The essential role of the Catholic priest

sanctus

The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
4,558
48
48
Ontario
www.poetrypoem.com
Fr John A. Hardon SJ


By now, there must be as many definitions of the priesthood as there are dictionaries in print. But in the Catholic Church, the priest exists for one main purpose: to offer the Sacrifice of the Mass.

So true is this that, without the priesthood, there would not only be no Sacrifice of the Mass. There would be no Catholic Church. This may sound strange, even exotic. But the fact of life is that God became man in order to sacrifice Himself on the Cross by dying for the salvation of the world. Having died once on Calvary, He continues offering Himself in every Mass so totally that He would be willing to die every time that Mass is offered.

It is impossible to exaggerate this identification. The Catholic Church exists mainly that the Sacrifice of the Mass may continue to be offered from thousands of altars every day, even until the end of time. True, Jesus died only once physically. But every time that Mass is offered, He is ready and willing to die and offer His life for the salvation of the world.

It is impossible to exaggerate the importance of identifying Christianity with the Cross. The human race began to sin from the time of our first parents. It has continued sinning over the centuries in every part of the world. We can safely say that God would long ago have destroyed the world because of its sin, except that the Sacrifice of the Mass had been offered by now on thousands of altars through- out the world.

People may wonder why the Catholic Church so emphasises the importance of the Mass, or why Catholics are encouraged to assist at the Mass, not only once a week, but even every day. For those who have the faith, the reason is obvious.

To begin to appreciate the importance of the Catholic priesthood, we must first understand the tragedy of sin from our first parents to the present day.

The world has been spared the penalty it deserves because God became man, dying on the Cross on Calvary to redeem a sinful mankind. But His death on Calvary has been repeated, and is being repeated every time that Mass is being offered.

But then we ask the most important question: what makes the Mass possible? The Mass is possible only because Christ's death on Calvary is literally repeated in every Mass offered on Catholic altars throughout the world. This is not indulging in rhetoric. This is the literal truth! Except for the Mass, the justified anger of God would long ago have wiped out the human race because of its multitude of sins.

How we need the Mass! But there is no Mass without the priesthood. That is why Christ instituted the Sacrament of the priesthood, to ensure that His sacrifice on Calvary would be renewed and repeated in every Mass until the end of time. It is impossible to overestimate the importance of the Mass being offered on thousands of altars every day. Except for the Mass, I repeat, the world would long ago have been destroyed because of its sins.

That is the fundamental meaning of the Sacrifice of the Mass. Its daily oblation throughout the world ensures the appeasement of God in the face of a sin-laden world.

With acknowledgement to Inter Mirafica. Fr John A. Hardon SJ, a distinguished American Jesuit, who was a prolific writer of articles and books on the Catholic faith, died on 30 December 2000.
 

BitWhys

what green dots?
Apr 5, 2006
3,157
15
38
...
That is the fundamental meaning of the Sacrifice of the Mass. Its daily oblation throughout the world ensures the appeasement of God in the face of a sin-laden world.

Egocentric stuff and institutionalized nonsense.

The sacraments are God's gift to man, not the other way around.

But go and learn what this means: 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners." - Matthew 9:13
 

sanctus

The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
4,558
48
48
Ontario
www.poetrypoem.com
Egocentric stuff and institutionalized nonsense.

The sacraments are God's gift to man, not the other way around.

But go and learn what this means: 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners." - Matthew 9:13


I was asked, can't recall who asked at the present, to define the role of the priest. Saying the Mass is his chief obligation. The Sacraments are indeed God's gift to mankind, but He gave them to the Church to administer. Don't forget that one of the 7 Sacraments is ordination, in other words the priesthood.
 

BitWhys

what green dots?
Apr 5, 2006
3,157
15
38
...Don't forget that one of the 7 Sacraments is ordination, in other words the priesthood.

So I've been told. Trust me. I won't forget. Whether the priesthood itself is indeed unique will of God makes no difference to my point, which is that the Eucharist is man's opportunity to experience the atonement personally and anew, not to effect it. The difference is not at all minor.