THE
CHURCH OF CHRIST was founded for a double
mission: a mission of faith and a mission of sanctification
of those redeemed by the blood of the Saviour. She must
bring to men faith and grace: the faith by her teaching and
grace by the sacraments, which were confided to her by Christ
the Lord. Her mission of faith consists in transmitting
to men the revelation of spiritual and supernatural realities
made by God to the world, and to safeguard this revelation without
change through the passing centuries. The Catholic Church
is, first of all, the faith which does not change; she is, as
St. Paul says, "the Pillar of truth" (I Tim. 4, 15), which travels
through the ages, always faithful to herself, an inflexible
witness of God in a world of perpetual change and contradiction.
Through the course of the centuries, the Catholic Church has
taught and defended her faith on the basis of one sole criterion:
"That which she has always believed and taught." All the heresies
which the Church has faced have been judged and repudiated in
the name of their non-conformity to this principle. The
"first reflex principle" of the hierarchy of the Church and
especially of the Roman Church, has been to maintain without
change the truth received from the Apostles and Our Lord.
The doctrine of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass belongs to the
Church's treasure of truth. And if today, in this particular
domain, there appears to be some kind of break with the Church's
past, then such a novelty should alert every Catholic conscience,
as in the times of the great heresies, and should provoke univocally
a confrontation with the Church's faith which does not change.
What
is the New Mass?
We know,
of course, that the ancient Mass was not given to us ready made.
It has kept the essential rituals performed by the Apostles
at Christ's command; and new prayers, praises and precisions
have been added to it in a slow elaboration so as to make more
explicit the Eucharistic mystery and to preserve it from the
denials of the heretics. The Mass was thus progressively
elaborated, fashioned around the primitive kernel bequeathed
by the Apostles, the witnesses of Christ's institution.
Like a case containing a precious stone or the treasure confided
to the Church, it was thought about, adjusted, adorned as a
piece of music. The best was retained, just as in the
construction of a cathedral. What the Mass explicitly
contains in its mystery was carefully made more explicit.
Just like the mustard seed, it spread forth its branches, but
everything was already contained in the seed. This progressive
elaboration, or explicitation, was achieved according to the
essentials by the time of Pope St. Gregory the Great in the
sixth century. Only a few secondary additions were made
in later years. This work accomplished during the first
centuries of Christianity has brought forth a basis for our
faith in order to impress upon the human intelligence the institution
of Christ in its recognized truth. Thus the Mass
is the unfolding or explicitation of the Eucharistic mystery
and its celebration.
The
Catholic Doctrine Defined
In reaction
to Luther's negations, the Council of Trent recalled and defined
the unchanged doctrine of the Catholic Church concerning the
Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, essentially in the following three
points of doctrine: 1) in the Eucharist, the Presence of Christ
is real; 2) the Mass is a true sacrifice: in its substance it
is the sacrifice of the cross renewed, a true sacrifice of propitiation
or expiation for the forgiveness of sins, and not just a sacrifice
of praise or thanksgiving; 3) the role of the priest in offering
the Holy Sacrifice is essential and exclusive: the priest, and
he alone, has received by the Sacrament of Orders the power
to consecrate the Body and Blood of Christ. The ancient
millennial Mass, Latin and Roman, expresses most clearly the
complete profundity of this doctrine, without detracting in
the slightest from the mystery .
What
is the Situation with the New Mass?
It is a
fact that the New Mass was imposed on the Catholic world in
order to fulfill the needs of ecumenism: the ancient Mass was
the major obstacle to the reconstruction of unity with the reformers
of the seventeenth century. Without the slightest room
for doubt, it affirmed precisely the Catholic Faith denied by
the Protestants, especially concerning the three essential points
of doctrine, namely: the reality of the Real Presence, the reality
of the Sacrifice, the reality of the power of the priest.
The New
Mass, quite simply, was to turn a deaf ear to this Catholic
Faith. Once introduced and having become indifferent to
all dogma, the new rite would be able to suit a purely Protestant
faith. It would be used as a meeting-point of ecumenical
unity for the world, for a single celebration where the contested
dogmas would have been prudently veiled, and where the only
gestures, expressions and attitudes to be retained would be
those open to an interpretation according to the faith of the
individual. Can the evidence of the facts be denied?
The changes wrought by the New Mass bear precisely on the points
of doctrine disputed by Luther.
I.
THE NEW MASS AND THE REAL PRESENCE
In the
New Mass, the Real Presence no longer plays the central role
which was highlighted by the ancient eucharistic liturgy.
All reference,
even indirect, to the Real Presence has been eliminated.
One recognizes with amazement that the gestures and signs which
spontaneously expressed our Faith in the Real Presence have
been either abolished or seriously changed. Thus the genuflexions,
the most expressive signs of the Catholic Faith, have been suppressed
as such. And if the genuflexion after the elevation has
been maintained as an exception, one must recognize unfortunately
that it has lost its precise meaning of adoring the Real Presence.
In the ancient Mass, the priest makes the first genuflexion
immediately after the words of consecration; this signifies,
without any possible ambiguity, that Christ is really present
on the altar by virtue of the very words of consecration pronounced
by the priest. He genuflects a second time after the elevation:
this genuflexion has the same meaning as the first and re-enforces
it. In the New Mass, the first genuflexion has been suppressed.
The second genuflexion, on the other hand, has been kept.
This is where the trap is for those minds not sufficiently acquainted
with the wiles of Modernism: in fact, this second genuflexion
isolated from the first, can now receive a Protestant interpretation.
If the Protestant faith does not admit the Real Physical Presence
of Christ in the Eucharist, it does nevertheless recognize a
certain spiritual presence of Our Lord on account of the faith
of the believers. Thus, in the New Mass, the celebrant
does not firstly adore the Host which he has just consecrated,
but he elevates it, presenting it to the assembly of the faithful
which engages its faith in Christ, and this faith renders Christ
spiritually present; one kneels and adores, and this can be
done simply in the Protestant sense of a presence purely spiritual.
The exterior ceremonial can thus be adapted to fit a purely
subjective faith, and even a denial of the Catholic doctrine
of the Real Presence. The genuflexion retained after the
elevation of the Host and Chalice has become capable, in effect,
of a Protestant interpretation. It has taken on a meaning
which can be adapted to the faith of the individual, and which
is therefore ambiguous. A rite such as this is no longer
the clear expression of the Catholic Faith. Other changes
made to the ancient rite - even if they are less serious than
those touching the very heart of the Mass - all nevertheless
point to a decreasing respect for the Real Presence. Under
this heading mention must be made of the following suppressions
which, when taken in isolation, may seem unimportant, but when
considered as a whole, are no less indicative of the spirit
which prevailed in the reforms. The following have been
suppressed: the purification of the priest's fingers over the
chalice and into the chalice; the obligation for
the priest to keep joined together those fingers which have
touched the Host after the consecration, in order to avoid all
contact with the profane; the pall protecting the chalice; the
obligatory gilding of the inside of the sacred vessels; the
consecration of the altar if it is fixed; the altar stone and
the relics placed in the altar if it is movable; the number
of altar cloths reduced from three to one; the prescriptions
concerning the case where a consecrated Host falls on the ground.
All these suppressions represent a decrease in the expression
of respect due to the Real Presence; to them can be added the
posture of those present, which again tends in the same direction,
and which has been practically imposed on the faithful: Communion
received standing and often in the hand; thanksgiving after
Communion, which, although extremely brief, one is urged to
make sitting down; standing after the consecration; These changes,
made worse by the removal of the tabernacle, which is often
relegated to a corner of the sanctuary, all converge in the
same direction - away from the doctrine of the Real Presence.
These observations can be applied to the Novus Ordo Missae as
a whole, whatever Canon is chosen, and even if the New Mass
is said with the so-called Roman Canon.
II.
THE NEW MASS AND EUCHARISTIC SACRIFICE
Apart from
the dogma of the Real Presence, the Council of Trent also defined
the reality of the Sacrifice of the Mass, which is the renewal
of the sacrifice of Calvary, the saving fruits of which are
applied to us for the forgiveness of sins and for our reconciliation
with God.
The Mass
is, therefore, a sacrifice. It is also a communion, but
a communion at a sacrifice previously celebrated - a meal, where
the immolated victim of the sacrifice is eaten. The Mass
is first and foremost, then, a sacrifice, and secondly a communion
or meal. But the whole structure of the New Mass is geared
to the meal aspect of the celebration, to the detriment of the
sacrifice. Again, and more seriously, this is in the direction
of the Protestant heresy. The substitution of the table
facing the people in the place of the altar of sacrifice bears
witness already to a specific orientation. For if the
Mass is a meal, it is in conformity with custom to gather round
a table, whereas an altar raised against the cross of Calvary
is quite out of place. The Liturgy of the Word has been
developed to the point where it now occupies the greater part
of the time-space of the new celebration, and diminishes in
the same proportion, the attention due to the eucharistic mystery
and sacrifice. Essentially, one must note the suppression
of the Offertory of the victim of the sacrifice, and its replacement
by the offering of the gifts. This substitution is truly
grotesque, and tends toward the farcical: for what do they mean
by this offering of a few bread crumbs and drops of wine - "fruit
of the earth and work of human hands" - that they dare to present
before the Sovereign Lord? The pagans did much better - they
offered to their divinity not just bread crumbs, but something
a bit more substantial: a bull, or some other animal whose immolation
was a real sacrifice for them. Luther railed very violently
against the presence of the sacrificial Offertory in the Catholic
Mass. And in fact, he was not mistaken in the way he looked
at it - the simple presence of an offering of the victim is
the undeniable affirmation that there really is a sacrifice
involved, and indeed a sacrifice of expiation for the forgiveness
of sins. Thus the Offertory of the Catholic Mass was an
obstacle to ecumenism. There was no hesitation to make
it look ridiculous and here again to undermine the Catholic
Faith. The old Offertory specified the oblation of the
actual sacrifice of Christ: "receive, O holy Father . . . this
spotless host . ." (hanc immaculatam hostiam), "We offer unto
Thee, O Lord, the chalice of salvation. . ." (calicem salutaris).
It was neither the bread nor the wine which was offered to God,
but already the spotless Host, the chalice of salvation, within
the perspective of the approaching consecration.
Certain
liturgists, too preoccupied with the letter of the rite, had
held that this was an anticipation. But this opinion is
quite wrong. The intention of the Church, expressed by
the priest, is in fact to offer the actual victim of the sacrifice
(and not bread and wine at all). In the Sacrifice of the
Mass, everything takes place at the precise moment of Consecration,
in which the priest operates in persona Christi and where the
bread and wine are transubstantiated into the Body and Blood
of Christ. However, given the impossibility of saying
everything at once about the spiritual riches of the mystery
of the Eucharist, the liturgy of the Mass begins to make an
exposition of these riches at the Offertory. It is therefore
not a matter of anticipation, but of perspective. In the
New Mass, the Offertory of the sacrificial victim has therefore
been suppressed, as well as the signs of the cross over the
oblations, which were a constant reference to the Cross of Calvary.
And thus
in this cumulative manner the prime reality of the Mass as the
renewal of the Sacrifice of Calvary is de-emphasized in its
concrete expressions. This is the case right up to the
central moment of the celebration. The actual words of
Consecration in the new rite, are in fact pronounced by the
priest as a narrative, as if it were simply the recital of an
event in the past; it is no longer pronounced in the intimate
tone of a Consecration made in the present and proffered in
the Name of Him in Whose person the priest is acting.
This is extremely serious. What could be the intention
of the priest - celebrant in this new perspective? - The intention,
which, according to the Council of Trent's reminder, is one
of the conditions for the validity of the celebration.
This intention is no longer signified by the ceremonial of the
rite. The priest-celebrant can of course supply it by
his own will and the Mass can then be valid. But what
about the progressive priests, who are concerned above all else
with breaking with ancient tradition? In this case doubt becomes
legitimate. And there is nothing else then, it seems,
to distinguish the New Mass in its general structure from the
Protestant Communion Service. They say that they have
kept the Roman Canon. At first glance at the new rite,
it is offered to the choice of the celebrant, along with three
other Eucharistic Prayers. What is the meaning of this
choice? The Roman Canon they have kept is no longer
the former Canon. It has in fact been mutilated in many
different ways: it has been mutilated in the very act of the
Consecration as we have just seen; it has been mutilated by
the suppression of the repeated signs of the cross; it has been
mutilated by the suppression of the genuflexions which were
an expression of belief in the Real Presence; it is no longer
presignified by the sacrificial Offertory. In the official
vernacular versions, which, in practice are the only ones used,
it has been translated in a tendencious fashion, brushing away
the rigorous expression of the Catholic Faith. Moreover,
it has lost its proper character as "Canon," that is as a fixed
prayer, as unchangeable as the very rock of the faith.
It has become interchangeable. It can be substituted,
according to each individual whim or belief, with one of the
other Eucharistic prayers. And this, obviously, is the
supreme trickery of the new ecumenism. Officially, there
are three new "Preces" offered as choices to the celebrant.
But, in fact, the door is open to all kinds of innovations and
it has become impossible to list all the different Eucharistic
prayers introduced and practiced in the various dioceses.
We need
not stop here to consider these "wildcat" liturgies, which,
although unofficial still blow in all directions in the same
wind of reform, or rather revolution. We will just give
a brief analysis of the three new Eucharistic Prayers, introduced
with the New Mass. The second prayer, presented as the
Canon of St. Hippolytus, older than the Roman Canon, is in fact
the canon of the anti-pope Hippolytus at the time of his revolt
before the martyrdom which merited his return to the unity of
the Church. This Canon has probably never been in use
in the pontifical Church of Rome and has only come down to us
in a few verbal souvenirs recorded by the recension of Hippolytus.
It has in no way been retained by the Tradition of the Church.
In this extremely short Canon which - apart from the recital
of the Last Supper - contains only a few prayers of sanctifying
the offerings, of thanksgiving and of eternal salvation, there
is absolutely no mention of sacrifice. In the third Eucharistic
Prayer, there is a mention made of sacrifice, but in the explicit
sense of a sacrifice of thanksgiving and praise. No mention
is made of the expiatory sacrifice renewed in the present sacramental
reality, which can win us the forgiveness of sins. The
fourth Prayer is a history of the benefits of the Redemption
wrought by Christ. But here again, the propitiatory sacrifice
- actually renewed - is not explicitated more than elsewhere.
Thus in the three new texts proposed the Catholic doctrine on
the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, a doctrine defined by the Council
of Trent, is in fact left in the shadow, and, being no longer
affirmed in the very act of celebrating the Mass, this doctrine
is in fact abandoned and, with such a significant omission,
denied.
III.
THE NEW MASS AND THE ROLE OF THE PRIEST
The exclusive
role of the priest as instrument of Christ in offering the sacrifice
is a third point of Catholic doctrine defined by the Council
of Trent. This role of the priest in offering the sacrifice
disappears in the new celebration, along with the sacrifice
itself. The priest appears as the president of the assembly.
The laity invade the sanctuary and attribute to themselves the
clerical functions, readings, distribution of Communion, sometimes
preaching. One must not be surprised by certain former
terms still in use, as they are now capable of having a different
meaning. Thus, as we have already observed, the word "offertory"
is maintained, but no longer in the sense of an oblation of
the sacrificial victim, just as the word "sacrifice" is retained
here and there, but no longer necessarily in the sense of the
renewed sacrifice of Our Saviour. It is capable of signifying
nothing more than thanksgiving or praise, according to the faith
of the believer. Concluding this brief analysis of the
new rites, we can only remark - in the light of the facts -
that the New Mass has been totally conceived and elaborated
in the direction of ecumenism, adaptable to the various faiths
of the various churches. This is what the Protestants
of Taize recognized immediately, declaring that it was now theologically
possible for Protestant communities to celebrate the communion
service with the same prayers as the Catholic Church.
The Protestant Church of Alsace spoke out in the same vein of
thought: "There is no longer anything in the Mass as it is now
renewed to upset the evangelical Christian." And an important
Protestant paper has said: "The new Catholic Eucharistic prayers
have dropped the false perspective of sacrifice offered to God."
Already the presence of six Protestant theologians, duly authorized
to participate in the elaboration of the new texts, had been
a significant presence. This ecumenical Mass is therefore
no longer the expression of the Catholic Faith. In their
entreaty to Pope Paul VI, Cardinals Ottaviani and Bacci were
not afraid to make the following observation, and no one today
can contest its rigor: "The Novus Ordo Missae departs in an
impressive fashion, both as a whole and in its details, from
the Catholic theology of the Holy Mass."