father and Son (1.10; PL 167.1579C-D). Rupert's commentary on the Fourth Gospel
attributes the eucharistie conversion to the assumption of the bread and wine by the
Word: "And thus the Word . . . is made visible bread by assimilating and transferring
bread into the unity of his person" (Ruperti Tuitiensis Commentarla in evangelium sancii
Iohannis, Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis 9 (1959) 2212-17, p. 357).
But in his commentary on Exodus, Rupert explicitly attributes the virginal conception,
the self-offering of Jesus on the cross, and the conversion of the bread and wine to the
proper operation of the Spirit: "The Virgin conceived him by the Holy Spirit and through
the same Spirit... this one offered himself a living victim to the living God" (In Exod.
2.10 [ibid. 443-45])... "by the operation of the Holy Spirit, the bread is made the body
and the wine the blood of Christ" (In Exod. 2.11 [ibid. 446-47]).
CATHOLIC EUCHARISnC THEOLOGY 417
middle of the twelfth century, and which allowed for the notion of
"consecration of the body and blood."
This phrase has a long history, inherited from the Latin theological
tradition of the first millennium. Its usage can be dated from the pe-
riod when the process of consecration, derived from the same theolog-
ical tradition, was understood to include the following elements: the
making of the sacrament, or the mystical designation of the bread and
wine as the body and blood of Christ as signified by the eucharistie
words of Christ; the transfer of the sacraments of the body and blood to
the heavenly altar to be united to the glorified body of the risen Lord,
expressed liturgically through the Supplices prayer; and the transitus
of the liturgical assembly to union with the Lord and the heavenly
Church.
It is not possible at present to demonstrate whether the phrase was
originally meant to embrace the process of the concept of consecration
described above. In any case it is certain that in early scholasticism
"consecratio of the body and blood" had a field of meaning that em-
braced (1) the transitus of the elements into the eucharistie flesh and
blood, (2) the transitus of the consecrated flesh and blood into the
heavenly body of Christ, and (3) the purpose of the twofold transitus,
namely, the integration of the liturgical community into this single
transitus of Christ from suffering to glory in virtue of its self-offering
made in union with Christ in the power of the Holy Spirit.
From the eleventh to the middle of the twelfth century, the phrase
"consecration of the body and blood" continued to be used without
difficulty alongside the notion of "consecration of the bread and wine."
However from the middle of the twelfth century, as the focus of atten-
tion turned to the problem of working out an explanation of the mys-
tery of the somatic real presence of Christ under forms of bread and
wine, the difficulty created by the distinction between the two bodies of
Christ, the historical body and blood and the eucharistie spiritualized
body and blood,28 faded into the background. Now the question of the

28
Between these two extremes of the Latin tradition regarding the nature of the
sacraments of the body and blood, exemplified by St. Ambrose of Milan and St. Augus-
tine of Hippo respectively, eventually an important speculative consideration had to be
introduced. It is the matter of the distinction between the historical body and the eu-
charistie body of the incarnate Word, and the relation of the one to the other. St. Jerome
(d. 419), in his commentary on Eph 1:7, makes the following observation: 'Indeed the
blood of Christ and the body are understood in a twofold sense, either that spiritual and
divine, about which he himself said, "My flesh is truly food" (John 6:54) and "Unless you
eat my flesh and drink my blood" (John 6:54), or the flesh and blood which was crucified
and shed by the lance of the soldier (John 19:30 [Comm. in Eph 1.1.7; PL 26:451A-B]).
418 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

formulation of a doctrine about the somatic presence of the whole


Christ became acute. At the same time, and understandably, a nar­
rowing of the concept of consecration began to take hold.
Gradually the term "consecration" came to be employed exclusively
to express the idea of the conversion of the bread and wine. By the
latter part of the twelfth century it was no longer correct to speak of
the "consecration of the body and blood of Christ" in systematic theo­
logical discourse. The transition from the older usage to the newer one
is illustrated in the Summa Bambergensis. The older point of view is
handed on in the commentary on the presence of angels at the liturgy:
"For we believe that the angels assist the priest when he consecrates.
Whence it is read in the Sententiae: Ίη an instant the body of Christ is
consecrated and taken up into heaven by the ministry of angels in
order to be united with the (heavenly) body of Christ.' " But now the
author quickly adds a correction for the contemporary period when
consecration simply refers to the conversion of bread and wine: "How­
ever there are three verbs here, which are to be referred to three
things. For consecran is turned to the bread, rapi to the form, conso-
ciari indeed to the body of the Lord."29
The Summa quaestionum of Codex Harley 1762 in the British Mu­
seum objects to the saying that the body and blood of Christ are con­
secrated. For the body and blood need no consecration. Rather it is
theologically correct to affirm that the bread and wine are consecrated,
that is, they are converted into the body and blood.30 It should come as
no surprise, then, that by this time the essential form of the Eucharist
was limited to the recitation of the eucharistie words of Christ which
identify the eucharistie gifts as Christ's body and blood. Shortly after

Jerome does not explain more precisely the relationship between the two. But he appears
to acknowledge a level of being of the historical body of Christ in the sacrament. This
theological problem remained alive throughout the first millennium. It was inherited by
early scholasticism and became a primary subject of theological reflection in the wake of
the controversy over the somatic real presence of Christ under forms of bread and wine,
occasioned by theological speculation of the eleventh-century Berengar of Tours.
29
Credimus enim angelos assistere sacerdoti quando consecrat. Unde legitur super
Sententias: Ίη momento consecratur corpus Christi et in coelum rapitur ministerio
angelorum consociandum corpori Christi.' Sint autem hic tria verba quae ad tria sint
referenda, nam consecran ad panem, rapi ad formam, consociali vero ad corpus Domini
retorquetur (Cod. Misc. Patr. 136, Stati. Bibliothek, Bamberg, fol. 67vb). The Summa
Bambergensis witnesses to the old terminology and the effort to attribute to it the
current theological understanding of consecration as applied to the Eucharist (Ludwig
Hödl, "Die Transsubstantiationsbegriff in der scholastischen Theologie des 12. Jahrhun-
derts," Recherches de théologie ancienne et médiévale 31 [1964] 232).
30
"Consecrantur autem pañis et vinum, non corpus et sanguis, sed illa in corpus
Christi et sanguinem" (fol. lOlra).
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 419
the resolution of the Berengar affair, however, the beginnings of the
general tendency to restrict the essential form of the Eucharist in this
way are discernible everywhere.31
Moreover, as is well known, in the debate over the somatic real
presence of the body and blood of Christ the belief in the efficacy of the
word of Christ grounded on the witness of the New Testament played
a central role. This resulted in the "reception" of the theology of eu-
charistie consecration of Ambrose of Milan which was thought to at-
tribute the consecration of the bread and wine to the recitation of the
liturgical ipsissima verba Christi contained in the Eucharistie
Prayer.32 We will return to this topic later on. But for now it suffices
to emphasize the fact that from now on it was the scripturally
grounded lex credendi that determined the function of the liturgical
narrative of the institution of the Eucharist. No longer did the lex
orandi (the role played by the liturgical narrative of institution within
the structure of the Eucharistie Prayer) exercise, as it generally had
throughout the first millennium, this determinative function.
This identification of the essential form of the Eucharist with the
eucharistie words of Christ eventually led to the conclusion, drawn by
Thomistic theologians of the 16th and 17th century, that the ecclesi-
ological aspect of the eucharistie sacrifice must be explained exclu-
sively from the Christological dimension. In other words the formal
reason why the Eucharist can be called the sacrifice of the Church is
31
Among the early witnesses to the scholastic theology of the essential form of con-
secration of the eucharistie bread and wine are Ivo of Chartres (1040-1115), who says
that the priest imitates the person of Christ when he recites the words of institution of
the Eucharist (Schaefer 235), and Hildebert of Le Main (ca. 1053-1133), who depicts the
priest as "vices Christ?' (Schaefer 276), or one who "acts in place of Christ" by reciting
the words of institution (Schaefer 269).
32
Among modern commentators on the subject of Ambrose's view of the liturgical
time of the transformation of the eucharistie elements, Raymond Johanny provides a
survey of the various opinions (L'Eucharistie centre de l'histoire de salut chez saint
Ambrose de Milan, Théologie historique 9 [Paris: Beauchesne, 1968] 104-124). Johanny
himself prefers the theory that the Fac nobis section of the fourth-century Milanese
eucharistie prayer "accomplishes the mystery" (ibid. 124). He argues that an epiclesis of
sanctification of the eucharistie gifts was lacking in the Eucharistie Prayer of Milan
(ibid. 125-34). In a still more recent discussion of this subject contained in his study of
the ancient liturgy of Milan, Josef Schmitz concurs with Johanny that the canon of
Ambrose does not have an epiclesis of consecration (Gottesdienst im altchristlichen
Mailand: Eine liturgiewissenschaftliche Untersuchung über Initiation und Messfeier
während des Jahres der Zeit des Bishofs Ambrosius (d. 397), Theophaneia 25 [Bonn,
1975] 7). He bases this conclusion on the fact that Ambrose explicitly attributes the
consecration to the words of Jesus (ibid. 403). He refers to De sacramentis 4.4.14; 4.5.23
(Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasticorum Latinorum 73.52, 56). See also Schmitz's biblio-
graphical notes on the literature about the teaching of Ambrose on this unresolved
debate (ibid. 408-10).
420 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

traced to the fact that Christ himself offers his once-for-all sacrifice as
head of the Church through the priest who acts in the name of Christ
the head of the Church. The ecclesiological dimension is considered to
be included in the presupposition of the Christological dimension.
In the latter part of the 20th century this later Thomistic teaching
has an important role to play within the average Catholic synthesis.
Here the essence of the eucharistie sacrifice is understood to include
the ecclesiological aspect within the concept of "sacramental represen-
tation of the historical sacrifice of the cross."
The term "sacramental sacrifice" is employed here to convey the idea
that the past historical sacrifice of Christ on the cross is represented to
the liturgical assembly in the action by which the "sacrificial sacra-
ment" of Christ's somatic real presence is constituted. It conveys the
notion that the eucharistie celebration is first and foremost "a visible
representation" of this unique historical sacrifice of the cross. In this
connection an appeal is made to the Council of Trent's teaching that
describes the institution of the Eucharist as follows: "... he, God and
our Lord . . . at the Last Supper . . . in order that he might leave to the
church a visible . . . sacrifice, by which that bloody one once for all
accomplished on the cross might be represented .. ."33
The foregoing interpretation of the passage from Trent's doctrine on
the sacrifice of the Mass favored by the Thomistic synthesis actually
goes beyond the meaning intended by the text. To be sure the once-
for-all historical sacrifice of Christ was confessed by Trent to be the
reality, source, and presupposition of the eucharistie celebration which
grounds the cultic sacrifice of the Church. But the council did not
intend to choose between theories championed by different Catholic
theological schools concerning the relation of the historical event of the
sacrifice of the cross to the Mass. Much less had the theory been for-
mulated concerning the possibility of the historical salvific work ob-
taining a new ubi et nunc in the sacramental world which transcends
the laws of space and time.
The Encyclical Mediator Dei
The more recent official teaching of the Roman Catholic magiste-
rium in this 20th century favors this idea of sacramental sacrifice. This
theological approach has gradually taken hold since the time of Pius
XII's encyclical letter Mediator Dei, November 20,1947. 34 Where this

33
Council of Trent, Doctrina de ss. missae sacrificio, Cap. 1: "... Deus et Dominus
noster . . . in Coena novissima . . . ut Ecclesiae visibile . . . relinqueret sacrificium, quo
cruentum illud semel in cruce peragendum repraesentaretur ..." (DS 1740).
34
AAS 39 (1947) 521-95; excerpts in DS 3840-55.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 421
letter takes up the question of the relation of the mysteries of Christ's
historical life to the liturgical year, the pope reacts somewhat nega-
tively to the theory of Odo Casel concerning the presence of the his-
torical mysteries of Christ's life in the liturgy. While the very notion of
the presence of the historical mysteries is not explicitly rejected, a
preference is clearly expressed for the traditional scholastic explana-
tion, namely, a presence of the effects of the historical salvific acts of
Jesus' historical life and activity, or the application of graces merited
by them.
Pius XII does make use of Casel's insight concerning the active pres-
ence of Christ in all liturgical action. Nevertheless he distances him-
self from Casel's thesis concerning the presence of the historical saving
acts in the liturgy of the Church. This is best exemplified in the pope's
remarks on the subject of the presence of the mysteries of Christ's life
in the liturgical year. Pius XII states:

These mysteries (mysteria) are constantly present and operate, not in the way
that some recent writers talk (effutiunt = chatter),35 but in the way the Cath-
olic doctrine teaches us. For according to the doctors of the Church they are
shining examples of Christian perfection, and sources of divine grace because
of the merits and earnest intercessions of Christ; and by their effect in us they
endure since each one of them exists according to its nature in its way as cause
of salvation.36

The encyclical affirms the actuality of the mysteries of Christ's life.


Christ continues "that journey... which h e . . . began in his mortal life
. . . with the intention of bringing men to know his mysteries, and in a
way to live by them." These mysteries are "examples of Christian
perfection, as well as sources of divine grace, due to the merits and
prayers of Christ." They are present in virtue of the actual presence of
Christ and his power: "Christ himself who is ever living in his
Church." Hence the liturgical year is not a mere external representa-
tion of the past, nor a pure remembrance.37
The encyclical does not seem to envision the mode of presence of the
mysteries of Christ's life in any other way than that of a presence in us
by the effects of the mysteries which, although located in the past,
exercise exemplary and efficient instrumental causality. The myster-
ies are present in the symbolic power of the liturgical rites, which both

35
Perhaps a better way of rendering this somewhat unusual phrase would be: "not in
that uncertain and vague way in which certain recent writers express it."
36
AAS 39 (1947) 580; DS 3855.
37
Ibid.
422 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

refer the Church to the mysteries of Christ, and bestow the grace of the
mysteries.38
The objective character of the sanctification given through the lit-
urgy is affirmed. The efficacy of the sacraments and eucharistie sacri-
fice derive "first of all and principally" from the act itself (ex opere
operato).39 On the other hand the ritual activity instituted by the
Church is efficacious ex opere operantis, since the Church is holy and
acts in union with Christ.
On the subject of the sacramental sacrifice of the Mass, formulas
close to that of Casel are employed. But the real death of Christ is not
said to be renewed, or even rendered present, in the Mass: "The sac-
rifice of our Redeemer is shown forth . . . by external signs which are
the symbols of his death." When it is said that Christ "does what he
already did on the cross,"40 the reference is only to the sacrificial ob-
lation (unbloody oblation, as opposed to bloody oblation).
It is also noteworthy that the Holy Office complained to the Arch-
bishop of Salzburg that the German translation of Mediator Dei gave
the impression that Pius XII favored Casel's theory by employing
"Mysteria" in place of "mysteria."40* The translation seemed to suggest
that the pope agrees with those "who teach that the Mysteries are
present in liturgical worship, not historically but mystically and sac-
ramentally, but nevertheless really."41 However Casel's theology of
mysteries was not explicitly, or implicitly, declared untenable by Me-
diator Dei. Rather the encyclical wanted a more precise statement at
the level of dogmatic theology. The letter of the Holy Office does not go
beyond the judgement of the encyclical. It merely states that the pope
does not favor CaseFs view.42
Since the middle of the 1950s it became quite clear that while many
aspects of CaseFs theology of mysteries needed to be corrected, his
basic insight deserved serious attention. A number of monographs be-
gan to appear in the area of biblical and patristic studies which tended
to support the idea of the representation of the historical saving work
of Christ in the sacramental celebrations of the Church, especially in
baptism and Eucharist. While no consensus emerged in this matter
from the standpoint of systematic speculative theology, this conclusion
38 39
Ibid. Ibid. 532; DS 3844.
40
Ibid. 548; DS 3847-48. ^ Ibid. 580.
41
"... qui docent 'Mysteria' in cultu liturgico praesentia esse, non historiée sed mys-
tice ac sacramentaliter, sed tarnen realiter" (AAS 46 [1954] 669; and see the footnote to
DS 3855).
42
J. Hild, "L'Encyclique 'Mediator Dei' et le mouvement liturgique de Maria-Laach,"
La Maison Dieu 14 [1948] 15-29.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 423
of scriptural and patristic scholars seems to have had the effect of
rendering the Roman magisterium more sympathetic to the basic in­
sight of Casel.
The presentation of the theology of eucharistie sacrifice in Mediator
Dei is, above all, significant for the influence it has had on subsequent
official Roman teaching. It has become the normative presentation,
and is based on the reception of one of the post-Tridentine scholastic
theologies of eucharistie sacrifice. Pius ΧΠ employs the eucharistie
theology of Thomas Aquinas as mediated through post-Tridentine
Thomistic theologians. He adopts the formulation of the Jesuit theo­
logian St. Robert Bellarmine, without subscribing to Bellarmine's pe­
culiar explication of the essence of the eucharistie sacrifice which em­
braces the aspect of destruction of the sacraments of the body and blood
through eating and drinking.43
On the subject of the consecration of the eucharistie species, which
he understands to pertain to the essence of the eucharistie sacrifice,
Bellarmine states: "Because the sacrifice of the Mass is offered in the
person of Christ (in persona Christi), there is nothing that the priest
does so clearly in the person of Christ as the consecration in which he
says: This is my body.' ' , 4 4 Again Bellarmine states: "The sacrifice is
offered principally in the person of Christ. Thus the oblation following
the consecration is a certain attestation that the whole Church con­
sents in the oblation made by Christ, and at the same time offers with
him."45 This latter text is cited by Pius XII in Mediator Dei.46
Finally Bellarmine links the offering of Christ, Church, and minis­
ter in this way: "The sacrifice of the Mass is offered by three: by Christ,
by the Church, by the minister; but not in the same way. For Christ
offers as primary priest, and offers through the priest a man, as his
proper minister. The Church does not offer as priest through the min­
ister, but as people through the priest. Thus Christ offers through the
47
inferior, the Church through the superior." In Mediator Dei we read
this paraphrase: "The priest acts for the people only because he rep-

43
Bellarmine included the idea that the consumption of the body and blood is an
essential part and not merely an integral part required for the integrity of the eucha­
ristie sacrifice. This insight stems from the biblical notion that sacrifice and meal are
inseparable. However the connection was based on the theory that sacrifice requires real
or virtual destruction.
^Robertas Bellarminus, Controversiarum de sacramento Eucharistiae, lib. 2 (=De
sacrificio Missae lib. 2.4; ed. J. Fèvre, Opera Omnia 4 [Paris: Vives, 1873] 373a).
45
Bellarmine, De sacrificio Missae 1.27; ed. Fèvre, 4.366a; DS 3851.
46
AAS 39 (1947) 554; DS 3851.
47
De sacrificio Missae 2.4; ed. J. Fèvre, 4.373-74.
424 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

resents Jesus Christ, who is head of all his members and offers himself
for them. Thus he goes to the altar as the minister of Christ, inferior to
Christ, but superior to the people."48
This theological interpretation, which excludes the approach of
Scotus-Biel, is developed at length in Mediator Dei.49 On the subject of
the nature of the eucharistie sacrifice Pius XII goes beyond the doctri-
nal instruction of the Council of Trent when he teaches: "The august
sacrifice of the altar . . . is . . . a true and proper act of sacrifice (sac-
rifieatio), whereby the High Priest by an unbloody immolation offers
himself a most acceptable victim to the eternal Father, as he did on the
cross.,,5° This assertion is intended to be an interpretation of the state-
ment of chapter 2 of the Council of Trent's doctrine concerning the
sacrifice of the Mass: "It is one and the same victim; the same now
offering by the ministry of priests, who offered himself then on the
cross, the manner of offering alone being different."51
After recalling that the priest of the eucharistie sacrifice is Jesus
Christ, represented by the minister who "possesses the power of per-
forming actions in virtue of Christ's very person," Pius XII adds this
observation regarding the identity of victim:

Likewise the victim is the same The manner, however, in which Christ is
offered is different. On the cross he completely offered himself . . . and the
immolation of the victim was brought about by the bloody death But on the
altar... the sacrifice is shown forth in an admirable manner by external signs
which are symbols of his death.... the eucharistie species under which he is
present symbolize the actual separation of his body and blood. Thus the com-
memorative representation of his death, which actually took place on Calvary,
is repeated in every sacrifice of the altar, seeing that Jesus Christ is symbol-
ically shown forth by separate symbols to be in the state of death.52
With these observations Pius XII distinguishes between two essen-
tial moments of the sacrifice of the Mass: the internal oblation of
Christ (oblatio) and the external manifestation of the internal act (im-
molatio incruenta). Thus he differs from Trent, where oblation and
immolation are used as synonyms. Also the pope seems to favor a
theory of actual oblation (internal offering) of Christ in every Mass,
where he says that Christ "does what he did then on the cross." It was
a common opinion in the 1940s that an actual oblation of Christ is
related to the eucharistie sacrifice; not formally a new act, but the

48
AAS 39 (1947) 553; DS 3850.
49
Ibid. 555-56; DS 3852.
50 51
Ibid. 548; DS 3847. DS 1743.
52
AAS 39 (1947) 548-49; DS 1348-49.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 425
same act which Christ elicited on the cross and which somehow re­
mains in the glorified Christ.
In fact, the pope explicitly distinguishes between internal oblation
and immolation in the following passage: "The sacrifice . . . is shown
forth by external signs (signa externa) which are symbols of his
death."53 Nevertheless the pope does not explicitly identify the con­
tent of the essential immolatio incruenta. Some contemporary theo­
logians held that it consists in the separate consecrations; others
that it consists in the sacramental mode of presence in that Christ's
body is present under the species of bread and his blood under the
species of wine in virtue of the words of consecration. Of course all
Catholic theologians hold that the whole Christ is present under each
species in virtue of the hypostatic union and the mystery of the resur­
rection and glorification, as defined by Trent.54 However the letter
ascribes only the value of sign or symbol to the separation of the spe­
cies. The unbloody immolation is said to be "signified," or "indi­
cated,"55 "made manifest in a mystical manner by the separation of
the species."56
In brief, Pius XII avoids theories which postulate a virtual destruc­
tion of Christ, such as those of Bellarmine, De Lugo, and Franzelin,
which dominated the entire Catholic theological field during the pon­
tificates of Pius IX and Leo ΧΙΠ. He retains formulas dating from the
end of the reign of Leo XIII, revived and propagated by Cardinal Billot,
while making no reference to Billot's system. But the pope appears to
tend in the direction of those theologians who had been making the
idea of sacramental sacrifice the object of their studies.
Prescinding from the various nuances of particular authors, the es­
sentials of the theory of sacramental sacrifice may be summarized
thus: The immolation of the Mass differs from the oblation. Christ
offers himself in the Mass and is sacramentally immolated at the con­
secration of the bread and wine. The qualification "sacramental"
means that it is a matter of a symbolic ritual that contains what it
signifies. In virtue of the divine institution the Eucharist renders the
historical sacrifice of the cross sacramentally present.
This explanation of the term "sacramental" is based on an under­
standing of the peculiar mode of sacramental being, whereby the re­
ality signified has its proper mode of existence elsewhere, but is truly
contained in its symbolic representation. It is with this concept of
"sacramental presence" that the explication of the eucharistie sacrifice
begins, that is, the explication of how the sacramental sacrifice is a

M
Ibid. 548; DS 3848. DS 1651,1653.
M
AAS 39 (1947) 548-49; DS 1348. Ibid. 563; DS 3854.
426 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

true sacrifice differing only in the manner of offering from that of the
historical sacrifice of the cross. However authors who hold for the
sacramental theory are not in agreement concerning the nature of the
presence of the sacrifice of the cross in the Mass. Is it to be attributed
to a perpetual state of victimhood of the glorified Christ? Here an
appeal is made to an interior offering of Christ accomplished on the
cross which has become "eternal" and is externalized through the
words of consecration. Others demand more in virtue of the fact that
we are redeemed by the historical redemptive work. In one way or
another they postulate the presence of the historical salvific acts them-
selves—a metahistorical presence.

Recent Decades
Since the publication of Mediator Dei the official teaching of the
Roman magisterium has often repeated the perspective ofthat encyc-
lical on the relation of the presiding priest to Christ and the Church in
the Eucharist. The Constitution on the Church of Vatican II states that
"the priest... confects the eucharistie sacrifice in the person of Christ
and offers it in the name of the people to God."57
The "Declaration of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
on the Question of Admission of Women to the Ministerial Priesthood,"
October 15, 1976, employs this Thomistic theology of eucharistie sac-
rifice in support of its teaching that only men can represent Christ in
the act of eucharistie consecration: "It is true that the priest represents
the church which is the body of Christ. But if he does so it is primarily
because, first, he represents Christ himself who is head and paster of
the church."58 Hence the conclusion is drawn that since the priest
represents Christ in strict sacramental identity at the moment of con-
secration the role must be taken by a man.
The "Letter of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on the
subject of the Role of the Ordained Ministry of the Episcopate and
Presbyterate in the Celebration of the Eucharist," dated August 6,
1983,59 provides a useful summary of all the major statements of re-
cent official teaching of the Roman magisterium on this topic. This
letter of the CDF was occasioned by the prevalence of erroneous opin-
ions concerning the question of those who qualify to preside at the
Eucharist. On this subject the traditional teaching is stated:

57
Lumen gentium 10 (AAS 57 [1965] 14).
58
Inter Insignores (AAS 69 [1977] 108-13, at par. 32 ^Declaration on the Question of
the Admission of Women to the Ministerial Priesthood [Washington: U. S. Catholic Con-
ference, 1976] art. 5, p. 14).
59
AAS 75 (1983) 1001-09.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 427
For although the whole faithful participate in one and the same priesthood of
Christ and concur in the oblation of the Eucharist, nevertheless only the min-
isterial priesthood, in virtue of the sacrament of orders, enjoys the power of
confecting the eucharistie sacrifice in the person of Christ and of offering it in
the name of the whole Christian people.60
The topic of the representative function of the presiding minister is
taken up in detail later on:
However those whom Christ calls to the episcopate and presbyterate, in order
that they can fulfill the office . . . of confecting the eucharistie mystery, he
signs them spiritually with the special seal through the sacrament of orders
. . . and so configures them to himself that they proclaim the words of conse-
cration not by mandate of the community, but they act "in persona Christi"
which certainly means more than "in the name of Christ" or even "in place of
Christ" . . . since the one celebrating by a peculiar and sacramental way is
completely the same as the "high and eternal Priest," who is author and prin-
cipal actor of this his own sacrifice, in which no one indeed can take his place.61
On the question of the relationship between the sacrifice of the Mass
and that of the cross, the most noteworthy document of Pope John Paul
II is his 1980 Holy Thursday letter, Dominicae cenae, where he treats
the sacred and sacrificial character of the Eucharist.62 The sacredness
of the Eucharist is ascribed to the fact that Christ is the author and
principal priest. This ritual memorial of the death of the Lord is per-
formed by priests who repeat the words and actions of Christ, who thus
offer the holy sacrifice "in persona Christi... in specific sacramental
identification with the High and Eternal Priest, who is the author and
principal actor of this sacrifice of his."63
Here as elsewhere in this letter John Paul II limits himself to the
typical scholastic approach to the theology of the Eucharist, passing
over the trinitarian grounding of the holiness of the Eucharist. In
modern Catholic theology the sacred character of the Eucharist is
grounded on more than the Christological basis. Its sacredness is not
merely based on the fact of originating in a historical act of institution
by Christ. Rather what grounds the holiness of the Eucharist is the
initiative of the Father: the self-offering by the Father of his only Son
for the salvation of the world.
Here we touch on the unique New Testament understanding of the
"true sacrifice" as that which is based on the movement of God to us.
60
Ibid. 1000.
61
Ibid. 1006; quotations are from Pope John Paul II's Lenten letter Dominicae cenae
no. 8 (AAS 72 [1980] 128-29).
62
De ss. Eucharistiae Mysterio et Cultu, Dominicae cenae nos. 8-9 (AAS 72 [1980]
113-148, at 127-34).
63
Ibid. 128-29.
428 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

The death of Jesus is ultimately the expression of the turning of God to


us. The love of the Father is the origin of the self-offering of Jesus. 64
The classical Eucharistie Prayers were constructed with this back-
ground in mind, and represent the response of the sacrifice of praise to
the Father for what the Father has done in Jesus Christ for the sal-
vation of the world. Also in this perspective there is the matter of the
sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit who is the divine agent of the
self-offering of Jesus on the cross (Hebrews 9:14) and of the presence
of this unique sacrifice in the eucharistie celebration.65 The sending of
the Spirit at Pentecost enables the celebration of the Eucharist in
which the triumph of the death of Christ is represented and the Father
is given thanks for the great gift. According to Vatican II's Constitu-
tion on the Sacred Liturgy, "All t h i s . . . happens... in the power of the
Holy Spirit.,,6e However there is a notable absence of the pneumato-
logical aspect of the Eucharist in Dominicae cenae.
The Eucharist is said to be "above all a sacrifice."67 As support for
this the doctrine of Trent's Decree on the Sacrifice of the Mass, chap-
ters 1 and 2, is cited. Also the Réspice prayer of Eucharistie Prayer ΠΙ
is quoted, where the self-offering of the community is linked to the
historical self-offering of Christ. But on the subject of the response
character of the Eucharistie Prayer the following is said: "Since the
Eucharist is a true sacrifice it brings about the restoration to God.
Consequently the celebrant... is an authentic priest, performing . . .
a true sacrificial act, that brings men back to God."68 Also in the same
pericope we find the expression, "this sacrifice, which is renewed (ren­
ovator) in a sacramental form." Here the traditional Thomistic fixing

64
Rom 8:32; John 3:16, etc.
65
On the cross Jesus offered himself in the Spirit, source of his habitual, personal,
individual, and incommunicable grace. Hebrews 9:14 refers to the active role of the
"eternal Spirit in the event of self-offering of Jesus on the cross . . . who offered himself
without blemish to God through the eternal Spirit." After the development of the the­
ology of the Spirit, patristic exegetes frequently identify the "eternal Spirit" with the
Holy Spirit (John McGrath, 'Through the Eternal Spirit: A Historical Study of the
Exegesis of Hebrews 9:13-14" [Dissertation, Rome: Gregorian University, 1961]). Ex­
amples of the rare use of the verse in liturgical sources are listed in E. J. Kilmartin,
Culture and the Praying Church. Canadian Studies in Liturgy 5 (Ottawa: Canadian
Conference of Catholic Bishops, 1990) 86-87, n. 7. The meaning of Hebrews 9:14 is
disputed among exegetes. Heribert Mühlen reaches the dogmatic conclusion that the
cooperation of the Holy Spirit in the event of the cross is the prophetic, pneumatic
inclusion of all the just ones who will later be drawn into Jesus' self-offering through the
same Spirit. This furnishes him with the theological explanation of how the sacrifice of
the cross is made present in the liturgy of the Church (Una Mystica Persona, 2d rev. ed
[Munich: Schöningh, 1967] nos. 8.90-8.97).
66 67
Lumen gentium no. 6. Dominicae cenae no. 9.
68
Ibid.
CATHOUC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 429
of the sacrificial act in the consecration of the eucharistie gifts by the
priest comes again to the fore. The sacrifice is conceived as accom­
plished liturgically at the moment of consecration, while the meal
aspect is treated almost as a dispensable appendix.
The final document to be considered is "Vatican Responds to ARCIC
69
I Final Report." The Anglican-Roman Catholic International Com­
mission published the results of meetings held from 1970-1981 in
70
1982. The report contains documents on the subject of Eucharist,
ordained ministry and authority in the Church. The theme of eucha­
ristie sacrifice is contained in "Eucharistie Doctrine" (Windsor 1971)
71
Π, 5: "The Eucharistie and the Sacrifice of Christ," and in "Eucha­
ristie Doctrine: Elucidation" (Salisbury 1979) 5: "Anamnesis and Sac­
72
rifice."
In Windsor 1971 the notion of memorial is employed to shed light on
the relation of the Eucharist to the cross. It is alleged that in the
biblical sense memorial was used at the time of Christ for the passover
celebration to convey the idea of a ritual activity that makes "effective
in the present... an event in the past." Applied to the Eucharist, it is
stated that the Eucharist is
the Church's effectual proclamation of God's mighty acts. Christ instituted the
eucharist as a memorial (anamnesis) of the totality of God's reconciling action
in him. In the Eucharistie Prayer the Church continues to make a perpetual
memorial of Christ's death, and his members, united with God and with one
another, give thanks for his mercies, entreat the benefits of his passion on
behalf of the whole Church, participate in these benefits and enter into the
movement of his self-offering.
Elucidation 5 of Salisbury 1979 defends the use of anamnesis to
express the "traditional understanding of sacramental reality, in
which the once-for-all event of salvation becomes effective in the
present through the action of the Holy Spirit." It goes on to argue for
the use of sacrifice as a synonym for anamnesis in the case of the
Eucharist. This means that "the Eucharist is a sacrifice in the sacra­
mental sense, provided it is clear that this is not a repetition of the
historical sacrifice." The Elucidation concludes on this subject: "In the
celebration of the memorial, Christ in the Holy Spirit unites his people
with himself in a sacramental way so that the Church enters into the
movement of his self-offering."
The Vatican's response recognizes that the "most notable progress

69
Origins 21, no. 28 (19 December 1991) 441-47.
70
ARCIC I Final Report (London: SPCK, 1982).
71 72
Ibid. 13-14. Ibid. 18-20.
430 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

toward a consensus" on the subjects dealt with in this international


ecumenical dialogue is found in the documents on the Eucharist. It
cites the statement: 'The Eucharist is a sacrifice in the sacramental
sense, provided it is made clear that there is no repetition of the his-
torical sacrifice" (Elucidation 5). However later on a fuller exposition
of Catholic doctrine regarding the Eucharist and ordained ministry is
recommended to the commission.
With regard to the Eucharist, the faith of the Catholic Church would be even
more clearly reflected in the Final Report if the following points were to be
explicitly affirmed: that in the Eucharist the Church, doing what Christ com-
manded his apostles to do at the Last Supper, makes present the sacrifice of
Calvary. This would complete, without contradicting it, the statement made in
the Final Report affirming that the Eucharist does not repeat the sacrifice of
Christ nor add to it. That the sacrifice of Christ is made present with its effects,
thus affirming the propitiatory nature of the eucharistie sacrifice, which can
be applied also to the deceased . . . including a particular dead person, is part
of the Catholic faith.73
The relevant material in the statement "Ministry and Ordination"
(Canterbury 1973) and "Ministry and Ordination: Elucidation" (Salis-
bury 1979) can be briefly summarized. "Ministry and Ordination" 2
states: "It is only the ordained minister who presides at the Eucharist,
in which, in the name of Christ and on behalf of his Church, he recites
the narrative of the institution of the Last Supper and invokes the
Holy Spirit upon the gifts."74 The Vatican response notes that from the
Catholic side this needs to be expanded in the following way: "That
only a validly ordained priest can be the minister who, in the person of
Christ, brings into being the sacrament of the Eucharist. He not only
recites the narrative of the institution of the Last Supper, pronouncing
the words of consecration and imploring the Father to send the Holy
Spirit to effect through them the transformation of the gifts, but in so
doing offers sacramentally the redemptive sacrifice of Christ."75
Again the Vatican response refers to "Ministry and Ordination" 13,
where it is said that in the Eucharist the ordained minister "is seen to
stand in a sacramental relation to what Christ himself did in offering
his own sacrifice."76 The response suggests that this statement be com-
pleted by adding
that it was Christ himself who instituted* the sacrament of orders as the rite
which confers the priesthood of the new covenant.... This clarification would
seem all the more important in view of the fact that the ARCIC document does

73 74
"Vatican Responds" 445. Ibid. 41.
75 76
Ibid. 445. Ibid. 35.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 431
not refer to the character of priestly ordination which implies a configuration
to the priesthood of Christ . . . central to the Catholic understanding of the
distinction between the ministerial priesthood and the common priesthood of
the baptized.77

CHARACTERISTIC TRAITS OF THE PREVAILING SYNTHESIS

What are some of the more important traits of the modern average
Catholic eucharistie theology? Part of the response to this question is
given below in a list of seven traits that derive from the scholastic
theory of the moment of consecration as formulated within the Tho-
mistic synthesis. But before that, we discuss two traits that originate
from different sources. They are included here for the sake of complete-
ness and, at the same time, to call attention to the development in the
theology of the Holy Spirit within modern Catholic theology and its
relevance for a systematic eucharistie theology.
These two traits, which are unrelated to the scholastic theory of the
moment of consecration, are transubstantiation and pneumatology.
1. Transubstantiation. The modern average Catholic theology of the
Eucharist is concerned with the réévaluation of the traditional scho-
lastic explication of the nature of the conversion of the eucharistie
elements whereby they become sacraments of the body and blood of
Christ. No longer do theologians of this tradition insist on awarding
pride of place to the classical scholastic theory of transubstantiation. 78
To a certain extent the modern situation resembles that of the end of
the twelfth century when the doctrine of transubstantiation was one of
several explanations being proposed. 79 It is especially significant that
the official Vatican response to the Faith and Order report, Baptism,
Eucharist, and Ministry, where it treats the sacramental presence of
Christ under forms of bread and wine, is open to "possible new theo-
logical explanations as to the Tiow' of the intrinsic change." 80

77
Ibid. 445.
78
For a brief history of the crucial developments on this theme which took place in
Catholic theology from 1945 down to 1970, see Edward J. Kilmartin, "Sacramental
Theology: The Eucharist in Recent Literature," TS 32 (1971) 233-77, at 232-45). Dur-
ing the last two decades the situation has remained stable.
79
On this subject we have the witness of Peter of Capua who, after reviewing the
various contemporary theories, concluded in his Summa quaestionum (A.D. 1201-2): 'It
is not an article of faith to believe that conversion is made thus or so, but only to believe
that the body of Christ is on the altar at the pronouncement of the words." See E. J.
Kilmartin, "Sacramental Theology" 244.
80
E. J. Kilmartin, 'The Official Vatican Response to BEM: Eucharist," Ecumenical
Trends 17 (1988) 37-40, at 39.
432 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

Moreover this same Vatican response seems inclined to approve the


early point of view that takes as its starting point the notion that
Christ is simultaneously the host of the meal and the gift, where it
states: "The risen Lord relates himself to this activity [i.e. the Church's
recall of the institution of the Eucharist]. He places the elements of
bread and wine in the relation between himself and the community.
These elements are made signs which realize his saving presence,
namely 'sacrament of his body and blood.' " 8 1 The bread and wine are
said to become sacramental signs because of the "intrinsic change
which takes place, whereby unity of being is realized between the
signifying reality and the reality signified."82
The first statement quoted above evokes the idea that all being is
relational and attains its full meaning and being when fully related to
God and humanity. The second statement emphasizes the "intrinsic
change" without insisting on the scholastic explanation of the nature
of the change. Hence the concept of change is open to the interpretation
of the fourth-century Antiochene eucharistie theology which became
the common tradition of Eastern Orthodox churches.
According to this Eastern church outlook the Holy Spirit exercises a
personal and proper mission in the economy of salvation which corre­
sponds to the personal and proper mission of the Word of God. As one
aspect of this mission the Spirit sanctifies the elements of bread and
wine by elevating them to their ultimate relational possibility. In light
of this consideration it may also be said that the Vatican response is
open to the Eastern pneumatology which affirms that the Holy Spirit
exercises a personal and proper mission of sanctification in all aspects
of the economy of salvation in general, and all aspects of the celebra­
tion of the Eucharist in particular.
2. Pneumatology. The traditional Latin scholastic version of trini-
tarian theology plays down the concept of the personal and proper
mission of the Holy Spirit. Western sources of the first millennium
distinguish between the economic roles of the second and third persons
of the Trinity and typically, as in the East, the role of sanctifier is
83
assigned to the Holy Spirit. However, with minor exceptions, this
description of the role of the Holy Spirit is determined by a trinitarian
theology which conceives the work of creation and redemption as op­
erations performed by the Godhead as such. In other words the work of
sanctification is "appropriated" to the Holy Spirit. It is not understood
as a work proper to the personal mission of the Spirit in the economy
81 82
Ibid. 40. Ibid.
83
Cf. η. 27 above.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 433
of salvation. Rather, attribution of the work of sanctification to the
"power of the Holy Spirit" serves as a synonym for "divine power."
However the modern renewal of interest in the theology of the Holy
Spirit has led Catholic theologians to a new appreciation of the pecu­
liar role of the Holy Spirit in the economy of salvation.
Modern studies in the field of pneumatology have resulted in a bet­
ter understanding that saving grace, as participation in the divine life
of the Holy Trinity, consists in personal relations with each of the
divine persons. The distinction between the work of the Trinity in
creation, which does not imply special relations of the individual di­
vine persons to creatures, and the work of the Trinity in redemption,
which implies personal relations to individual divine persons, has al­
ready influenced the teaching of the modern Roman magisterium.84
At the end of the 19th century Pope Leo ΧΠΙ, in his encyclical letter
Divinum Mud munus, May 9,1897, taught that apart from the Incar­
nation of the Word, the action of the divine persons ad extra is one and
the same, but attributed to one or other person "by appropriation."85
Less than fifty years later Pius XIFs encyclical letter Mystici corporis,
June 29,1943, featured the distinction between the action of the Trin­
ity in creation and the inhabitation of the divine persons in those who
are in the state of grace.86 Pope Paul VI repeated this teaching in a
series of allocutions which began in 1966. Here he worked out his own
synthesis, developing the idea that holiness unfolds "from the myste­
rious inhabitation of the Holy Spirit in each soul."87

84
Only a distinction of reason exists between the works of the divine persons in
creation because there are no grounds for a real distinction of relations of individual
divine persons to created works as such. But aspects of creation are appropriated
( = strict sense) to a person because it suits the peculiarity of that person. The use of
"appropriation" in the strict sense is motivated by the desire to affirm that creation is a
unified work of the triune God: identity of operation; differentiated work of persons
(distinction of reason). On the other hand, there exists a real distinction between the
works of divine persons in the sanctification of human realities because there exist real
relations between individual divine persons and human persons. In this case "appropri­
ation" in the wide sense is applicable, namely, the work proper to one divine person
includes the work of the other two: differentiated work of one person includes the work
of the other two: differentiated work of persons (real distinction); real unity of differen­
tiated operations (perichoresis).
85 M
DS 3326. DS 3814-15.
87
Audience of Nov. 12, 1969 (Documentation catholique 66 [1969] 1053-55). On the
subject of Pope Paul VFs interest in the theology of the Holy Spirit, see E. J. Kilmartin,
'Taul VTs References to the Holy Spirit in Discourses and Writings on the Second
Vatican Council, 1963-1965," in Paolo VI e i problemi ecclesiologici al concilio, Collo­
quio internazionale di studio: Brescia, 19-21, settembre 1986 (Brescia: Pubblicazioni
dellTstituto Paolo VI, 1989) 399-406.
434 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

In his recent encyclical letter on the subject of the Holy Spirit, Pope
John Paul II explicitly stated that he did not intend to resolve ques-
tions about the Holy Spirit that are presently under discussion.88 Nev-
ertheless, he seems to favor as his personal opinion the Eastern doc-
trine concerning the personal and proper mission of the Holy Spirit
where he treats the Spirit's role in the Eucharist. Here he asserts that
in the Mass "his (Christ's) advent and salvific presence is sacramen-
tally renewed (renovatur); namely in the sacrifice and communion....
However it is effected by the power of the Holy Spirit in interiore eius
propria missione."89 This Latin phrase should be translated: "in his
interior proper mission." In a footnote the pope states that this idea is
expressed in the eucharistie epiclesis of the new Roman Missal of Paul
VI, and he refers explicitly to the second Eucharistie Prayer.90
What consequences follow for the theology of the Eucharist from the
attribution to the Spirit of a personal and proper mission in the econ-
omy of salvation? It must be said what holds for systematic theology in
general holds also for eucharistie theology. Insofar as this Eastern
theology of the Holy Spirit is accepted, the systematic theologian must
endeavor to integrate it fully into all aspects of Christian theology in
general, and the Eucharist in particular.
There is the matter of the pneumatological aspect of the Incarnation
of the Word and the work of the incarnate Word by which the new
covenant is established between the Father and humanity, and of the
role of the Holy Spirit in the work of establishing and maintaining the
Church and in the process of sanctification of ordinary human persons.
In the case of the Eucharist, attention must be paid to the role of the
Holy Spirit in the event of the transformation of the eucharistie ele-
ments into the sacraments of the Body and Blood of Christ; to the
nature of the action of the Holy Spirit by which the eucharistie com-
munity is sanctified and thus enabled to offer acceptable worship to the
Father in union with the crucified and risen Lord; to the nature of the

88
De Spiritu Sancto in vita ecclesiae et mundi, May 18, 1986 (Vatican City, 1986)
Introduction, no. 2, p. 6.
89
Part 3, nos. 62,88.
90
Here the pope appears to follow the lead of the Second Vatican Council's Decree on
Ecumenism which refers to the importance of recovering the pneumatological aspect of
Christian worship by calling attention to the riches of Eastern liturgy, and noting "...
with what love the Eastern Christians celebrate the sacred liturgy, especially the eu-
charistie mystery . . . enter into communion with the most holy Trinity" (15a). The same
council's Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy has the obligatory reference to the Holy
Spirit where it speaks of the thanksgiving offered to God "through the power of the Holy
Spirit" (no. 6). But in the section especially dedicated to the Eucharist the role of the
Holy Spirit is not mentioned (nos. 47-58).
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 435
sanctifying action of the Holy Spirit which sheds light both on the
question of the manner of presence of the death-resurrection of Christ
in the eucharistie celebration and on the question of the participation
of the worshippers in this mystery of God in Christ.
In none of these instances is the Holy Spirit described as "mediator";
the role of the Spirit is more precisely defined as "mediation." The
Eastern tradition is especially sensitive to this function of the Holy
Spirit in the economy of salvation, namely, that of bringing the Church
to Christ and Christ to the Church. This insight underlies the epiclesis
of the liturgies of the various sacraments. The Spirit is invoked both to
bring Christ to the Church and over the assembled Church in order to
bring it to Christ. Both movements are essential. If Christ is not
brought to the assembly there is a purely human ceremony; if the
Church is not brought to Christ the liturgy is meaningless.
Here we touch on the fundamental question of the relationship be-
tween Christ and the Church. The unity between Christ and the
Church is a unity in plurality of persons. Christ is the head, the
Church is the body; Christ is the bridegroom, the Church is the bride;
Christ is master, members of the Church are disciples. The bond of
unity is the Holy Spirit. In this optic three false understandings of the
Church are to be avoided: a monophysitic, or overdrawn identification
of Church with Christ; the Nestorian tendency, or overdrawn separa-
tion of Church from Christ; and an overdrawn identification of Church
with the Holy Spirit. This danger is avoided by introducing the concept
of "mediated immediacy."
The unity between Christ and the Church is personal and immediate
because it is mediated by the one Spirit. The Holy Spirit is not "me-
diator" between Christ and us, but rather mediation of the mediator,
because the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Christ whom he shares with us.
Therefore the Holy Spirit is the personal principle of unity and differ-
entiation. This understanding of this role of the Spirit in the economy
of salvation enables us to speak of the interplay between Christ and
the Church without neglecting the difference; to distinguish the activ-
ity of the two without neglecting the greater mystery of their unity.
According to the teaching of the Constitution on the Church of the
Second Vatican Council the Holy Spirit is the principle of unity be-
tween Christ and Church. The Spirit is the principle of life, constitu-
tion and fruitfulness of the Church, which is made by the Spirit the
"sacrament of salvation."91 In this regard the council refers to the
analogy between the Incarnation and Church. Here the distinction
between the mission of the Son and the mission of the Spirit is basic for

Lumen gentium 48.


436 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

the nexus and distinction between Christ and Church, and for the
ordering of Christ and Church.92
The pneumatological dimension of the mystery of the Church—the
identity of the one Spirit in Christ and in the believers—furnishes the
theological basis for avoiding the danger of constructing a mono-
physitic ecclesiology, i.e. the overdrawn identification of the Church
with Christ. Consequently it supplies the basic theological argument
against the narrow Thomistic explanation of the relationship of the
ecclesiological dimension of the eucharistie sacrifice to the Christolog-
ical dimension. For it shows that the ecclesiological dimension of the
eucharistie sacrifice is grounded on the divine activity of the Holy
Spirit through whom Christ offered himself on the cross and through
whom the faithful offer themselves in union with Christ.
Up to this point we have discussed two important characteristic
traits of the prevailing Catholic synthesis of eucharistie theology
which are not related to the scholastic theology of the moment of con-
secration. There are a number of other characteristic traits in this
prevailing Catholic synthesis which do derive from the scholastic the-
ology of the moment of consecration formulated within the Thomistic
synthesis. Our listing continues with seven of these traits.
1. The Twofold Aspect of the Moment of Consecration. The theologi-
cal postulate that the moment of consecration is both the moment of
the sacramental self-offering of Christ and the moment of conversion of
the eucharistie elements into the body and blood of Christ implies that
this is likewise the ideal moment for the faithful to unite themselves to
the self-offering of Christ by faith. Hence the Eucharistie Prayer as a
whole appears to belong to the integrity of the rite, certainly not to the
integrity of the sacrament. What then is the function of the Eucharis-
tie Prayer as a whole? The notion of ideal moment emphasizes the
individual believer's relation to Christ; the "moment" of the Eucharis-
tie Prayer as a whole appears to supply the context which fosters the
prayerful relation of the corporate assembly of believers to Christ the
head of the Church.
2. The Rite of Holy Communion as Integrating Rite. The scholastic
moment-of-consecration theology effectively excludes the rite of par-
ticipation of the body and blood of Christ from the aspect of eucharistie
sacrifice. In the relationship to the eucharist sacrifice of Christ the rite
of Holy Communion is described as an "integrating part" rather than
"essential part."93 However, biblically speaking, sacrifice and meal

92
Ibid. 8.
93
Pius XII, encyclical letter Mediator Dei, 20 November 1947, AAS 39 (1947) 562-63;
DS 3854.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 437
cannot be separated. Insofar as Jesus can be said to have instituted the
memorial of his self-offering within the symbolic actions of the Last
Supper, the sacrificial and meal aspects are inseparable.
The process of the meal is that by which (the modus quo) the ritual
sacrificial act (the id quod) is realized. In other words, although the
meal aspect belongs to the shape of the celebration, it is bound to the
sacrificial aspect of the Eucharist. The shape of meaning is that of a
sacrificial event constituted in the form of a ritual meal process. Inso-
far as the meal contains formal elements of meaning they are already
given in the essential traits of sacrifice and communion: namely, the
aspect of the self-offering of Christ for the salvation of the world, the
acceptance of the giver by the communicants, and the response of self-
offering by the communicants in order to achieve the meaning of their
lives. 94
3. The Objective Sacramental Presence of the Sacrifice of the Cross.
This moment-of-consecration theology reflects a particular under-
standing of the Eucharist under the aspect of "sacrament of the sacri-
fice of Christ." It implies that the once-for-all "sacrifice of Christ," the
transitus of Jesus Christ from suffering to glory, or the mystery of the
death-resurrection-glorification of Jesus Christ, is rendered present in
the context of the eucharistie celebration. Moreover it implies that the
objective presence of the past historical redemptive acts of Christ is
located "on the altar." However there is no consensus as to what this
means.
Various explanations are offered concerning the possibility of the
past historical redemptive acts of Christ becoming "eternalized," and
so available to be presented sacramentally in the Eucharist of the
Church. In order to support the fact of the objective presence an appeal
is made frequently to the biblical notion of anamnesis. However it is
highly questionable whether the concept of anamnesis, as applied to
the celebration of memorial feasts which were instituted by the God of
Israel, generally included the idea of liturgical objective representa-
tion of past historical saving actions of God. Rather the commemora-
tive feasts seem to have been understood more commonly as the media
by which the participants of the feasts are effectively represented to
94
Johannes Betz, among others, objects to Pius XITs description of the rite of Holy
Communion as a "merely integrating part" in Mediator Dei: 'The somatic real presence
of Jesus makes possible the deepest encounter of Christ with the Christians and the
Communion, the final end in any case of the symbolic meal, the indispensable act at
least of the priest, completes it as an essential, not merely an integrating part (so Pius
XII, DS 3854) of the sacrifice of the Eucharist" (J. Betz, "Eucharist, I. Theological, E.
Theological Explanations," in Karl Rahner, ed., Encyclopedia of Theology: The Concise
Sacramentum Mundi [New York: Seabury, 1975] 458).
438 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

the foundation event in the sense of being offered a share in blessings


analogous to those imparted in the historical event itself.
At any rate the application of the biblical notion of anamnesis sup-
ports the idea that the eucharistie assembly is, in some sense, repre-
sented to the foundation event of Jesus' death-resurrection and, as a
consequence, enabled by faith to participate in its salutary effects.
Moreover the witness of the liturgy, the classical eucharistie prayers,
does not furnish support for any other understanding of the biblical
anamnesis. These prayers point in the direction of the representation,
or repeated presentation, of the liturgical assembly to the foundation
event of the new covenant by faith.
But in what sense is the worshipping community represented to the
Christ-event through the eucharistie liturgy? The average Catholic
synthesis, which assumes the objective presence on the altar, asks how
the historical redemptive work which took place in space and time
could have become "eternalized." But this question jumps the gun by
assuming the fact of the sacramental objective presence of the histor-
ical sacrifice of the cross.
There are good grounds for the assumption that the concept of ob-
jective anamnesis is compatible with the teaching of certain Eastern
Fathers of the Church such as Theodore of Mopsuestia and St. John
Chrysostom. However this teaching is not so clearly and widely en-
dorsed that it warrants being classified as the authentic tradition of
the Eastern churches; much less can the claim be made for Western
sources. Hence one is not constrained on the grounds of an authentic
whole tradition of the East and West to seek a credible explanation of
this concept of objective anamnesis. In addition none of the numerous
attempts to explain how past historical saving events can be conceived
as surviving the flow of historical space and time and so becoming
accessible for liturgical presence have been successful. All of these
theories appear to have one thing in common: They do not represent
solutions to problems, but rather formulate problems in need of solu-
tions.
4. The Relationship between Faith and the Sacramental Sacrifice.
The question of the relation of the act of faith of the liturgical assembly
to the sacramental presence of the sacrifice of Christ is resolved im-
plicitly by the notion of the objective presence of the mystery on the
altar. The sacramental presence of the unique self-offering of Christ is
conceived as prior in time and not simply prior in nature to the re-
sponse of faith by which the assembled believers unite themselves to
this mystery. Hence the average Catholic synthesis views the relation-
ship as analogous to the reception of a dogmatic statement proposed for
the assent of faith.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 439
But is not the act of saving faith so bound up with the mystery of God
in Christ that the one is not only related to the other as object of belief,
but is already here in the other? In the liturgical celebration, is the act
of faith something that stands before the mystery as a first step, or is
it rather the indispensable and abiding way of sharing in the mystery?
5. The Eucharist as the Sacrifice of the Church. The Eucharist is
identified as the sacrifice of the Church because at the moment of the
consecration of the bread and wine Christ is actively present offering
himself as high priest and head of the Church. In other words, the
potential exists for the "assisting faithful" to participate in the sacra-
mental self-offering of Christ who is acting as the high priest and head
of the Church.
According to this understanding the Eucharist appears to be a sac-
rament celebrated in the Church for the sake of the Church, but not
precisely the sacrament of the Church. Hence it can be said that the
"Eucharist makes the Church," as the source of the Church's unity. On
the other hand the traditional notion that the "Church makes the
Eucharist," or that "the Church manifests itself and realizes itself
through the Eucharist," is less apparent.
This explanation of the ecclesiological dimension of the Eucharist
provides the grounds for the theory that the sacramental sacrifice of
the head affords the opportunity for members of the Church through-
out the world to participate personally by their intention and devotion
in the "Masses of the world," as though physically assisting and en-
gaged. Moreover a part of the scholastic tradition, favored by the Ro-
man magisterium in the past and never explicitly rejected, holds that
the faithful throughout the world by thus uniting their devotion to the
Masses of the world account for the measure of graces that derive from
each Mass. This conclusion appears to follow logically from the theory
that situates the ecclesiological dimension of the eucharistie sacrifice
within the Christological dimension. Nevertheless it is unintelligible
from the standpoint of a theology of prayer.95
6. Roles of the Presiding Priest. The priest who presides at the Eu-
charist is conceived as representing the Church of which Christ is the
head because he represents Christ the head of the Church exclusively
when he pronounces the eucharistie words of Christ contained in the
Eucharistie Prayer. Thus the novel linear order is introduced: Christ-
"Ministerial Priest"-Priestly People-Eucharist. It replaces the basic
traditional order of: Christ-Church-Eucharist.
In the latter ordering the so-called "ministerial priesthood" is con-
ceived as a substructure of the Church, embedded in the relation:
95
E. J. Kilmartin, 'The One Fruit and the Many Fruits" 61-63.
440 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

Christ-Church. Therefore its role is explainable systematically only


in terms of a reciprocal relation to Christ and Church.96 This means
that the ministerial priest, missioned by Christ, and commissioned by
the Church through ordination, exercises a leadership role in the ec-
clesial body of Christ. Therefore as leader of the community that mer-
its the title "Church of Christ," he acts as representative of Christ, the
head of the Church, in the eucharistie liturgy. On the other hand, he
proclaims the Eucharistie Prayer in the name of the Church and there-
fore represents the Church of which Christ is the head. All this is made
intelligible if the Eucharistie Prayer itself is conceived as equivalent to
the "essential form" of the Eucharist, but not if the essential form is
confined to the eucharistie words of Christ spoken by the priest acting
in persona Christi, that is, in specific sacramental identity with Christ.
In this latter case it would hold true that the priest represents the
Church at the moment of consecration only because here he acts ex-
clusively as instrument of Christ, the head of the Church.
More recent Catholic theological reflection on the eucharistie sacri-
fice has shown a tendency to depart from this modern average Catholic
position, and to be more sympathetic to what is described as the mod-
ern Byzantine Orthodox point of view, but which in reality represents
also the Western tradition of the first millennium.97 According to the
traditional Eastern theology, the leader of the Eucharist is best de-
scribed as one who has been called by Christ and ordained in the power
of the Holy Spirit to act as representative of the liturgical assembly
and, at the same time, to act as the representative of Christ the head
of the Church. In this theological tradition the priest who presides at
the Eucharist proclaims the Eucharistie Prayer in the name of the
Church, that is, as the official representative of the Church of which
Jesus Christ is the head. Therefore he also acts in the name of Jesus

96
Only a few early scholastic theologians refer to the reciprocal relation of the priest
to Christ and the Church. But there is no development of this notion. The idea that the
priest represents both Christ and Church is brought out by Bernold of Constance (1050-
1100) who depicts the priest as "ambassador of Christ and embassy of the people to the
Lord" (Schaefer 134). Honorius of Autun also views the priest as "ambassador of the
Church to Christ; ambassador of Christ to us (embassy of Christ to us)" (Schaefer 158).
97
Relevant publications on this subject by E. J. Kilmartin include "Apostolic Office,
Sacrament of Christ," TS 36 (1975) 243-64; "Christ's Presence in the Liturgy," Em-
manuel 82 (1976) 237-43 (a brief presentation based on the explanation given in "Ap-
ostolic Office, Sacrament of Christ" 105-112); "Pastoral Office and the Eucharist," Em-
manuel 82 (1976) 312-18 (the witness of liturgical sources); Letter to America on the
Declaration on the Ordination of Women, America 136 no. 9 (5 March 1977) 177-78;
"Bishops and Presbyters as Representatives of Christ and the Church," in Leonard and
Arlene Swidler, eds., Women Priests: A Catholic Commentary on the Vatican Document
(N. Y.: Paulist, 1977) 295-301.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 441
Christ, the head of the Church. In this sense he can be described as
typos or eikon of Christ when he acts in the name of Christ as leader of
the eucharistie celebration. This point of view was included in the
Anglican-Orthodox Doctrinal Commission's statement at the close of
the 1976 Moscow conference: "In the Eucharist the eternal priesthood
of Christ is continually manifested in time. The celebrant in his litur-
gical action has a twofold ministry: as icon of Christ, acting in the
name of Christ for the community, and also as representative of the
community, expressing the priesthood of the faithful."98
7. The Efficacy of the Mass "ex opere operato." When the moment of
consecration of the eucharistie elements is understood according to the
later Thomistic synthesis to be the moment of the sacramental "re-
newal" of the sacrifice of the cross through Christ's presence as priest
and victim, the way is opened to predicate an effect that is independent
of the devotion of the priest and others who are somehow construed as
actively participating in the Mass. This means that the Mass might be
conceived as efficacious in a fashion analogous to the efficacy of the
sacraments in general, in virtue of the sacramental renewal of the
once-for-all oblation of Christ.
This theory was held in the past, and seems to remain as part of the
traditional popular eucharistie theology. Still Catholic theologians at
present appear to be in more general agreement that there is no new
oblation on the part of Christ which could account for the new fruits
that flow from the Mass. Therefore in modern scholastic theology the
notion of a twofold efficacy is discarded in favor of the singular efficacy
that is measured by the devotion of the participants."
ASSESSMENT OF THE PREVAILING SYNTHESIS
The average modern Catholic eucharistie theology displays only a
weak integration of the elements that go into the construction of a
systematic theology of the Eucharist. But how is the theologian to
proceed to develop a truly systematic approach that avoids the objec-
tionable consequences of the scholastic moment-of-consecration theol-
ogy and the accompanying Christological point of departure?
As noted above, the identification of the eucharistie words of Christ
as the essential form of the sacrament resulted from the application of
the article of faith concerning the efficacy of the word of God, as it was
applied in the 11th-century debate over the content of the sacraments
of the body and blood of Christ. Consequently it originated from the

98
E. J. Kilmartin, "The Active Role of Christ and the Holy Spirit in the Sanctification
of the Eucharistie Elements," TS 45 (1984) 225-53, at 236-37.
99
'The One Fruit and the Many Fruits" 63-64.
442 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

law of belief and not from the precise function that the narrative of
institution plays in the Eucharistie Prayer.
Without doubt this development of the theology of the essential form
of the Eucharist in which the Christological dimension became the
starting point for a theological synthesis shattered the fragile equilib-
rium that the early scholastic theological synthesis was able to main-
tain well into the 12th century. In our day this official theology of the
Eucharist is being subjected to strong negative criticism by some Cath-
olic scholars, especially in Europe. In general it is recognized that the
average Catholic synthesis is unable to satisfy the demands of a bal-
anced approach to the shape of meaning and the shape of celebration of
the Eucharist.
Angelus Häussling has called attention to an undesirable result of
the exaggerated esteem for the so-called words of consecration vis-à-vis
the whole Eucharistie Prayer: "It leads to the elevation of the priest,
because he speaks the words of Christ in the account of instutition
according to 1 Cor 11 and the Synoptic Gospels, to the role of the one
acting "in persona Christi," and finally representing the person of
Christ himself... in such a way that he no longer, as the rite shows,
is receiver with and in the celebrating assembly (which is Church) and
so remains and must remain. Otherwise, as the logical consequence, a
sacramentalistic clericalism results that works destructively."100
Also Bishop Karl Lehmann's observation on this aspect of the scho-
lastic theology of the Eucharist is not exaggerated when he says: "The
concentration on the concept of consecration has abridged the Eucha-
ristie Prayer liturgically and ecclesiologically in a disastrous way. In
this narrowing is grounded a part of the thematic of the sacrificial
character of the Mass which to this day has not been sufficiently
worked out."101
Above all, mention must be made of Cesare Giraudo who has con-
tributed an extensive literary-theological analysis of the Eastern and
Western traditions of the classical Eucharistie Prayers.102 Against this
background he supplies a convincing argument for the conclusion that
while the idea that the priest represents Christ, or acts "in the person
of Christ," must be maintained, there is a more balanced key to the
100
Angelus Häussling, "Odo Casel—Noch von Aktualität/' Archiv fur Liturgiewis-
senschaft 28 (1986) 377.
101
Karl Lehmann, "Gottesdienst als Ausdruck des Glaubens/' Liturgisches Jahrbuch
30 (1980) 197-214, at 211; Cesare Giraudo, Eucaristia per la chiesa. Prospettive teolo-
giche sull'eucaristia a partire dalla "lex orandin (Rome: Gregorian University, 1989) 210.
102
C. Giraudo, IM struttura letteraria della preghiera eucaristica. Saggio sulla genesi
letteraria dVuna forma. Tôdâ veterotestamentaria, berakà guidaica, anafora cristiana.
Analecta Biblica 92 (Rome: Biblical Institute, 1981).
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 443

understanding of the role of the priest, namely, that the priest acts "in
the person of the Church."103
We may conclude our reflections up to this point, therefore, with the
observation that the prevailing synthesis, the average modern Cath-
olic theology of the Eucharist which we have been describing, is with-
out a future. In the second millennium, the law of belief, instead of the
law of prayer, has enjoyed pride of place. The analysis of the theolog-
ical treatises on the subject of the Eucharist produced during the for-
mative period of the Western scholastic synthesis shows that theolo-
gians and liturgists had no grasp of the literary structure and theo-
logical dynamic of the Eucharistie Prayer and accompanying symbolic
action. They reduced the whole problematic to an imaginary "central
space" within the Eucharistie Prayer, with the result that the eucha-
ristie words of Christ were poised in the air without access to the other
elements of the structure.104
The re-integration of the law of belief into the law of prayer after the
manner of the first millennium remains the task of the future; it fur-
nishes the point of departure for the construction of a systematic eu-
charistie theology and will be the achievement of the third theological
millennium. At this juncture it is not possible to predict the way in
which a normative systematic theology of the Eucharist might be
structured. However a brief description of how the sacrificial aspect of
a new approach might be formulated is offered here. It can serve as a
conclusion to this article.
TOWARDS A COMPREHENSIVE THEOLOGY OF THE EUCHARIST
The best access to the more authentic traditional theology of the
eucharistie sacrifice is the classical Eucharistie Prayers and accompa-
nying symbolic activity.105 Without exception they mirror a theology
of salvation history which is conformed to the witness of the New
Testament. These Eucharistie Prayers of the Eastern and Western
traditions have the same basic structure: anamnesis (remembrance)
and epiclesis (petition). The liturgical narrative of institution of the
Eucharist can be found in either section. It represents the theological
center of these prayers, for it supplies the reason for anamnetic-

103
Regarding the preference for the employment of the concept in persona ecclesiae as
the starting point for the analysis of the twofold representative role of the priest who
presides at the Eucharist, see Giraudo, Eucaristia 336-45.
104
Ibid. 520-56.
ios rphe analysis which follows is dependent on that of C. Giraudo who offers an ex-
tended treatment of the subject in La struttura letteraria della preghiera eucaristica and
to a lesser extent in Eucaristia per la chiesa. Cf. also E. J. Kilmartin, "Sacrifìcium
Laudis: Content and Function of Early Eucharistie Prayers," TS 35 (1974) 268-87.
444 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

offering prayer through which the liturgical community consciously


makes its own self-offering. It also gives the grounds for the epiclesis
of the Holy Spirit, asking for the sanctification of the eucharistie gifts
and the communicants. Moreover, introduced into the context of
prayful discourse, the liturgical account of institution takes on the role
of prayer of petition. This epicletic function is, in fact, highlighted both
in virtue of the intimate connection that is made between the liturgical
narrative and anamnetic-offering prayer, and in virtue of the intimate
link between this group and the epiclesis for the sanctification of the
gifts and of the participants who share in the sacraments of the body
and blood.
The literary structure of the classical Eucharistie Prayers shows
that it is a unified prayer directed to the Father as the source of all. 106
It mirrors the dynamic relation of the partners of the new covenant in
the history of salvation realized fully through the redemptive work of
Christ in the power of the Spirit. The thankful recognition of the Fa-
ther's action in Christ (anamnesis) is followed by the petition (epiclesis)
that the continuing fidelity of the Father to his people be expressed
and realized through the sanctifying action of the Holy Spirit by which
the communicants are brought to Christ (epiclesis for sanctification of
communicants) and by which Christ is brought to the communicants
(epiclesis for sanctification of the bread and wine). The extension of the
epiclesis in the intercessions is the expression of the Church's desire
that all humanity be brought within the sphere of the new-covenant
people. The commitment of the Church to the new covenant is ex-
pressed explicitly in the anamnetic-offering prayer.
The transitus of the assembled community to the Father is expressed
liturgically through the Eucharistie Prayer. The transitus of Christ
himself is recalled and affirmed as the single transitus in which the
believing assembly participates through the medium of the eucharistie
celebration. At the same time the Holy Spirit is identified as the me-
diation of the presence of Christ to the Church and the Church to
Christ.

106
The earliest legislation concerning the Eucharistie Prayer is found in canon 21 of
the Breviarium Hipponense, which summarizes the acts of the Council of Hippo Regius
of October 8, 393: "No one shall name the Father for the Son or the Son for the Father
in prayers; and when one assists at the altar the oration shall be directed always to the
Father." An explanation of this canon, its background, and later influence is given in
E. J. Kilmartin, "Early African Legislation concerning Liturgical Prayer," Ephemerides
liturgicae 99 (1985) 105-27. There is evidence for the practice of naming the Son in
eucharistie prayers as the addressee in early Gallican and Spanish sources; a practice
that probably originated as a reaction to the Arian heresy ("Early African Legislation"
108).
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 445
The response to the prayer of the Church is represented sacramen-
tally in the sacraments of the body and blood of Christ. The reception
of the sacraments enables sacramental communion with Christ as the
one who offered himself once and for all to the Father in order to
receive from the Father the meaning of his life, who offered himself as
the man for others to draw believers into personal communion with
himself and so into communion with the Father.
The crucified and risen Lord accomplishes this movement on behalf
of humanity under the title of mediator and in virtue of the theandric
act by which he sends the Holy Spirit from the Father to enable the
communicants to share in his own sentiments of self-offering. Conse-
quently in the power of the Holy Spirit the sacramental communion of
believing communicants with Christ becomes the sacramental source
of their spiritual, personal communion with the risen Lord which, by
participation in his uniquely acceptable self-offering, culminates in
communion with the Father of all blessings.
The Eucharistie Prayer and the Jewish Meal Ritual
At the outset of the Jewish religious meal, the leader, elevating
bread a little above the table at which he is seated, pronounces the
blessing. Then he breaks the bread, consumes a particle, and distrib-
utes the rest to those around the table. Normally the distribution and
consumption of the bread take place in silence, but exceptions are
recorded for special circumstances. At the end of the meal, the same
procedure is carried out with the cup(s).107
The initial and closing rituals are parts of the meal itself. They are
intended to express the religious sentiment that should permeate the
whole meal: praise and thanksgiving for the gift of life and of spiritual
and corporeal nourishment. This religious sentiment is expressed rit-
ually by utilizing the gifts of God the creator and sustainer of fully
human existence in order to praise and thank him.
The Prayer of Praise and Thanksgiving
The prayer of praise and thanksgiving is called berakha. This He-
brew term refers, in the first place, to gifts receivedfromYahweh. The
English word blessing" supplies a suitable translation. The things
that Yahweh gives, that make human existence possible (life and cor-
poreal nourishment) and fully human existence attainable (the spiri-
tual nourishment of the Torah, the communal life of the chosen people,
and the promised land) are called "blessings."
107
On the evidence for the number of cups, see E. J. Kilmartin, "The Eucharistie Cup
in the Primitive Liturgy," Catholic Biblical Quarterly 24 (1962) 32-43.
446 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

AU blessings that human beings need come from Yahweh. Yahweh


himself needs no blessings in the sense that he profits by mankind's
beneficence. Nevertheless there is an analogous sense in which human
beings can bless Yahweh. They do this by speaking well of Yahweh, by
praising him as the source of all blessings, and by thanking him for
concrete benefits which he has already given to Israel and continues to
bestow on his faithful people.
Forms of Jewish prayer have this common structure: praise of God;
recall of God's mighty acts in favor of his people, as motive of the
praise; and a final doxology that repeats the theme of praise. Fre-
quently a petition for God's continued blessings is inserted after the
recall of God's mighty acts. Thus the recall serves as a clasp that unites
the whole prayer. It furnishes the motive for praise of God, and the
motive for the expectation that the faithful God will hear the petitions
of his people now. Moreover this recall, which places before God what
God has already done, was thought by ancient Israel to serve as a
motive for God himself to recall this faithfulness and to come to the aid
of his people in the present.
The Gifts of Bread and Wine
The act of holding the bread and cup above the table is the gestural
complement of what is expressed verbally by the blessing. It is an act
of offering the elements to Yahweh: a symbolic act by which the ele-
ments are given a new meaning. In brief, the offering of bread and
wine with thanksgiving is, in the first place, an act of adoration. The
bread and wine become signs that represent a sacrifice of praise and
thanksgiving. Taken together, the verbal blessing and the gesture of
offering the elements constitute a ritual sacrifice: the explicit acknowl-
edgement that all things belong to Yahweh and that human beings are
dependent on Yahweh for their continued existence and human devel-
opment.
The way of expressing ritually the confession that the gifts by which
corporeal life is sustained (food and drink) derive from Yahweh is the
gesture of offering types of food and drink back to Yahweh. This ges-
ture does not signify that the offerer has no need of the gifts or that
they are useful to Yahweh. Rather it signifies that the created ele-
ments always belong to Yahweh and are properly used by human
beings when they accept these as gifts, namely with the attitude of
gratitude.
However the meaning of the offering of gifts does not end with the
idea of thanksgiving for elements that sustain corporeal life. The ges-
ture is also meant to be the expression of gratitude for the spiritual
gifts of Yahweh that sustain fully human life (e.g. the Torah and the
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 447
corporate life of the people of God). Finally this symbolism extends to
human life itself. Hence the field of symbolism includes the acknowl-
edgement that the offerers themselves belong to Yahweh. At this level
the offerers give themselves back to God in order to receive the mean-
ing of their life that God alone can bestow.
The idea that self-offering to Yahweh, or complete openness to re-
ceive from God the fulfillment that he alone can give, is the acceptable
sacrifice is not foreign to biblical faith. The notion is found in the
Psalms, most of which were probably composed to accompany acts of
worship in the temple.108
In the second century of the Christian era, Irenaeus of Lyons inter-
prets the offering of bread and wine of the Eucharist in continuity with
this deepest meaning of the Jewish meal ritual. Irenaeus underscores
the fact that God has no need of the offerings of human beings. Rather
human beings need to make offerings to show gratitude, and thus reap
the blessings of God: 'The oblation of the Church... is accounted with
God a pure sacrifice, and is acceptable to him; not that he stands in
need of a sacrifice from us, but that he who offers is himself glorified in
what he offers, if his gift is accepted."109

The Consumption of the Bread and Wine


After the ritual act of blessing and offering of the bread and wine at
the Jewish meal, the elements are considered to be signs in which the
offerer places his interior dispositions of praise and thanksgiving. The
bread and wine have become blessed, offerings made to God. The table
companions appropriate to themselves the ritual acts of the leader by
the verbal assent, "Amen." Thereby they make the offered bread and
wine signs of their personal sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. Fur-
thermore this ritual consent is confirmed by the act of consumption of
the consecrated bread and wine. In short, the eating and drinking is a
positive act of adhesion to the blessing and ritual offering of the ele-
ments. It is a religious act that denotes the grateful acceptance of the

ios ««pkg sacrifice acceptable to God is a broken spirit" (Ps 51:17-19). The prayer of
Azariah, inserted into Daniel between 3:23-3:24, and probably composed in Hebrew in
the second orfirstcentury B.c., provides a good example of this concept: "And at this time
there is . . . no burnt offering, or sacrifice, or oblation, or incense, no place to make an
offering before thee.... Yet with a contrite heart and a humble spirit may we be ac-
cepted, as though it were with burnt offerings of rams and bulls . . . such may our
sacrifice be in thy sight this day" (w. 15-17. The same idea is found in Rom 12:1).
109
Adversus haereses 4.17.4-18.6, at 18.1; see also 4.31.1 and 5. For a detailed pre-
sentation of this theme in Irenaeus, see Robert J. Daly, Christian Sacrifice: The Judaeo-
Christian Background before Origent Studies in Christian Antiquity 18 (Washington:
Catholic University, 1978) 339-60.
448 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

blessings of God and at the same time connotes the commitment to be


a living sacrifice offered to God.
The two ritual acts that surround the meal represent the attitude
that the participants should have during the course of the whole sub-
stantial meal. Everything that is eaten and drunk should be taken as
a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving.
Summary
From the foregoing analysis we are in a position to identify the
shape of meaning and the shape of celebration of the Jewish festive
meal which, in turn, is applicable to the eucharistie celebration of the
Church. The phrase "shape of meaning" signifies the form of accom-
plishment which gives to the celebration its meaning and through
which its individual aspects obtain their theological significance, are
linked to one another, and are integrated into the whole. The phrase
"shape of the celebration" refers to the material expression of the for-
mal shape of meaning. To this belongs everything which is constitutive
for the symbolic actions of the celebration: words, gestures, elements
and actions, personal and social factors, the ordering of the whole
celebration.
The shape of "meaning" of the Jewish festive meal is that of a ritual
representation of the covenant relation between God and his people,
which corresponds to what Hans B. Meyer describes as the formal
liturgical-theological shape of meaning of the eucharistie celebration.
He defines the shape of meaning under the concept of "blessing-
commemoration." In the New Testament "blessing" (eulogia) stands
for a benevolent action by which God bestows his grace on humankind
or by which humankind acknowledges the goodness of God.110
Meyer summarizes his thought on this subject as follows:

110
The Greek term eucharistia also embraces this twofold meaning, for it is related to
eulogia, the latter being a translation of the Hebrew berakah which corresponds to
"blessing." The root charts can refer to a gift bestowed or to a thankful response made to
the giver of the gift. Correspondingly eucharistia, used to identify the substantive gift as
gift, can also be used to describe the grateful response itself: the intentional giving back
of the gift to the giver as a way of maintaining consciousness that the gift is a gift. In the
old Church, theologians as well as texts of the divine liturgy emphasized the objective
side. But the subjective side of Eucharist, the idea of the turning of the liturgical as-
sembly to the divine Giver, was not neglected. In this act the community intentionally
gives back itself, but also the gift, to the giver, not because it has no need of the gift but
to acknowledge that the gift remains the gift of God, of which the community stands in
constant need (J. Betz, "Die Eucharistie als—auch ethische—Umsetzung von
Glaubenseinsicht," in Bernard Fraling and Rudolf Hasenstab, eds., Die Wahrheit tun:
Zur Umsetzung ethischer Einsicht: Festschrift zum 70. Geburtstag von Georg Teicht-
weier [Würzburg: Echter, 1983] 93-107).
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 449
Blessing can refer to the holy Self-mediation of God or the praise of God. The
blessing-activity is actualized verbally and/or gesturally, as well as by be-
stowal of a gift, or by any combination of the three. The use of this concept is
especiallyfittingfor the Eucharist because the element of gift contained in the
concept eulogia is open to a specific eucharistie interpretation. The mutual
giving and receiving of the gift of the bread and wine expresses the self-
offering of God in Jesus Christ to humanity, effected through the Holy Spirit,
sanctifying individuals and establishing fellowship of the believers in the
Lord, and also the self-offering of individuals to God, as well as that of the
liturgical community united to Christ through the Holy Spirit.111
The individual aspects of the shape of meaning are ordered to one
goal: communion in the Holy Spirit with Christ and through him with
the Father, but also communion with the Body of Christ in the unity of
the Holy Spirit (that is, in and with the Church). Consequently the
eucharistie celebration, as the performative form of the faith of the
Church, articulates a theology of covenant.
The Eucharistie Prayer and Salvation History
The salvation-history theology which is found to be reflected in the
classical Eucharistie Prayers and the complementary symbolic action
has the following characteristics. This theology (1) features the idea of
the believer's participation in the mystery of God in Christ on the side
of the humanity of Christ; (2) it implies that this consists in a "partic-
ipation in the faith of Christ" by which he responded to his Father for
what the Father had done in him for the salvation of the world; (3) it
identifies the divine source of this participation as "the Spirit of the
faith of Christ," namely, the Holy Spirit, who was the source of the life
of faith of the incarnate Lord; (4) it identifies the Holy Spirit as the
mediation of the personal immediacy of the believers to Christ and of
the divinely transmitted conformity to the spiritual attitudes of Christ
whereby the believers are enabled to offer acceptable worship to God
"in, with, and through" Christ; (5) it identifies the effect of participa-
tion in the new covenant as the integration of the believer into the
single transitus of Jesus to the Father from suffering to glory; and (6)
it implies the representation of the eucharistie assembly to the histor-
ical salvific acts of Jesus.
Salvation-Historical and Liturgical Theology of the Eucharist
Among the numerous modern contributions to the understanding of
the salvation-history theology reflected in the classical Eucharistie

111
Hans Bernard Meyer, Eucharistie: Geschichte, Theologie, Pastoral. Gottesdienst der
Kirchey Handbuch der Liturgiewissenschaft, Teil 4 (Regensburg: Pustet, 1989) 455.
450 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

Prayers a few supply key insights which constitute central themes of a


systematic theology of eucharistie sacrifice. These insights are de­
scribed here and systematically ordered to one another.

Being Present to Christ's Salvific Acts


Dom Odo Casel favored the idea that in a first step the liturgical
activity represents, or renders present Christ and his saving work to
the liturgical assembly. This way of thinking has characterized much
of the discussion concerning the relationship of the historical salvific
acts of Christ to the eucharistie sacrifice. However, here and there over
the last three decades some voices have been raised in favor of another
way of thinking which takes into account the theology of the Holy
Spirit.
In a survey article published in this journal in 1971, this writer
called attention to a series of contributions which featured the idea
that "at the time of the Eucharist, the Spirit gives to the Church the
grace to recall, to render herself present to the Christ of history, pass­
ing from the world to the Father."112 In other words, "Our memory, in
the Spirit, allows us to bring the sacrifice of Christ to the center of
history and our lives. The movement is not from the historical event of
the cross to us; the event is not withdrawn from its historical context
and made to come to us. Rather, we go to the event, are made present
to it. The movement by which we meet a "passed" event is called
memory. It is by remembrance that we meet the sacrifice of the
cross. 113
This explanation of the existential presence of the participants of the
Eucharist to the sacrifice of Christ through recalling in the Spirit
corresponds partially to the theory of Cesare Giraudo. He favors the
concept of representation of the eucharistie community to the histori­
cal salvific acts of Jesus. This ripresentazione misterica is attributed to
God: "It is God who represents us to the 'salutaris virtus9 of the 'sacri­
9
ficio ephapax in the mediation of the sacramental sign. The subject
passively considered, that is represented, is the assembled Church
114
which celebrates by the "ministry of priests."
The more commonly accepted viewpoint, still maintained in many
115
circles, is exemplified in the writings of Johannes Betz, and devel-

112
E. J. Kilmartin, "Sacramental Theology," TS 32 (1971) 246.
113 114
Ibid. C. Giraudo, Eucaristia 620 η. 68.
115
Betz explains that the eternal person of the Logos, acting through his humanity, is
the active subject of the historical salvine acts. Because of this, the past saving deeds of
Jesus "have a perennial quality" and are taken up into the glorified humanity which
remains an efficacious instrument joined to the exalted Lord. As such the past saving
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 451
oped by Lothar Lies116 among others. Nevertheless Giraudo's pains-
taking literary-theological analysis of the classical Eucharistie
Prayers has begun to receive serious attention. Among those who have
reacted favorably to the viewpoint of Giraudo can be mentioned Hans
B. Meyer of the University of Innsbruck.117 He raises the question
whether one might be better advised to discard the traditional way of
thinking, and whether it would be more accurate to say that the litur-
gical activity does not "render present Christ and his saving work. It is
rather that we ought to enter newly into the presence of his person and
saving work in the medium of the ritual cultic activity."118
Giraudo's understanding of the notion of representation differs from
Casel's, but the difference is only superficial. Both hold that the his-
torical salvific acts of Jesus participate in the "eternity" of God; both
maintain that for this reason these saving acts are always potentially
present to human beings; both maintain that these saving acts become
effectively present in the measure that believers are represented to
them by the divine action in faith. However, Casel attributes to the
liturgical activity itself the power to render present Christ and his
redemptive work, while Giraudo holds that the believing community
repeatedly enters into the presence of the person of Christ and his
saving work in the medium of the ritual cultic activity. Giraudo speaks
of the historical salvific act of Jesus, "which at the level of space-time
is 'passed*—but which now rises to presenzialità eterna—and projects
us eschatologically toward the fulfillment of the future kingdom." But
his argument in favor of the supratemporal trait of the historical
salvific acts of Jesus is no more convincing than the others which have
been adduced. He employs a distinction between "profane history" and

acts can now assume a new spatio-temporal presence through and in a symbolic reality.
"For the symbolic reality is an entity in which another being enters and reveals itself,
is, and acts. The essence of a symbol is not its own physical reality, but the manifestation
and presentation of the primary reality which is symbolized in it" (J. Betz, Eucharistie
458-59). See also J. Betz, "Die Gegenwart der Heilstat Christi," in Leo Scheffczyk et al.,
eds., Wahrheit und Verkündigung, Festschrift Michael Schmaus (Munich: Schöningh,
1967) 2.1807-26.
116
Lothar Lies, "Verbalpräsenz—Aktualpräsenz—Realpräsenz: Versuch einer sys-
tematischen Begriffsbestimmung," in L. Lies, ed., Praesentia Christi: Festschrift Jo-
hannes Betz zum 70. Geburtstag dargebracht von Kollegen, Freunden. Schülern (Düssel-
dorf: Patmos, 1984) 79-100.
117
Hans Meyer, Eucharistie 448-49; also "Caséis Idee der Mysteriengegenwart in
neuer Sicht," ALW 28 (1986) 388-95.
118
Concerning this point of view, confer Adolf Darlap, "Anamnesis: Marginalien zum
Verständnis eines theologischen Begriffs," ZKT 97 (1975) 80-86. Darlap treats the
theme of anamnesis as repetition in the sense of the new appropriation of the past.
452 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

"salvation history" in which the concepts of "physical" and "meta­


physical" are operative. He contends that in the latter case the cate­
gories of "profane history," where past is not present and the present is
not the future, are literally transcended. To explain why this should be
so, he appeals to Ansgar Vomer's interpretation of the mind of Thomas
Aquinas, as formulated by Casel: "On this subject Dom Vonier, in
direct dependence on Saint Thomas Aquinas, has reason to say that
the laws of space and time do not hold for the sacramental world."119

Metaphysical Presence of the Consequent Terms of the Divine Plan


of Salvation
Opposition to the basic thesis of Casel and Giraudo is based on two
arguments: denial of the possibility of historical salvific acts becoming
"eternalized," and proof that the historical salvific acts of Jesus need
not be repeated in order to be effectively present in the liturgical cel­
ebration.
On this subject the late Irish theologian Brian McNamara contrib­
uted a clear, concise, and convincing explanation of the mode of pres­
ence of the historical salvific acts of Jesus to the eucharistie celebra­
tion, which is based on the implications of the scriptural witness to the
divine plan of salvation and supported by the realist metaphysics of
Thomas Aquinas.120
According to the witness of the New Testament, the transitus of the
Incarnate Word to the Father is the ultimate meaning of the world.
Historically completed on the experiential level with the glorification
of Jesus, it is still to be completed at the further level of the fulfilment
of the divine plan for all humanity. Temporal succession and spatial
duration are relevant to humanity's involvement in this transitus of
the world to the Father, which reached its climactic expression in the
Christ-event and is continued in the age of the Church. However, such
succession and duration are not relevant to the ultimate intelligibility
involved; for removes of space and time are not relevant to the ulti­
mate intelligibility of the divine plan.
When the question of the mode of presence of the historical salvific

119
Eucaristia 615 η. 53.
120
Brian McNamara, "Christue Patiens in the Mass and Sacraments: Higher Perspec­
tives," Irish Theological Quarterly 42 (1975) 17-35. E. J. Kilmartin, Christian Liturgy:
Theology and Practice, vol. 1: Systematic Theology of Liturgy (Kansas City: Sheed &
Ward, 1988) favors the position of McNamara. Η. B. Meyer's review article on Kil-
martin's book finds promising the solution to the Mysteriengegenwart problem which is
suggested there (ZKT 113 (1991) 24-38).
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 453
acts of Jesus in the eucharistie liturgy is raised in the experiential
perspective, the only possible solution is that of scholastic theology
which refers to the subjective appropriation of the effect of the redemp-
tion that objectively happened in the past. However, McNamara shows
that from the divine perspective another solution is possible.
According to the divine plan of salvation for the world the effect of
participation in the new covenant is tantamount to the integration of
the believer into the single transitus of Jesus to the Father from suf-
fering to glory. But how is this to be made intelligible? Since the divine
knowing is eternal, without succession, all historical events, as conse-
quent terms of this divine knowing, are equally present to it. Moreover
divine causative knowledge has determined the existence of a real
relation of dependence of the effect of participation of ordinary human
beings in the transitus of Jesus on the presence of the historical saving
acts of Jesus.
The divine action of the Spirit, the agency of the human living of
Jesus, and the effect of divine adoption, together with the psychologi-
cal aspect of conformity to the meritorious attitudes of Christ, are
coexistent in the properly disposed person. Therefore, insofar as the
human life and activity of Jesus modifies the sanctifying action of the
Holy Spirit, it may be said that there is a real presence of the saving
acts of Jesus in the beneficiary of this divine action. However, it is not
to be understood as a localizing of the presence of the historical salvific
acts of Jesus which have taken on a supratemporal character. All such
postulates fail to make the distinction between the eternity of God and
the consequent terms that flow from the divine eternal knowing, will-
ing, and acting.
The ultimate intelligibility of the historical salvific acts of Jesus
does not depend on the coordinates of space and time in which they
occur in history. The divine plan excludes this idea. Rather the intel-
ligibility is determined by the divine plan of salvation, in which the
single transitus of Jesus from suffering to glorification is made the
only way of salvation for the world. Concretely this means that in
virtue of the divine causative knowledge there exists a real relation of
dependence: the effect of the participation of ordinary human beings in
the mystery of God in Christ is dependent on the presence of the his-
torical saving acts of Jesus—of Jesus as agent of modification of the
sanctifying action of the Holy Spirit.
This eternal activity of the Spirit is found as a consequent term in
the believer. But this divine action, which effects the divinization of
the willing subject, is modified by the historical salvific acts of Jesus so
as to bring about the transmission of the spiritual attitudes of Jesus by
454 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

which the believer is enabled to respond properly to the offer of di-


vinization and thereby participate proleptically in the single transitus
of Jesus from the world to the Father.
The continued presence of the historical transitus of Jesus from suf-
fering to glory in this economy of salvation is not to be conceived as a
localized presence but rather as a metaphysical presence. It consists in
the modification of the sanctifying action of the Holy Spirit by which
the meritorious attitudes of Christ are communicated to willing sub-
jects to the end that they are enabled to join in the acceptable response
of Jesus to the Father. Therefore it follows that the historical salvific
acts of Jesus need not be repeated in the liturgical celebration.
McNamara sheds further light on the possibility of the efficacious
presence of the historical salvific acts of Jesus in the economy of sal-
vation by recalling the teaching of St. Thomas Aquinas concerning the
role of this presence in effecting the conformity to Christ. The Angelic
Doctor, as was noted above, describes the salvific acts of Jesus as the
instrumental efficient cause employed by the principal efficient cause,
namely the action of God, and which co-exist with the principal cause;
for in the perspective of a realist metaphysics the cause, instrument,
and effect are coexistent.
Participating in the Mystery of God in Christ by Sharing in the
Faith of Christ
Participation in the mystery of God in Christ takes place, on the side
of the creature being sanctified, by a response of faith to the offer of
grace, the gift of the Holy Spirit. But how is this act of faith related to
participation in the mystery of God in Christ? As the response to the
offer of grace, the act of faith is the way by which the event of God's
self-communication is actualized. By its very nature the act of faith is
not simply a necessary condition for participation in the mystery of
God in Christ. It is, rather, the way of participation in the mystery of
salvation, the divine life of the triune God. Moreover this manner of
participation in the mystery of God in Christ has a peculiar Christo-
logical dimension.
Viewed Christologically, the analysis of the essence of faith leads to
the conclusion that believers participate in the mystery of God in
Christ by a "participation in the faith of Christ."121 Hans Urs von
Balthasar explains that the faith of Christ himself belongs to the mys-
tery of God in Christ, for it is the embodiment of the covenant of

121
Hans Urs von Balthasar, "Fides Christi," in Sponsa Verbi, Skizzen zur Theologie
2 (Einsiedeln: Johannes, 1961) 45-79, at 78-79; cf. Angelus Häussling, "Odo Casel—
noch von Actualität," ALW 28 (1986) 383-84.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISnC THEOLOGY 455
humanity with the Father—the sealing of the covenant of humanity
with the Father on the side of humanity. Balthasar speaks of an "on-
tic" participation of believers in the faith of Christ which makes pos-
sible their conformity to the meritorious response of Christ in view of
what the Father has done in him for the salvation of the world.
This Christologically qualified faith is not a first step, something
that stands before the mystery, but the first and indispensable way of
sharing in the mystery. Through it the faithful are enabled to express
and realize their participation in the response of Christ's self-offering
to the Father. This enablement results from the divine action effecting
the transmission of the sacrificial attitude of Christ.
The idea that believers participate in the faith of Christ is sugges-
tive. However this notion needs to be qualified more exactly since no
one participates in the personal faith of Christ which, by definition, is
incommunicable. Rather we should speak of a "participation in the
Spirit of the faith of Christ," namely, in the Holy Spirit who was the
source of the life of faith of the incarnate Lord.122 The Holy Spirit is
identifiable as the mediation of the personal immediacy of the believ-
ers to Christ and of the divinely transmitted conformity to the spiritual
attitudes of Christ, whereby believers are enabled to offer acceptable
worship to God in union with that of Jesus Christ.
Summary
Bringing the foregoing insights together and ordering them to one
another, the following formula results: The liturgical assembly is re-
presented, or presented continually, to the historical salvific acts of
Jesus by the divine activity in the medium of the ecclesial ritual
prayer and accompanying symbolic action. Correspondingly, the his-
torical salvific acts are rendered present to the liturgical assembly as
instrumental cause modifying the sanctifying power of the Holy Spirit.
The efficacy of the divine action includes both the participation in the
Spirit of the faith of the incarnate Word, by whose inspiration Jesus
responded to the Father's covenantal initiative, and the proleptic par-
ticipation in the single transitus of Jesus from suffering to glory. The
former effect derives from the psychological aspect of the action of the
Holy Spirit which consists in the transmission of the meritorious at-
titudes of Christ. By this activity of the Spirit the recipient is rendered
capable of uniting freely with Christ in his acceptable response of faith
and thereby receives a share in the blessing of the new covenant from
the Father of all blessings through grace, the gift of the Holy Spirit.
122
E. J. Kilmartin, "Sacraments as Liturgy of the Church," TS 50 (1989) 527-47, at
540-44.
456 THEOLOGICAL STUDIES

The foregoing description favors the scholastic concept of sacrament


insofar as it situates the presence of the salvific acts of Jesus in the
overall effect of the action of the Holy Spirit on the participant of the
liturgical activity. It is opposed to CaseFs theology of mysteries insofar
as he conceives a sacramental symbol as holy in itself in virtue of the
sacramental presence of the historical salvific acts of Jesus "under the
veil of the symbol." On the contrary, from the viewpoint of key aspects
of the systematic salvation-history, liturgical theology of eucharistie
sacrifice outlined above, the sacramental symbol is considered holy
insofar as the grace signified by it is present therein by extrinsic de-
nomination. In other words, the grace of the sacrament is in the recip-
ient and not in the sacramental symbol. Nevertheless there exists a
real relation of dependence between the conferral of the grace and the
sacramental symbol. The conferral of the grace which is signified by
the sacrament is dependent on the accomplishment of the sacramental
symbolical action. This real relation is grounded on divine institu-
tion.123

CONCLUSION

The foregoing theology of the eucharistie sacrifice derived from the


analysis of the Eucharistie Prayer and accompanying symbolic action
displays characteristic traits that clash with the average modern Cath-
olic synthesis. However this should not cause problems for the theolo-
gian; for different starting points can and do produce different results.
Above all it is fruitless to attempt to refute the findings of the one
theological approach by the other. Rather, the basic problem concerns
the relative value of the different theologies.
It should be constantly recalled that the Western scholastic ap-
proach to sacramental theology in general, and the Eucharist in par-
ticular, concentrates on the intensive study of specific themes by re-
ducing the perspective fields. This type of concentration has, at times,
resulted in important gains. However it has also led to loss of contact

123 rpke outlook furnished by the insights of the modern authors cited in this section
corresponds in great part to the original proposal of Gottlieb Söhngen (1892-1971), Der
Wesensaufbau des Mysteriums, Grenzfragen zwischen Theologie und Philosophie 6
(Bonn, 1938). In a later work, Das sakramentale Wesen des Meßopfers (Essen: Augustin
Wibbelt, 1946), Söhngen modified his original theory, developing the idea of the active
and relative presence of sacrificial acts of Christ grounded on the sacramental action
which is a sacrifice. This latter explanation was clarified further in his article "Christi
Gegenwart in uns durch den Glauben," in Franz Xaver Arnold and Balthasar Fischer,
eds., 2d ed., Die Messe in der Glaubensverkündigung (Freiburg: Herder, 1953) 14-28.
CATHOLIC EUCHARISTIC THEOLOGY 457
with the place of the subject under consideration within the whole of
the economy of salvation.124
The most recent Catholic theological reflection on the Eucharist,
which we have contrasted with the modern average Catholic synthesis,
is attempting a new type of concentration, one that explicates a par-
ticular aspect of Christian life of faith by taking into account the basic
structure of all aspects of the economy of salvation.
In the case of the Eucharist this new approach necessarily requires
that attention be paid to the law of prayer as the preferred matrix into
which the law of belief must be integrated. The first theological mil-
lennium awarded to the lex orandi a certain normative value with
respect to the lex credendi. In the second millennium the lex credendi
took pride of place. The reintegration of the lex credendi into the lex
orandiy already begun at the end of this millennium, signals the con-
tours of eucharistie theology that will characterize the third theologi-
cal millennium. This task of renewal of eucharistie theology will re-
quire the restoring of the account of institution into the literary-
theological movement of the whole Eucharistie Prayer, and the
reversal of the ecclesiological and Christological dimensions in the
systematic theology of the Eucharist.

124
One example is the concentration on the category of sacrament as a basic structure
of all aspects of the economy of salvation; see E. J. Kilmartin, "Sacraments as Liturgy of
the Church" 547.

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