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Most
Catholics do not seem to realize that the Church teaches that the Mass is a
real and true sacrifice, that a prime function of the Catholic priesthood is to
offer sacrifice, that an altar is a place of sacrifice, and that the word host
is from the Latin word hostia, meaning sacrificial victim. Rome holds that
Christ must be constantly re-presented in His victimhood to God through the
Mass for our salvation. With each offering of the Mass, some 120 million times
a year, the Church says that “the work of our redemption is continually carried
out.” The Pope, not finding Hebrews 9:12 to his liking, simply changed it. This
was not a slip of the pen, but a calculated alteration of God’s Word to make
the Sacrifice of the Mass appear biblical
By:
James McCarthy
By:
The John Ankerberg Show
Is the Mass a real sacrifice? This is the
question that most Catholics seldom discuss, but one that is nonetheless
central to their faith.
In this month’s article, Jim McCarthy
examines the Church’s answer and how Pope John Paul II defends it from
Scripture.!
Few Catholics think about this question. The
reason is that most Catholics are not aware that the Church teaches that the
Mass is an actual sacrifice.
They know that the rite is called the
Sacrifice of the Mass, that it is performed by a priest, that the congregation
assembles before an altar, and that the consecrated bread wafers are called
hosts.
Nevertheless, most Catholics do not seem to
realize that the Church teaches that the Mass is a real and true sacrifice,
that a prime function of the Catholic priesthood is to offer sacrifice, that an
altar is a place of sacrifice, and that the word host is from the Latin word hostia,
meaning sacrificial victim.
When I told Anthony, a Catholic catechism
teacher, that he was going to a sacrifice for sins each week, he denied it.
Anthony’s sister, Teresa, had been born again
several years earlier and had left the Catholic Church.
She had been sharing the gospel with Anthony,
and he too now was claiming to be trusting Christ alone for his salvation. He
remained, however, loyal to the Catholic Church and its practices.
“Anthony, you can’t
say you are trusting in Christ’s finished work on the cross and keep going to a
weekly sacrifice for your sins,” I told him.
“But it’s not a
sacrifice,”
Anthony insisted.
“Look at the
Eucharistic prayer,”
I said, handing him an open copy of the Vatican II Sunday Missal, the book
containing the words recited by the priest during the Mass.
“What does the priest
pray after consecrating the bread and wine?”
“‘We offer to you,
God of glory and majesty,’” Anthony read, “‘this holy and perfect sacrifice the
bread of life and the cup of eternal salvation.’”
He then added, “I
don’t remember the priest ever saying that.”
“Read on,” I asked.
“‘Look with favor on
these offerings and accept them as once you accepted the gifts of your servant
Abel, the sacrifice of Abraham, our Father in faith, and the bread and wine
offered by your priest Melchizedek. Almighty God, we pray that your angel may
take this sacrifice to your altar in heaven. Then, as we receive from this
altar the sacred body and blood of your Son, let us be filled with every grace
and blessing.’”
Anthony studied the
prayer for a few moments in silence, and then added, “Well, I never heard
this at the Mass.”
“I’m not making this up, Anthony,” I told him.
“Next Sunday sit near
the front of the church and listen carefully to the words of the priest. You’ll
see for yourself. According to your Church, in some mystical way the cross
transcends time and is made present by the liturgy of the Eucharist. I know
this doesn’t make a lot of sense, but Catholicism teaches that the Mass is one
and the same as the sacrifice of Calvary.”
The next time I saw Anthony he admitted that
he had been wrong.
Despite almost forty years in the Catholic
Church and experience as a catechism teacher, he didn’t know that the Mass was
supposedly the actual sacrifice of Christ.
Neither did he realize that he was not only
attending Christ’s sacrifice, but he was participating in it.
It is indeed the
priest alone, who, acting in the person of Christ, consecrates the bread and
wine, but the role of the faithful in the Eucharist is to recall the passion,
resurrection and glorification of the Lord, to give thanks to God, and to offer
the immaculate victim not only through the hands of the priest, but also
together with him; and finally, by receiving the Body of the Lord, to perfect
that communion with God and among themselves which should be the product of
participation in the sacrifice of the Mass. — Second Vatican Council (emphasis added)
One must ask: What kind of worship is this?
The cross was a horrific event.
It was the enemies of the Lord Jesus, not His
disciples, who crucified Him. Why would anyone calling himself a Christian want
to participate in the continuation of the cross?
Furthermore, as the Lord died on the cross,
He cried out, “It is finished!” (John 19:30).
Why then does the Church want to continue His
sacrifice? He died “once for all” (Hebrews 7:27, 9:12, 9:26, 9:28, 10:10).
How then can the Church say that each
offering of the Sacrifice of the Mass appeases the wrath of God?
The Lord “entered
the holy place once for all, having obtained eternal redemption” (Hebrews 9:12).
Why then does the Church seek to continually
re-present Christ in His victimhood to the Father? The Lord is not in a state
of victimhood. He is the risen, glorified, crowned King of Glory.
Rome’s theologians, you can be sure, have
responses to each of these questions.
But don’t expect any simple or
straightforward answers.
While writing The Gospel According to Rome, I
asked Michael, a scholarly colleague with advanced theological degrees, to
critique the section of the manuscript that reviewed the Church’s rebuttal to
criticism of the Mass.
About to complete a doctorate in biblical
Hebrew at a leading university, I was confident that, if anyone could make
sense of them, it was Michael.
I was expecting him to carefully analyze each
response, delving into the finer points of theology.
To my amazement, he simply wrote in the
margin, “WHAT A BUNCH OF HOOEY!”
Michael was right. Rome’s explanation of the
glaring contradictions of the Mass amount to nothing more than mystical
mumbo-jumbo and high-sounding nonsense.
Even more distressing is the way the Church
distorts the Scriptures in an attempt to provide a biblical basis for the Mass.
Take, for example, the following reference to
the Mass in Pope John Paul II’s recent best-seller, Crossing the Threshold of
Hope:
. . . the Church is
the instrument of man’s salvation. It both contains and continually draws upon
the mystery of Christ’s redemptive sacrifice. Through the shedding of His own
blood, Jesus Christ constantly “enters into God’s sanctuary thus obtaining
eternal redemption”
(cf.
Hebrews 9:12).
— Pope
John Paul II
Here the Pope actually changes the
Scriptures. Though he modifies the wording of Hebrews 9:12, he puts his new
version in quotation marks and retains the reference, suggesting that it
compares well to the original.
Three alterations, however, have so distorted
the meaning of the verse that the Pope’s new version teaches the very opposite
of what the original did.
Before examining how the verse has been
changed and why the Pope would want to modify it, consider first the original
meaning of the verse and its context.
At Mount Sinai God showed Moses a tabernacle
in heaven, and instructed him to build a similar tabernacle on earth, carefully
following its pattern (Exodus
25:9, 40; Acts 7:44; Hebrews 8:5).
It was to be a rectangular tent with a single
entryway and no windows. Inside a curtain was to divide the structure into a
large outer room and a smaller inner room.
The earthly tabernacle was to serve as the
focal point of Israel’s worship (Exodus 25:8; 29:42).
Each day Jewish priests were to enter its
outer room and perform various duties (Exodus 30:7-8; Leviticus 4:18, 24:1-9).
Once a year on the Day of Atonement the
Jewish high priest was to enter the inner room, presenting the blood of sin
offerings to make atonement for himself and for the nation (Leviticus 16:1-34).
In front of the tabernacle, God told Moses to
construct a bronze altar upon which the priests were to continually offer
animal sacrifices (Numbers
28-29).
Hebrews 9 reviews many of these details.
There the emphasis is placed on the frequency with which the Jewish priests
were to enter the tabernacle to perform their duties:
“Now when these
things have been thus prepared, the priests are continually entering the outer
tabernacle, performing the divine worship, but into the second only the high
priest enters, once a year, not without taking blood, which he offers for
himself and for the sins of the people committed in ignorance.” — Hebrews 9:6-7
(emphasis added)
The verses that follow contrast the continual
and yearly ministry of the Jewish priests in the earthly tabernacle with the
once for all ministry of the Lord Jesus in the heavenly tabernacle.
“But when Christ
appeared as a high priest of the good things to come, He entered through the
greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made with hands, that is to say, not
of this creation; and not through the blood of goats and calves, but through
His own blood, He entered the holy place once for all, having obtained eternal
redemption.”
— Hebrews
9:11-12 (emphasis added)
These verses speak of an event following the
crucifixion when the Lord Jesus entered into the presence of God in the
heavenly tabernacle.
There He presented His shed blood on our
behalf (Hebrews
9:24-25).
Unlike the Jewish priests, however, who “are
continually entering” (Hebrews
9:6) and
the high priest who “enters once a year” (Hebrews 9:7), the Lord Jesus, our
High Priest, entered the holy place of the heavenly tabernacle “once for
all, having obtained eternal redemption” (Hebrews 9:12).
Only one presentation of His blood was
necessary for God accepted it as the perfect and complete satisfaction for our
sins.
Now consider how Pope John Paul II has
altered the meaning of Hebrews 9:12.
He writes that “… Jesus
Christ constantly ‘enters into God’s sanctuary thus obtaining eternal
redemption’” (cf.
Hebrews 9:12).
Three changes are apparent.
The original text of Hebrews 9:12 says that
Christ “entered” God’s sanctuary.
The Greek verb is in the indicative mood and
the aorist tense. This portrays Christ’s entrance into the heavenly sanctuary
as an event in past time, freezing the action as if taking a snapshot of it.
The Pope changes the verb to the present
tense, writing that Christ “enters into God’s sanctuary.”
This makes Christ’s entrance an event that is
now occurring, viewing the action as something that is in progress.
Further distorting the meaning of the verse,
the Pope introduces it with the word constantly, writing that “… Jesus Christ
constantly ‘enters into God’s sanctuary’ (cf. Hebrews 9:12).”
The verse, however,
says that Christ “entered the holy place once for all" (Hebrews 9:11).
In Hebrews 9 it is the Jewish priests who are
constantly entering into the tabernacle.
This is contrasted with the Lord Jesus who entered
only once.
Finally, John Paul changes the ending of the
verse to teach that by constantly entering the heavenly sanctuary Jesus Christ
is “‘thus obtaining eternal redemption’” (cf. Hebrews 9:12).
The Bible says that Christ entered the holy
place once for all, “having obtained eternal redemption.”
The work of redemption is finished, not
ongoing.
Now why would the Pope want to change the
Scriptures?
Why would he want his
readers to think that the Bible teaches that Christ “constantly ‘enters into
God’s sanctuary thus obtaining eternal redemption’” instead of what it
actually teaches, that Christ “entered the holy place once for all, having
obtained eternal redemption”?
Why? Because Rome holds that Christ must be
constantly re-presented in His victimhood to God through the Mass for our salvation.
With each offering of the Mass, some 120
million times a year, the Church says that “the work of our redemption is
continually carried out.”
The Pope, not finding Hebrews 9:12 to his
liking, simply changed it. This was not a slip of the pen, but a calculated
alteration of God’s Word to make the Sacrifice of the Mass appear biblical.
Adapted
from Conversations with Catholics by James G. McCarthy (Harvest House
Publishers: Eugene, 1997)
For
more than 37 years The John Ankerberg Show has offered Real Answers
to Real Questions and presented and defended the Christian faith. In all areas
of ministry and through a variety of media outlets, our mission is to provide
answers to tough theological questions in order to proclaim biblical
truth, encourage the believer, and challenge the skeptic.
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