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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Forward
This manuscript is the result of a three year research project (2015-2017) for the Ecumenical
Studies group of the Society for Pentecostal Studies (SPS), which is an international community
of scholars working within the Pentecostal and Charismatic Traditions which was established in
1970.
The subject of the manuscript grew out of conversations with fellow members of the
Institute for Biblical and Theological Studies at North Central University, which included Glen
Menzies, Ph.D., Buzz Brookman, Ph.D., John Davenport, Ph.D., Phil Mayo Ph.D., and Allen
Tennison Ph.D. However, it was through a friendship and conversation with Christopher A.
Stephenson, Ph.D. from Lee University, who has been the leader of the Ecumenical Studies
interest group of the Society for Pentecostal Studies, who has shown his graciousness,
I also want to thank those who assisted me with the manuscript over the years, especially
Victoria Pyron Tankersley and Diane Shirk. Both Victoria and Diane were helpful to me with
Introduction
This work is on the Eucharist as the Offering of Firstfruits. In light of both the 500th year
commemoration of the Protestant Reformation in 1517, and the subsequent Catholic Reformation
begun in the 16th century and which continued through the Second Vatican Council and
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
situation. The work will also coincide with the 100th year anniversary of the reported apparition,
prophetic message, and miracle at Fatima. It is also the 50th year anniversary of the Catholic
Charismatic Renewal that began among a group of college students from Duquesne University
and La Roche College who were on retreat at The Ark and The Dove Retreat House outside of
Pittsburgh. This renewal also had influence on other students attending the University of Notre
One of the difficulties for Protestant, Evangelical, Pentecostal, and other Christians is
how to understand the Eucharist as sacrifice, offering, and oblation. A return to ancient Jewish
and Christian sources has uncovered the category of the offering of firstfruits. This is found in a
lesser degree among Second Temple Judaism and to a greater degree in early Christian literature
beginning with the New Testament itself. This has brought renewed interest in understanding
the Eucharist not only in the context of the Feast of Passover, but also in light of the Feast of
Pentecost and the offering of firstfruits, and within the context of the Zebach td that is, the
sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. This has strong implications for a theological, liturgical,
spiritual, and practical awakening in understanding the Eucharist as Sacrifice. In the Eucharist,
the Church offers the firsfruits of creation, Christ, and also herself to the Father in the Holy
Spirit. Each member is called to actively participate in the Eucharistic sacrifice through which
they themselves become a Holy and Living sacrifice for the life of the world. This has
implications for a renewed Eucharistic spirituality and worship, the New Evangelization, and
new works of mercy. The work is the result of having been able to live, study, work and teach in
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE: THE EUCHARIST AS THE OFFERING OF FIRSTFRUITS
The first chapter returns to ancient Jewish and Christian sources to uncover the
category of the offering of firstfruits. The offering is found in a lesser degree
among Intertestamental Judaism, in such texts as the Book of Jubilees and among
the Qumran scrolls. It is found in a greater degree in early Christian writers such
as Irenaeus of Lyon and John Damascene, and even the New Testament itself.
This has brought renewed interest in understanding the Eucharist not only in the
context of Passover, but also in light of Pentecost and the offering of firstfruits.
TOPICS: Introduction, Focus and Limitations, The Feast of Pentecost and
Firstfruits in the Old Testament, The Feast of Pentecost and Firstfruits in the
Intertestamental Period, Book of Jubilees, Damascus Document, Rule of the
Community, The Feast of Pentecost and Firstfruits in the New Testament, The
Baptist and Jesus within the Context of Second Temple Judaism, Jesus and the
Second Temple, Jesus and the Eucharist, Views of Jeremias, Kuhn, Nodet and
Taylor, Summary and Integration, Penultimate Conclusion.
In this chapter, we investigate the Epistle to the Hebrews and its relationship to
the Eucharist, and the offering of firstfruits. One of the main problems is how to
reconcile Hebrew's repeated emphasis that Jesus offered himself "once" (7:27:
9:12, 26, 28; 10:10), with the notion that the Eucharist is an offering and sacrifice.
Hebrews gives evidence that Jesus is the firstfruits of the new humanity, who has
ascended on high, and who holds the priesthood permanently through whom the
church offers the Zebach td, the offering of praise and thanksgiving, which
finds its enduring significance through mercy and charity.
TOPICS: Introduction, Epistle to the Hebrews, Hebrews and the Eucharist,
Offering of Christ, Jesus as One Time Sacrifice, Jesus as the First Fruits of the
New Creation, Conclusion on the Offering of Christ, Offering of the Community,
Offering of Self, We Have an Altar, We Have an Altar for Offering, Assertion
We Have an Altar, First Exhortation: Let Us Go Out, The Eucharist and the
Zebach Td, Second Exhortation: Offer a Sacrifice of Praise, What is the
Nature of the Sacrifice of Praise?, Offering of the Sacrifice of Praise, Spiritual
Offering of Praise, Liturgical Offering of Praise, Conclusion on the Offering of
Praise, Firstfruits of Eucharistic Prayer, The Eucharist and Works of Mercy as
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OF FIRSTFRUITS
1517
1
In the Eucharistic Sacrifice, we offer the firstfruits, Christ, and ourselves to the Father, a true,
proper, and living sacrifice who enables us to be living witnesses to offer justice, judgment, mercy,
peace, and hospitality to others. This sacrifice is the work of the entire Trinity in which the Body of
Christ has active participation.
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CHAPTER ONE
A CATHOLIC-PENTECOSTAL PERSPECTIVE2
Introduction
One of the difficulties for Pentecostals is to understand the Eucharist as a sacrifice, offering,
oblation. A return to ancient Jewish and Christian sources has uncovered the category of the
offering of firstfruits. This is found in a lesser degree among Intertestamental Judaism, in such
texts as the Book of Jubilees and among the Qumran scrolls, and it is found in a greater degree in
early Christian writers such as Irenaeus of Lyon and John Damascene, and even the New
Testament itself. This has brought renewed interest in understanding the Eucharist in light of
Gregory Dix had already pointed out that for Irenaeus the Eucharist is an oblation offered
to God, and that in a particular sense the sacrificial character of the Eucharist is a sacrifice of
firstfruits (Against Heresies 4.17.5; 4.18.4-5).3 However, Cyprian in the next century (ca. 250),
describes the Eucharist as a sacrifice of the Lords passion, which Cyprian says is the sacrifice
2
Presented at the 44th Annual Meeting of the Society for Pentecostal Studies to the Ecumenical
Studies Group by Lawrence Francis Ligocki.
3
Gregory Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy (2nd ed.; London: Continuum, 2003 [1945]), 114.
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of the Lord, which is offered during the Eucharist in remembrance of what the Lord had done
This latter view is problematic for Pentecostals, though the Catechism of the Catholic
Church teaches that the Eucharist is, among other things, the sacramental offering of the
This theological paper will analyze the offering of firstfruits, the offering of Christ, and
the offering of the Church in a way that I hope will bring renewed life within the Church,
promote understanding and unity among Christians, and promote renewed interest in the
1982, has become the "most widely distributed and studied text in the history of the ecumenical
movement" (BEM vii), which has been discussed in various documents that discuss growing
consensus in ecumenical conversations, both in the United States,7 and on an international level.8
4
Cyprian of Carthage, On the Church: Select Letters (ed. John Behr; trans. Allen Brent; Popular
Patristics Series, Number 33; Crestwood, NY: St Vladimirs Seminary Press, 2006), 185.
5
Catholic Church, Catechism of the Catholic Church (2nd Ed.; Washington, DC: United States
Catholic Conference, 2000), 343.
6
World Council of Churches, Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry (Faith and Order Paper no. 111;
Geneva: World Council of Churches, 1982).
7
See Growing Consensus: Church Dialogues in the United States, 1062-1991 (Vol. V, Ecumenical
Documents; ed. J. A. Burgess and J. Gros; New York: Paulist Press, 1995), 216; and also Growing
Consensus II: Church Dialogues in the United States, 1992-2004 (ed. L Veliko and J. Gros; USCCB, 2005),
487-495. February 1, 2009. *
8
See Growth in Agreement II: Reports and Agreed Statements of Ecumenical Conversations on a World Level,
1982-1998 (ed. J. Gros et. al.; Geneva: WCC, 2000), 833, 852-854. See comments on Catholic
Churchs positive response to large sections of BEM, which also points to areas that need
development; also includes short comment on Pope John Paul II and other Roman Catholic leaders
who have underlined the importance of BEM in the movement to visible unity (853).
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According to the document, the Eucharist is "essentially one complete act" (BEM 10).
However, the Eucharist is described under the following aspects: A) thanksgiving to the Father;
Walter Kasper also discusses and reflects on various aspects of the Eucharist, though
within a slightly different framework. For Kasper the various aspects of the Eucharist are as
follows: 1) the testimony of Jesus; 2) the memorial (anamnesis); 3) thanksgiving and sacrifice; 4)
the epiclesis (invocation of the Holy Spirit); 5) communio; and 6) the eschatological sign.9
After setting forth these aspects, Kasper concludes that the Eucharist is a synthesis of the
Christian mystery of salvation, from which it is not possible to understand the Eucharist based on
Within Kaspers framework, the category of the offering of firstfruits will fit into the
third aspect. Kasper himself will make reference to Irenaeus, who speaks of the offering or gifts
of bread and wine, but Kasper does not explicitly call these gifts firstfruits.11
I will attempt to focus on the third aspect, specifically the offering of firstfruits. And so
the papers focus is limited. My intent is not to deny any of the other aspects of the Eucharist. In
what follows, in anything that I speak that is true, I attribute to those who have taught me well,
9
Walter Cardinal Kasper, Sacrament of Unity: The Eucharist and the Church (trans. B. McNeil; New
York: Crossroad Publishing Company: 2004), 84-113. The original German was published as
Sakrament der Einheit. Eucharistie und Kirche (Herder Verlag: Freiburg, Basle, and Vienna, 2004).
10
Kasper, Sacrament of Unity, 113.
11
Kasper, Sacrament of Unity, 98. For a helpful discussion on the Eucharist as offering, gift, and
sacrifice among the early church, see Joseph A. Jungmann, The Mass of the Roman Rite: Its Origins and
Development (Vol.1; trans. F. A. Brunner; Notre Dame: Ave Maria Press, 2012 [1951]), 22-28.
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foundation for understanding the feast from the Hebrew Scriptures in order to later build upon it
The Feast of Pentecost is the second greatest feast of the year in the Hebrew Calendar.
During the feast there was an offering of firstfruits. Although the Feast of Pentecost is primarily
the name that I will use for the feast, its name has changed in various degrees in the Hebrew
bikkrm) of the grain harvest ( , qr) (34:22).13 In Deuteronomy 16:9-10, the feast is
referred to as the Feast of Weeks, where the text also gives an explanation for its name and even
fixes an exact date: the feast was celebrated seven weeks after the cutting of the standing grain
this was the real feast for the first-fruits of the harvest.14 The most elaborate portrayal of the
feast is found in Leviticus 23:15-22, where in the LXX it is associated with fifty days,
Macc 12:32.
12
In what follows, I follow Roland de Vaux, Ancient Israel (vol.2; New York: McGraw-Hill,
1961), 493-495. *
13
, qr, may also be translated branches or boughs, and even used to describe the branches
of a vine (Ps 80:7-11); see Jack P. Lewis, 2062 , Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament (ed. R.
L. Harris, G. L. Archer Jr., and B. K. Waltke; Chicago: Moody Press, 1999), 810.
14
De Vaux, Ancient Israel, 2.493.
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After Israel entered the promised land and reaped its harvest, the people were instructed
perhaps wave ( ;np), the sheaf before the Lord (Lev 23:9-11), along with making other
offerings (vv 12-13). Then, beginning on the day after the Sabbath, on the day in which the
sheaf ( ; mer) of the grain harvest were lifted up and offer to the Lord (23:15),15 seven weeks
were counted which ended on the day after the seventh Sabbath, bringing us to the fiftieth day (v
16). These are the fifty days from the beginning of the barley harvest (eve of 16th of Nisan) 16 to
the end of the wheat harvest17 (month of Sivan). On the final day there was an offering of two
loaves made with new flour, which were baked with leaven, which, according to De Vaux, is
the only instance in which the use of yeast is ritually prescribed for an offering to Yahweh.18
According to Roland de Vaux, this offering of leavened bread during the Feast of Pentecost is
associated with the eating of unleavened provisions during the Feast of Unleavened Bread, when
unleavened bread was eaten at the beginning of the barley harvest as a sign of new beginnings,
and later leavened bread was offered at the end and fulfillment of the wheat harvest.19 The
Rabbis referred to the Feast of Pentecost as the Atzeret (solemn assembly) of the Passover and
15
See Jacob Milgrom, Leviticus 23-27 (vol. 3B, The Anchor Bible: New York: Double Day, 2001),
1982: this is the first barley offering. See also Jacob Milgrom, A Continental Commentary: Leviticus: a
Book of Ritual and Ethics (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2004), 277. * Ruth and Naomi arrived in
Bethlehem at the beginning of the barley harvest (Ruth 1:22), and Ruth gathered until the end of
both the barley and wheat harvests (2:23).
16
See J. Van Goudoever, Biblical Calenders (Leiden: Brill, 1959), 239; * see also The Oxford
Handbook of Judaism and Economics (ed. A. Levine; New York: Oxford University, 2010), 188-189; *
see also Colin J. Humphreys, The Mystery of the Last Supper: Reconstruction the Final Days of Jesus
(Cambridge: Cambridge University, 2011), 69. * Van Goudover points out the parallel in the Gospel
of John 6:1-14 where Jesus feeds the five thousand during the Feast of Passover (five barley loaves
and two fishes) with the harvesting of the first sheaf of barley on the eve of the 16th of Nisan; Jesus
feeds the five thousand at the beginning of harvest time (239).
17
See Milgrom, Leviticus 23-27, 1990: this is the time of the first wheat offering.
18
De Vaux, Ancient Israel, 2.493-494.
19
De Vaux, Ancient Israel, 2.294.
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thus stressing the connection between the two festivals, one marking the beginning, the other
The Feast of Pentecost was initially a farmer's feast, and the practice of offering the
firstfruits of the harvest to a deity was not uncommon. The date of the feast was based on the
weather and crop conditions, though the date of the Feast of Pentecost was later fixed in
connection with the Feast of Unleavened Bread and Passover. The offering of the firstfruits took
place on the Sunday after the "octave of the Passover," "on the 15th of the third month."21 The
feast eventually included various sacrifices and offerings, which also included one male goat as a
In Exodus and Deuteronomy, the Feast of Pentecost was given a minimal composition
compared with the other great feasts. In Ezekiel, Pentecost is all together missing, where in the
prophets vision of the restored temple, the Feast of Pentecost appears to have no place in temple
worship (Ezk 45:21-25).23 However, this changes during the intertestamental period.
20
Bernard J. Bamberger, Commentary on Leviticus, The Torah: A Modern Commentary (ed. W.G.
Plaut; New York: Union of American Hebrew Congregations: 1981), 924.
21
De Vaux, Ancient Israel, 2.494, 492.
22
Walter A. Elwell and Barry J. Beitzel, Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker
Book House, 1988), 1579: A sin offering of one male goat was presented at each of the sacred
holidays: the New Moon (Nm 28:15), each day of Passover (vv 2224), the Festival of Weeks (v 30),
and of Trumpets (29:5), the Day of Atonement (v 11), and each day of the Feast of Tabernacles (vv
16, 19).
23
According to Walther Zimmerli, Ezekiel, changes the calendar of the major feasts by a
reduction to the two great annual festivals...levels out these two festivals from the point of view of
the offerings demanded in the requirements and...by prefacing the sin offering of a bull gives to both
feasts a strong character of atonement. See Walther Zimmerli, Frank Moore Cross, and Klaus
Baltzer, Ezekiel: a Commentary on the Book of the Prophet Ezekiel (Hermeneiaa Critical and Historical
Commentary on the Bible; Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1983), 485486. *
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foundation for understanding the Eucharist within the category of offering of firstfruits. All four
texts predate the 1st century CE and fit well between the section above on the feast in the Old
Testament and what will follow later on the New Testament. First I will discuss the Book of
Jubilees, then the Damascus Document, and finally the Rule of the Community and the Rule of
the Congregation. I will attempt to look at each of these text within their own context, after
Book of Jubilees
In the Book of Jubilees, which is dated to the second century BCE, the Feast of Pentecost is on
stage and up front. Jubilees is called the Little Genesis, for it is a rewriting of Genesis 1
Exodus 14. The book was likely written in Palestine. The earliest texts of Jubilees have been
found among the Dead Sea Scrolls. The Feast of Firstfruits is understood as the feast of Oaths,
the time of the renewal of the covenant.25 The feast always occurs on the same date every year.
The offering of the firstfruits took place on the Sunday after the "octave of the Passover," "on the
15th of the third month."26 Noah is pictured as having celebrated the feast of the covenant on this
day with his sons (Jub. 6:18).27 The feast was originally celebrated in heaven from the first day
24
Here I am following Justin Taylor, Where Did Christianity Come From? (Collegeville: Liturgical
Press, 2001).
25
This connection is not made in the Pentateuch, unless one considers the concept of
atonement (Num 28:30; Lev 23:19) as opening the door to covenantal renewal (see Jub. 6:2, 14; CD
4.9).
26
De Vaux, Ancient Israel, 2.494, 492. There is no reference to the seven weeks, nor is there any
explicit link with Passover.
27
James H. Charlesworth, The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha and the New Testament:
Expansions of the Old Testament and Legends, Wisdom, and Philosophical Literature, Prayers,
Psalms and Odes, Fragments of Lost Judeo-Hellenistic Works (vol. 2; New Haven; London: Yale
University Press, 1985), 67. *
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of creation (6.18).28 After the flood, Noahs deliverance is associated with the renewal: a new
world will emerge following the chaos and disappearance of the old world; Noah and his sons
are the new humanity saved from the deluge and celebrate the feast in order to renew the
covenant (6.17-18, 21).29 It was forgotten for a time, and then restored during the time of the
patriarchs.30 When the LORD enters into covenant with Abraham, he renews the feast (14:20-
21; see Gen 15). Isaac and Jacob also kept the feast (Jub. 6:19). Abram celebrated the firstfruits
of the harvest grain (15:1), and offered up a new sacrifice, the firstfruits of food, along with other
offerings, after which the LORD appeared to Abram and again entered into covenant with him
(15:1-5; see Gen 17). In the year that he died, Abraham observed the Feast of Pentecost with
both Isaac and Ishmael, which is also called the feast of the firstfruits of the harvest (Jub. 22:1-
2). Jacob will later celebrate the feast at Beer-sheba (44:1-4). The feast was again forgotten by
the Israelites. Then it was renewed through Moses, who was instructed to observe Pentecost in a
way that the covenant could be renewed every year (6:20-22; see Ex 34:22). The sacrifice that
was offered by Moses at Mount Sinai (24:1-11) took place on the fifteenth day of the third
month.31
This connection between the feast and covenantal renewal is not explicit in the
Pentateuch, but an early indication of this association may be found in the reform and renewal
during King Asa, who gathered Israel in the third month (2 Chr 15:10-15). According to the
Targum of Chronicles 15:11, this covenant took place in the Festival of Shabout, .32
28
In the beginning (
;r t), when God created heaven and earth, the first spoken into
existence is light ( ;r). In a sense, light is the first-fruit of the created world.
29
See Taylor, Christianity, 146.
30
Taylor, Christianity, 146.
31
Taylor, Christianity, 146.
32
Comprehensive Aramaic Lexicon. Targum Chronicles. Hebrew Union College, 2005.
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Regardless of the influence of 2 Chr 15:10-15, Jubilees clearly makes the connection between
the feast and the covenant and associates it with the promise of the new covenant (1.15-18),
which is found in the prophets (Ezek 36:22-32; Jer 31:31-34; Deut 30:6-10). Jubilees even
mentions "the holy Spirit" (Jub. 1:21, 23) in place of "the new spirit" of Ezekiel.33
Here is one final note. The Book of Jubilees does not associate the Feast of Pentecost
with the concept of atonement as in Num 28:30 and Lev 23:19. It does describe Noah sacrificing
a goat to make atonement for the land on the day he went out of the arkthat is, on the first day
Damascus Document
The Damascus Document (CD), also known as the Zadokite Fragments, has been dated to the
early half of the first century BCE.34 The document was first discovered in Cairo Genizah,
where two medieval manuscripts were found (A from the tenth century and B from the twelfth
century); they were then published in 1910 by Solomon Schechter under the title Fragments of a
Zadokite Work; eight manuscripts were later found in Qumran Cave 4that contain substantial
parallels with Genizah documents and major additions, which include the beginning and ending
of the text.35 According to George Nickelsburg, the document is an exposition of the laws of the
33
Taylor, Christianity, 146: Taylor sees this as the "sign of belonging to the community and
Covenant" through forsaking sin and conforming to God's precepts.
34
Lawrence H. Schiffman, Zadokite Fragments (Damascus Document), ed. David Noel
Freedman, The Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary (New York: Doubleday, 1992), 1037: The text of the
Zadokite Fragments has to have reached approximately its present form (discounting medieval
expansions and scribal errors) by the date of the earliest manuscripts, ca. 7550 B.C.E. (Milik 1959:
38). See also Philip R. Davies, The Damascus Covenant: An Interpretation of the Damascus Document
(vol. 25; Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series; Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic Press, 1982), 203.
35
Joseph M. Baumgarten, Damascus Document, Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls (vol. 1; ed.
L. H. Schiffman and J. C. VanderKam; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 166-167.
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community with a long admonitory introduction.36 Although the document does not explicitly
refer to the Feast of Pentecost and the offering of firstfruits, the reference is found in fragments
from Qumran, such as 4Q270: [Concerning the two] loaves of the sacred offering, it is for all the
houses of Israel which eat the bread [of the land to] raise ( )once a year.37
The Damascus Document clearly presents the community as a renewal of the covenant.
Although not explicit, the covenant was first kept by Noah. Afterwards Noahs sons and their
families strayed and were cut off (CD 3:1).38 Then Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob became friends
and members of the covenant forever, though the sons of Jacob strayed (3:2-4). But to those
who remained faithful in the commandments, God raised up ( )his covenant with Israel
forever to reveal to them the hidden things with which all Israel had wandered (3:12-14). God
remembered the covenant with the forefathers ( )and raised up ( )individuals from
Aaron and Israel who left the land of Judah and lived in the land of Damascus (6:2-5). Those
observed, among other things, to offer/raise up ()39 holy offerings ()40 according to
exact interpretation, to love one another, to help the poor and the needy, and to seek peace (6:19-
21). Those who enter the new covenant are linked with the covenant of Abraham (12:11), and
36
George W. E. Nickelsburg, Jewish Literature Between the Bible and the Mishnah: a Literary
and Historical Introduction (2nd ed.; Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2005), 123.
37
4Q270 f3ii:19-20: Florentino Garca Martnez and Eibert J. C. Tigchelaar, The Dead Sea
Scrolls Study Edition (translations) (Leiden; New York: Brill, 19971998), 611. 4Q270 frag. 3 col.
II;* 4Q266 frag. 6 col. III; * 4Q267 frag 6.*
38
Florentino Garca Martnez and Eibert J. C. Tigchelaar, The Dead Sea Scrolls Study Edition
(translations) (Leiden; New York: Brill, 19971998), 555.
39
The Hiphil...serves as a technical term for presenting an offering, particularly the heave
offering. Andrew Bowling, 2133 , ed. R. Laird Harris, Gleason L. Archer Jr., and Bruce K.
Waltke, Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament (Chicago: Moody Press, 1999), 838.
40
can refer to a number of holy things, among which is the bread of God ( )
which is from the holy of holies ()
as well as from the holy ()
(Lev 21:22)
the holy things which are for offerings (Num 18:8), and the firstfruits of the land (18:13, 9-10).
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in essence are returning to the Law of Moses with all their heart, mind, and soul (15:8-10). God
established the covenant with the forefathers () 41 in order to atone ( )for sins (4.9).
among the earliest manuscripts that were discovered, photographed, and published from Cave 1
at Qumran.42 Ten manuscripts were found later in Cave 4 (4QS255-264 or 1Qa-j), and two
discovered in Cave 5 (5Q11 and 5Q12). The date of 1QS (in its present form) is from the first
century (100-75) BCE, and its origin goes back to the second century, for 4QS255 has been
dated to the middle of the second century BCE.43 The scroll of 1QS is a composite document,
The community understood and expressed itself as the ( yad), which means unity,
alone, togetherness.45 The term appears sixty-three times in the scroll.46 Although some
scholars have suggested that it is possible to understand the community in light of ancient
Hellenistic communities and associations,47 it is better to understand the whole community after
41
Literally, first, former, beginning, can also mean first of the barley harvest (2 Sam 21:9) (BDB
911).
42
James C. VanderKam, Sinai Revisited, in Biblical Interpretation at Qumran (ed. Matthias Henze;
Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature; Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, U.K.: William
B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2005), 44.*
43
Michael A. Knibb, Rule of the Community, Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls (vol. 2; ed. L.
H. Schiffman and J. C. VanderKam; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 796.
44
The Rule of the Community has been the object of intense study regarding its literary
development and textual developments and redactions: see Jerome Murphy-OConnor, La gense
littraire de la Rgle de la Communaut, Revue biblique 76 (1969): 528549; J. Pouilly, La Rgle de la
communaut de Qumran: son volution littraire, Cahiers de la Revue biblique 17 (Paris: 1976);
Sarianna Metso, The Textual Development of the Qumran Community Rule (vol. 21, Studies on the Texts of
the Desert of Judah; New York: Brill, 1997);* and Knibb, Rule of the Community, 2:795-796.
45
BDB 403.1.
46
VanderKam, Sinai Revisited, 45.
47
See Moshe Weinfeld, The Organizational Pattern and Penal Code of the Qumran Sect: Comparison with
Guilds and Religious Associations of the Hellenistic-Roman Period (vol. 2; Novum Testamentum et Orbis
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the likeness of Israel at Mount Sinai (Exodus 19-20 and 24),48 where the community of Israel
responds as one ( ; ydw) to the promise of the covenant (19:5-8a). In the Rule of the
Community, those who joined the community separated themselves into the wilderness in order
to study and live perfectly the Law of Moses and the prophets (1QS 8:13-16). The community
saw itself as a holy temple ( : 8:5),49 and the holy of holies for Aaron ( : 8:6), to
offer a pleasing odor (8:9), and to atone ( )for the land and to announce judgment against the
ungodly (8:10). The community participated in the yearly renewal of the covenant (2:18-19;
5:20-24). Although there are two proposals for the date of the covenantal renewal (Day of
Atonement or the Feast of Pentecost),50 it is more certain that the renewal took place on the day
that the covenant was initiated shortly after Israel had arrived at Mount Sinai in the third month
(Ex 19:1, 10-11, 15). The earliest literature that attests to this association is the Book of Jubilees
as we seen above. In Jubilees all the covenants from Genesis to Exodus took place in the middle
of the third month, which turns out to be the fifteenth of that month.51 Two calendar documents
Antiquus; Fribourg: ditions Universitaires; Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1986); see also
Matthias Klinghardt, The Manual of Discipline in the Light of Statutes of Hellenistic Associations,
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 722.1 (1994): 251-267.
48
VanderKam, Sinai Revisited, 48.
49
A number of passages speak of the sect itself as a holy house () , clearly a
metaphorical designation for the temple. See Lawrence H. Schiffman, Qumran and Jerusalem: Studies
in the Dead Sea Scrolls and the History of Judaism (Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature;
Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, UK: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2010), 87.
50
Lawrence H. Schiffman, Qumran and Jerusalem: Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and the History of
Judaism (Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature; Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, UK:
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2010), 87.
51
VanderKam, Sinai Revisited, 49-50: VanderKam continues, the precise date for the festival
was a disputed matter during and after the Second Temple period, but the writer of Jubilees seems to
have arrived at 3/15 as the correct time for the holiday through exegesis of the way the date in
Exodus 19:1 is worded. That verse, as we have seen, places the Israelites arrival in the Sinai
wilderness in the third month, with the covenant following a few days after. The verse does not,
however, specify a date in the month when they entered the region of Sinai; rather, it says on that
very day. The natural question to ask is: Which day? The expression on that very day is pointless
in a context where no definite date has been mentioned. In order to deal with this difficulty, the
writer of Jubilees employed an exegetical device that would later be called gematria, that is, adding up
17
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
from Cave 4 from Qumran also associate the Feast of Pentecost with the third month on the
fifteenth day (4Q320 f4iii.1-5 and 4Q321 f2ii.4-5).52 Those who enter the new covenant are
linked with the covenant of Abraham, and, in essence, are returning to the Law of Moses with all
The community participated in a communal meal that included the blessing of the first
fruits of bread and the new wine. They ate, blest, and took counsel as a community.
In every place where there are ten men of the Community council, there should not be
missing amongst them a priest. And every one shall sit according to his rank before him,
and in this way shall they be asked for their counsel in every matter. And when they
prepare the table to dine or the new wine for drinking, the priest shall stretch out his hand
as the first to bless the first fruits of the bread (< ) or the new wine for
drinking, the priest shall stretch out his hand as the first to bless the first fruits of the
bread ( > ) and the new wine () ( 1QS 6:2-6).53
The description of the community has parallels with other sources outside of Qumran,
such as Josephus54 and Philo, 55 which both describe the Essenes.56 For example, Josephus
states,
the numerical value of the letters in a word in order to derive added meaning from it. In this case the
problematic word so treated is the one translated that in the expression on that very day. The
letters of the word ( )add up to 12 ( = 7, = 5), so the author of Jubilees read the phrase to mean
that the Israelites reached the Sinai wilderness in the third month on the twelfth day. Then Moses is
told to prepare the people for an appearance by God on the third day (Exod. 19:1011, 15). The
author of Jubilees took those three days to be 3/1315, with the covenant being made on the last of
them.
52
James C. VanderKam, Shavuot, in Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls (vol. 2; ed. L. H.
Schiffman and J. C. VanderKam; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 871872: 4Q320
corresponds with the twenty-four priestly services in 1 Chr 24:7-19. Jeshua and the Feast of Weeks
(4Q320 f4iii.5) correlate with the fifteenth day of the third month.
53
Florentino, The Dead Sea Scrolls, 83.
54
See Josephus, Jewish Wars 119-161 (esp. 129-131).*
55
See Philo, Every Good Man is Free 75-91 (esp. 86 and 91).*
56
For the identification of the Qumran community with the Essenes and other hypotheses, see
James C. VanderKam, The Dead Sea Scrolls Today (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing, 1994), 71-
98.*
18
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Despite the above similarities, the account of Josephus of the Essenes lacks explicit reference to
the firstfruits of bread and the new wine. Nonetheless, there is another important document, the
Rule of the Congregation, which sheds more light on the communal meal of Qumran.
The Rule of the Congregation (1QSa = 1Q28a), which is also known as the Messianic
Rule, is dated from 100-75 BCE.58 It contains a description of the eschatological community,
which will experience the coming of the messiah and the messianic banquet.59 Once again, as in
1QS, the firstfruits of bread and the new wine appear. According to the Rule of the
Congregation,
[when] they gather [at the tab]le of community [or to drink the n]ew wine, and the table
of the community is prepared [and the] new wine [is mixed] for drinking, [no-one should
stretch out] his hand to the first-fruit ( )of the bread and of [the new wine] before
the priest, for [he is the one who bl]esses the first-fruit ( )of bread and of the new
win[e and stretches out] his hand towards the bread before them. Afterwar[ds,] the
Messiah of Israel [shall str]etch out his hands towards the bread. [And afterwards, they
shall ble]ss all the congregation of the community, each [one according to] his dignity.
And in accordance with this precept one shall act at each me[al, when] at least ten me[n
are gat]hered (1Q28a ii.17-21).60
What was the significance of these community meals? There are at least two proposals.
Lawrence H. Schiffman argues that the common meal was eschatological in nature, which
57
Josephus, The Jewish War: Books 17 (ed. Jeffrey Henderson et al.; trans. H. St. J. Thackeray;
vol. 1; Loeb Classical Library; Cambridge, MA; London; New York: Harvard University Press;
William Heinemann Ltd; G. P. Putnams Sons, 19271928), 373.
58
Michael A. Knibb, Rule of the Congregation, Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls (vol. 2; ed. L.
H. Schiffman and J. C. VanderKam; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 797.
59
Schiffman, Qumran and Jerusalem, 156.*
60
Florentino, The Dead Sea Scrolls, 103.
19
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
required the purity of food and drink (and members), but the meal had no real sacred
significance, nor was it understood as a replacement for the Jewish Temple rituals.61 Other
scholars, such as Hartmut Stegemann,62 Moshe Weinfeld,63 Mathias Delcor,64 and Karl Georg
Kuhn65 have argued that there is a deeper sacred or religious significance of the common meal. 66
Kuhn argues at one point that neither of the two Qumran passages seen above (1QS 6:2-6; 1Q28a
ii.17-21) would provide us with any information about the religious significance that the
community attributed to the common meal.67 However, in order to explain the religious meaning
of the meal, Kuhn points to a unique element in the Jewish text Joseph and Aseneth, which refers
to a special meal that includes eating the blessed bread of life, drinking from the blessed cup
of immortality, and anointing with the blessed ointment of incorruptibility (Jos. Asen. 8.5;
15:5, 11; 16:6).68 As others have pointed out, there is the problem concerning how to understand
61
Lawrence H. Schiffman and Chaim Potok, Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls: The History of Judaism,
the Background of Christianity, the Lost Library of Qumran (New Haven; London: Yale University Press,
1994), 335-337.
62
Hartmut Stegemann, The Library of Qumran (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing, 1998 [Ger.
1993]), 45, 190-191: The common meals in the assembly hall were always preceded by a prayer
service. It is primarily of for this reason that the entire course of the assembly was regarded as an
act of worship requiring ritual purity (45); The order of seating at these meals strictly followed the
internal hierarchy established annually at the covenant renewal ceremony (191).
63
Moshe Weinfeld, The Organizational Pattern and Penal Code of the Qumran Sect: Comparison with
Guilds and Religious Associations of the Hellenistic-Roman Period (vol. 2; Novum Testamentum et Orbis
Antiquus; Fribourg: ditions Universitaires) Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1986.
64
Mathias Delcor, Repas cultuels, essniens et thrapeutes, thiases et aburoth, Revue de
Qumran 6 (1968): 401425.
65
Karl Georg Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, in The Scrolls and
the New Testament (ed. K. Stendahl; New York: Crossroad Publishing, 1992 [1957]), 65-93.
66
See Jodi Magness, The Archaeology of Qumran and the Dead Sea Scrolls (Studies in the Dead Sea
Scrolls and Related Literature; Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, UK: William B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company, 2002), 114.
67
Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, 74.
68
James H. Charlesworth, The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha and the New Testament: Expansions of the
Old Testament and Legends, Wisdom, and Philosophical Literature, Prayers, Psalms and Odes, Fragments of
Lost Judeo-Hellenistic Works (vol. 2; New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1985), 212, 226, 229.
See Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, 74-76.
20
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
this triad meal formula in Joseph and Aseneth: is this a cultic meal, an ordinary meal, or is it
Be that as it may, it is better to try to understand the two passages from Qumran on their
own within the context of priestly terminology and the broader context of the Jewish Temple.
This approach was already begun by Kuhn himself, who commented that the Qumran
community,
separated from the Temple....discontinued the sacrificial cult, but continued to lead their
lives in accordance with priestly purity. They continued daily baths and sacral meals.
Removed from the Temple, these practices were given a deeper religious
significance....In place of the sacrificial cultus of the Temple, which was no longer
possible for them by reason of their distance from it, the baths, and apparently also the
communal meal, took on a new meaning, mediating salvation from God.70
sacrificial terminology of the Old Testament, and that the community retained this sacrificial
terminology for the cult meal, and that this is another indication that the cult meal is originally
derived from the priestly meal in the Jerusalem Temple.71 There is in fact a priestly context for
of firstfruits that are brought to the priests (Lev 2:11-16; Num 18:12-13) or simply into the
shown that among some Jews there was opposition to the Jewish Temple, its practices, and its
69
See C. Burchard, Joseph and Aseneth, OTP 2.211-212 n. i; see also Randall D. Chesnutt,
Joseph and Aseneth. The Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary (vol. 3; ed. D. N. Freedman; New York:
Doubleday, 1992), 971.
70
Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, 68.
71
Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, 260 (nos. 22, 15), and 68.
72
See BDB 912.1. *
21
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
officials in the years surrounding the destruction of the Temple in the year 70 CE. This is found
in several Jewish sources, such as Josephus, the Pseudepigrapha, the Targum of Jonathan,
Rabbinic literature, and the Dead Sea Scrolls.73 Within the context of this paper, I will look
briefly at the Qumran Community and its view of the Temple. According to N. T. Wright, the
temple was the focal point of every aspect of Jewish national life, and was in principle the
heart of Judaism.74 E. P. Sanders has argued, I think that it is almost impossible to make too
much of the Temple in first-century Jewish Palestine, and that modern people fail to appreciate
the significance of the Temple.75 Even Simeon the Righteous is to have said that there are three
things on which the world stands: on the Torah, on the Temple service, and on deeds of
How did the Qumran Community understand themselves in relation to the Temple? They
literally separated themselves from Jerusalem and the Temple, going into the wilderness in order
to study and practice the law and the prophets (1QS 8:13-15). The community understood
themselves as a kind of temple (8:5), where they offered up spiritual sacrifices, made atonement,
and announced judgment (8:6-10; CD 6:19-21), offered up first-fruits during the Feast of
Pentecost, when renewing the covenant (1QS 2:18-19; 5:20-24; 4Q320 f4iii.1-5 and 4Q321
f2ii.4-5; CD 15:8-10), and participated in a pure and sacred meal of the blessed firstfruits of
bread and wine under the ministry of a priest on a more regular basis (1QS 6:2-6). They looked
forward to a coming eschatological meal of the blessed firstfruits of bread and wine with the
73
Craig A. Evans, Opposition to the Temple: Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls, Jesus and the Dead
Sea Scrolls (New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1992), 235-250;* E. P. Sanders, Jesus and
Judaism (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985), 61-90; John P. Meier, A Marginal Jew, Rethinking the
Historical Jesus: Volume Three (New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 2001), 498-501;* N. T.
Wright, The New Testament and the People of God (London: Society for Promotion Christian
Knowledge, 1992), 224-226.*
74
Wright, The New Testament and the People of God, 224, 226.
75
E. P. Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus (London: Penguin, 1993), 262.
22
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
coming Messiah of Israel, who was subordinate to the priestly order (1Q28a ii.17-21). The
community also looked to the future restoration of an eschatological temple (11Q19 xxix: 7-12;
see also 4Q174),76 where there would be, among other sacrifices, the offering of the firstfruits of
bread and new wine on the day after the seventh Sabbath following Passoverthat is, on the
Feast of Pentecost (11Q19 xix:1-16). In other words, they saw themselves as the community
that already, but not yet fully, realized the covenant of a priestly people that was promised to
Moses in the Torah (CD 15:8-10; Exodus 19-20, 24). But, the community envisioned all this
John the Baptist and Jesus within the Context of Second Temple Judaism
John the Baptist and Jesus have been called the eschatological prophets, the eschatological odd-
couple, or simply two unique individuals, each in his own way, with a prophetic mission within
the context of Second Temple Judaism. John was a fiery eschatological prophet announcing the
imminent judgment upon Israel (Mt 3:7-12; Lk 3:7-9). He was the only son from a priestly line,
which allowed him, and in a sense required him, to become a priest in the Jerusalem Temple like
his father Zechariah. However, it seems that he turned his back on that priesthood and the
Temple, ending up in the wilderness, where eventually he proclaimed repentance and offered a
one-time baptism for the forgiveness of sins (Mk 1:4; Mt 3:1-3; Lk 3:3; Jn 1:26), calling them to
3:8).77 John said and executed all this outside of Jerusalem and its Temple,78 on which,
76
On the eschatological Temple, see Schiffman, Qumran and Jerusalem, 294-297.*
77
NA27.
78
See John P. Meier, A Marginal Jew, Rethinking the Historical Jesus: Volume Two, Mentor, Message, and
Miracles (New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1994), 24.*
23
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
according to Josephus, Herod had engraved near the entrance of the Temple a golden vine with
According to John Meier, John the Baptist is the one person who had the greatest single
influence on the ministry of Jesus, and one of the most certain things that we know about Jesus
is that he himself willingly submitted to the baptism of John in the Jordon.80 By being baptized
by John, Jesus was accepting Johns unofficial, charismatic baptism and its importance for
the salvation and remission of sins,81 thus he agreed with the Baptist and his message on the
following points: 1) the end of Israel, as they were experiencing it, was fast approaching; 2)
Israel had gone astray, and that all of Israel was in danger of facing the fire of Gods judgment
and their destruction; 3) there was the possibility of mercythrough repentance and a change of
heart, submitting to the one-time baptism of John, looking to the one who baptized in the Holy
Spirit; and 4) that John the Baptist had been sent by God, and finally that the Baptist was a or
When talking about John and Jesus, what is certain from the Gospels is that John's
message flows into that of Jesus. Jesus will carry on Johns eschatological message, but with
differences. By way of comparison, John is the desert ascetic and Jesus is the kingly banquet
host. John is strict and Jesus is joyful. Jesus is the Son of Man bringing the joy of the kingdom
79
Antiquities 15.395; Jewish Wars 5.210; see also Tacitus, Historiae 5.5.
80
John P. Meier, A Marginal Jew, Rethinking the Historical Jesus: Volume Two, Mentor,
Message, and Miracles (New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1994), 7.
81
Meier, A Marginal Jew, 2.110.* On reasons why Jesus agreed to be baptized into a baptism for
the forgiveness of sins, see 111-116.
82
Meier, A Marginal Jew, 2.109-110.
24
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
to humanity (Q: Matt 11:16-19; Lk 7:31-35).83 Jesus will announce the coming judgment, like
John before him, but Jesus begins his ministry with healings, miracles, compassion and mercy.84
How significant was the theme of judgment in the message of Jesus? A number of
scholars have recently shown that Judgment was an important portion of Jesus proclamation.85
For example, Marius Reiser has shown that in Q there are sayings and parables that comprise
223 verses, according to Luke; in Mark there are 171 verses; in special material in Matthew are
N. T. Wright has gathered information from the parables of Jesus on the theme of
The seed was growing in secret, and when it was ripe the sickle would be put in, because
the time of harvest had arrived. The weeds would be gathered by the angels at the close
of the present age, and bound and burned. The net would drag in fish of every kind,
which would then be separated. Those who refused the invitation would be like
murderers who killed the messengers sent to them with invitations to a wedding feast: the
king would send his troops and deal severely with them. At the banquet, those who
insisted on the best seats would be humiliated; those who refused the invitation would be
replaced with others; those who were not ready, or worthy, would be excluded. When the
king came to his people, those who failed to do his bidding would incur judgment. The
parable of the wicked tenants sums up this, as so much else: the present hierarchy had
decided to try to keep the vineyard for themselves, but it was now to be given to others.
Their rejection of Jesus meant that now they would not only not be the heirs, they would
not be tenants either. Those who rejected the heaven-sent messengers would find the
kingdom of god taken away from them and apportioned elsewhere.87
83
Meier, A Marginal Jew, 2.255.*
84
See Walter Kasper, Mercy: The Essence of the Gospel and the Key to Christian Life (trans. W. Madges;
New York: Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 2014), 65-68.*
85
Scot McKnight, A New Vision for Israel: The Teachings of Jesus in National Context (Grand Rapids,
MI; Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1999), 139-149;* N. T. Wright, Stories of the Kingdom (3):
Judgment and Vindication, Jesus and the Victory of God, 320-368; * Marius Reiser, Jesus and Judgment:
The Eschatological Proclamation in Its Jewish Context (trans. L. M. Maloney; Minneapolis: Fortress Press,
1997 [Ger. 1990]).
86
Marius Reiser, Jesus and Judgment: The Eschatological Proclamation in Its Jewish Context (trans. L. M.
Maloney; Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1997 [Ger. 1990]), 303.
87
N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Christian Origins and the Question of God; London:
Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1996), 328.
25
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
There are sayings of Jesus that continued Johns message on bearing good fruit, which
reinstated their importance and the consequences for those who failed to produce them (Matt
7:15-20; 12:33-37; see also Lk 6:43-45). According to the Gospels, Jesus calls Israel to peace
(Lk 19:42; Matt 26:52), mercy (Matt 5:17; 9:13; 12:7; 18:33; 23:23; Lk 6:36; 10:37), and
forgiveness (Mk 11:25; Matt 6:14-15; 18:35), but if Israel does not respond to the message, then
destruction will come upon her (Lk 19:43-33; Matt 23:21-36). As Jesus is described coming
If you, even you, had only recognized on this day the things that make for peace! But
now they are hidden from your eyes. Indeed, the days will come upon you, when your
enemies will set up ramparts around you and surround you, and hem you in on every side.
They will crush you to the ground, you and your children within you, and they will not
leave within you one stone upon another; because you did not recognize the time of your
visitation. (Lk 19:41-44: NRSV).88
sayings in Matthew which show that Jesus had respect for the altar () and the
88
NA27 lacks NRSV from God.
89
See note 71 above; see also N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (London: Society for
Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1996), 432-438,*, 490-495,* 510-528;* Brant Pitre, Jesus, The
New Temple, and the New Priesthood, Letter & Spirit: Temple and Contemplation: Gods Presence in the
Cosmos, Church, and Human Heart (Steubenville, OH: Emmaus Read Publishing, 2008), 47-83;* The
Historical Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide (trans. J. Bowden; ed. G. Theissen and A. Merz: Minneapolis:
Fortress Press, 1998 [Ger. 1996]), 431-439;* Jacob Neusner, Money-Changers in the Temple: The
Mishnahs Explanation, NTS 35.2 (1989): 28790; Bruce Chilton, The Temple of Jesus: His Sacrificial
Program within a Cultural History of Sacrifice (University Park, Pennsylvania: 1992), 92- 154; A Feast of
Meanings: Eucharistic Theologies from Jesus through Johannine Circles (Leiden; New York: Brill, 1994);
Jostein dna, Jesus Symbolic Act in the Temple (Mark 11:15-17): The Replacement of the
Sacrificial Cult by His Atoning Death, Gemeinde ohne Tempel: Community without Temple
(Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 118; ed. B. Ego, A. Lange and P. Pilhofer;
Tbingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1999), 461-476.*
26
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Temple as the place where God dwells (Matt 23:19-21). But on the other hand, Jesus is
understood as greater than the Temple (12:8). In one triplet tradition, Jesus action in the Temple
shows zeal, driving out those who were selling and buying in the Temple and overturning the
tables, instead calling for the Temple to be a house of prayer (Mk 11:17; Matt 21:13; Lk 19:46),
but in another he is to have predicted the Temples destruction (Mk 13:1-2; Matt 24:1-2; Lk
Entered the temple and began to drive out those who were selling and those who were
buying in the temple, and he overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of
those who sold doves; and he would not allow anyone to carry anything through the
temple. He was teaching and saying, Is it not written, My house shall be called a house
of prayer for all the nations? But you have made it a den of robbers (Mk 11:15-17).
This action in the Temple has been interpreted in a variety of waysfor example, a
symbol of coming destruction, symbol of coming restoration, and a forerunner of the coming
new institution. Dominic Crossan argued that the action in the Temple is a deliberate symbolic
attack. It destroys the Temple by stopping its fiscal, sacrificial, and liturgical operations....[This]
symbolic destruction simply actualized what he had already said in his teachings, affected in his
healings, and realized in his mission of open commensality.90 N. T. Wright holds the view that
Jesus action was a prophetic critique of the present Temple, and that the action symbolized its
imminent destruction.91 E. P. Sanders argued that Jesus action both symbolized destruction
and also looked toward restoration.92 According to Sanders, Jesus did not wish to purify the
temple, either of dishonest trading or of trading in contrast to pure worship. Nor was he
opposed to the temple sacrifices which God commanded to Israel. He intended, rather, to
indicate that the end was at hand and that the temple would be destroyed, so that the new and
90
Dominic Crossan, Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography (New York: HarperCollins, 1995), 131, 133.
91
N. T. Wright, Jesus and The Victory of God, 417-418.
92
Sanders, Jesus and Judaism, 69-71.
27
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
perfect temple might arise.93 Like Sanders, who tried to move beyond the theme of destruction,
a number of scholars have suggested the movement beyond destruction towards the
After looking at the Mishnah, the Tosefta, and Exodus 30:16, Jacob Neusner comes to the
realization that the money-changers performed a vital service for the daily whole-offering to be
offered up in the name of the Jewish community in the Jewish Temple. This has a remarkable
significance for understanding Jesus action in the Temple. When Jesus enters the Temple and
overturns the table of the money-changers, this action is a prelude to a later event in the life and
ministry of Jesus. Jesus overturns one table in order to establish another. The place of sacrifice
for the atonement of sins will no longer be centered on the Jewish Temple; rather, the place of
It was to be the rite of the Eucharist: table for table, whole offering for whole offering.
It...seems to me that the correct context in which to read the overturning of the money-
changers tables is not the destruction of the Temple in general, but the institution of the
sacrifice of the [E]ucharist, in particular.96
This perspective has merit for it fits well within the context of the Gospel of Mark, which has the
Last Supper (14:22-25) surrounded on both sides with sayings on the Temples destruction
93
Sanders, Jesus and Judaism, 75.
94
The Historical Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide (trans. J. Bowden; ed. G. Theissen and A. Merz:
Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1998 [Ger. 1996]), 431-439;* Jacob Neusner, Money-Changers in the
Temple: The Mishnahs Explanation, NTS 35.2 (1989): 28790; Bruce Chilton, The Temple of Jesus:
His Sacrificial Program within a Cultural History of Sacrifice (University Park, Pennsylvania: 1992), 92-
154; A Feast of Meanings: Eucharistic Theologies from Jesus through Johannine Circles (Leiden; New York:
Brill, 1994); Jostein dna, Jesus Symbolic Act in the Temple (Mark 11:15-17): The Replacement of
the Sacrificial Cult by His Atoning Death, Gemeinde ohne Tempel: Community without Temple
(Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 118; ed. B. Ego, A. Lange and P. Pilhofer;
Tbingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1999), 461-476.*
95
Jacob Neusner, Money-Changers in the Temple: The Mishnahs Explanation, NTS 35.2
(1989): 287290.
96
Neusner, Money-Changers in the Temple, 290.
28
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
(13:1-31; 14:56-62; 15:29-30), and enclosed further with events surrounding the Temple,
including Jesus action in the Temple (11:15-19), and the splitting of the Temple curtain from
problematic. Any serious student of the liturgy of the Eucharist would eventually discover that
analysis of its origins and development in just the early centuries of Christianity is complex.
This is especially true when determining the roots of the Eucharist in the Last Supper.98
It is generally held that there are at least two traditions of the Lords Supper: one of these
is seen in Mark and Matthew, and the other in Paul and Luke. Which of the two is closer to the
original is uncertain. On the one hand, some scholars prefer the Pauline account as more
primitive. 99 On the other hand, a number of scholars credit Mark as being closer to the
original.100
97
A number of scholars have argued that there is a historical foundation for the Last Supper: 1)
see Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 263-264: we cannot completely reconcile the versions with
one another, but Jesus said, something about the cup, the bread, his body and his blood (263); 2)
see also Meier, A Marginal Jew, 2.302-309: Meier discusses the criteria of multiple attestations,
coherence, and discontinuity; it was part of the ministry of Jesus to have meals with his disciples and
even sinners, and that the meals had eschatological meaning and significance of the coming kingdom
and salvation of God (303); the saying in Mk 14:15 is discontinues from the early churchs
Christology, soteriology, and eschatology (305, 307); 3) finally, see Schillebeeckx, Jesus, 206-218.
98
See for example, Paul F. Bradshaw, Eucharistic Origins (vol. 80; Alcuin Club Collections;
London: SPCK, 2004); Reconstructing Early Christian Worship (London: SPCK, 2009), 3-52; see also The
Historical Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide, 405-439.
99
Joseph Jungmann, The Mass: An Historical, Theological, and Pastoral Survey (trans. J. Fernandes;
Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press, 1976), 5-6; Rudolf Bultmann, Theology of the New Testament
(vol. 1; trans. K. Grobel; New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1951), 150; see also James Dunn, The
Theology of Paul the Apostle (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing, 1998), 607-608.
100
Joachim Jeremias, The Eucharistic Words of Jesus (trans. N. Perrin; Philadelphia: Fortress Press,
1966), 189-191; Rudolf Pesch, On The Gospel in JerusalemMark 14:12-26 as the Oldest
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What was the historical background and nature of the Last Supper? There are a number
of suggestions: 1) this was a Kiddush meal, which included a blessing of the meal on the Sabbath
or on a feast day; 2) it was a chaburah or a religious fellowship meal among friends; 3) that it
was an Essene meal, which was a daily religious or sacred meal of the Essenes found in
Jerusalem and Qumran; and 4), it was a Passover meal. There appears to be no evidence that the
Sabbath-Kiddush meal actually existed during the time of Jesus, but appears only later during the
late Tannaitic or perhaps Amoraic period,101 and there is no evidence for the chaburah meal.102
Thus, the first two are rejected for lack of evidence.103 That leaves two possibilities, a Passover
meal and/or a community meal, such as that which is found among the scrolls from the Qumran
community.
According to Joachim Jeremias, the Passover is the historical background for the Last
Supper. Jeremias makes fourteen observations, which support this conclusion.104 However, not
everyone agrees with Jeremias. Karl G. Kuhn, who we discussed earlier, argues that the meal
that lies behind the Last Supper is a communal meal, which has a form that corresponds to the
cult meal of the Essenes.105 Kuhn finds the remnant of the original formula for the Last
Supper within Mk 14:22-24, portions of which he is certain are from a pre-Marcan cult
Tradition of the Early Church, The Gospel and the Gospels (ed. P. Stuhlmacher; Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans Publishing, 1991), 117-139; esp. 122-130; Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal
Meal at Qumran, 80.
101
Jeremias, The Eucharistic Words of Jesus, 28.
102
Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, 264 n. 68; see also Jeremias,
The Eucharistic Words of Jesus, 31.
103
However, Edward Schillebeeckx has shown similarities between Jesus fellowship meals found
throughout the Gospels with the Last Supper itself. See Edward Schillebeeckx, Jesus (trans. H.
Hoskins; New York: Seabury Press, 1979), 206-218, 306-312.
104
Jeremias, The Eucharistic Words of Jesus, 41-62.
105
Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, 85; see also John Zizioulas,
the Eucharistic Communion and the World (London: New York: T&T Clark, 2011), 2-6.*
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formula and from a Palestinian origin.106 For Kuhn, the words while they were eating are an
editorial comment made by Mark, and the words of the covenant are impossible in any Semitic
language.107 Therefore, whether he is right or wrong in his analysis, Kuhn reduces the text of
Mark 14:22-24 in such a way that parallels the community meal at Qumran, which included the
priestly blessing upon the firstfruits of bread and the new wine.
tienne Nodet and Justin Taylor have also not followed Jeremias conclusion that the
Last Supper was in fact simply a Passover meal.108 They challenge nearly all of Jeremias
fourteen points.109 They agree that Passover provides the general context of the Last Supper
narrative (especially Luke 22:15-20),110 but they also provide several difficulties (which they call
1. The Gospels speak of bread and not unleavened bread that is associated with
Passover.
2. Early Christians frequently celebrated the Lords Supper and not simply once a year as
with the Passover.
3. The chief priests and scribes decided not to arrest Jesus during the feast of Passover (Mk
14:2).
4. Pilates custom to release a prisoner (Mk 15:6), can only be understood so that the one set
free may celebrate the feast (m. Pesa. 8:6).
5. Christ is called our paschal lamb who has been sacrificed (1 Cor 5:7), suggesting that
he was crucified at the time that the Passover lamb was sacrificed, which agrees with
John.
106
Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, 81, 80.
107
Kuhn, The Lords Supper and the Communal Meal at Qumran, 80.
108
tienne Nodet and Justin Taylor, The Origins of Christianity: An Exploration (Collegeville,
Minnesota: Liturgical Press, 1998). I will not follow their thesis entirely, which argues that
Christianity originated from among the Essenes.
109
Nodet and Taylor, The Origins of Christianity, 94-104
110
Nodet and Taylor, The Origins of Christianity, 104.
111
Nodet and Taylor, The Origins of Christianity, 105-109. The numbering (1-7) is my own. I have
gathered together several of their points. I have simplified and the information is by no means
exhaustive.
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6. Christ is also called the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep (1 Cor 15:20); the
first fruits were offered on the day following the Sabbath (Lev 23:11); this is the 16
Nisan, which coincides with the Sunday of the resurrection, thus making the 14 Nisan
(Friday) the day of crucifixion.
7. According to Johns Gospel, Jesus is sent to be crucified at the sixth hour of the day of
preparation (19:14-16), in which the Passover lambs were sacrificed.
Most significant is the role of the covenant in the Last Supper (Mk 14:24; Matt 26:28; Lk
22:20; 1 Cor 11:25). It is the Feast of Pentecost (not Passover) that is associated with the
covenant and with the firstfruits,112 which we have seen above when discussing Jubilees and the
Qumran Community. Rabbi Eleazar would later hint at the link between Pentecost and the
So what was the nature of the Last Supper according to Nodet and Taylor? They argue
that the tradition behind the Last Supper is actually independent of the Passover, rather, it is a
sort of community meal, which involves bread and wine and that,
The central meaning which it [Last Supper] symbolizes is connected with Pentecost,
signifying both the renewal of the Covenant (Sinai) and an anticipation of the Kingdom
(first-fruits).113
Gospels. The elements of bread and the cup/wine take on a new meaning within the broader
context of the Feast of Pentecost, at least in the mind of scholars who see the parallels.
However, I find it almost impossible to think that the context of the Passover was not in the mind
of Jesus during the Last Supper, and for that matter, also those who were present with Jesus and
112
Nodet and Taylor, The Origins of Christianity, 112-113.
113
Nodet and Taylor, The Origins of Christianity, 119-120.
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in the minds of the authors of the Synoptic Gospel. But there are still difficulties in
understanding this account based simply on sola pesach. The supper has meaning beyond that
confine. The Last Supper needs to be understood in light of Pentecost, not simply Passover.
Analyzing and comparing the Last Supper alongside our understanding of the Feast of Pentecost
found in the Old Testament and in Jubilees and Qumran is helpful. There are similarities, but
there are differences. The same could be said if we compare the account with the community
meal of firstfruits found at Qumran. It needs to compared not only with the community meal
found at Qumran, that included the blessing of the firstfruits of bread and the new wine, but also
following. On Thursday the 13th of Nisan, Jesus offers his Last Supper. On Friday he is
crucified on the day of preparation of the Passover lambs on the 14th of Nisan. This agrees with
Paul who calls Christ our paschal lamb (1 Cor 5:7). On the Sabbath Jesus rests from his
labors. On Sunday, the day after the Sabbath (16th of Nisan), Jesus is raised like the first fruits of
the barely harvest (mer). This would again agree with Paul who calls Christ the firstfruits of
those raised from the death (15:20). Yet, this was only the beginning of Pentecost, whose climax
game fifty days later with the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, which was itself the firstfruits of the
eschatological future.
If we follow Markan priority for the Last Supper, Jesus takes bread, blesses it, breaks it,
and gives it to his disciples, giving a new meaning to bread by saying the words this is my
body (Mk 14:22), and to the cup with the words, this is my blood of the covenant, which is
poured out () for the sake of many, but saying this only after he had taken the cup,
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given thanks, given it to them, and they all had drunk from it (vv 23-24). 114 All this is better
understood not only in the light of the death of Jesus and the Passover, but also in light of Easter
and Pentecost.
Truly I tell you, I will never again drink of the fruit of the vine until that day when I drink
it new in the kingdom of God (Mk 14:25; see also Lk 22:18).115
This saying of Jesus shows that the Last Supper is to be understood not only in face of his
coming death, but also his future eschatological hope. The Last Supper and the crucifixion are
to be understood in the Eucharist as the offering of Jesus, who is the firstfruits of the
resurrection. The Last Supper and crucifixion also prefigure the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on
the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1-13), where the disciples are said to be filled with new wine.
This parallels Paul, who describes those who are partakers of Christ as having the first fruits of
the Spirit (Rom 8:23). Finally, but really initially, Jesus had already offered himself through
baptism (Mk 1:9-11; Matt 3:13-17; Lk 3:21-22; Jn 1:29-32), and would be the one who baptizes
in the Holy Spirit (Mk 1:8; Q: Matt 3:11 and Lk 3:16; Jn 1:33).
The oblation of Jesus seen in his baptism, ministry, Last Supper, and the cross leads to a
fuller realization through the resurrection, ascension, and the baptism of the Holy Spirit, which
all took place outside the actual liturgy of the Jerusalem Temple. This offering seemed destined
to take on new meaning especially after the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE. Thus, the
understood by the Matthean community as referring to the Eucharist (Matt 23:19), especially
after the Temples destruction. Furthermore, the Matthean community could have also
114
Sections of Mark are my translation based on NA27.
115
For arguments in favor of the authenticity of this saying within the context of the Last
Supper, see Meier, A Marginal Jew, 2.303-305.
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understood the saying of Jesus in Matt 5:23-24 about forgiving and being reconciled with brother
or sister before going to offer () the gift at the altar (), within the context of
prayer and the Eucharist. This certainly is the case in Early Christian Literature, for example in
On the Lords own day gather together and break bread and give thanks, having first
confessed your sins so that your sacrifice () may be pure. But let no one who has a
quarrel with a companion join you until they have been reconciled, so that your sacrifice
may not be defiled (Did. 14.1-2).116
When approaching the Eucharist there needs to be reconciliation and peace. "As our
Savior said, 'If you bring your gift to the altar, and there remember that your brother
keeps anger against you; leave your gift before the altar, and go, first be reconciled to
your brother and then come offer your gift.' But the gift of God is our prayer and our
Eucharist. If it be then that you have some grudge against your brother, or he against
you, your prayer is not heard, nor your Eucharist accepted, but you are found void of
prayer and of the Eucharist, because of the anger that you keep (Did. Apost. 11.43a).117
Cyril of Jerusalem also applies this text from Matthew for preparation of the Eucharist through
It was this that Christ had in view when He said: If, when you are bringing your gift to
the altar, you suddenly remember that your brother has a grievance against you, leave
your offering by the altar; first go and make your peace with your brother, and then come
back and offer your gift (Cat. Lect. 23.3).118
But, where is the evidence that the Eucharist was understood as the offering of firstfruits?
It came after the resurrection. It is found in the understanding that the Eucharist is an offering.
116
Michael William Holmes, The Apostolic Fathers: Greek Texts and English Translations (Updated
ed.; Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1999), 266-267.
117
Didascalia Apostolorum in Syriac (trans. Margaret D. Gibson; London: Cambridge University,
1903), 63.* Edited by LFL.
118
Leo McCauley, Foreword to Catecheses 1318, in The Works of Saint Cyril of Jerusalem (ed.
Bernard M. Peebles; trans. Leo P. McCauley and Anthony A. Stephenson; vol. 64; The Fathers of
the Church; Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 1970), 193.*
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
As we have seen above, this was the case in the Didache (14.1-2), which also points to the
This is the sacrifice concerning which the Lord said, In every place and time
offer me a pure sacrifice, for I am a great king, says the Lord, and my name is
marvelous among the nations (Did. 14.3).119
This association of the Eucharist with words from Malachi is also found among Justin Martyr, in
By making reference to the sacrifices which we Gentiles offer to Him everywhere, the
Eucharistic Bread and the Eucharistic Chalice, He predicted that we should glorify His
name.(Dial. 41).120
It is Irenaeus of Lyon who not only associates the Eucharist with Malachi, but also with the
offering of firstfruits:
He directed his disciples to offer God the first fruits of his creation, not as if God needed
them but so they themselves would not be unfruitful or ungrateful. He took the bread,
which is created, and gave thanks, saying, This is my Body. Likewise for the cup,
which is part of the creation to which we belong, and he revealed it to be his Blood, and
he taught that it was the new offering of the new covenant. It is this very same offering
which the Church has received from the apostles and which throughout the world it offers
to God who feeds us with the first fruits of his gifts in the new covenant (Haer. 4.17.5).121
Irenaeus here uses the term firstftuits twice. The first time refers to the firstruits of
creation, which by context is bread and wine. The second time the term firstfruits takes
John of Damascus also uses the term firstfruits when referring to the Eucharist. But, he
makes a distinction between the offertory bread and the consecrated bread for which he says,
119
Holmes, The Apostolic Fathers, 67. Words are from Mal 1:11, 14.
120
Thomas B. Falls with Justin Martyr, The First Apology, The Second Apology, Dialogue with Trypho,
Exhortation to the Greeks, Discourse to the Greeks, The Monarchy or The Rule of God (vol. 6; The Fathers of
the Church; Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 1948), 210.
121
Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 4.17.5 (Worship in the Early Church: An Anthology of Historical Sources;
ed. L. J. Johnson; vol. 1; Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press, 2009), 77-78.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
This bread is the first-fruits of the bread to come, which is the supersubstantial bread. For
supersubstantial either means that which is to come, that is, the bread of the world to
come, or it means that which is taken for the sustenance of our substance (De. Fide. Orth.
4.13).122
Thus, for John the offertory bread is not called the firstfruits, rather it is after the consecration
Penultimate Conclusion
The offering of Jesus is a complex reality. In the Lukan tradition, in a sense it even begins with
Mary who offers humanity the firstfruits of her womb (Lk 1:35, 38, 42). The offering of Jesus is
seen when he offered himself through baptism with sinful Israel, through the Father who offered
the firstfruits of the Spirit to the Son at his baptism, through Jesus life of ministry, through the
bread and wine of the Last Supper, through the cross and resurrection when he offered back to
the Father a new creation and new humanitywhich is more fully realized through the
ascensionand through the giving of the Holy Spirit in Pentecost. Like Israel in the wilderness
who responded to the covenant, or the Qumran community who renewed the covenant with
bread and wine outside the Jewish Temple, so the early believers in Jesus entered into covenant
renewal with the Father through the firstfruits of creation, through the risen Jesus and the Spirit,
and who were themselves a kind of firstfruits offered to the Father through baptism, the
Eucharist, and a life in the Spirit. In the Eucharist they offered to the Father the firstfruits of
I finish with two prayers over the offerings found in the 2011 Roman Missal.
Sanctify by invocation of your name, we pray, O Lord our god, this oblation of our
service, and by it make of us an eternal offering to you. Through Christ our Lord.
122
John Damascene, Writings (ed. H. Dressler; trans. F. H. Chase Jr.; vol. 37; The Fathers of the
Church; Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 1958), 360. John also
associated the Eucharist with words of Malachi.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
(Prayer over the Offerings on the Feast of the Most Holy Trinity)
Accept, O Lord, the offerings we have brought to honor the revealing of your beloved
Son, so that the oblation of your faithful may be transformed in the sacrifice of him who willed
in his compassion to wash away the sins of the world. Who lives and reigns for ever and ever.
(Prayer over the Offerings on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord)
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
CHAPTER TWO
A CATHOLIC-PENTECOSTAL PERSPECTIVE
Introduction
This paper will investigate the Epistle to the Hebrews and its relationship to both the
Eucharist, and the offering of firstfruits.124 One of the main problems for some Pentecostals and
even some Catholics is how to reconcile the repeated emphasis in the Epistle to the Hebrews that
Jesus offered himself "once" (7:27: 9:12, 26, 28; 10:10) with the notion that the Eucharist is an
offering. In contrast to scholars such as Ronald Williamson, who claim there is no connection
between Hebrews and the Eucharist, I want to suggest that there is a relationship between the
Eucharist and Hebrews. In Hebrews, there is evidence that the author explains Jesus as the
firstfruits of the new humanity, who has ascended on high and who holds the priesthood
and prayer of thanksgiving, which finds its enduring significance through charity.
123
Presented at the 45th Annual Meeting of the Society for Pentecostal Studies to the
Ecumenical Studies Group by Lawrence Francis Ligocki.
124
This paper is a continuation of previous work on the Eucharist as the offering of firstfruits.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
This paper is divided into three parts: 1) the offering of Christ; 2) the offering of the
community; and 3) the offering of the Zebach Td. The first will establish the one-time
sacrifice of Christ; the second and third will support the argument that the Eucharist is the
offering of firstfruits. The paper begins with a short discussion on Hebrews and the Eucharist,
then proceeds through the body of material, during which I will discuss Hebrews within the
unique style that is highly literate with comprehension of the Greek language, rhetoric, and
Jewish thought. It has been called the most elegant and sophisticated, of early Christian texts,
yet also the most enigmatic.125 The work is well constructed with a parallel structure that
centers on Christs high priesthood and the theme of sacrifice (Heb 4:14-10:39).126 The book's
authorship is uncertain; its view of Jewish worship at first appears negative; and its relationship
to the Early Christian Eucharist is debated. What is certain is the works high regard for the
supremacy of Christ, the one-time sacrifice of Christ, the use of cultic language, the comparison
of Christs priesthood with Melchizedek, and the works undeniable criticism of the cultic
worship associated with the wilderness Tabernacle. Although the book is critical of this worship
and its priesthood, the Second Jewish Temple is not mentioned. It is also unclear whether the
Jewish Temple is still standing when the book was written.127 The book is difficult to date
125
Harold W. Attridge and Helmut Koester, The Epistle to the Hebrews: A Commentary on the Epistle
to the Hebrews (Hermeneiaa Critical and Historical Commentary on the Bible; Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1989), xxviii, 1.
126
Raymond Brown, An Introduction to the New Testament (New York: Doubleday, 1997), 690.*
127
This raises the question of the date of the book in relation with the destruction of the Jewish
Temple in 70 CE. Was it written before, during, or after? The destruction of the temple is not
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
relationship between the Epistle and the Eucharist. Hebrews does not mention the Eucharist by
name. This has not prevented some scholars from arguing that the Eucharist is an important
background for the Epistle. In the 19th century, John Mason Neale held the view that the Epistle
to the Hebrews drew upon the primitive Liturgy of Saint James, which he considered the early
Eucharistic prayer associated with both James and the city of Jerusalem.129 If Neale was correct,
then Hebrews could be understood within the context of the Eucharist. John Edward Field later
maintained that there are numerous illusions to the Eucharist in the Epistle to the Hebrews130
following to a certain degree the view of Neale stated abovethat is, that important passages in
Hebrews were derived from this primitive liturgy.131 However such dependence is difficult to
accept today. Scholars such as Gregory Dix132 and Louis Bouyer133 have argued that the Liturgy
of Saint James, as we now have it, is from the 5th century. Furthermore, Edward Yarnold has
pointed out that, we do not possess a text of the Jerusalem liturgy of the fourth century, that the
Liturgy of Saint James has come down to us in a later form, and that this liturgy as we have it
has been developed from Cyril of Jerusalems Mystagogical Catechesis, which is dated to the 4th
mentioned, which leads some scholars to conclude that the epistle was written before. However,
this is not conclusive, and some scholars would date the epistle after 70 CE. It is a though issue to
decide.
128
Brown, Introduction to the New Testament, 696.
129
John Mason Neale, Essays on Liturgiology and Church HistoryWith an Appendix (2nd ed; London:
Saunders, Otley, and Co., 1867 [1863]). See pages 419-421. *
130
John Edward Field, The Apostolic Liturgy and the Epistle to the Hebrews (London: Rivingtons,
1882).
131
Field, The Apostolic Liturgy and the Epistle to the Hebrews, vi-vii: Field states, I accept [Neales]
main position, that certain important passages occurring both in the Liturgy of S. James and in the
Epistles of S. Paul [here Field attributes both 1 Corinthians, Colossians and Hebrews to Paul] are
taken by the Apostle from the Liturgy and not by the Liturgy from the Apostle; and I have
attempted to strengthen the proof of this theory.
132
Gregory Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy (2nd ed.; New York: Continuum, 2003 [1945]), 176.*
133
Louis Bouyer, Eucharist (trans. C. U. Quinn; Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press,
1968 [French: 1966]), 268-280 (esp. 277).
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
century.134 The point is that the earliest texts associated with the Liturgy of Saint James and its
Eucharistic prayers are dated centuries after Hebrews, meaning these texts could not have
influenced Hebrews.
In the last fifty years, scholarship has again investigated the relationship between the
Epistle and the Eucharist. On the one hand, Ronald Williamson claimed that there is no
association between Hebrews and the Eucharist,135 and more recently Craig Koester thinks it is
best not to assume illusions to the Lords Supper in the Epistle.136 On the other hand, James
Swetnam has argued that the Eucharist is the central point of the Epistle and that there are
plausible grounds for seeing Eucharistic allusions in Heb 9:20 and 13:7.137 While some of
Swetmams earlier work138 was questioned by Williamson, as mentioned above, more recently
Paul Williams has lent support to Swetnams work.139 Arthur Just has also built on the work of
Swetnem, arguing that the Epistle was written within a liturgical context for Christians who
celebrated the Eucharist on a regular basis.140 Albert Vanhoye also understands the Epistle as
134
Edward J. Yarnold, The Liturgy of the Faithful in the Fourth and Early Fifth Centuries, in
The Study of Liturgy (rev. ed.; eds. C. Jones et. al.; New York: Oxford University Press, 1992), 239-
240.
135
Ronald Williamson, The Eucharist and the Epistle to the Hebrews, NTS 21.2 (1975): 300-
312. For a criticism of R. Williamson, see Hahn, Appendix: Jesus Death as Liturgical Sacrifice in
Hebrews, in Kinship by Covenant, 330-331. *
136
Craig R. Koester, Hebrews (vol. 36; The Anchor Bible; Doubleday: New York, 2001), 128.*
137
James Swetnam, Christology and the Eucharist in the Epistle to the Hebrews, Biblica 70.1
(1989): 74-95 (esp. 93-94): Swetnam argues that the Eucharist is not made more specific possibly
because of the writers pastoral concerns or possibly the author is following the discipline of the
secret.
138
James Swetnam, The Greater and More Perfect Tent: A Contribution to the Discussion of
Hebrews 9:11, Biblica 42 (1966): 91-106; On the imagery and Signficance of Hebrews 9:9-10,
CBQ 28 (1966): 155-157.
139
Paul Williams, The Eucharist in the Epistle to the Hebrews, LTR 12 (1999-2000): 95-103.
140
Arthur A. Just, Entering Holiness: Christology and Eucharist in Hebrews, CTQ 69:1 (2005):
75-95: Just states, This essay will show how the Christology of Hebrews suggests a eucharistic
reading of this Epistle; that is, to understand the high-priestly Christology of Hebrews is to affirm
that the hearers believed that this Christology was enfleshed at the altar (76). I thank Dr. Phil
Mayo who first shared this article with me.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
being preached by the author during Eucharistic celebrations and that the Epistle is inviting the
community to come near to and into contact with God in the Eucharist.141 Swetnem himself has
continued his work dealing specifically with a liturgical approach to Hebrews 13.142
A slightly different approach than the above scholars is taken by Barnabas Lindars, who
argues that Hebrews has influenced Christian liturgical text throughout history, including the
Liturgy of Saint James, the early Roman Liturgy, and the more modern hymn writers, such as
William Brights Once, only once, and once for all, which applied Hebrews theology to
We will now look at the Epistle of Hebrews and its authors presentation of the one-time
sacrifice of Christ and the continual sacrifice or offering of the community. This will lay the
141
Albert Vanhoye, Structure and Message of the Epistle to the Hebrews (Rome: Pontificio Istituto
Biblico, 1989). This is a publication of two previously published books by Albert Vanhoye, Le
message de l'ptre aux Hbreux (Paris 1977) and A structured Translation of the Epistle to the Hebrews
(Rome, 1964).
See also Cardinal Albert Vanhoye, Let us Receive Christ Our High Priest, Preached February
10-16, 2008 for the Spiritual Exercises with Pope Benedict XVI. Trans. J. Wallace. While commenting
on Heb 10:19-25, Vanhoye states, As we have already seen, the High Priest could only enter once a
year into the Most Holy part of the Temple, and only for the purpose of observing a whole series of
minutely prescribed rites. Now, instead, we are all invited to come near to God, to enter into
intimate contact with him. We have good reasons for thinking that the author made this exhortation
during a Eucharistic celebration, perhaps even during several Eucharistic celebrations because, as I
have already said, he was a travelling apostle; we see that at the end. It seems to me very probable to
me that he composed this magnificent homily in order to preach it in Christian assemblies that
involved the celebration of the Eucharist. This phrase corresponds perfectly to the Eucharistic
dynamism in every way. The author speaks here of the blood of Christ, the flesh of Christ, (just like
in Jesus discourse on the bread of life) and the person of Christ the Priest. He says that these three
realities are now available to us. Where are they available? They are available in the Eucharistic
celebration (78-79).
142
James Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews 13, Letter & Spirit: The Authority of
Mystery: The Word of God and the People of God (vol. 2; ed. S Hahn; Steubenville: Emmaus Road Press,
2006), 159-173. * See also James Swetnam, Zebach td [ ] in Tradition: A Study of Sacrifice
of Praise in Hebrew, Greek and Latin, Filologia Neotestamentaria 15 (2002): 65-86. *
143
Barnabas Lindars, The Theology of the Letter to the Hebrews (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1991), 141-142. * & % $
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Christological foundation found in Hebrews for the communitys worship that is expressed in the
Eucharist.
I. Offering of Christ
Jesus as One Time Sacrifice
In the Epistle, offering appears twenty-nine times in chapters 5, 7-13. Hebrews
compares and contrasts the worship that took place in the Tabernacle with the worship that takes
place in the New Covenant. On the one hand, in the Tabernacle both priests and high priests
offer gifts and sacrifices for the sins of themselves and the people (Heb 5:1, 3; 7:27, 8:3-5; 9:7,
9; 10:1, 2; 11). On the other hand, in the New Covenant Jesus offers the gift of himself through
his life, death, and ascension. In the days of his flesh, he offered (: ) up
prayers and supplications" (5:7). Jesus offered (: ) himself up, doing this only
eternal Spirit (9:14), and has no need to offer () himself again and again (9:25). And
when Jesus offered (: ) once for all time, he sat down at the right hand of
God (10:12). After having been offered () once to bear the sins of many, he will
appear a second time (9:28). Through the offering () of the body of Christ once for
all, the people of the New Covenant have been sanctified according to Gods will (10:10), for by
a single offering () he has perfected for all times those who are sanctified (10:14).
According to Hebrews Jesus suffered outside the gate in order to sanctify () the
people by his blood (Heb 3:12), a term that carries with it the meaning not only to sanctify in a
moral sense but in a cultic sense too.144 Through his death and through the blood of the covenant
144
BDAG 10.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Jesus was sanctifying a priestly people for himself and giving them an eternal kingdom
(12:28)that is, a priestly people who would make offerings like those of Jesus (2:11-12; 13:15-
16).
If the community is a priestly people, what are they to offer? We will return to the
answer below in section II. For now two things are certain for the author of Hebrews. First, the
references above emphasize the one-time () offering of Jesus, which on a literary basis is
made several times (7:27: 9:12, 26, 28; 10:10). Secondly, although this offering is the sacrifice
Jesus made on the cross for the purification of sins through sufferings and for atonement (1:3;
2:10, 17; 9:26-28; 10:29; 12:2), it was an offering made to God through the eternal spirit (9:14)
and finds its fuller fulfillment in his ascension into heaven (1:3-4; 4:14; 6:19; 7:26: 8:1; 9:24;
12:2), to which his heavenly bound priestly community is also called and called to confess,
to Jesus having been raised from the dead,145 and, as such, He is the firstborn of a new
humanity146 or in other words the firstfruit of the new creation (Col 1:5; Rev 1:5). In a later
passage, those who have responded to Jesus have come to the (church of
the firstborn), who are enrolled in heaven (Heb 12:23), which most likely refers to the believers
(Lk 10:20; see also Phil 4:3 Rev 3:5; 13:8; 20:12) who are members of the assembly of the
firstborn. Jesus is also called (2:10), referring to him as the pioneer of salvation
through both the sufferings of the cross and the resurrection (13:20).147 Again in a later passage,
145
Contrary EDNT 3.190.
146
BDAG 894.
147
EDNT 1.163,
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Jesus is not only called the pioneer (), but also the perfecter () of faith, to whom
the community is looking () as they run () the race with patient endurance (12:2).
Jesus is also called , forerunner (6:20). In the entire NT, is only used here in
Hebrews. It appears three times in the LXX. In Numbers 13:20 it is used as a translation for the
Hebrew word for firstfruits ( bikkrm),148 where Moses encourages Israels early
,
explores to enter into the promised-land and among other things to bring back some of the
firstfruit of the soil (Num 13:21-24). According to Pliny the Elder, when the fig-tree produces its
other words, he is the pioneer and forerunner of the resurrection. As the firstfruits, Jesus was
finally raised into heaven itself (1:3-4; 4:14; 6:19; 7:26: 8:1; 9:24; 12:2), to which his heavenly
bound community is also called; and he is the firstfruits of the resurrection through which the
community is called and called to confess, (3:1; 4:14; see also 12:22-23; 13:14-15). If
Jesus is the firstfruits, is the priestly communitys confession and praise likened to firstfruits?
The answer below will be yes! The communitys offering is like the firstfruits.
am certain that it cannot be exhausted with what follows below, but I suggest three dimensions:
(1) offering of self, (2) offering of the Zebach Td, and (3) offering of works of charity (or
fruits of righteousness).
148
HRCS 1206.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Offering of Self
The first dimension is the priestly gift of self of the communities members. It is the
offering of self. Hebrews uses the term (approach) in a cultic sense for approaching
Gods presence (Heb 7:25; 11:6), approaching the throne of grace (4:16), and to come to God in
a cultic sense (10:22).149 The community has not approached Mount Sinai (12:18), but has
come to () Mount Zion (v 22). According to Robert Daly, only priests had the
right to draw near to the sanctuary and the altar to serve God, yet this cultic act of drawing
near is repeated by the author of Hebrews using in the cultic sense.150 Thus, as
Hebrews stresses the one-time event of the sacrifice and ascension of Christ (as noted above), the
Epistle also points out the continual need for the priestly community to approach God (7:25:
;151 11:6: 152). In other words, the Church offers itself by drawing
near and coming into the presence of God. It is an oblation of self to God in response to what
God has done through Jesus. It may well be that initially individuals offered themselves through
, baptism to become part of the priestly community (6:2). Yet, there are at least two
We Have an Altar
The second dimension of the communitys offering is the offering of praise, and
according to the Epistle, the offering of the community is associated with an altar. William Lane
has noted the parallelism in Hebrews 13:10-16 that is divided into the two following parts: the
first portion is in the form of exposition, which begins with we have an altar (10-12); the
149
BDAG 878.
150
Robert Daly, Christian Sacrifice: The Judaeo-Christian Background before Origen (vol. 18; Studies in
Christian Antiquity; Catholic University Press, 1978), 275-276, 273-274.
151
Verb, present (middle or passive), participle, plural, accusative, masculine. See also 10:1.
152
Verb, present (middle or passive), participle, single, accusative, masculine.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
second is in the form of exhortation, which concludes with sacrifices (13-16). Within the
parallelism are three portions of texts (A A`; B B`; C C`) that are arranged within its
chiastic structure.153 Both parts are positioned between the imperatives, remember your
This brings us to the outer parallel between the proposition in v. 10 and the exhortations
(vv. 15-16). The assertion that we have an altar, (13:10a) is the determining
thesis that sheds light on 13:15-16.155 In other words, the proposition that we have an altar
him, and to offer (: v. 15-16) to God the types of sacrifice that are pleasing to
153
William L. Lane, Hebrews 913 (vol. 47B; Word Biblical Commentary; Dallas: Word,
Incorporated, 1998), 503.*
154
I have used the NRSV for the text with my alterations marked with [] and additions from
NA26 Greek text marked with ().
155
Lane, Hebrews 913, 503.
156
Max Zerwick, A Grammatical Analysis of the Greek New Testament (trans. M. Grosvenor; 4th ed.;
Roma; Pontificio Istituto Biblico, 1993), 688-689.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
God. The inner parallelism focuses on the object of Jesus. The communitys worship is centered
We have an altar () from which those who [minister] in the tent have no right to eat
(Heb 13:10).
What is the altar? Two things are certain. On the one hand, it is not the altar
associated with the Levitical priesthood and the tabernacle (Heb 7:11-14: 13:10). On the other,
its meaning and interpretation has taken on a life of its own. There are four basic interpretations:
(1) the cross, (2) a heavenly altar, (3) the Eucharistic table, and (4) the human heart.
The first view has the strength of identifying the centrality of Christ sacrificial death on
the cross, which has a biblical and historical foundation (Heb 13:12; Jn 19:17-18; see also Mk
15:22-24; Matt 15:22-24; Lk 23:33). A weakness is found in the difficulty of describing the
continued benefits of the cross. If Christ died only once on the altar of the cross, how is the
community to participate in the event? Thus, some scholars find it helpful to interpret altar as
the altar as the body of Christ upon who was sprinkled the blood of the covenant. Thus, Christ is
the offeror, the offer, and the altar. The second view has the strength of continuity with the first.
Through the resurrection and ascension, Christ mediates grace and mercy from his heavenly
throne much like Melchezidek shared bread and wine and a heavenly blessing with Abram (Heb
4:16; 5:1-10; 7:1-10).157 The third viewthat of the Eucharist tabledevelops the second. It
has the strength of associating the altar with the Eucharist, and understands eating as feeding
157
Of course a weakness in this association with bread and wine is that Hebrews does not
explicitly link Christ priesthood with them, but this should not be a huge problem. When discussing
Melchizedek, the author of Hebrews does not mention him bringing out bread and wine (Gen
14:18-20).
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
on the earthly and heavenly mystery of Christ, and also accommodating the reality of the
Eucharist, the crucified, risen, and ascended Christ. The strength of this view is it is found in
early liturgical text in the fourth century such as the Liturgy of Saint Basil, the Roman Rite, and
the eighth book of the Apostolic Constitutions. In his work, The Eucharist: the Sacrament of the
Kingdom, Alexander Schmemann speaks of the ancient eucharistic experience, to which the
very order of the eucharist witnesses, indicating that it speaks of our ascent to the place where
Christ ascended,158 and through thanksgiving the meaning of the eucharist as the ascent of the
Church to the heavenly altar, as the sacrament of the kingdom of God, is fulfilled.159 A
weakness of this view is that presently the earliest evidence for an early Eucharistic altar comes
from the second and third century.160 However, this does not seem insurmountable. The author
of Hebrews uses the term , which designates a place of sacrifice.161 The fourth
viewthat of the human heartargues that the altar is the interior heart of the individual. The
strength in this view is that it has a biblical basis in Hebrews and is supported by some of the
early patristic fathers. Its weakness, though, is that it is simply too subjective. If each individual
heart was an altar, then there would be altars. There is something more objective: be it the
memorial of the cross, the ascended Lord, the participation in the Eucharist, something that is
In closing this portion, it is worth noting that the Catechism of the Catholic Church
describes the altar of the New Covenant as the Lords Cross and the table of the Lord,162
158
Alexander Schmemann, The Eucharist: Sacrament of the Kingdom (trans. P. Kachur; Crestwood,
New York: St. Vladimirs Seminary Press, 1988), 60.*
159
Schmemann, The Eucharist, 199. *
160
I have in mind archeological evidence.
161
It seems natural that a place associated with the sacrificethat is, the Eucharistwould
naturally grow and develop into some kind of altar centered on the offering.
162
CCC 1182. *
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and that the Christian altar is the symbol of Christ himself.163 This confirms, at least to my
minds eye, that the altar in Heb 13:10 is not easily defined as simply earthly or heavenly,
Concerning the phrase outside the camp in Hebrew 13:11, 12, 13, there at least four
interpretations: (1) going beyond the earthly world seeking the heavenly city; (2) to go outside
the world of Judaism and Jewish traditions; (3) going outside sacred and cultic space into the
secular and profane world; and (4) outside the city and to the marginalized and suffering. There
is not room to discuss all of these interpretations in detail. Let it suffice to say there may be truth
in all of them. However, the one view that I want to discuss is the second. This is important for
understanding the worship described in 13:1-16 within the context of Second Temple Judaism.
This view explains going out to mean leaving Judaism and Jewish traditions. Simon
Kistemaker argues that, the Jewish Christian must leave the family structure in which he
learned the precepts and commandments, the ceremonies and traditions, the prejudice and pride
of the Jew.To go to one who bears the curse of God is to share the disgrace he bore. By
choosing for Christ, the Jew rejects Judaism and thus faces expulsion, alienation, and at times
persecution.164 For Jamieson, Fausset, and Brownjust as the bodies of the animals, whose
blood is taken into the sanctuary, and the bodies burned outside the campso also Jesus suffered
outside the gate of ceremonial Judaism, of which His crucifixion outside the gate of Jerusalem
163
CCC 1383. *
164
Simon J. Kistemaker and William Hendriksen, Exposition of Hebrews (vol. 15; New Testament
Commentary; Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 19532001), 422.
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is a type.165 Westcott states, Christians are now called upon to withdraw from Judaism even in
its first and purest shape. It had been designed by God as a provisional system, and its work was
done.166
There is certainly some truth in this view. However, Jesus was a Jew. This point was
emphasized by both Jewish and Christian scholars during the second half of the last century
including Geza Vermes,167 E.P. Sanders,168 and Harvey Cox.169 Christians have had to struggle
for centuries with the fact that Jesus was Jewish and remained so throughout his entire life.170
So, going out to him does not necessarily mean abandoning everything that is Jewish and from
early Semitic tradition. This is especially true when Hebrews is understood in the context of
Second Temple Judaism. Case in point: Hebrews emphasizes the importance of understanding
Jesus in light of the high priesthood of Melchizedek (Heb 5:6; 6:20; 7:11-28). The coming high
priest like Melchizedek was also important to some in Second Temple Judaism. Among the
discoveries from the Second Temple period and the Qumran Scrolls is 11Q13, also known as
11QMelch, dated to around 1st century B.C.E., which is an eschatological text in which
Melchizedek is explained as a heavenly high priest, who is closely associated with the Day of
Atonement in the last days, and who brings both grace and judgment.171 In the New Testament,
165
Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset, and David Brown, Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the
Whole Bible (vol. 2; Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc., 1997), 480. *
166
Brooke Foss Westcott, ed., The Epistle to the Hebrews the Greek Text with Notes and Essays (3d ed.;
Classic Commentaries on the Greek New Testament; London: Macmillan, 1903), 444.
167
Geza Vermes, Jesus the Jew (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1981 [orig. 1973]); and The Religion of Jesus
the Jew (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993).
168
E.P. Sanders, Jesus and Judaism (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985).
169
Harvey Cox, Rabbi Yeshua Ben Yoseph: Reflection of Jesus Jewishness and the Interfaith
Dialogue, Jesus Jewishness: Exploring the Place of Jesus in Early Judaism (vol. 2 of Shared Ground Among
Jews and Christians; ed. J.H. Charlesworth; New York; Crossroad, 1991), 27-62.
170
Cox, Rabbi Yeshua Ben Yoseph, 32.
171
According to Annette Steudel, 11Q13 ii.18 contains the oldest known explicit citation from
the Book of Daniel. See Annette Steudel, Melchizedek, Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls (vol. 1; ed.
L.H. Schiffman and J.C. VanderKam; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 1.356.
52
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Melchizedek is only discussed in Hebrews 4-10, and according to Annette Steudel, the influence
of Qumran ideas on the Christology of Hebrews often has been assumed, and indeed there are
some characteristic parallels in the concept and the use of the figure of Melchizedek, but there
are also differences.172 Joseph Fitzmyer has argued that 11Q13 displays an almost
contemporary Jewish understanding of Melchizedek, with material that has been incorporated
into Heb 7.173 Larry Hurtado has also commented on the similarities and differences between
Hebrews and 11Q13; he presents three possibilities: (1) Hebrews reflects a Christian adoption of
ideas from Qumran about Melchizedek; (2) the biblical texts on Melchizedek (Gen 14:17-21; Ps
110:4) may have generated a variety of interpretations, from which both Hebrews and 11Q13 are
the only two surviving examples (each developing independent of the other); and (3) Hebrews
and 11Q13 are the only two texts from this period (ca. 100 B.C.E. 100 C.E.) that demonstrate
interest in Melchizedek, and that it is purely coincident that both are extent.174 We will return to
the importance of Second Temple Judaism in relations to Hebrews when we discuss the nature of
the sacrifice of praise. However, let us look at the second exhortation from Heb 13:15).
We discussed above the parallel between the assertion we have an altar (v. 10) and the
exhortation to offer up worship (v. 15). This brings us to the second dimension of the
172
Steudel, Melchizedek, 1.356.
173
Joseph A. Fitzmyer, Further Light on Melchizedek from Qumran Cave 11, JBL 86 (1967):
31. *
174
Larry W. Hurtado, Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity (Grand Rapids, MI;
Cambridge, U.K.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2005), 501. * Of the three
possibilities, Hurtado finds the second more probable, and the third as the most unlikely.
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communities offering, that is, the , sacrifice of praise. In other words, what
sacrifice of praise, which appears in Heb13:15. The Vulgate translates Heb 13:15 primarily with
hostiam laudis, but there are variant readings sacrificium laudis and laudes hostias.175
In Leviticus, the sacrifice of thanksgiving was included under and as part of the
peace offering (7:11; see also chap. 3). The thank offering included, among other things,
unleavened bread (LXX, ; Vulgate, panis; MT, [ cakes]) that were mixed with oil (v.
12), and also leavened bread (LXX, ; Vulgate, panis; MT, [ cakes of
unleavened bread]) (v. 13). From the animal that was sacrificed for the peace offering (chap. 3),
the priest sprinkled the blood, and the flesh was to be eaten on the day of the sacrifice (vv. 14-
15). The sacrifice of thanksgiving seems to be the more primitive, for according to Jacob
Milgrom, the tradition that the thank offering is an independent offering, separate from the
peace offering is found in all other sources, 176 which even includes rabbinic sources (m.
Zebachim 5:6-7).177 A later rabbinic tradition taught that according to Rabbi Mehahm the
Galilean, in the time-to-come all offerings will cease except the thank-offering, this will never
175
Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews, 168.
176
See Lev 22:19 (H not P); Jer 17:26; 2 Chr 29:31-33; 33:16.
177
Jacob Milgrom, A Continental Commentary: Leviticus: a Book of Ritual and Ethics (Minneapolis,
MN: Fortress Press, 2004), 71.
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cease (Midrash Tehillim 56.4; 100.4).178 The point is that the peace offering included a
bloody sacrifice and a bloodless sacrifice. And if Milgrom is correct, and I understand him
correctly, behind the priestly tradition of Lev 7 lays a more primitive thank offering that was
from a bloodless rite. Regardless, the priestly tradition in Lev 7 presents the zebach td as a rite
The sacrifice of praise also appears in a number of the Psalms (26:7; 42:4; 50:14, 23;
69:30, 34; 107:22; 116:17; 147:7). These all contain hymns and songs of praise and
thanksgiving. Sometimes there is a tendency to argue that the Psalms above allegorize or
spiritualize the sacrifice of praise, thus outright rejecting any type of material sacrifice. While it
is true that among these Psalms there is emphasis on the singing of songs of praise and
thanksgiving (26:7; 42:4; 69:30; 107:22; 147:7), and criticism of animal sacrifice (69:31; 50:7-
13), nowhere in these Psalms is there an attack or sign of disapproval of the offering of the bread
associated with the zebach td. Furthermore, one of these Psalms shows a parallel between the
zebach td and the lifting up of the cup of salvation (116:13-17). This reference to the cup in v.
13 is among the positively connotated passages regarding the cup, with parallels in Pss 16:5
178
See The Midrash on Psalms (2 vols.; ed. L. Nemoy et. al.; trans. W. G. Braude; Yale Judica
Series, vol. 13; New Haven: Yale University Press, 1959), 1.498, 2.148; saying attributed to Rabbi
Menahem the Galilean. Menahem the Galilean is to have also said, [To invite] one to go before the
ark they do not say [to him], Come and pray. Rather they say [to him], Come and draw near. Come
and make our offerings for us, provide for us, fight for us, make peace for us (y. Ber. 4:4, III.1.A).
The Talmud continues, others say [the text of the short Prayer is as follows]: The needs of your
people Israel are great and their ability [to express them] is limited. But let it be your will, Lord our
God, and God of our fathers, that you provide for each and every creature his needs, and for each
and every person that which he lacks. Blessed be the Lord, for he has heard the voice of my
supplications [Ps. 28:6]. Blessed art thou, O Lord who hears [our Prayer]. [T. 3:7F.]: see Jacob
Neusner, The Jerusalem Talmud: A Translation and Commentary (Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson
Publishers, 2008).
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
and 23:5.179 The cup may be associated with a drink offering, which is called the cup of
salvation (v. 13),180 or may be the cup that is raised up and drank with thanksgiving for the
received benefits and joy of salvation.181 Thus, the zebach td is an offering of praise and
thanksgiving that also contains a ritual offering of bread and possibly wine.
There are a number of texts from Second Temple Judaism that enhance our
understanding of the sacrifice of praise within early Judaism as both the fruit of the lips and
the fruits of charity (1QS 9:4-5; 1 QHodayot; Sirach 35:1-10; Psalms of Solomon 15:3).
Robert Daly has suggested that the texts from the Rule of the Community (1QS 9:4-5;
10:6) are so much akin to Heb 13:15 that they have to be considered part of its background and
possibly even its source in some indirect way.182 Daly points out that only in 1QS 9 and 10 is
the phrase fruit of lips so inclined toward a sacrificial meaning as in Heb 13:15.183 Here
three things stand out. First, these sections from the Rule of the Community (1QS 9:4-5; 10:6)
are an important historical background for Heb 13:15. Secondly, it is surely possible that they
had an influence in some indirect way, but it seems at present difficult to show. It is better to use
a more comparative approach in saying that the parallels are undeniable. Finally, there are also
strong parallels in the Thanksgiving Hymns between fruit of the lips in Heb 13:15 and fruits
179
Frank-Lothar Hossfeld and Erich Zenger, Psalms 3: A Commentary on Psalms 101150 (ed.
Klaus Baltzer; trans. Linda M. Maloney; HermeneiaA Critical and Historical Commentary on the
Bible; Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2011), 218.
180
Willem A. VanGemeren, Psalms, in The Expositors Bible Commentary: Psalms, Proverbs,
Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs (vol. 5; ed. F. E. Gaebelein; Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing
House, 1991), 727.
181
Carl Friedrich Keil and Franz Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (vol. 5; Peabody, MA:
Hendrickson, 1996), 716.
182
Daly, Christian Sacrifice, 283.
183
Daly, Christian Sacrifice, 283.
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interpretations: 1) a liturgical rite, with the Eucharist as the chief explanation; and 2) some sort
perhaps influenced by a liturgical tradition.184 He also thinks the phrase sacrifice of praise
neither requires nor excludes association with the Lords Supper.185 Attridge argues that the
metaphorical characteristic of sacrifice of praise is seen in the appended phrase, that is, the
fruit of lips that confess his name (v. 15),186 and that the nature of the praise appears to be
primarily prayer rather than a ritual act.187 Attridge questions if the author of Hebrews is even
making allusions to the Lords Supper.188 William Lane argues that the offering of Christian
consistsin the verbal response of praise and gratitude to God (cf. 12:28).189 Johnson also
consisting in praise, the fruit of lips confessing his name, Hebrews joins a broad stream of
Greco-Roman and Jewish piety that regarded moral virtue and verbal praise as more appropriate
offerings to the Divine than animal sacrifices.190
184
Paul Ellingworth, The Epistle to the Hebrews: A Commentary on the Greek Text (New International
Greek Testament Commentary; Grand Rapids, MI; Carlisle: W.B. Eerdmans; Paternoster Press,
1993), 719. *
185
Ellingworth, Hebrews, 719.
186
Attridge, Hebrews, 400. *
187
Attridge, Hebrews, 400, 401. *
188
Attridge, Hebrews, 400.
189
Lane, Hebrews 913, 549.
190
Luke Timothy Johnson, Hebrews: A Commentary (ed. C. Clifton Black, M. Eugene Boring, and
John T. Carroll; 1st ed.; The New Testament Library; Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press,
2012), 349. Johnson cites a number of examples: Epictetus, Enchiridion 31.5; Apollonius of Tyana,
Letter 26; Sir 34:1835:11; Pss. Sol. 15:3; T. Levi 3.56; 1QS 9:45, a perspective found in other New
Testament writings as well (Rom 12:12; Phil 2:17; 4:18; 1 Pet 2:5; John 4:24).
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
the context of a liturgical rite of the Eucharist. James Swetnam has made a strong case for its
investigates the perspective of the following topics: 1) the structure of chapter 13 of Hebrews;192
2) the association of the biblical sacrifice zebach td with the Sacrifice of Praise in
Hebrews;193 and 3) the zebach td and the Sacrifice of Praise in the Latin Rite of the Catholic
Church.194 In the heart of the Latin Eucharistic Prayer is the phrase, Qui tibi offerunt hoc
191
Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews 13, Letter & Spirit 2 (2006): 159-173.
192
Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews 13, 159. Swetnam will later describe this first
topic on the structure of Hebrews 13 as the first stage of the paper: The first stage approached the
text in the perspective of its structure. Any text is presumed to have a structure or at least a non-
structure. Determining the structure of a text generates perspectives, for a structure indicates the
authors points of view. The structure which emerged from a study of formal criteria as well as
content showed that the author was basing his exposition on the centrality of the death of Jesus and
its role in Christian liturgy (vv. 1114). Flanking this central concern were verses concerned with
eating (vv. 910) and verbal prayer (vv. 1516). Serving as a frame for all of this were verses which
emphasized the role of the leaders of the community (vv. 7 and 17). Verses 15a indicated the
authors concerns about moral conduct; vv. 5b6 indicated his concern for Scripture; vv. 1819
indicated the authors personal reliance on the community in prayer; and vv. 2021 indicated his
concern to invoke Gods blessing in Christ on the addressees (172).
193
Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews 13, 165. Swetnam will later describe this
second topic on the Jewish td as the second stage of the paper, which is the attempt to make
chapter 13 more intelligible, approached the central portion of the text, vv. 717, from the
perspective of the Jewish td ceremony. This resort to the td was justified by the occurrence of the
phrase in v. 15. Thus the perspective of the sacrifice of praise was used to evaluate
the structure resulting from a study of formal indications in the text combined with content. This
use of the td perspective seemed confirmed by the apparent coincidence of its three elements
bloody sacrifice, food, and verbal prayer/hymnswith the three elements of eating, bloody death,
and verbal prayer resulting from the analysis of structure (172).
194
Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews 13, 168. He will finally describe this third
topic on the Roman Rite as the third state of the paper, which approached the entire text, vv. 121,
from the standpoint of the Latin Mass of the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church. The justification
for this approach was the coincidence of the five sections of these verses with the basic outline of
the Latin liturgy: act of repentance; reading from Scripture; central sacramental action; prayer based
on remembrance of the living; final blessing (172).
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sacrificium laudis (we offer you this sacrifice of praise).195After sequencing through the above
three topics, and correlating parallels between them, Swetnam concludes that Heb 13:1-21 is a
sophisticated presentation of the Eucharistic liturgy of the church, carefully structured and
carefully argued.196 Swetnam does not argue that an early liturgical rite directly influenced the
Epistle, or vice versa, but that the parallels and coincidences in so many areas make total
isolation and independence highly improbable.197 This approach opens the door for considering
the offering of the sacrifice of praise to have been not simply a spiritual and verbal offering but
also the offering of bread and, possibly, a cup of wine, which was at the heart of the zebach
td.198
10:29; 12:2) and risen Christ (1:3; 4:14; 6:19; 7:26: 8:1; 9:24; 12:2), who is the risen firstfuits
(1:6; 2:10: 6:20: 12:2, 23; 13:20), we can consider that in Heb 13:15 the sacrifice of praise and
fruit of the lips are firstfruits of the community through the risen Christ (3:1; 4:14; see also
12:22-23; 13:14-15). In other words, they offer Christ to the Father through their praise. This
offering comes from the heart strengthened through grace (13:9). When thanking God with this
new song of praise, the fruit of the lips are the firstfruits from a holy and righteous heart (Pss.
195
James Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews, Letter & Spirit: The Authority of Mystery:
The Word of God and the People of God 2 (2006): 169.
196
Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews 13, 172.
197
Swetnam, A Liturgical Approach to Hebrews 13, 172: Swetnam concludes with, no
statement was made about whether the epistle was influenced by the liturgical act or vice versa. The
only thing asserted was that a coincidence in so many variables of such a varied nature seems
improbable.
198
See Appendix One.
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Sol. 15:3).199 It is an offering from the created order and not simply something spiritual and
In the Eucharistic sacrifice the whole of creation loved by God is presented to the Father through
the death and the Resurrection of Christ. Through Christ the Church can offer the sacrifice of
praise in thanksgiving for all that God has made good, beautiful, and just in creation and in
humanity (CCC 1359).200
There is also the possibility that something more is taking place. While Jesus offered
himself once to make atonement (7:27: 9:12, 26, 28; 10:10), he continually bears all of creation.
God created the universe through him (1:2), and he also sustains all things, ,
(lit. bearing or moving all things) by his powerful word (v. 3; see Col 1:16; 1 Cor 8:6). All of
creation came through the praise of his lips and are sustain and moving toward her final inheritor
(Heb 1:2). In the words of Pope Francis, the ultimate destiny of the universe is in the fullness
of God, which has already been attained by the risen Christ, the measure of the maturity of all
things.201
It is certainly possible that the offering of the sacrifice of praise in 13:15 also included
the offering of bread and wine in their expressing praise and thanksgiving. Through the eyes of
faith and their encounter with Christ, the community had the substance () of the things
hoped for, things not seen with the visible eyes (Heb 11:1). In other words, with the eyes of faith
they came to know the reality of Christ crucified, resurrected, and ascended on high. Yet, the
community was not to be so heavenly minded that they were no earthly good to others. We will
see shortly that the communitys worship included works of charity and mercy, which are
of liturgical prayer that were developing during the first two centuries of Christianity. I have in
mind three examples for parallels. First, the exhortation on how to give thanks in the Didache,
thanks (Did. 9.1), which is followed with a liturgical prayer (9.2-10.6)202 that even includes
manner they wish (10.7). Scholars both ancient and modern have pointed out the parallels
between Hebrews and 1 Clement.203 Both Hebrews and 1 Clement use the term ,
sacrifice of praise, (35:12; Heb 13:15); but only 1 Clement contains a liturgical-like prayer (59.3-
61.3) that actually contains words of praise to God, a prayer that acknowledge that it is
, through the High Priest Jesus Christ, that the community makes its confession and
, sacrifice of praise through him ( ) (13:15).204 The final example is from the
early Christian text the Odes of Solomon. Scholars such as Jean Carmignac,205 James
Charlesworth,206 and Michael Lattke207 have commented on the parallels between the Odes and
202
Michael William Holmes, The Apostolic Fathers: Greek Texts and English Translations (Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1999), 259-263. *
203
Eusebius, Hist. eccl., 3.38; Attridge, Hebrews, 6-7; Andreas Lindemann, The First Epistle of
Clement, in The Apostolic Fathers: An Introduction (ed. Wilhelm Pratscher; trans. Elisabeth G. Wolfe;
Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2010), 59.
204
Holmes, The Apostolic Fathers: Greek Texts and English Translations, 22. * References for 1 Clement
are taken from Holmes edition.
205
Jean Carmignac, Les affinits qumrniennes de la onzime Ode de Salomon, RevQ 3
(1961): 71102: Carmignac compared Ode 11 with the Qumran hymn 1QH.
206
James H. Charlesworth, Solomon, Odes of, ed. David Noel Freedman, The Anchor Yale Bible
Dictionary (New York: Doubleday, 1992), 114; * see also James H. Charlesworth, Qumran, John and
Odes of Solomon, in John and Qumran (ed. J.H. Charlesworth; London: Geoffrey Chapman, 1972),
135.
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Qumran Scrolls. The Odist prays, open to me the harp of the Holy Spirit, so thatI may praise
you, O Lord, and according to the multitude of your merciesgrant unto me, and hasten to
grant our petitions (14.8-9).208 My heart was pruned and its flower appeared, then grace
sprang up in it, and it produced fruits for the Lord (11.1). The Odist proclaims, I shall open my
mouth, and his spirit will speak through me, the praise and beauty of the Lord (16.5). The Odist
states, He has filled me with words of truth, that I may proclaim him. And like the flowing of
waters, truth flows from my mouth, and my lips declare his fruits (12.1-2). Finally, the Odist
realizes that those who participate in the Lords offering are called to show compassion, justice,
and truth, and not to oppress any one (20.5-6), for the offering of the Lord is righteousness, and
From the three examples above, only the Didache gives evidence for the early formation
of a Eucharistic prayer. The other two, 1 Clement and the Odes of Solomon, are not explicitly
Eucharistic, but they provide early examples of verbal offerings of praise and thanksgiving that
Thus, within Heb 13:15, have we discovered an important component for understanding
the origins of the early Eucharistic prayer? Be that as it may, there is a final dimension of the
communitys worship that includes another dimension of the offering of the sacrifice of praise.
207
Michael Lattke and Harold W. Attridge, Odes of Solomon: A Commentary (Hermeneiaa Critical
and Historical Commentary on the Bible; Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2009), 153 n.15. *
208
James H. Charlesworth, The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha and the New Testament: Expansions of the
Old Testament and Legends, Wisdom, and Philosophical Literature, Prayers, Psalms and Odes, Fragments of
Lost Judeo-Hellenistic Works (vol. 2; New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 1985), 748. * All the
following sections from the Odes of Solomon are from or based on Charlesworths edition.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
The Greek word means rendering of service, well doing, a good deed
(BDAG 410). In the New Testament, it is a hapax legomenon. In another early Christian text,
Ignatius of Antioch uses it to describe a good work in the service of God (IPol. 7.3). The word
encouraged to practice hospitality (13:2), and here in v. 16 they are commanded to do good
and to share, and, according to Kistemaker, here the author of Hebrews sees these deeds of
love and mercy as sacrifices of praise.210 According to Leon Morris, this means that they offer
no animals but make their response to what Christ has done for them in praise, good deeds, and
others (through Christ), they are really worshiping God, and fulfilling the sacrifice of praise.
Through Christ they are receiving an eternal kingdom (12:28), mercy and grace (4:16), Through
Christ they offer acceptable worship to God (12:28; 13:16), and rendering service to others
(12:8; 13:16). There is an unmistakable parallel in vv. 15-16 with the great commandment (Matt
22:36-40). This can be extended to 1 John, where those who say they love God must also love
one another (4:19-21). In the words of Pope John XXIII, it is charity alone that makes it
209
BDAG 552.
210
Kistemaker, Hebrews, 424. *
211
Leon Morris, Hebrews, in The Expositors Bible Commentary: Hebrews through Revelation (ed.
Frank E. Gaebelein; vol. 12; Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1981), 152.
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possible for us to love God above all else, and makes us ready and glad to do all the good we can
charity and sharing of goods are acceptable worship, is it possible that marriage and the marital
bed are a form of worship (Heb 13:4) that finds deeper meaning from the Eucharist? Earlier, the
, acceptable worship (12:28), and to do good and to share with others, for such
Let marriage be held in honor by all, and let the marriage bed () be kept undefiled
(); for God will judge fornicators and adulterers (13:4).
In the Letter to Diognetus, Christians are described as those who live in the flesh, but not
according to the flesh, and that they setup and share a common table, but not their marriage bed
() (Diogn. 5:7).213
The word in Heb 13.4 means pure in either a religious or moral sense.214 In the
Clementine Vulgate from 1592, we find thorus immaculatus,215 and the BSV, inmaculatus. 216
let us offer to God acceptable worship (12:28), and the verb (pleasing), do good
and share for such sacrifices are pleasing to God (13:16). If marriage and the marriage bed
212
John XXIII, Aeterna Dei Sapientia (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1961). *
213
Holmes, The Apostolic Fathers, 541.
214
BDAG 54.
215
Biblia Sacra Juxta Vulgatam Clementinam. (Ed. electronica.; Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible
Software, 2005), Heb 13:4.
216
Biblia Sacra Vulgata: Iuxta Vulgatem Versionem (electronic edition of the 3rd edition.; Stuttgart:
Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1969), Heb 13:4.
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were not forms of worship for the community, they were at least understood within the context
of worship.
Conclusion
According to Hebrews, Jesus Christ offered himself once in order to make atonement for
sin. Through his resurrection and ascension into the heavenly tabernacle, Christ is also the
firstfruits of the eternal priesthood, through whom the Church offers a sacrifice of praise
through its priestly service, worship, liturgical traditions, and also through its works of charity,
mercy, and justice. Not all Christians will agree that Heb 13:15 is the basis or even concerned
with the Eucharist, as does Catholic tradition. 217 However, all Christian should be able to agree
that Heb 13:15 is the basis for other liturgical prayer such as the Liturgy of the Hours (Divine
Office),218 and the singing of psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs. Through Christ, the Church
expresses her praise and thanksgiving to God the Father for both the goodness and beauty of
creation, and for the wonders of salvation brought about through the crucified, risen, and
ascended Lord. This is not merely a human work. The author of the final benediction of
Hebrews states the conviction that it is God, who through the blood of the covenant raised up
Jesus from the dead, will also raise up the community, making them complete in everything good
in his sight, through Christ, to God be the glory forever (13:20-21). After which the author
217
CCC 1359. *
218
Pius XII, Mediator Dei 139; * Benedict XVI, Verbum Domini, n. 62. *
219
BDAG 53.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Accept, O Lord, the offerings we have brought to honor the revealing of your beloved
Son, so that the oblation of your faithful may be transformed in the sacrifice of him who willed
in his compassion to wash away the sins of the world. Who lives and reigns for ever and ever.
(Prayer over the Offerings on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord)
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
CHAPTER THREE
A CATHOLIC-PENTECOSTAL PERSPECTIVE220
Introduction
Although Pentecostals have made headway and avenues throughout culture, one journey they are
hesitant to make is a deeper participation in the Eucharist as a sacrifice. Some might even argue
that the Eucharist is not a sacrifice at all. However, I will argue for the sacrificial nature of the
Eucharist. I will investigate the Liturgy of the Eucharist in the Roman Rite showing sacrificial
dimensions. This is a daunting task since the General Instruction of the Roman Missal reaffirms
the sacrificial nature of the Mass (GIRM 2).221 I will approach this from the mindset of the royal
or common priesthood of the faithful, but without denying the importance and role of the
ministerial priesthood (LG 10).222 I may not answer all questions concerning the sacrificial
220
Presented at the 46th Annual Meeting of the Society for Pentecostal Studies to the
Ecumenical Studies Group by Lawrence Francis Ligocki.
221
The Roman Missal: Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican,
Promulgated by Authority of Pope Paul VI and Revised at the Direction of Pope John Paul II (Third Typical
Edition; Washington D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011), 19.
222
Lumen Gentium makes clear the relationship between the ministerial priesthood and the
common priesthood: Though they differ from one another in essence and not only in degree, the
common priesthood of the faithful and the ministerial or hierarchical priesthood are nonetheless
interrelated: each of them in its own special way is a participation in the one priesthood of Christ.
The ministerial priest, by the sacred power he enjoys, teaches and rules the priestly people; acting in
the person of Christ, he makes present the Eucharistic sacrifice, and offers it to God in the name of
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nature of the Liturgy of the Eucharist, but I hope to blaze the trail for others to follow, and to
encourage others to study, to live, and to participate in the liturgy as a holy and living sacrifice
work meaning public work or public service in the classical world; but, the term liturgy
can also refer to ritual, cultic, or priestly services.223 In the LXX, the word means ministry or
service in the tabernacle or the temple.224 In the NT, the term is used to explain public service,
ritual or cultic services, and other kinds of service.225 In the book of Acts, the word describes the
community worshiping the Lord where there were prophets and teachers (13:1-2). In the
Didache, genuine prophets were given the firstfruits (13:1-7), and firstfruits may have been
used for the Eucharist () by these prophets (10:7; 9:1-10:6). Bishops and deacons
were also to be appointed to serve the community as the ministers () of the prophets
and teachers (15:1). Although the ministry of the prophets declined in the early church in this
In the Eastern Church, came to mean both the sacred Christian rites in
general, and the Eucharist in particular for example, the liturgy of St James, of St John
all the people. But the faithful, in virtue of their royal priesthood, join in the offering of the
Eucharist. Catholic Church, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church: Lumen Gentium, in Vatican
II Documents (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2011).
223
William Arndt, Frederick W. Danker, and Walter Bauer, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New
Testament and Other Early Christian Literature (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), 590.
224
Ex 37:19; Num 18:6; 1 Chr 6:17; 2 Chr 8:14; 2 Macc 3:3; Sir 50:19.
225
BDAG 590-592.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Chrysostom, of St Mark, and of St Basil; it was not until the 16th century that the term was
associated with the Latin Mass.226 The term liturgy became part of official Church teaching,
for example with Pope Pius IX, when speaking of the Catholic liturgies.227
the genius of the native Roman Rite is marked by simplicity, practicality, a great sobriety and
In the early centuries, Christians in the city of Rome celebrated the liturgy in Greek; then
in the middle of the third century, while a Latin version of the Scriptures was used for the
readings, the forms of prayer were still celebrated in Greek; though little has survived from the
Greek form.229 However, a brief section from the Roman Eucharistic prayer in Greek is found in
the writings of Marius Victorinus around the year 360.230 We do have access to a reconstructed
Greek text of the Apostolic Traditions, dated to ca. 250; however recent scholarship has
226
Anscar J. Chupungco, A Definition of Liturgy, in Introduction to the Liturgy (vol. 1 of
Handbook for Liturgical Studies; ed. A. J. Chupungco; Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1997), 3-4.
227
Inter Multiplices 2, Encyclical of Pope Pius IX Pleading for Unity of Spirit (March 21, 1853);
see Claudia Carlen, ed., The Papal Encyclicals: 17401878 (Ypsilanti, MI: The Pierian Press, 1990), 315;
see also Omnem Sollictudinem, Encyclical of Pope Pius IX on the Greek-Ruthenian Rite (May 13,
1874) (Carlen, The Papal Encyclicals, 439).
228
Edmund Bishop, The Genius of the Roman Rite, in Liturgica Historica: Papers on the Liturgy
and Religious Life of the Western Church (London: Oxford University Press, 1918), 12. The paper was
first read at the meeting of the Historical Research society at Archbishops House, Westminster on
May 8, 1899.
229
Anscar J. Chupungco, History of the Roman Liturgy until the fifteenth Century, in
Introduction to the Liturgy (vol.1; Handbook for Liturgical Studies; ed. A. J. Chupungco; Collegeville:
Liturgical Press, 1997), 132.
230
Against Arius 2.8. Marius Victorinus, Theological Treatises on the Trinity (ed. Hermigild Dressler;
trans. Mary T. Clark; vol. 69; The Fathers of the Church; Washington, DC: The Catholic University
of America Press, 1981), 210: The prayer of oblation, understood in that way, is addressed to God:
soson periousion laon zltn kaln ergn (save a people around your substance, a pursuer of good
works).*
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
questioned its use and influence in Rome.231 One of the earliest patristic texts that is associated
with Rome and is liturgical in nature is 1 Clement 59.3-61.3, which is written in Greek and dated
ca. 96. However, although it is liturgical, it is not generally associated with the liturgy of the
Eucharist, though it can be argued that it is an exemplary model of prayer, praise, and a sacrifice
of thanksgiving.
The Roman Rite most likely began to take its essential shape in the fourth century, which
began with liturgical reforms of Pope Damasus I (366-384) who is credited with giving the
liturgy its Latin form.232 Popes Innocent (402-417), Celestine (422-432), Leo the Great (440-
461), Gelasius (492-496), Vigilius (537-555), and Gregory the Great (590-604) all contributed
significantly to the formation of the Roman Rite and other liturgical writings.233 During the
second half of the first millennium, Sacramentaries began to emerge that contained prayers and
texts used for celebrating the Eucharist on various days and feast days: for example, the Leonine
or Verona Sacramentary, the Gelasian Sacramentary, and the Gregorian Sacramentary. 234 There
is also the Ordines Romani that contains descriptions and directions for the celebration of the
Roman Rite in Rome by the Pope. These Ordines became fifteen in number dating from the 6th
15th centuries. Among these is the Ordo Romanus Primus, which is considered one of the
231
Paul F. Bradshaw, In Search for the Origins of Christian Worship (2nd ed.; Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2002), 81.
232
Johanness H. Emminghaus, The Eucharist: Essence, Form, Celebration (Collegeville: Liturgical
Press, 1992), 170.
233
Keith F. Pecklers, Liturgy: the Illustrated History (Mahwah, NJ; Paulist Press; Libreria Editrice
Vaticana, 2012), 82.
234
Frank C. Senn, Christian Liturgy: Catholic and Evangelical (Minneapolis: Fortress, Press, 1997),
176-177. See also Gregory Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy (Second Edition.; Westminster: Dacre Press,
1945), 565-568, 570-573.
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earliest and dated around 700, though some of the material may go back to the time of Pope
Beginning in the 8th century, the Franks began to adopt the Roman Liturgy as was the
case with Bishop Chrodegang of Metz (d. 766).236 In 785, Charlemagne received a Gregorian
sacramentary (actually Hadrians sacramentary) from Pope Hadrian; Charlemagne decreed that
the work become the model for the Franks; within a century, the Franks began to study and foster
the Roman Liturgy through their writings and commentaries.237 Among the most influential
were Amalar of Metz (ca. 780-850),238 and Remigius of Auxerre (ca. 841-908).239
Roman Liturgy under the leadership of the Franks and Germans from the time of Popes Gregory
the Great to Gregory VII (590-1073).240 Although this was a period of growth and development,
some important aspects began to be eclipsed, for example, the decline of the Prayer of the
Faithful. This period was followed by a time of dissolution, elaboration, reinterpretation, and
misinterpretation of the Roman Liturgy, which Klauser dates from Pope Gregory VII to the
Council of Trent (1073-1545).241 During this time there was the growth of the private mass
and the decline of the offertory procession in which the faithful had an active part.
235
Edward G. C. F. Atchley, Ordo Romanus Primus (vol.7; Library of Liturgiology & Ecclesiology for
English Readers; ed. V. Staley; London: Alexander Moring, 1905). *
236
Pecklers, Liturgy, 105: Bishop Chrodegang of Metzvisited Rome in 753 and subsequently
introduced Roman chant and the Roman Order of Mass to his diocese when he returned home.
237
Emminghaus, The Eucharist, 66-67. As early as 754, Roman liturgical texts were coming into
Gaul during the time of King Pepin (66).
238
Amalar of Metz, On the Liturgy (2 vols. Dumbaton Oaks Medieval Library 35, 36; ed. and trans. E.
Knibbs; Harvard University Press, 2014).
239
Jean-Paul Bouhot, Les sources de lExpositio missae de Remi dAuxerre, Revue des tudes
Augustiniennes 26 (1980): 141-151.
240
Theodor Klauser, A Short History of the Western Liturgy: An Account and Some Reflections (2nd ed.;
trans. J. Halliburton; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1979), 45-93.
241
Klauser, A Short History of the Western Liturgy, 94-116.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Following the Council of Trent (1545-1563), Pope Pius IV took up the task of reforming
the liturgy. The revised Roman Rite, known as the Tridentine Mass, was promulgated by Pope
Pius V in 1570 and was based on manuscripts found in the Vatican Library and elsewhere, on
ancient and competent authorities, and on the form and rite of the fathers.242 According to Keith
Pecklers,
At the heart of the Tridentine liturgical reform was a desire to return to the classic Roman
Rite in order to show the Protestants its great value. The project of classic reform,
however, ultimately proved impossible. For one thing, it was too difficult to delineate and
separate the original norms, but the bishops also sensed the need to avoid liturgical
archaeology. Thus, liturgical texts were not changed, and the medieval liturgy rather than
the patristic was chosen as the basis for that conciliar reform.243
As it turned out, the 1570 Roman Rite differed little from the first printed edition of the Missale
Romanus in 1474,244 which faithfully followed the Roman Liturgy from the time of Pope
Innocent III (1198-1216).245 What was called the Roman Rite was actually an amalgamation
242
Pope Pius V, Quo Primum (July 14, 1570): Pope Pius V states, We decided to entrust this
work to learned men of our selection. They very carefully collated all their work with the ancient
codices in Our Vatican Library and with reliable, preserved or emended codices from elsewhere.
Besides this, these men consulted the works of ancient and approved authors concerning the same
sacred rites; and thus they have restored the Missal itself to the original form and rite of the holy
Fathers. When this work has been gone over numerous times and further emended, after serious
study and reflection, We commanded that the finished product be printed and published as soon as
possible, so that all might enjoy the fruits of this labor; and thus, priests would know which prayers
to use and which rites and ceremonies they were required to observe from now on in the celebration
of Masses. Online source: http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Pius05/p5quopri.htm. December 26,
2016.
243
Pecklers, Liturgy, 136.
244
Missale Romanum Mediolani 1474 (vol. 1; ed. R. Lippe; Henry Bradshaw Society; London:
Harrison and Sons, 1899).* This is a reprint of the copy of the Milanese edition of 1474, which was
preserved in the Ambrosian Library in Milan.
245
The General Instruction of the Roman Missal 7 in The Roman Missal: Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy
Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican, Promulgated by Authority of Pope Paul VI and Revised at the Direction
of Pope John Paul II (Third Typical Edition.; Washington D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops, 2011), 2021: Moreover, manuscript books in the Vatican Library, even though they
provided material for several textual emendations, by no means made it possible to pursue inquiry
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
number of monasteries in Europe and America, including the Order of Saint Benedict (OSB).
Monks such as Lambert Beaudin, OSB from the Keizerbsberg Abby in Belgium, Odo Casel,
OSB from Maria Laach in Germany, Pius Parsch from the Augustinian Klosterneuburg
Monastery in Austria, and Virgil Michel, OSB from Saint Johns Abbey in Minnesota all made
significant contributions to the Liturgical Renewal.247 In principle, the source of this renewal is
attributed to Pope Pius X and his Tra Le Sollecitudini (On Sacred Music), which encouraged
active participation of the faithful in the divine mysteries and the Churchs common and solemn
prayer as the primary source for Christian life, so that worship might ascend as a sweet odor to
the Lord. 248 Pope Pius XIIs two encyclicals Myststici corporis (1943), and Mediator Dei
(1947), helped guide and encourage the renewal of the liturgy.249 According to Pope Pius XII,
The sacred liturgy isthe public worship which our Redeemer as Head of the Church renders to
the Father, as well as the worship which the community of the faithful renders to its Founder, and
through Him to the heavenly Father. It is, in short, the worship rendered by the Mystical Body of
Christ in the entirety of its Head and members (Mediator Dei 20).250
into ancient and approved authors further back than the liturgical commentaries of the Middle
Ages.
246
Pecklers, Liturgy, 118.
247
Kenan B. Osborne, Christian Sacraments in a Postmodern World: A Theology for the Third Millennium
(New York; Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1999), 1011.*
248
Tra Le Sollecitudini (November 22, 1903): Filled as We are with a most ardent desire to see
the true Christian spirit flourish in every respect and be preserved by all the faithful, We deem it
necessary to provide before anything else for the sanctity and dignity of the temple, in which the
faithful assemble for no other object than that of acquiring this spirit from its foremost and
indispensable font, which is the active participation in the most holy mysteries and in the public and
solemn prayer of the Church. And it is vain to hope that the blessing of heaven will descend
abundantly upon us, when our homage to the Most High, instead of ascending in the odor of
sweetness, puts into the hand of the Lord the scourges wherewith of old the Divine Redeemer drove
the unworthy profaners from the Temple. Adoremus, Society for the Renewal of the Sacred
Liturgy. Accessed November 6, 2016. *
249
Keith F. Pecklers, Liturgy: The Illustrated History (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press; Libreria Editrice
Vaticana, 2012), 170.*
250
Claudia Carlen, ed., The Papal Encyclicals: 19391958 (Ypsilanti, MI: The Pierian Press, 1990),
122.*
73
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Following the publication of Mediator Dei, Pius XII appointed a commission for the
reform of the liturgy on May 28, 1948.251 The commission was chaired by Cardinal Clemente
Micara; it existed for twelve years and held eighty-two meetings during which the commission
worked in complete secrecy.252 The commission brought about a number of reforms, most
notably was the restoration of the Easter Vigil (1951); the work of the commission also helped
set the stage for the reforms of the Second Vatican Council.253
Although the document is most known for the restoration of the liturgy into the vernacular
(native) language of the people, which at present I have found twenty-four spoken and one in
ASL,254 the constitution clearly expresses the desire of the council that all the faithful be led to
the full and active participation in the liturgy (SC 14).255 This participation is rooted in their
Christian baptism, which is their right and duty to be a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy
nation, a redeemed people (1 Pet 2:9). This participation is the primary and essential source for
the true Christian spirit (SC 14).256 The faithful are to,
Come to him, a living stonechosen and precious in Gods sight, and like living stones,
let yourselves be built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual
sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ (1 Pet 2:4-5).
251
Annibale Bugnini, The Reform of the Liturgy 1948-1975 (trans. M. J. O`Connell; Collegeville:
Liturgical Press, 1990), 8.
252
Bugnini, The Reform of the Liturgy, 9.
253
Pecklers, Liturgy, 171.
254
Hebrew, Aramaic, Syriac, Arabic, French, Italian, German, English, Spanish, French,
Portuguese, Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, Korean, Filipino, Old Slavonic, Croatian, Lithuanian,
Polish, Russian, Ukrainian, Nigerian, Ghanaian, and ASL.
255
Sacrosanctum Concilium 14: Catholic Church, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy:
Sacrosanctum Concilium, in Vatican II Documents (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2011).
256
est enim primus, isque necessarius fons.
74
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
According to Robert Daily, this passage is a focal point of the universal priesthood of
believers, which has been recovered and renewed in Catholic theology since the Second Vatican
Council.257 Martin Luther understood this passage to mean that there is only one priesthood,
but unfortunately he also used it to attack ministerial priesthood.258 Based on 1 Pet 2:9, Luther
also argued that all believers in Christ are priests and kings in Christ.259 However, Paul
Achtemeier seems correct in arguing that the point of the passage is not that each Christian is a
priest, rather the priesthood is to be understood in this context only as corporate and with a
function to be a witness to all humanity.260 This is not to say that each individual does not
have a special charism or gift to offer to God in Christ and to serve one another with (4:10-11).
We are to proclaim Gods mighty acts and wonderful mercy around the world (2:9-10).
This conscious participation is the way of prayer and contemplation, the lifting of mind
and heart in humility, in order to prepare the way for covenantal communion with God through
Christ in the Holy Spirit and in the Church. 261 This life of contemplation informs the active life.
The Second Vatican Council and the Reform of the Roman Rite
As was pointed out above, the Liturgical Renewal in the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
the writings of Popes Pius X and Pius XII would eventually lead to Pius XII appointing a special
commission to reform the liturgy on May 28, 1948. During the Second Vatican Council (1962
257
Robert Daily, Sacrifice Unveiled: The True Meaning of Christian Sacrifice (London: T&T Clark,
2009), 59.
258
Martin Luther, Luthers Works, Vol. 30: The Catholic Epistles (ed. Jaroslav Jan Pelikan, Hilton C.
Oswald, and Helmut T. Lehmann; vol. 30; Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1999), 53. *
259
Martin Luther, Luthers Works, Vol. 31: Career of the Reformer I (ed. Jaroslav Jan Pelikan, Hilton
C. Oswald, and Helmut T. Lehmann; vol. 31; Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1999), 354. *
260
Paul J. Achtemeier, 1 Peter: A Commentary on First Peter (ed. Eldon Jay Epp; Hermeneiaa
Critical and Historical Commentary on the Bible; Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1996), 156. *
261
CCC 2559-2565. Catholic Church. Catechism of the Catholic Church. 2nd Ed. Washington, DC:
United States Catholic Conference, 2000.
75
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
1965), calls were again made to restore the Roman liturgy to its classical and pristine form.262
With the help of the Liturgical Renewal, numerous scholars discovered and made known other
ancient Roman and Ambrosian Sacramentaries, along with other Hispanic and Gallican liturgical
texts; there were also discoveries of liturgical traditions and documents from the early centuries,
before the period of formation of the liturgical rites of East and West; further Patristic studies
shed new light on the theology of the mystery of the Eucharist found in the illustrious Fathers
of Christian antiquity, such as Saint Irenaeus, Saint Ambrose, Saint Cyril of Jerusalem, and
Saint John Chrysostom.263 As noted above, the first document promulgated by Pope Paul VI
from the Second Vatican Council was Sacrosanctum Concilium (Constitution of the Sacred
Liturgy, hereafter SC), which was set forth on December 4, 1963. In the very opening of the
This sacred Council has several aims in view: it desires to impart an ever increasing
vigor to the Christian life of the faithful; to adapt more suitably to the needs of our own
times those institutions which are subject to change; to foster whatever can promote
union among all who believe in Christ; to strengthen whatever can help to call the whole
of mankind into the household of the Church. The Council therefore sees particularly
cogent reasons for undertaking the reform and promotion of the liturgy (SC 1).264
When discussing the reform of the sacred liturgy, the Council states that, the liturgy is
and in the restoration of the liturgy both texts and rites are to be drawn up that express
more clearly the holy things they signify so that the Christian people should be able to
understand them, and be able to take part in them fully and actively as a community
(SC 21). The Council then presents general norms for the reform of the liturgy and
262
Pecklers, Liturgy, 118.
263
The General Instruction of the Roman Missal 8-9.
264
Sacrosanctum Concilium 1.
76
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
addresses both the importance of preserving tradition and the need to be open to progress.
That sound tradition may be retained, and yet the way remain open to legitimate progress,
careful investigation is always to be made into each part of the liturgy which is to be
revised. This investigation should be theological, historical, and pastoral. Also the
general laws governing the structure and meaning of the liturgy must be studied in
conjunction with the experience derived from recent liturgical reforms and from the
indults conceded to various places. Finally, there must be no innovations unless the good
of the Church genuinely and certainly requires them; and care must be taken that any new
forms adopted should in some way grow organically from forms already existing (SC
23).265
When discussing the sacred mystery of the Eucharist, the document states,
The rite of the Mass is to be revised in such a way that the intrinsic nature and purpose of
its several parts, as also the connection between them, may be more clearly manifested,
and that devout and active participation by the faithful may be more easily achieved.
For this purpose the rites are to be simplified, due care being taken to preserve their
substance; elements which, with the passage of time, came to be duplicated, or were
added with but little advantage, are now to be discarded; other elements which have
suffered injury through accidents of history are now to be restored to the vigor which
they had in the days of the holy Fathers, as may seem useful or necessary (SC 50).266
The history, background, and workings of the reform of the liturgy have been
chronicled,267 scrutinized,268 and sometimes heavily criticized.269 In recent years there have also
been responses to the critics.270 The implementation of the liturgical reforms was overseen by
Pope Paul VI; the work was carried out by special commission (led by Father Annibale Bugnini),
which first gathered in Rome in April 1964 and several other times until the works completion
265
Sacrosanctum Concilium 23.
266
Sacrosanctum Concilium 50.
267
Bugnini, The Reform of the Liturgy, 337-405.
268
Alcuin Reid, Sacrosanctum concilium and the Reform of the Ordo Missae, Antiphon 10.3 (2006):
277-295.*
269
Michael Davis, The Missal of 1962 A Rock of Stability, Latin Mass Magazine (2001).
Online Source: http://www.latinmassmagazine.com/articles/articles_2001_sp_davies.html.
December 28, 2016.
270
John F. Baldovin, Reforming the Liturgy: A Response to the Critics (Collegeville: Liturgical Press,
2016); * Keith F. Pecklers, The Genius of the Roman Rite; On the Reception and Implementation of the New
Missal (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2009); Piero Marini, A Challenging Reform: Realizing the Vision of
the Liturgical Renewal, 1963-1975 (ed. M. R. Francis et. al; Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2007). *
77
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
and approval by Pope Paul VI on November 6, 1968.271 The new Missale Romanum (Roman
Missal) was approved by Pope Paul VI on April 3, 1969.272 It was promulgated in 1970,
followed by several editions.273 The most recent edition is the 2008 Missale Romanum, which is
the third Latin edition promulgated by Pope Paul II. 274 In between the calling of the Council and
the promulgation of the 1969 Missale Romanum in 1970, there were other liturgical texts based
on the 1570 edition of Pope Pius V: 1) the 1962 Missal, which is still lawful and is used today by
Catholics devoted to this form of the Roman Rite;275 2) the 1965 Missal;276 and 3) the 1967
Missal.277 Much of the criticism came from those who saw omissions, additions, replacements,
and combinations, which they argued were not faithful to the reform set out in Sacrosanctum
Nearly forty years after the completion of the special commission, Piero Marini argued
that there were tensions between the curias Congregation for Rites, who wanted to lead the
liturgical reform, and the special commission headed by Father Bugnini, and that it was the later
271
Bugnini, The Reform of the Liturgy, 338, 383.
272
Pope Paul VI, Apostolic Constitution Missale Romanum (April 3, 1969) in The Roman Missal:
Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican, Promulgated by Authority of Pope
Paul VI and Revised at the Direction of Pope John Paul II (Third Typical Edition; Washington D.C.:
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011), 11-15. *
273
First Latin Edition, 1970; Amended First Latin Edition, 1971; Second Latin Edition, 1975;
Third Latin Edition, 2001; Amended Third Latin Edition, 2008. The first, second, and third editions
were all promulgated on the Thursday of the Lords Supper during Holy Week.
274
Missale Romanum: Ex Decreto Sacrosancti cumenici Concilii Vaticani II Instauratum Auctoritate Pauli
PP. VI Promulgatum Ioannis Pauli PP. II Cura Recognitum (3rd ed.; Vatican City: Libreria Editrice
Vaticana, 2008).
275
Ordo Missae (April 11, 1962). Online Source:
http://www.catholicliturgy.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/textcontents/index/4/subindex/66/textind
ex/17. December 27, 2016. See Missale Romanum: Ex Decreto SS. Concilii Tridentini Restitutum
Summorum Pontificum Cura Recognitum. Vatican City: Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1962.
276
Ordo Missae (1965). Online Source: Corpus Christi Watershed.org: vol. 1:
http://www.ccwatershed.org/media/pdfs/13/11/15/17-54-56_0.pdf; vol. 2:
http://www.ccwatershed.org/media/pdfs/13/11/18/11-49-24_0.pdf. December 27, 2016.
277
See Alcuin Reid, Sacrosanctum concilium and the Reform of the Ordo Missae, Antiphon 10.3
(2006): 277-278.* On the variations and simplification in the 1967 Ordo Missae, see 290-292.
278
They were also unhappy with changes from the 1962 Latin Rite.
78
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
who realized the liturgical reform envisioned by Sacrosanctum Concilium.279 Others, such as
Malcolm Ranjith280 and George Weigel,281 would disagree. Thankfully, there are signs of hope.
In 2007 Pope Benedict XVI made it clear that the 1962 Roman Rite (the extra ordinary form)
and the 1970 Roman Rite (the ordinary form) are not two rites but a twofold use of the one
Be that as it may, in what follows I will be following the 2011 Roman Rite,283 which is
the English translation of the 2008 Latin Missale Romanum, which is the most recent Latin
version.284 This is the Latin version following the Second Vatican Council. On occasions, I may
refer to the 1962 Latin Missale Romanum for comparisons and contrasts.
Word; 3) the Liturgy of the Eucharist; and 4) the Blessings at the End of Mass and Prayers over
the People. Following the General Instruction of the Roman Missal, the Liturgy of the Eucharist
itself has within it three important parts: A) the Preparation of the Gifts, bread and wine are
brought to the altar; B) the Eucharistic Prayer, prayers, and thanksgivings are given to God for
279
Marini, A Challenging Reform, 1-13 (esp. 13).
280
Malcolm Ranjith, True Development of the Liturgy, First Things (May 2009): Online Source:
https://www.firstthings.com/article/2009/05/true-development-of-the-liturgy. December 28,
2016.
281
See Shawn Tribe, George Weigel Reviews Marinis A Challenging Reform, New Liturgical
Movement (February 10, 2008): Online source:
http://www.newliturgicalmovement.org/2008/02/george-weigel-reviews-
marinis.html#.WGRVBRsrLyQ. December 28, 2016.
282
Pope Benedict XVI, Apostolic Letter on Summorum Pontificum (July 7, 2007): Online source:
http://w2.vatican.va/content/benedict-xvi/en/letters/2007/documents/hf_ben-
xvi_let_20070707_lettera-vescovi.html. December 28, 2016.
283
The Roman Missal: Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican,
Promulgated by Authority of Pope Paul VI and Revised at the Direction of Pope John Paul II (Third Typical
Edition; Washington D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011), 3.
284
Catholic Church, Missale Romanum: Ex Decreto Sacrosancti cumenici Concilii Vaticani II
Instauratum Auctoritate Pauli PP. VI Promulgatum Ioannis Pauli PP. II Cura Recognitum (Editio Typica
Tertia.; Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2008), 5.
79
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
the work of salvation, and the offerings becoming the Body and Blood of Christ; and C) the
Communion rite in which the faithful, though many, receive the one bread of the Lords Body
and the one chalice of the Lords Blood.285 In what follows I will focus on part A: the
Preparation of the Gifts, which is sometimes referred to as the Offertory. In recent years, it has
become customary to refer to this portion as the Preparation of the Gifts, rather than calling it the
Offertory, in order not to confuse it with the sacrifice (sacred action) during the Eucharistic
Prayer.
first century, the bishop offered gifts.287 Justin Martyr refers to the bread and chalice that are
presented to the presider who then offers up prayer and praise.288 Irenaeus of Lyon refers to the
churchs offering of the firstfruits in the bread and the cup to God the father.289 The Apostolic
Tradition describes how the oblation is brought to the bishop who places his hands on them and
prays a prayer of thanksgiving.290 This description of the oblation and prayer of thanksgiving is
found in numerous versions of the Apostolic Tradition including the Latin, Sahidic, Arabic, and
Ethiopic versions with slight variations.291 In the Prayers of Sarapion, the bishop prays,
fillthis sacrifice with your power and your partaking: for to you we offered this living
285
The Roman Missal: Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican,
Promulgated by Authority of Pope Paul VI and Revised at the Direction of Pope John Paul II (Third Typical
Edition.; Washington D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011), 35.
286
Here I am following Edward Yarnold to a certain degree. See his work The Awe-Inspiring Rites
of Initiation (2nd ed.; Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2006 [1994]).
287
Clement of Rome, First Clement 44.4.* Dated ca. 96.
288
Justin Martyr, First Apology 65, 67.* Dated ca. 150.
289
Irenaeus of Lyon, Against Heresies 4.17.5. Dated ca. 180.
290
Apostolic Tradition 4.* Dated from ca. 250 to the 4th century.
291
Paul F. Bradshaw, Maxwell E. Johnson, and L. Edward Phillips, The Apostolic Tradition: A
Commentary (ed. Harold W. Attridge; Hermeneiaa Critical and Historical Commentary on the
Bible; Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2002), 38.*
80
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
sacrifice, this bloodless offering.292 During the Easter Season, Augustine addresses the faithful,
in which he likens their lives with the bread and the wine when addressing the faithful about the
Eucharist, explaining, there you are on the table, and there you are in the chalice.293 These
brief references to the offering do not reveal an elaborate offertory, presentation of the gifts, or
what would become important in the eastern church known as the Great Entrance, but they do
give evidence of an offering accompanied with prayer by the one presiding during worship.
in bringing the gifts to the altar by writers such as Cyprian,294Augustine,295 and Gregory the
Great.296 Gregory of Tours describes how a widow continually brought a liter of Gazan wine to
the sanctuary of the Holy Basilica.297 This participation developed into an elaborate procession
in some areas of the West such as Africa, Rome, and Gaul.298 In the Old Gallican Liturgy, the
gifts were already being viewed in anticipation of what was to happen through the
consecration.299
292
See R. C. D. Jasper and G. J. Jasper and Cuming, Prayers of the Eucharist: Early and Reformed (3rd
ed.; rev.; Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1990), 77, 74. Dated to ca. 350.
293
Augustine, Sermon 229.*
294
Cyprian of Carthage, On Works and Alms, 15 (ANF 5.480).*
295
Augustine, Confessions 5.9.17.
296
Anonymous Monk of Whitby, The Earliest Life of Gregory the Great 19 (trans. And ed. B
Colgrave: London: Cambridge University Press, 1968), 107.*
297
See Cabi, The Eucharist, 78. Cabi refers to a source that I was not able to track down:
Gregory of Tours, Liber miraculorum in Gloria confessorum 64 (ed. B. Krusch; MGH SRM 1; 1885), 785-
786. However, I did find it as follows: Gregorii Episcopi Turonesis, Miracula et Opera Minora, Liber
in Gloria Confessorum 64, (Monumenta Germaniae Historica: Scriptores Rerum Merovingicarum 1.2; ed. B.
Krusch; Hannover; Hahns Books, 1969 [1885]), 235-336.
http://www.mgh.de/dmgh/resolving/MGH_SS_rer._Merov._1,2_S._336. December 30, 2016.
298
Cabi, The Eucharist, 78.
299
Cabi, The Eucharist, 79.
81
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
Rather, it is the deacons who present the gifts. Theodore of Mopsuestia sees symbolism in the
deacon bringing the offerings on the patens and in the chalices symbolizing Christ going to his
passion.300 Narsai of Nisibis encourages his hearers to see the procession of the deacon with the
bread on the paten and the wine in the cup as Jesus going forth to suffer.301 This procession and
symbolism prefigures the Byzantine rite of the "Great Entrance" that is found in the eighth
century,302 and also the Byzantine Prothesis.303 In an early manuscript that may have prefigured
refer to the Patriarch who made prayer over the holy bread of presence, or to an exhortation to
pray that which the Patriarch does over the presentation of the holy bread.305 There is a most
curious parallel with the , the bread of presence (Mk 2:26; Mt 12:4;
300
Theodore of Mopsuestia, Homily 15: On the Eucharist 25 [5th cent.] in Worship in the Early
Church: An Anthology of Historical Sources (vol.3; ed. L. J. Johnson; Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2009),
261-262. Here after WEC. Theodore was a Nestorian. One wonders his influence in regards to the
Eucharist among Orthodox Catholics.
301
Narsai of Nisibis, Homily 17: Exposition of the Mysteries [5th cent.] in WEC 3.290. Narsai is from
the Assyrian Church (5th cent.). See also Edmund Bishop, The Liturgical Homilies of Narsai (ed. J.
Armitage Robinson; trans. R. H. Connolly; vol. 8, No. 1; Texts and Studies: Contributions to Biblical
and Patristic Literature; Cambridge: Cambridge at the University Press, 1909), 1. * He is known as
the Harp of the Holy Spirit
302
Cabi, The Eucharist, 79.
303
Prothesis is both a small chapel to the left of the sacred altar, which includes a table; Prothesis
is also the action and prayers during the preparation of the gifts of bread and wine.
304
On the development of the Byzantine Prothesis, see F. E. Brightman, ed., Liturgies: Eastern and
Western (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1896), 539-531. * See Jacobus Goar, Sive Rituale
Graecorum (2nd ed.; Bartholomaei Javarina, 1730), 153. *
305
The first option is my poor attempt to translate, and the second was with the help of my
friend Amy Anderson.
82
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
The Divine Liturgy, celebrated by the Orthodox Church, is divided into three parts; the
first being the Prothesis which takes place in a separate area called by the same name in which
there is a table that is known as the Table of Prothesis.306 This is followed by the second part
known as the Liturgy of the Catechumens, which is followed by the third part, the Liturgy of the
Faithful. In the 14th century, Nicholas Cabasilas described the Prothesis in which the offering of
bread and wine is prepared, comparing the bread and wine with the offering of firstfruits.307
During the Prothesis, the (Proskomide), oblation takes place that prepares the
bread and the wine for the Eucharist. It is also at the beginning of the Proskomide that the
faithful may bring gifts to the priest and the deacons so that the Eucharist can be prepared.308
to the decline: 1) the offertory procession had become time consuming; 2) the use of unleavened
bread in the Eucharist, which prevented using bread provided by the faithful; and 3) the rise of
private masses.309 In the Late Middle Ages, the offertory was revived within the papal Mass
during canonizations; such is the case of the canonization of Bridget of Sweden by Pope
Boniface IX in 1391; however, the procession took on a more complex allegorical meaning; for
example, candles, bread, and wine were brought forward to the papal altar, where others waited
with a candle and a cage of doves; the lighted candles may have represented faith, the bread
symbolized hope, the wine represented love, and the doves the innocence of the saint who is
306
R. M. French, Introduction, A Commentary on the Divine Liturgy (trans. J. M. Hussey and P. A.
McNulty; Crestwood, New York: St Vladimirs Seminary Press, 1977), 2, 4.
307
Nicholas Cabasilas, A Commentary on the Divine Liturgy 2-11 (trans. J. M. Hussey and P. A.
McNulty; Crestwood, New York: St Vladimirs Seminary Press, 1977), 31-42.
308
John D. Zizioulas, The Eucharistic Communion and the World (ed. Luke Ben Tallon; London;
New York: T&T Clark, 2011), 6162.
309
Klauser, A Short History of the Western Liturgy, 109-110.
83
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
being canonized.310 Following the Second Vatican Council, the faithfuls participation in the
in giving at the offertory, they gave something of their own substance, which according to
Theodore Klauser, served to enhance the symbolism of the offertory gift, and the giving of
themselves.311 Robert Cabi argues that through the faithfuls contribution of bread and wine
(and with their intentions), they shared and gathered the fruits of the Eucharist.312 Recent Papal
writings have pointed out the importance of the faithfuls role in the Preparation of the Gifts, as
the common or royal priesthood because of their baptism (LG 10). According to Hebrews,
Christ is the High Priest (Heb 5:5). He has made the People of God a kingdom and priests to
God the Father and to reign on the earth (Rev 1:6; 5:9-10). They are being built into a spiritual
house and a holy priesthood to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus (1
Pet 2:4-5).313 They are to present their bodies as a living sacrifice, holy, and acceptable to God
as their spiritual worship (Rom 12:1).314 The kingdom they are receiving is unshakable for
which they give thanks and offer to God an acceptable worship (Heb 12:28).315 They are to
offer a sacrifice of praise to God through Christ and to do good and share with others for such
310
Klauser, A Short History of the Western Liturgy, 112-113.
311
Klauser, A Short History of the Western Liturgy, 109.
312
Cabi, The Eucharist, 80-81.
313
Acceptable ().
314
Acceptable ().
315
Acceptable ().
84
Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
sacrifices are pleasing to God (Heb 13:15-16).316 Thus, by reason of their baptism into Christ,
they are able to share in a special way in the one priesthood of Christ (LG 10). However,
according to Lumen Gentium, during the Eucharist the faithful make their offering in union with
the ministerial priesthood, which is related with the common priesthood, but with differences:
Though they differ from one another in essence and not only in degree, the common
priesthood of the faithful and the ministerial or hierarchical priesthood are nonetheless
interrelated: each of them in its own special way is a participation in the one priesthood
of Christ. The ministerial priest, by the sacred power he enjoys, teaches and rules the
priestly people; acting in the person of Christ, he makes present the Eucharistic sacrifice,
and offers it to God in the name of all the people. But the faithful, in virtue of their royal
priesthood, join in the offering (oblationem) of the Eucharist.317
In his 1980 Apostolic Exhortation Dominicae Cenae (On the Mystery and Worship of the
Eucharist), Pope John Paul II addressed the role of the common priesthood in union with the
ministerial priesthood. Although the high point in the Eucharistic prayer is the consecration of
the bread and wine at the hands of the celebrant and the prayer for the Holy Spirit, the faithful
already participate in the offering during the presentation of the gifts. He states,
The celebrant, as minister of this sacrifice, is the authentic priest, performing-in virtue of
the specific power of-sacred ordination-a true sacrificial act that brings creation back to
God. Although all those who participate in the Eucharist do not confect the sacrifice as
He does, they offer with Him, by virtue of the common priesthood, their own spiritual
sacrifices represented by the bread and wine from the moment of their presentation at the
altar. For this liturgical action, which take a solemn form in almost all liturgies, has a
"spiritual value and meaning." The bread and wine become in a sense a symbol of all
that the Eucharistic assembly brings, on its own part, as an offering to God and offers
spiritually.318
In his 2007 Encyclical Sacramentum Caritatis (hereafter SC), Pope Benedict XVI addressed the
bishops, clergy, consecrated persons, and the lay faithful concerning the Eucharist as the source
316
Pleasing ().
317
Catholic Church, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church: Lumen Gentium, in Vatican II
Documents (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2011): Concerning the faithful it states, fideles
vero, vi regalis sui sacerdotii, in oblationem Eucharistiae concurrunt.
318
Pope John Paul II, Dominicae Cenae II.9 (February 24, 1980). Online Source:
https://w2.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/letters/1980/documents/hf_jp-
ii_let_19800224_dominicae-cenae.html. January 4, 2017.
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and summit of the Churchs life and mission. When reflecting on the presentation of the gifts he
states,
This is not to be viewed simply as a kind of interval between the liturgy of the word
and the liturgy of the Eucharist. To do so would tend to weaken, at the least, the sense of
a single rite made up of two interrelated parts. This humble and simple gesture is actually
very significant: in the bread and wine that we bring to the altar, all creation is taken up
by Christ the Redeemer to be transformed and presented to the Father. In this way we
also bring to the altar all the pain and suffering of the world, in the certainty that
everything has value in Gods eyes. The authentic meaning of this gesture can be clearly
expressed without the need for undue emphasis or complexity. It enables us to appreciate
how God invites man to participate in bringing to fulfilment his handiwork, and in so
doing, gives human labour its authentic meaning, since, through the celebration of the
Eucharist, it is united to the redemptive sacrifice of Christ (SC 47).319
In the offering bread and the wine, the faithful are offering the firstfruits of the earth from the
created orderthat is, creation. Humanity may be thought of as a high point, with its strengths
and shortcomings, but human nature is totally dependent on the Creator and the created order.
Alongside the simplest forms of life (biological), humans owe their existence and gratitude to
God. Humans are not self-sustaining, and to think as such is self-deceiving. We offer to God
what God has first given to us from the created order and the order of grace, along with
ourselves. In a sense, we offer Christ, who is the firstfruits of the new creation, to the Father,
along with ourselves, and in return we share in the firstfruits, gifts, and charisms of the Holy
Spirit. We acknowledge the supremacy of Christ, who is the vine, and we are the branches. If
we abide in him, and He in us, we will bear much fruit, and without him, we can do nothing (Jn
15:5).
Through baptism, the anointing of the Holy Spirit, and faith in the crucified, risen, and
ascended Christ, we not only make our offering, we also anticipate the eschatological fulfillment
of all things, and so we lift our hearts and minds to heaven. We are hoping and looking for the
319
Benedict XVI, Sacramentum Caritatis (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2007).
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coming Son of Man, Son of God, the coming resurrection, and the final restoration of all things
in God.
The way has already been prepared for us from the very beginning (Mk 1:1-8). In the
Introductory Rite, we begin, In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit,
320
which reminds us of our baptism into Christs death and resurrection and in the divine name
of the Holy Trinity (Mk 16:16; Rom 6:3-4). More importantly, this should remind us of Jesus
Baptism in the Jordan by John the Baptist that revealed both the opening of the heavens and the
Mystery of the Trinity (Mk 1:9-11). Then the presider extends his hand and greets us with the
words, The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy
Spirit be with you all, 321 which reminds us that we are to participate in communion with the
Then follows the Penitential Act, during which we confess our sins and pray for Gods
mercy, which is reflected in Psalm 51.323 We then either sing or say the Gloria, a hymn that is
a kind of sacrifice of praise in which we contemplate the Lamb of God who having been
320
The Order of Mass, 1.
321
The Order of Mass, 2: this is the first of three options. The second is Grace to you and peace
from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. The third is The Lord be with you. To which
the people respond, And with your spirit.
322
See 2 Cor 13:13; Jn 1:1-3; 3:24; 1 Cor 10:16.
323
The Order of Mass, 3-7.
324
The Order of Mass, 8.
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qui tollis peccta mundi, you take away the sins of the world,
sscipe deprecatinem nostram. receive our prayer;
Qui sedes ad dxteram Patris, you are seated at the right hand of the Father,
miserre nobis. have mercy on us.
Qui sedes ad dxteram Patris, miserre nobis.
For you alone are the Holy One,
Quniam tu solus Sanctus, tu solus Dminus, you alone are the Lord,
tu solus Altssimus, Iesu Christe, cum Sancto you alone are the Most High,
Spritu: in glria Dei Patris. Jesus Christ,
Amen.325 with the Holy Spirit,
in the glory of God the Father.
Amen.326
readings from the Sacred Scriptures, sing from the psalms, and hear a homily and exhortation
either by the priest or the deacon and are encouraged to imitate the words contained in them.327
During this time the seeds of the Word of God are being sown into our hearts, which have been
cultivated through repentance. It is important that the seeds of the Word of God are sown into
our hearts, so that they bear fruit in the Liturgy of the Eucharist that will follow and throughout
our lives. Following the homily, we either sing or speak the Creed, which is also called the
Symbol or Profession of Faith; in general we recite the Nicene-Constantinople Creed, but during
Lent and Easter Time, we may recite the Apostles Creed. During this time we contemplate the
325
Catholic Church, Missale Romanum: Ex Decreto Sacrosancti cumenici Concilii Vaticani II
Instauratum Auctoritate Pauli PP. VI Promulgatum Ioannis Pauli PP. II Cura Recognitum (Editio Typica
Tertia.; Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2008), 510.
326
The Roman Missal: Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican,
Promulgated by Authority of Pope Paul VI and Revised at the Direction of Pope John Paul II (Third Typical
Edition; Washington D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011), 522.
327
The Order of Mass, 10-17.
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Trinitarian Faith of the Creed. We then pray the Universal Prayer, which is known as the Prayer
of the Faithful.328
Christ, is the key to understanding the Second Vatican Councils call for active participation
that is fully conscious, which includes the art of interior listening, a subconscious
experience, and a balance between sparseness and excessiveness of emotion that feeds the heart
and the mind, the body and the soul (SC 14).329 The faithfuls participation should be above all
internal in that they join their mind with what they hear and pronounce, cooperating with the
Holy Spirit, and also external to show the internal participation by gestures and bodily attitudes,
by the acclamations, responses and singing.330 The faithful should learn to unite themselves
interiorly to what the ministers or choir sing, so that by listing to them they may raise their minds
to God.331
have been associated with the Preparation of the Gifts/Offerings/Oblation. I use the term
oblation to designate the internal or spiritual offering that the faithful make concurrent with the
presider who leads the worship. As the minister prepares the altar for the celebration of the
328
The Order of Mass, 18-19. Then follows the Prayer of the Faithful.
329
Pope John Paul II, Address to the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of the United States of American
(Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Alaska) (October 9, 1998), no. 3: Online Source:
https://w2.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/speeches/1998/october/documents/hf_jp-
ii_spe_19981009_ad-limina-usa-2.html. January 6, 2017.
330
Sacred Congregation for Rites, Musicam Sacram 15 (March 5, 1967). See Austin Flannery,
Vatican Council II (vol. 1; ed. A. Flannery; rev. ed.; Northport: Costello Publishing Company, 1998),
84.
331
Sacred Congregation for Rites, Musicam Sacram 15.
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Eucharist, the offertory chant begins. During the early centuries, the offertory took place in
silence, and all attention was centered on the procession and on the gifts.332 It was not until the
time of Augustine that we have possible evidence of an offertory chant in the West.333 In the
East, there was no lengthy offertory chant in the Prayer of Sarapion, or the Apostolic
Constitutions 8, but there is one found in a 9th century manuscript of the Divine Liturgy of Saint
Basil, which likely is an ancient offertory prayer said in the East.334 The prayer begins,
O Lord our God, you have created us and brought us into this life, and have
shown to us the way to salvation, be gracious to us and reveal to us your heavenly
mysteries, . You have made us to stand in this
service in the power of the Holy Spirit, .
Be pleased, therefore, O Lord to make us servants of your new covenant, and
ministers () of your holy mysteries.
Receive us and draw us near to your holy altar according to your abundant mercy,
so that we might be worthy to offer to you this reasonable and bloodless sacrifice
( ), for our own sins and the
ignorance of the people. Receive it up to your holy, heavenly, and spiritual altar
in a sweet smelling odor, and send down to us in return the grace of the Holy
Spirit.335
This prayer acknowledges God as both creator and savior. The prayer asks God to be drawn to
the holy altar through the abundant mercy of God so that the community might be worthy to
In the West, offertory prayers were eventually introduced into the Roman Rite. We will look
at three. The first is found in the 1570 Missale336 Romanum, but it was omitted from the 2008
332
Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy, 492-498.
333
Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy, 492.
334
Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy, 498.
335
F. E. Brightman, ed., Liturgies: Eastern and Western (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1896), 319. * My
translation with the help of aids.
336
Private prayers were added to the Mass in order to interpret various liturgical actions with a
sense of symbolism; for example, during the presentation of bread and wine at the offertory, there
were prayers of offering (Susicipe, Offerimus), along with the epicletic formula Veni sanctificator,
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Missale Romanum, and thus from the new 2011 Roman Rite with a few exceptions. The second
is a new prayer that was added to the new Roman Rite. The third is an ancient prayer that was
retained in the 2008 Missale Romanum, thus found in the recent Roman Rite.
Pater (Accept, Holy Father) from a Carolingian prayer concerning the bread.337 It first appears
with variations in the prayer book of the Emperor Charles the Bald (875-877),338 who prayed the
Suscipe Sancta Trinitas atque indivisa unitas Accept Holy Trinity, and undivided unity, this
hanc oblationem quam tibi offero per manus oblation which I offer to you through the
Sacerdotis tui, pro me peccatore, & miserrimo hands of your priest for me a sinner, and most
omnium hominum. miserable of all humans.
This offertory prayer above from Charles is addressed to the Holy Trinity and simply refers to
the oblation that is offered through the hands of the priest. The offertory prayer below from
the 1570 Missale Romanum is addressed to the Holy Father, Almighty, Eternal God and refers to
Suscipe, sancte Pater, omnipotens, aeterne Accept, Holy Father, Almighty, Eternal God,
Deus, hanc immaculatam Hostiam, quam ego this immaculate sacrifice, which I, your
indignus famulus tuus offero tibi Deo meo unworthy servant, offer to you my living and
vivo et vero pro innumerabilibus peccatis et true God, for my innumerable sins and
arriving ultimately with Suscipe, Sancta Trinitas, hanc oblationem; these were part of what became known
as a little canon (Emminghaus, The Eucharist, 78, 167).
337
Michael Witczak, History of the Latin Text and Rite, in A Commentary on the Order of Mass of
the Roman Missal (ed. E. Foley, et. al.; Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2011), 204.
338
Adrian Fortescue, The Mass: A Study of the Roman Liturgy (London: Longmans, Green and Co.;
1922), 305. * For the Latin text, see Sartorius, Liber Precationum Quas Carolus Calvus Imperator
(Ingolstalt, 1583), 112-113.
339
See Sartorius, Liber Precationum Quas Carolus Calvus Imperator (Ingolstalt, 1583), 112-113:
Suscipe Sancta Trinitas atque indivisa unitas hanc oblationem quam tibi offero per manus Sacerdotis
tui, pro me peccatore, & miserrimo omnium hominum (Accept Holy Trinity, and undivided unity,
this oblation which I offer to you through the hands of your priest for me a sinner, and most
miserable of all humans). *
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offensionibus et negligentiis meis et pro offenses and my negligence, and for all
omnibus circumstantibus, sed et pro omnibus gathered around, and for all faithful
fidelibus Christianis vivis atque defunctis: ut Christians living and dead, so that it might to
mihi et illis proficiat ad salutem in vitam profitable to me and to them for salvation in
aeternam. 340 eternal life.
The question arises, why was this offertory prayer excluded from the New Roman Rite?
According to Lucien Deiss, the old offertory resembled a magnificent garden in which
tradition, from throughout the ages, had planted the most marvelous flowers.341 The problem
was they were located out of place; this includes the above prayer, Suscipe, sancta Pater.342 It is
not surprising that those who bemoan the new Roman Rite see great value in such prayers.343
considered to be out of place.344 As pointed out above, the prayer was omitted from the 2008
340
C. E. Hammond, ed., Liturgies: Eastern and Western (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1878), 312313.
The prayer continues by asking God to look upon the community and its worship, and to accept
them just as God accepted the gifts of Abel, the sacrifice of Noah, the burnt offering of Abraham,
the priestly service of Moses and Aaron, the peace offerings of Samuel, and finally the true worship
of the Apostles, asking that God might accept from the hands of sinners the gifts in the Lords
goodness in order that they might blamelessly perform the liturgical service at Gods holy altar and
that they might find the reward of the faithful and enlightened stewards in the day of Gods
righteous reward, through the compassionate mercy of Gods only begotten Son with whom be
blessed with the all-holy, good, and life giving Spirit. To which the people respond Amen.
341
Lucein Deiss, The Mass (trans. L. Deiss et. al.; Collegeville; Liturgical Press, 1992), 49.*
342
Deiss, The Mass, 50.
343
See for example, Rama P. Coomaraswamy, The Destruction of the Christian Tradition (rev.; World
Wisdom, Inc.: 2006), 258: Coomaraswany includes the Suscipe sancta Pater as one of the prayers
deleted by those he calls innovators who purged the mass of Catholic doctrines. See also Michael
Davies, Liturgical Time Bombs in Vatican II: The Destruction of Catholic Faith through Changes in Catholic
Worship (Charlotte: Tan Books, 2003).
The Suscipe sancta Pater was held in high regard by Dom Prosper Gueranger. In his The Holy Mass
(1885), Dom Gueranger states, in orderto understand all these Prayers which now follow, we
must keep steadily before us the Sacrifice itself, although it is not as yet offered in all its august
reality. As a first instance, we have in this Prayer the Host spoken of as being presented to the
Eternal Father, although our host at this moment is not yet the Divine Host Itself. And is said that
the host is without spot: immcaulatam hostiam; in these words allusion is made to the victims of the
Old Testament, which were obliged to be without blemish, because they were a type of Our Lord,
Who was one day to appear before us as the Immaculatus.
344
Fortescue, The Mass, 305.
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Missale Romanum, except for simplified and variant forms that are found in the memorial of the
Martyrs Saint Andrew Dng-Lac and Companions, the Common of Martyrs, and in the Easter
Vigil during the blessing of the fire and the preparation, prayer and offering of the Easter
candle,345 where the light from the candle comes to represent the inner illumination and
presence of the light of Christ in our hearts and in our lives.346 However, the above offertory
1968, is based on an ancient Jewish prayer and early prayers from the Didache.348 After the
presentation of the gifts and the preparation of the altar, the presider, who is standing at the altar,
takes (accipit) the paten (golden or silver plate) with the bread and raises it slightly above the
345
Catholic Church, Missale Romanum: Ex Decreto Sacrosancti cumenici Concilii Vaticani II
Instauratum Auctoritate Pauli PP. VI Promulgatum Ioannis Pauli PP. II Cura Recognitum (Editio Typica
Tertia.; Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2008), 872, 909, 349, 355.
346
Kevin W. Irwin, Models of the Eucharist (New York; Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 2005), 103.
347
Catholic Church, Missale Romanum: Ex Decreto SS. Concilii Tridentini Restitutum Summorum
Pontificum Cura Recognitum (vol. 1; Vatican City: Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1962), lviii, 220.
348
Michael Witczak, Liturgy of the Eucharist, in A Commentary on the Order of Mass of the Roman
Missal. (ed. E. Foley and et. al.; Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2011), 205.
349
The Roman Missal: Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican,
Promulgated by Authority of Pope Paul VI and Revised at the Direction of Pope John Paul II (Third Typical
Edition.; Washington D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011), 529. Normally
the priest says this prayer in a low voice; if, however, the Offertory Chant is not sung, the priest may
speak it aloud, after which the people make the acclamation, Blessed be God forever.
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transformation in the new Roman prayer is beautifully expressed.353 He continues that this is
the focus for everyday existence in the principle referred to in 1 Timothy that, everything
created by God is good, and nothing is to be rejected, provided it is received with thanksgiving;
This new prayer also has a firm foundation elsewhere in the New Testament. While
rejoicing in the Holy Spirit, Jesus prays, I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, after
which Jesus acknowledges that all things () were given to him by the Father (Lk 10:21-22;
Matt 11:25: 12:1). All things () came into being through him, and for him, and in him all
things () are held together (Jn 1:1-3; Col 1:16-17), and through him God was pleased to
reconcile to himself all things (), whether on earth or in heaven, by making peace through the
The new prayer is set within the context of creation, in the world for which Christ has
now finished his redeeming work, in the world from which we now look in faith, hope, and
350
The Order of Mass, 23.
351
The Roman Missal: Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy Second Ecumenical Council of the
Vatican, Promulgated by Authority of Pope Paul VI and Revised at the Direction of Pope John Paul
II (Third Typical Edition.; Washington D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011),
529. Normally the priest says this prayer in a low voice; if, however, the Offertory Chant is not
sung, the priest may speak it aloud, after which the people make the acclamation, Blessed be God
forever.
352
The Order of the Mass, 25.
353
Geoffrey Wainwright, Worship with One Accord: Where Liturgy and Ecumenism Embrace
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1997) 210.
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anticipation for the final destiny in Gods kingdom.354 Yet, the prayer also keeps us rooted in
lifes experiences. According to Archbishop Barreto Jimeno of Huancayo, Peru, as fruit of the
earth, the bread and the wine represent the creation which is entrusted to us by our
Creator.The Eucharist commits us to working so that the bread and wine be fruit of a fertile,
pure and uncontaminated land.355 Finally, the prayer reminds that created things have the
potential to be sacred. In one of the more famous sayings of Benedict of Nursia, monks were to
regard, all utensils and goods of the monastery as sacred vessels of the altar.356
fratres is the oldest addition to the Roman Rite found in the Frankish liturgy; it is first found in
Amalar of Metz (9th century).357 Following the Second Vatican Council, the prayer was the
object of discussion during the reform of the liturgy. Pope Paul VI favored its retention, pointing
out that the prayer was a beautiful, ancient, and appropriate dialogue between celebrant and
congregation, and that its removal would be the loss of a pearl.358 In the end, the prayer was
kept.
354
Wainwright, Worship with One Accord, 210.
355
See John L. Allen, Bishops Synod on the Eucharist, National Catholic Reporter (October 6,
2005): Online Source: http://www.nationalcatholicreporter.org/word/sb100605.htm. January 7,
2017: Barreto Jimeno also said, For that reason the Eucharist has a direct relationship with the life
and hope of humanity and must be a constant concern for the church and a sign of Eucharistic
authenticity.[In] the Archdiocese of Huancayo, the air, the ground and the basin of the river
Mantaro are seriously affected by contamination.
356
The Rule of Saint Benedict 31.10. See also Zechariah 14:20-21.
357
Emminghaus, The Eucharist, 168.
358
Bugnini, The Reform of the Liturgy, 379.
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Following two short prayers recited quietly,359 the presider stands at the altar facing the
people, and first extending, then joining together his hands, he says,
After the presider finishes the Prayer over the Offering, the people respond, Amen.
Both Emminghuas362 and Cabi363 have argued that the original intent of this prayer was
for the priest to invite the fellow clergy, who were also present, to pray for him so that the
sacrifice might be acceptable to God. Be that as it may, Remigius of Auxerre makes it clear that
in the 9th century it is the people who are addressed and exhorted to prayer.364 The people are
invited to join their innermost offering in their heart with the oblation in order that their gift
359
In spritu humilittis (The Order of Mass 26) and Lava me (The Order of Mass 28).
360
The Order of Mass 29.
361
The Roman Missal: Renewed by Decree of the Most Holy Second Ecumenical Council of the
Vatican, Promulgated by Authority of Pope Paul VI and Revised at the Direction of Pope John Paul
II (Third Typical Edition; Washington D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011),
530.
362
Emminghaus, The Eucharist, 168.
363
Cabi, The Eucharist, 206.
364
Remigius of Auxerre, Expositio missae 40 (PL 101.1251C-1252B). See also Jean-Paul
Bouhot, Les sources de lExpositio missae de Remi dAuxerre, Revue des tudes Augustiniennes
26 (1980): 145-146.
365
See Jungmann, The Mass of the Roman Rite, 2.96.
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Pope Pius XII later discussed the Orate, fratres, within a context of the faithfuls
baptism, who become part of the Mystical Body of Christ, and so participate in Christs
priesthood, offering up Christ and themselves to the Father, along with the presider who has
It does not seem unreasonable to understand the faithfuls active and conscious
participation in the Orate, fratres as the expression and intention of the faithful to offer
themselves along with Christ as a living, spiritual, and reasonable sacrifice. The way has been
prepared for them and already anticipates the memorial sacrifice of Christs death, resurrection,
and ascension that is celebrated in the words and the hands of the presider in the Eucharistic
Prayer,367 in the faithfuls reception of communion in the Communion Rite,368 and the blessing
Conclusions
This paper has focused on the first major part of the Liturgy of the Eucharist. The three
Eucharistic Prayers and the Communion Rite still need to be addressed at another time. The
prayer and desire to restore unity among all Christians was the reason to hold the Second Vatican
366
Pius XII, Mediator Dei 85-104.
367
The Order of Mass, 31-123. This section ends with the doxology spoken by the celebrant alone
or with the concelebrants:
Through him, and with him, and in him,
O God, almighty Father,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
all glory and honor is yours,
for ever and ever.
The people acclaim:
Amen.
368
The Order of Mass, 124-139.
369
The Order of Mass, 140-146.
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Council.370 I am convinced that there already exist certain, but imperfect unity among baptized
faithful Christians. I know a number of Pentecostals and Evangelicals who attend the Eucharist
and participate in a deep and spiritual manner, without receiving communion. Therefore, I
wanted to share my own knowledge and experience from a life of prayer, work, and study as one
In the Eucharist, we repent and seek the reparation operation. As believers, we are called
to participate in the divine life of the Holy Trinity, presenting our bodies as holy and living
sacrifices acceptable to God, offering spiritual sacrifices, the sacrifice of praise, and the sacrifice
of doing good and sharing with others. In the Eucharist, both the ministerial priesthood and
royal priesthood participate in their own unique way in the one High Priesthood of Christ. We
do this through the presence, power, and renewal of the Holy Spirit, whom we believe was
present and hovered over creation, overshadowed Mary, entered into Jesus at his baptism, was
with Jesus when offering the Mystical Body to the Father, came upon the early believers, and is
to be poured upon all flesh. In the Eucharist, we offer creation, Christ, and ourselves to the
Father, praying for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit and renewing of the face of the earth. As
believers, we are called to be a living liturgy, called to worship, called to service, called to be a
holy and living sacrifice, priests in the inner court of the temple, and prophets into the streets and
to the world to the glory of God the Father. Even if it costs us our life, we already participate
370
See John 17:20-24. See also Pope John XXIII, Ad Petri Cathedram 59-62.
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
APPENDIX
Introduction
As I was finishing the third and final portion of this project for the Ecumenical Studies Interest
Group, which I presented at the 46th Annual Meeting of the Society for Pentecostal Studies, I
omitted an important part of the project. I did this in part because the third portion had become
over twice the length that I felt was presentable to the Ecumenical Studies Interest Group. The
other reason was that the topic of the Nature of Sacrifice was developing nicely and was taking
on a certain beauty and shape of its own that would complement the project as a whole. My
intent was to finish working on the topic of the Nature of Sacrifice and its relationship with the
It had always been one of my goals to finish this project in light of the 500th year
commemoration of the Protestant Reformation of 1517. This ambition grew out of conversations
that I had with Glen Menzies Ph.D. and Christopher A. Stephenson Ph.D. several years ago when
they were so gracious and kind to share hospitality and conversation during the 40th Annual
Meeting of the Society for Pentecostal Studies in Memphis, TN, in March 2011. Dr. Stephenson
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Lawrence Francis Ligocki, Eucharist as Offering.
member of the East Cleveland Church of God congregation. Both Stephenson and his gracious
wife Lisa P. Stephenson earned their Ph.D.s from Marquette University and are both faculty
encouragement to me for they were from the Church of God, yet spent time at Marquette
University in Milwaukee, WI, which is a Jesuit Catholic institution. I have known Glen
Menzies for nearly 30 years. I was Glens Teaching Assistant and later taught as adjunct faculty
at North Central University in Minneapolis, MN, for close to 20 years, during which time Glen
was Dean of the Institute for Biblical and Theological Studies from 20112016. I consider it an
honor and a privilege to have been able to work and teach at an Evangelical-Pentecostal school
of higher education as a Catholic scholar. The open and honest conversations among colleagues
were refreshing. As iron sharpens iron (Prov 27:17), so our intellects sharpened one another.
As a Catholic, I also found support from the friendship of John Davenport Ph.D., who
was Chair of Arts and Sciences under whom I taught Church History and Ancient Philosophy as
an adjunct faculty for several years. Johns wit, intelligence, and love of church history were
pleasant surprises for he was also a practicing Catholic, with whom I shared a great appreciation
and love, among other things, for the Orthodox Church, the Eastern Catholic Churches, the
Catholic Charismatic Renewal, and Evangelical and Pentecostal Christians. I also found support
and friendship from among the leadership of Dr. Thomas A. Burkman, who for years was Vice
President of Academic Affairs, Cheryl Book, who for many years was Vice President of
Business and Finance, and Dr. Gordon Anderson, who was president of the university during my
time teaching at North Central. This spiritual, professional and academic environment allowed
me to work, struggle, teach, and grow as a Catholic and to learn and glean from the schools
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Evangelical and Pentecostal traditions. There are many other friendships that I made during my
time at the university with whom I was able to converse as a Catholic. I learned that it is
possible for Catholics and Pentecostals to live, work, share, and worship together despite our
differences. At present, there already exists a certain but imperfect communion among
Christians.
happened on October 31, 1517, takes place this year. Some see Martin Luther as a hero and
others as a villain, some as a champion of Christian freedom and others as one of the most
divisive figures in church history. Nonetheless, the historical fact exists that long before the
Protestant Reformation, there was a general sense among some individuals that the Catholic
The first is the Babylonian Captivity of the Church. This is the notable time in history
when the papacy moved to Avignon France (13051377) where it came under the influence of
French authorities. During this time a number of abuses arose in the church that included,
among other things, nepotism, simony, and a kind of absenteeism. However, with the help of
two remarkable women, Catherine of Siena and Bridget of Sweden, Pope Gregory XI returned to
Rome.
The second example is the Western Schism. After the death of Pope Gregory XI, Urban
VI was elected the new Pope in 1378, who intended to end French influence over the papacy and
to reform the church. However, in doing so, he made enemies among a number of cardinals who
declared their election of Urban as void and elected a new pope, Pope Clement VII. A few
months later, Clement VII and his cardinals left for Avignon, thus ushering in the Western
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Schism. In effect, there were now two popes (one in Rome and one in France). Eventually, a
third line of popes would arise from the Council of Pisa in 1409. This schism was resolved with
the help of John Gerson, Chancellor of the University of Paris, and the Council of Constance
where members of the Church worked to end the crisis. In the decree Sacrosancta (1415), the
council called for reform in both head and members. I might be stretching it a bit, but I interpret
this document to be a call for universal holiness among all members of the Church. In essence,
Sarosancta was calling for reform within the Church. The third example is the Renaissance
Popes. They were the twelve popes between the year 1417 and the eve of the Protestant
Reformation. These popes wanted to turn Rome into a center of the Renaissance. Some of these
Popes are considered to have been more spiritual than the others, and the others were more
worldly for which they were criticized. During this time, the Dominican Preacher Savonarola
adopted an apocalyptic style of preaching announcing not only coming judgment upon the
church but also a coming renewal within the church much like the day of Pentecost.371 There
were others who were calling for reform such as John Wycliffe and John Huss.
There was, thus, a general sense that there was need of reform. In the words of one
theologian, reform came, but it arrived with a vengeance. Martin Luther and his 95 theses!
One of the most unfortunate results of the Protestant Reformation was the many different
views that emerged among Protestants concerning the nature and meaning of communionthat
is, the Eucharist. What is meant to be a source of unity among Christians was viewed as though
through a broken lens. Lutheran, Anglican, Reform, Zwinglian, and Anabaptist not only
371
Girolomo Savonarola, Selected Writings of Girolamo Savonarola: Religion and Politics, 14901498
(trans. and ed. by A. Borelli and M.P. Passaro; Yale University, 2006), 174: In A Dialogue Concerning
Prophetic Truth (14961497), Savonarola speaks of the renewal of spirit and of Christian life, that
will be poured out through the whole world through the grace of the Holy Spirit, just as was done
in the times of the Apostles.
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disagreed with Catholics, but they even disagreed among themselves. How is it possible then to
claim that presently there already exists a certain but imperfect communion among Christians?
There were attempts to restore unity between Catholics and Protestants. This was sought
to some degree even as early as the Council of Trent (15451563), though without lasting
success. Other attempts were made, such as the work, teaching, and writings of Elena Guerra
and Pope Leo XIII in the late 19th and early 20th centuries,372 who have been called forerunners
of the charismatic renewal, calling for devotion to the Holy Spirit. It was not until the Second
Vatican Council (19621965) that Christian unity became one of the main goals of the Catholic
Church. Before convening the council, there was offered up a prayer for a renewal of Gods
wonders and a new Pentecost.373 After the Second Vatican Council had begun, the four goals of
the council were stated: 1) to renew the life of the Christian faithful; 2) to adapt to the needs of
the times those institutions subject to change; 3) to foster unity among all Christians; and 4) to
strengthen the evangelical outreach of the Church to all peoples, nations, tongues, and tribes.374
372
See Val Gaudet, A Woman and the Pope: Elena Guerra and Pope Leo XIII: forerunners of
the Charismatic Renewal in the Church Today, New Covenant (Oct., 1973): 46. * See also Pope
Leo XIII, Divinum illud munus 3 (1897) in Claudia Carlen, ed., The Papal Encyclicals: 18781903
(Ypsilanti, MI: Pierian Press, 1990), 410. *
373
Open the Windows: The Popes and Charismatic Renewal (ed. K. McDonnell; South Bend, Indiana:
Greenlawn Press, 1989), 1.
374
Catholic Church, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy: Sacrosanctum Concilium, in Vatican II
Documents (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2011): This sacred Council has several aims in
view: it desires to impart an ever increasing vigor to the Christian life of the faithful; to adapt more
suitably to the needs of our own times those institutions which are subject to change; to foster
whatever can promote union among all who believe in Christ; to strengthen whatever can help to
call the whole of mankind into the household of the Church. The Council therefore sees particularly
cogent reasons for undertaking the reform and promotion of the liturgy (SC 1).
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those who are baptized and are named Christians (LG 15).375 Those who believe in Christ and
are truly baptized are in communion with the Catholic Church even though this communion is
imperfect (UR 3).376 In 1993, The Ecumenical Directory confirmed that despite serious
difficulties that do not allow for full ecclesial communion, all those who have been baptized into
In his 1995 encyclical on Christian unity Ut Unam Sint (That They Might Be One), Pope
John Paul II reaffirmed that to the extent that these elements are found in other Christian
Communities, the one Church of Christ is effectively present in them. For this reason, the
Second Vatican Council speaks of a certain, though imperfect communion (UUS 11).378
More recently, in his 2013 encyclical Evangelii Gaudium (Gospel of Joy), Pope Francis has
argued,
How many important things unite us! If we really believe in the abundantly free
working of the Holy Spirit, we can learn so much from one another! It is not just
about being better informed about others, but rather about reaping what the Spirit
has sown in them, which is also meant to be a gift for us.Through an exchange
of gifts, the Spirit can lead us ever more fully into truth and goodness (EG
246).379
During the week of prayer for Christian unity, on January 20, 2016, Pope Francis pointed out
that Catholics, Orthodox, and Protestants share in one Baptism, and that, the mercy of God, who
375
Lumen Gentium 15. *
376
Unitatis Redintegratio 3. *
377
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, Directory for the Application of Principles and
Norms on Ecumenism (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1993), n. 104.a. *
378
John Paul II, Ut Unum Sint (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1995), n. 11. *
379
Francis, Evangelii Gaudium (Apostolic Exhortation; Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana,
2013), 184.
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acts in Baptism, is stronger than our divisions.380 Although Pentecostals are not mentioned
explicitly, Pope Francis has had good relationships with Pentecostals, both in his home country
of Argentina and also in Italy. To the surprise of many, Pope Francis sent greetings to a
gathering of Pentecostal leaders in Fort Worth, Texas, on January 14, 2014.381 In July 2014, the
Caserta, Italy, greeting them as Brothers and Sisters in which he encouraged the community and
asked forgiveness for the way some Catholics have mistreated Pentecostals labeling them as
Christian Elements
What are some of the common elements that the Second Vatican Council acknowledges as
existing outside the visible boundaries of the Catholic Church? Belief in God the Father
Almighty, in Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Savior; in the graces and gifts of the Holy Spirit;
the Word of God (the Sacred Scripture); Faith, hope, and charity; prayer and worship; life in the
Christian Ecumenism
My involvement in ecumenism has been on a grassroots level, and yes, the pun is intended. For
me there needed to be a spiritual ecumenism, an inner dialogue with the Catholic tradition I grew
up in, and an outer dialogue with those other Christian traditions that I encountered (for example,
Lutheran, Eastern Orthodox, Evangelical, and Pentecostal). It has not been a dialogue of things
that we agree on or the differences of doctrine, but a dialogue of the whole person, a dialogue of
380
Pope Francis, General Audience for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, January 20,
2016; online source: Vatican Website. * Accessed March 27, 2016.
381
We are brothers, Pope Stresses in Message to Pentecostals, Catholic News Agency, Online
source: *, Dated February 25, 2014. Accessed March 28, 2016. Those addressed included the
Pentecostal minister Kenneth Copeland.
382
Popes Address to Pentecostal Community in Caserta, Zenit, Online site: * Dated July 29,
2014, Accessed March 28, 2016.
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love.383 My experience was based on an encounter with Christ in my Catholic tradition and with
other Christians that I met, the sermons that I heard, and works that I studied.
By far the longest, and probably one of the most profound, is the exchange between
Pentecostals with whom I have lived, studied, worked, and taughtfor the last thirty years at
what has come to be called North Central University. In my early years there, some friends and
students were open to me being Catholic, but others were not. One fellow student sat down with
me in Carlson Hall lobby and expressed with me her concern for my well-being and salvation.
Another friend of mine from North Central told me that he did not think I would remain
Catholic, but would quickly leave the Catholic Church. Another individual at North Central
point blank asked me, which are you going to choose, Catholic or Pentecostal? I later thought
to myself, why does it have to be either or? Why it is that no one wants to stand in the
gap? Where is the peace maker, the bridge builder, where is the one who cries out to God for
justice, mercy, and unity? Where are the prophet, the priest, and king? I say all this not to say
that all is perfect among the members of the Catholic Church. For the church, according to the
restoration in my own Christian life, bringing forth renewed life and vitality. It has taken years
of listening, studying, prayer, and contemplation. It was at times extremely trying, challenging,
and difficult. Yet from out of the pain came fruits of righteousness. It would be difficult to
383
Ut Unam Sint 47.
384 Catholic Church, Decree on Ecumenism: Unitatis Redintegratio, in Vatican II Documents (Vatican
City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2011): Christ summons the Church to continual reformation (perennem
reformationem) as she sojourns here on earth. The Church is always in need of this, in so far as she is an
institution of men here on earth (UR 6).
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Hospitality
During my first two years at North Central, I traveled with their worship touring group One
Accord. A majority of the time we would travel by day, minister at churches and youth groups
in the evening, and stay in host homes at night. My experiences were quite positive. Hosts
provided us with a place to stay, a meal if we were hungry, and often entertained us with graceful
conversations. The experiences of having someone share their home and table was quite
Working Together
In a sense, I could have been a poster child for where North Central may be headed in the future
in developing the area of the sciences. Some of my undergraduate studies were in electrical
engineering and the sciences. When Vern Kissner, who was head of Plant Operations, learned
that I was a techie, he asked if I could look at one of the stereos in a music room on campus.
This set of skills would later allow me to work for North Central during the summers doing
electrical installs and troubleshooting. I often worked alongside fellow employees and student
workers from North Central. I was able to talk and share my faith as a Catholic with
Listening
I could not count the number of times that I experienced in the words of John Wesley, I found
my heart strangely warmed when hearing the Word of God preached in North Central chapels.
It became clear to me that among Pentecostals there are those who hold the Divine Scripture in
high regard.
Worshiping
From a Catholic perspective, the Church in Christ is a sacrament (Gr. Mysterion)that is, a sign
and instrument of communion with God and unity among all peoples, nations, tongues, and
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tribes. The Eucharist is the heart of Catholic Orthodox worship. It is the source and summit of
our life with the Triune God (LG 11).385 It is an offering of praise and thanksgiving for Gods
creation and salvation. It is a spiritual or reasonable sacrifice (1 Pet 2:5; Rom 12:1). It is a
sacramental form of worship and offering in which we participate in the Word of God and the
Work of God, with the presider, with the crucified, resurrected, and ascended Christ, the Son of
God and Son of Man, body, blood, soul, and divinity. It is an offering of our hearts, minds, soul
and strength, an offering of the firstfruits of creation (bread and wine), through Christ, in the
Holy Spirit to the glory of God the Father. Although the Eucharist is rooted in the paschal
mystery, it finds its apex in the Feast of Pentecost, which begins with Jesus being raised from the
dead and ascending on high, culminating with the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.386
I have also experienced something similar worshiping with Pentecostals. For example,
when I was a student at North Central in the late 1980s, I sat in the pews during chapel next to a
friend of mine from One Accord, Diane Vagle, who married Dan Larson, both of whom now
pastor at Family Life Community Church in Seattle, Washington.* While Diane raised her
hands, heart, and voice to worship God, I came to realize that the same crucified and risen Christ,
whom I came to know and worship within a Catholic liturgical tradition, was the same risen Lord
being worshiped during chapel through the fruit of human lips and human limbs. It seemed to
have a different cultural context but pointed to the same risen Lord.
385
Lumen Gentium 11;* See also John Paul II, The Eucharist is the Source of the Churchs Life,
April 8, 1992, Audiences of Pope John Paul II (English) (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2014);
* John Paul II
386
John Paul II, Pentecost: Gods Gift of Divine Adoption, July 26, 1989, Audiences of Pope John
Paul II (English) (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2014): This work of the Holy Spirit has its
new beginning at Pentecost in Jerusalem, at the apex of the paschal mystery. From then onward
Christ is with us and works in us through the Holy Spirit, putting into effect the eternal design of the
Father, who has predestined us to be his adopted sons through Jesus Christ (Eph 1:5). Let us never
tire of repeating and meditating on this marvelous truth of our faith. *
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Sharing Gifts
In the early 90s, I traveled to Malawi, Africa, for a cross-cultural mission opportunity.
Professor Doug Lowenberg led the group. If I remember correctly, we would spend the
weekends as a team, but during the week, we would travel to preaching points in small villages
where we spent our time preaching, praying, and spending time with the Africans. A couple
notable experiences are worth commenting on. We often stayed in areas that had no electricity,
plumbing, or sewer systems. The evening nights were filled with wonders. Looking up at the
stars from dark surroundings and from the southern hemisphere was amazing. The heavens just
look different. I saw something that I had never seen before with my own eyes: the Southern
Cross. In the words of the songwriter, When you see the Southern Cross for the first time You
understandwhy you came this way 'Cause the truth you might be runnin' from is.as big as
the promise, the promise of a comin' day (Crosby, Stills & Nash).
During one service, we invited individuals to come forth and pray for the baptism in the
Holy Spirit. One woman came forward, and we prayed for her. At some point she began to say,
"thank you Jesus, thank you Jesus, thank you Jesus." The interpreter turned to me, and we looked
at each other with a sense of amazement. Later I asked the woman through the interpreter what
had happened. She did not know English, so the interpreter asked the question and also translated
for me her response. She had been filled with the Holy Spirit before, but she came up to pray for
a refilling. During the prayer, she began to speak in an unknown tongue, which we heard as a
prayer of praise and thanksgiving. Here I would later realize that, she was sharing with me her
gift, and that she was a sign and instrument to me of the unity that already exists among us. I
have often wondered how many and how much of the ancient Eucharistic prayers have their
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In closing this section, I want to reaffirm that what unites Evangelicals, Pentecostals, and
Catholics is greater than what divides us. We both have a wonderful opportunity to listen and
learn from one another. But we must listen in humility. Although there is not yet full unity,
there are many opportunities to pray, work, study, dialogue together, and to bear witness to one
another and to the resurrected and risen Christ. One important area for dialogue and
weighty differences. One of these is the significance, meaning, and importance of the Eucharist.
Since the Second Vatican Council, the Catholic Churchs understanding and teaching of the
Eucharist, with particular attention to other baptized Christians who are not in full communion
with the Catholic Church, has been presented in a number of important sources including the
Decree on Ecumenism (1964),387 the Catechism of the Catholic Church (1992),388 the New
Ecumenical Directory (1993),389 the encyclicals of Pope John Paul II, That They May be One
387
Catholic Church, Decree on Ecumenism: Unitatis Redintegratio, in Vatican II Documents
(Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2011): n. 22.*
388
Sections 13221419: see Catholic Church, Catechism of the Catholic Church (2nd Ed.;
Washington, DC: United States Catholic Conference, 2000), 334356.*
389
Sections 92101, 102107, 129136, 159160: see Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian
Unity, Directory for the Application of Principles and Norms on Ecumenism (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice
Vaticana, 1993).*
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(1995)390 and Ecclesia de Eucharistia (2003),391 and the more recent apostolic exhortation on the
As early as 1964, the Decree on Ecumenism expressed the Second Vatican Councils
.Though the ecclesial Communities which are separated from us lack the
fullness of unity with us flowing from Baptism, and though we believe they have
not retained the proper reality of the eucharistic mystery in its fullness, especially
because of the absence of the sacrament of Orders, nevertheless when they
commemorate His death and resurrection in the Lords Supper, they profess that it
signifies life in communion with Christ and look forward to His coming in glory.
Therefore the teaching concerning the Lords Supper, the other sacraments,
worship, the ministry of the Church, must be the subject of the dialogue (22).393
In the United States, a series of dialogues began in 1965 between Catholics and
Lutherans and continued to 2010.394 In 1967, the third series tackled one of the thorniest issues
separating the church since the Reformation, that is the topic of the Eucharist as Sacrifice. The
conversations during this third series on the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist took place during
See also the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, The Ecumenical Dimension in the
Formation of Those Engaged in Pastoral Work (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana), 1998.*
390
Sections 2328, 6470, 72, 87, 97: see John Paul II, Ut Unum Sint (Vatican City: Libreria
Editrice Vaticana, 1995).*
391
Sections 4346: see John Paul II, Ecclesia de Eucharistia (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice
Vaticana, 2003).*
392
Sections 1517: Benedict XVI, Sacramentum Caritatis (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana,
2007).*
393
Decree on Ecumenism, 22. *
394
These included topics such as the Nicene Creed, Baptism, the Eucharist, Papal Primacy,
Justification by Faith, Scripture and Tradition, and important topics too. See the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops, Documents Produced by the Lutheran-Catholic Dialogue in the
United States, Online Source: http://www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/ecumenical-and-
interreligious/ecumenical/lutheran/lutheran-documents.cfm. Accessed April 10, 2017.
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understanding and fellowship, and resulted with signs of convergence and growing unity, while
There also has been international dialogue between Lutherans and Catholics on the
European continent that began in 1967 and continues even today with the vision of the
1978 that resulted in a document that discussed the Eucharist, which includes agreements on the
Eucharist and differences that still need to be overcome.397 A more recent publication is the
Report of the Lutheran-Roman Catholic Commission on Unity that is entitled From Conflict to
Communion (2013), which also has sections that deal with the Eucharist and sacrificial
dimensions.398 Although a joint and shared Eucharistic communion is not a present reality
between Catholics and Lutherans because of obstacles, there are those who anticipate a shared
395
Lutherans and Catholics in Dialogue III: The Eucharist as Sacrifice (October 1, 1967). See
the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, The Eucharist, http://www.usccb.org/beliefs-
and-teachings/ecumenical-and-interreligious/ecumenical/lutheran/eucharist.cfm. Accessed April
10, 2017.
396
See the Lutheran World Federation, Lutheran-Roman Catholic Dialogue, Online Source:
https://www.lutheranworld.org/content/lutheran-roman-catholic-dialogue. Accessed April 10,
2017. These meetings have been the joint effort of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the
Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity (PCPCU).
397
Joint Roman Catholic/Lutheran Commission, The Eucharist (1978), Online Source:
http://www.prounione.urbe.it/dia-int/l-rc/doc/e_l-rc_eucharist.html. Accessed April 10, 2017.
See especially sections 5664 that addresses the topic of the Eucharist as Sacrifice.
398
This document is found on both the Vaticans website and the Lutheran World Federations
website. See From Conflict to Communion: Lutheran-Catholic Commemoration of the Reformation in 2017,
Online Source: http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/chrstuni/lutheran-fed-
docs/rc_pc_chrstuni_doc_2013_dal-conflitto-alla-comunione_en.html; see also From Conflict to
Communion: Lutheran-Catholic Commemoration of the Reformation in 2017 (Leipzig: Evangelische
Verlagsanstalt, 2013). A PDF version is available online:
https://www.lutheranworld.org/content/resource-conflict-communion-basis-lutheran-catholic-
commemoration-reformation-2017. Accessed April 10, 2017. The document is also the joint effort
of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity
(PCPCU).
For a discussion on the Eucharist, Luthers understanding of the Lords Supper, and Luthers
view of the Eucharistic sacrifice, see sections 140148; for the Catholic concerns, see sections 149
152; for the agreement from the Lutheran-Roman Catholic Dialogue on the Eucharist, see sections
153161.
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Eucharistic communion in the near future.399 There is also a news report from Austen Ivereigh
that during his papal visit to Sweden on October 31, 2016, Pope Francis and Rev. Martin Junge,
General Secretary of the Lutheran World Federation, have agreed to work together for a shared
Eucharist.400 On November 1, 2016, Cindy Wooden reported that Cardinal Kurt Koch,
President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, made a distinction between
Eucharistic hospitality that is for individual persons, and Eucharistic communion that is the
Pentecostal-Catholic Dialogue
The International Catholic-Pentecostal dialogue between Pentecostals and Catholics began in
1972. Conversations were initiated in 19691970 when the Reverend David J. Du Plessis
expressed interest to the Vatican in opening dialogue with the Catholic Church. With the help of
Father Kilian McDonnell, OSB, and the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity,
Pentecostals and Catholics officially opened conversations and meetings that have occurred
throughout the years through six phases and have resulted in the publication of numerous reports.
The goal of the dialogue was not structural union, but its objective was the growth among
399
See the joint article by Catholic Bishop Anders Arborelius and Lutheran Archbishop Jackeln,
in An Important Ecumenical Sign, The Lutheran World Federation (October 18, 2016), Online
Source: https://www.lutheranworld.org/news/important-ecumenical-sign. Accessed April 10,
2017.
400
Austen Ivereigh, Catholic and Lutheran Churches Pledge to Work for Shared Eucharist,
Crux (October 31, 2016), Online Source: https://cruxnow.com/papal-visit/2016/10/31/catholic-
lutheran-churches-pledge-work-shared-eucharist/. Accessed April 10, 2017.
401
Cindy Wooden, Vatican Cardinal Explains Limits of Eucharistic Sharing, Catholic News
Service (November 1, 2016), Online Source:
http://www.catholicnews.com/services/englishnews/2016/vatican-cardinal-explains-limits-of-
eucharistic-sharing.cfm. Accessed April 10, 2017.
402
There have been several topics discussed periodically in six phases over the years: 1)
introduction and discussions on various topics such as baptism, scripture, tradition, worship,
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There has not been a single phase from the International Catholic-Pentecostal Dialogue
that deals exclusively with the topic of the Eucharist or the Lords Supper. However, it is
apparent that the topic did come up throughout the dialogues as seen in the final report
documents and often with insight, clarity, and perspective. However, a developed discussion on
the Eucharist as Sacrifice has not yet come up.403 Hopefully, something develops in the future.
Be that as it may, here are several examples of discussions from the International Catholic-
Pentecostal Dialogue on the Eucharist that demonstrate there is a growing consensus and
understanding, though full and visible communion has not yet been reached.
Corporate worship is a focal expression of the worshipper's daily life as he or she speaks
to God and to other members of the community in songs of praise and words of
thanksgiving (Eph 5, 19-20; 1 Cor 14, 26). Our Lord is present in the members of his
body, manifesting himself in worship by means of a variety of charismatic expressions.
He is also present by the power of his Spirit in the Eucharist. The participants recognized
that there was a growing understanding of the unity which exists between the formal
structure of the eucharistic celebration and the spontaneity of the charismatic gifts. This
discernment of spirits, prayer and praise, and a discussion on the Christian experience of the Spirit
of God and discussion on the Baptism of the Holy Spirit (19721976); 2) Christian experience of
the Holy Spirt with discussion on speaking in tongues, faith and experience, Scripture and tradition,
exegesis, biblical interpretation, faith and reason, healing, Community worship and communication,
tradition and traditions, perspectives on Mary, ministry in the Church, ordination, apostolic
succession, recognition of ministries, 19771982); 3) Perspectives on koinonia (or communio),
koinonia and the Word of God, The Holy Spirit and the New Testament vision of koinonia,
koinonia and baptism, koinonia in the life of the Church, koinonia and the communion of the saints
(19851989); 4) on evangelization, proselytism, and common witness (19901997); 5) on becoming
a Christian with insights from Scripture, patristic writings, and contemporary reflections (1998
2006); and 6) on the charisms in the life and mission of the church (20112015).
See Dialogue with Pentecostals, Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, Online
Source: http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/chrstuni/sub-
index/index_pentecostals.htm. Accessed April 11, 2017.
403
See Appendix B below for examples from the International Catholic-Pentecostal Dialogue on
the topic of the Eucharist or Lords Supper.
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unity was exemplified by the Pauline relationship between chapters eleven to fourteen of
I Corinthians (sec. 34).404
Both Pentecostals and Roman Catholics celebrate the Lord's Supper/Eucharist with
notable difference in doctrine and practice. Roman Catholics regard the Eucharist as a
sacramental memorial of Christ's sacrifice on Calvary in the Biblical sense of the word
anamnesis. By God's power, in the Eucharistic celebration Jesus is present in His death
and resurrection. This sacred rite is for Roman Catholics a privileged means of grace and
the central act of worship. It is celebrated frequently, even daily. Among Pentecostals, the
Lord's Supper does not hold an equally predominant place in their life of worship. Most
Pentecostals celebrate the Lord's Supper as an ordinance in obedience to the command of
the Lord. Other Pentecostal churches believe this memorial to be more than a reminder of
Jesus' death and resurrection, considering it a means of grace (sec. 45).
Generally Pentecostals practice "open communion", that is, anyone may participate in the
Lord's Supper provided they acknowledge the Lordship of Christ and have examined
their own dispositions (1 Cor 11 :28). Except in certain cases of spiritual necessity
determined by the Church, the Roman Church admits to communion only its own
members provided they are free from serious sin. This is not meant to be a refusal of
fellowship with other Christians, but rather expresses the Roman Catholic Church's
understanding of the relationship between the Church and the Eucharist (sec. 46).405
The doxological praise of God is at the heart of both Catholic and Pentecostal life.
Corporate praise in a Pentecostal congregation and sacramental and liturgical worship in
Catholic churches are indeed the source and summit of our spiritual lives. It not only
expresses our thanksgiving and praise to God but shapes our very being as disciples and
communities. The divine presence itself, whether in the eucharist or in the high praises of
God's people, is transformative "into the same image from one degree of glory to
another" (2 Cor 3:18). Pentecostals and Catholics are especially aware of this. Living the
liturgical year and participating in the eucharist shapes the Catholic ethos. The
Pentecostal imagination is formed by the manifestation of spiritual gifts amid the jubilant
praise of those upon whom the Spirit has fallen. Yet many Catholics also have come to
know the charismatic presence of the Spirit and Pentecostals are formed by their devout
celebration of the Lords Supper. We affirm together that we desire to be a People who
reflect God's presence to the world by being in his presence. "Therefore, since we are
404 Final Report of The Dialogue between The Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity of The Roman
Catholic Church and Leaders of Some Pentecostal Churches and Participants in The Charismatic Movement
Within Protestant and Anglican Churches: 19721976, Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity,
Online Source:
http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/chrstuni/pentecostals/rc_pc_chrstuni_doc_1972
1976_final-report-pentecostals_en.html. Accessed May 11, 2017.
405
See Final Report of the Dialogue between the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity of
the Roman Catholic Church and Some Pentecostals 19771982, Pontifical Council for Promoting
Christian Unity, Online Source:
http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/chrstuni/pentecostals/rc_pc_chrstuni_do
c_19840509_final-report-pentecostals_en.html. Accessed April 11, 2017.
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receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us give thanks, by which we offer to God
an acceptable worship with reverence and awe" (Heb 12:28) (sec. 136).406
and complex. My life journey as a Catholic had opened to me shared experiences among
Pentecostals. Although Pentecostals have their own unique culture and worship style, which
some Catholics might find uncomfortable, they have visible elements that are common with
Catholics: for example, the Word of God, hospitality, praise and thanksgiving, the use of music
in worship, and the importance of the Holy Spirit. The complexity has been the different views
and practices between Catholics and Pentecostals concerning the Eucharist. Among Catholics,
the Eucharist is considered the source and the summit of the Churches' worship. For
Pentecostals, the Baptism of the Holy Spirit is emphasized, and it is the Holy Spirit that is the
source of the communities free/spontaneous worship and praise. This is not to say that the Holy
Spirit is not important in the Liturgy of the Eucharist. Nor does it mean that Pentecostals do not
have room for the Lord's Supper in their worship, for on occasions they do celebrate it with the
words of institution. Christopher Stephenson has reminded us that Pentecostal churches often
have an altar inscribed with the words, "Do this in remembrance of me."
Pentecostals. At first, it was at times challenging and difficult, but over the years it became
rewarding and fruitful. It gradually became clear to me that in regard to worship Catholics and
Pentecostals share in a common reality, the crucified, risen, and glorified Christ. However, there
406
See On Becoming a Christian: Insights from Scripture and the Patristic Writings: with Some
Contemporary Reflections: Report of the Fifth Phase of the International Dialogue Between Some
Classical Pentecostal Churches and Leaders and the Catholic Church (19982006), Pontifical
Council for Promoting Christian Unity, Online Source:
http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/chrstuni/eccl-comm-
docs/rc_pc_chrstuni_doc_20060101_becoming-a-christian_en.html. Accessed April 11, 2017.
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were some important differences in belief and practices on the level of visible signs, verbal
expressions, preparations, and the manner in which communion with God is expressed,
specifically the differences in belief and practices regarding the Eucharist or the Lords Supper.
On the one hand, Catholics have a body of authoritative teaching rooted in biblical and ancient
traditions expressed most recently in the Second Vatican II documents, the Catholic Catechism,
and recent post-conciliar thought expressed in Papal documents. On the other hand, the
Pentecostals do not have a unified and authoritative body of literature outside of the written
Word of God.407 Pentecostals have also had unique developments during the twentieth century
As a result, I had to find something that Catholics and Pentecostal share in common. It
became clear to me that it had to be rooted in and founded upon the Holy Scriptures. Although
407
See Christopher A. Stephenson, Proclaiming the Mystery of Faith Together: Toward Greater
Common Witness between Pentecostals and Roman Catholics on the Lords Supper, Journal of
Ecumenical Studies 48:1 (2013): 8596.
408
In the last century, the Pentecostal experience has been described by some in the context of
three periods or waves.
The first-wave Pentecostals who experienced the baptism in the Holy Spirit stressed an
essential link with speaking in tongues. These Pentecostals have their roots going back to Charles
Parham and his Bible school students in Topeka Kansas, where the first person to be filled with the
Holy Spirit and speak in tongues wasAgnes Ozman on January 1 (New Years Day) in 1901.
Another one of Parhams students, William Joseph Seymour, led a revival in 1906 at the Azusa
Street Mission in Los Angeles from which Pentecostalism spread throughout the world. These
individuals were often shun from their denominations and formed groups such as the Assemblies of
God, the Church of God, and other important groups.
The second-wave emerged in the 1960s in the Charismatic renewal that spread across various
mainline denominations which included Lutherans, Episcopalians, Roman Catholics, and others.
These individuals experienced the baptism in the Holy Spirit. They often spoke in tongues.
However, they did not necessarily stress that speaking in tongues was an essential sign of Spirit
baptism.
The third-wave describes Evangelicals and others who, beginning in the 1980s, opened up to
the workings of the Holy Spirit as experienced by Pentecostals and charismatics. This group
emphasizes the importance of charismatic and supernatural gifts. Although there is not a strong
emphasis on speaking in tongues, as with the first-wave, there is a strong emphasis on signs and
wonders that accompany power evangelism. Those involved in the third-wave seem to have a
certain disposition and uneasiness with identifying themselves as Pentecostals.
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this is not entirely true, some Catholics tend to stress Christs passion, sufferings, and Passover
to the exclusions of Christs resurrection, ascension, and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the
day of Pentecost. Something similar might be said, though again not entirely true, that
Pentecostals stress the Baptism of the Holy Spirit at the expense of Christs passion, sufferings,
and the Passover. What I decided to do was to seek a way of reconciliation and thus avoid these
two extremes.
As a result, Passover and Pentecost became two poles that I would seek to contemplate
and seek a way to correlate. This approach resulted in working to understand these two feasts
within the historical context of Early Judaism, also known as Second Temple Judaism.
Inadvertently, this brought Early Judaism into the project as the third dialogue partner. As a
result, this developed into the first part of the project that sought to understand the Eucharist
within the context of the Jewish feasts of Passover, Pentecost, and the offering of the firstfruits.
This brought me to eventually realize that this would lead to a richer understanding of Jesus
within the context of Second Temple Judaism, which would help me understand the Eucharist in
Early Christianity.
In other words, my original quest was to bridge the gap between Catholics and
Pentecostals but resulted in a deeper understanding and appreciation of the importance of Early
Judaism. This led me to find links between Second Temple Judaism and the Eucharist. Which
ultimately brought me to study three important relationships: first between John the Baptist,
Jesus, and the Jewish temple; second, the relationship between the Jewish temple and the
Eucharist; and finally, the relationship between the Eucharist and the Jewish feasts of Passover
and Pentecost, which resulted in the project the Eucharist as the Offering of Firstfruits.
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