ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PAUL VI
ON THE HOLY EUCHARIST
SEPTEMBER 3, 1965
To His Venerable Brothers the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops and
other Local Ordinaries in Peace and Communion with the Apostolic See, and to
the Clergy and Faithful of the Entire World.
Venerable Brothers and Dear Sons, Health and Apostolic Benediction.
The Mystery of Faith, that is, the ineffable gift of the Eucharist that the
Catholic Church received from Christ, her Spouse, as a pledge of His immense
love, is something that she has always devoutly guarded as her most precious
treasure, and during the Second Vatican Council she professed her faith and
veneration in a new and solemn declaration. In dealing with the restoration
of the sacred liturgy, the Fathers of the Council were led by their pastoral
concern for the whole Church to regard it as a matter of highest importance
to urge the faithful to participate actively, with undivided faith and the
utmost devotion, in the celebration of this Most Holy Mystery, to offer it
to God along with the priest as a sacrifice for their own salvation and that
of the whole world, and to use it as spiritual nourishment.
2. For if the sacred liturgy holds first place in the life of the Church,
then the Eucharistic Mystery stands at the heart and center of the liturgy,
since it is the font of life that cleanses us and strengthens us to live not
for ourselves but for God and to be united to each other by the closest ties
of love.
Reaffirmation by Vatican II
3. In order to make the indissoluble bond that exists between faith and
devotion perfectly clear, the Fathers of the Council decided, in the course
of reaffirming the doctrine that the Church has always held and taught and
that was solemnly defined by the Council of Trent, to offer the following
compendium of truths as an introduction to their treatment of the Most Holy
Mystery of the Eucharist:
4. "At the Last Supper, on the night when He was betrayed, our Savior
instituted the Eucharistic Sacrifice of His Body and Blood. He did this in
order to perpetuate the Sacrifice of the Cross throughout the centuries
until He should come again, and so to entrust to His beloved Spouse, the
Church, a memorial of His Death and Resurrection: a sacrament of love, a
sign of unity, a bond of charity, a paschal banquet in which Christ is eaten,
the mind is filled with grace, and a pledge of future glory is given to us.''
Both Sacrifice and Sacrament Highlighted
5. These words highlight both the sacrifice, which pertains to the essence
of the Mass that is celebrated daily, and the sacrament in which those who
participate in it through holy Communion eat the flesh of Christ and drink
the blood of Christ, and thus receive grace, which is the beginning of
eternal life, and the "medicine of immortality" according to Our Lord's
words: "The man who eats my flesh and drinks my blood enjoys eternal life,
and I will raise him up on the last day." (2)
Restoration of Liturgy Linked to Eucharistic Devotion
6. And so We earnestly hope that the restoration of the sacred liturgy will
produce abundant fruits in the form of Eucharistic devotion, so that the
Holy Church may, with this salvific sign of piety raised on high, make daily
progress toward the full achievement of unity, (3) inviting all Christians
to a unity of faith and love and drawing them to it gently, through the
action of divine grace.
7. We seem to have a preview of these fruits and a first taste of them in
the outpouring of joy and eagerness that has marked the reception the sons
of the Catholic Church have accorded to the Constitution on the Sacred
Liturgy and to the restoration of the liturgy; and we find these fruits too
in the large number of carefully-edited publications that make it their
purpose to go into the doctrine of the Holy Eucharist more profoundly and to
come to a more fruitful understanding of it, especially in terms of its
relationship to the mystery of the Church.
8. All of this brings Us deep consolation and joy. And it gives Us great
pleasure to inform you of this, Venerable Brothers, so that you may join
with Us in giving thanks to God, the bestower of all gifts, who rules the
Church and makes her grow in virtue through His Spirit.
REASONS FOR PASTORAL CONCERN AND ANXIETY
9. There are, however, Venerable Brothers, a number of reasons for serious
pastoral concern and anxiety in this very matter that we are now discussing,
and because of Our consciousness of Our Apostolic office, We cannot remain
silent about them.
False and Disturbing Opinions
10. For We can see that some of those who are dealing with this Most Holy
Mystery in speech and writing are disseminating opinions on Masses
celebrated in private or on the dogma of transubstantiation that are
disturbing the minds of the faithful and causing them no small measure of
confusion about matters of faith, just as if it were all right for someone
to take doctrine that has already been defined by the Church and consign it
to oblivion or else interpret it in such a way as to weaken the genuine
meaning of the words or the recognized force of the concepts involved.
11. To give an example of what We are talking about, it is not permissible
to extol the so-called "community" Mass in such a way as to detract from
Masses that are celebrated privately; or to concentrate on the notion of
sacramental sign as if the symbolism—which no one will deny is certainly
present in the Most Blessed Eucharist—fully expressed and exhausted the
manner of Christ's presence in this Sacrament; or to discuss the mystery of
transubstantiation without mentioning what the Council of Trent had to say
about the marvelous conversion of the whole substance of the bread into the
Body and the whole substance of the wine into the Blood of Christ, as if
they involve nothing more than "transignification," or "transfinalization"
as they call it; or, finally, to propose and act upon the opinion that
Christ Our Lord is no longer present in the consecrated Hosts that remain
after the celebration of the sacrifice of the Mass has been completed.
12. Everyone can see that the spread of these and similar opinions does
great harm to belief in and devotion to the Eucharist.
Purpose of the Encyclical
13. And so, with the aim of seeing to it that the hope to which the Council
has given rise—that a new wave of Eucharistic devotion will sweep over the
Church—not be reduced to nil through the sowing of the seeds of false
opinions, We have decided to use Our apostolic authority and speak Our mind
to you on this subject, Venerable Brothers.
14. We certainly do not deny that those who are spreading these strange
opinions are making a praiseworthy effort to investigate this lofty Mystery
and to set forth its inexhaustible riches and to make it more understandable
to the men of today; rather, We acknowledge this and We approve of it. But
We cannot approve the opinions that they set forth, and We have an
obligation to warn you about the grave danger that these opinions involve
for true faith.
HOLY EUCHARIST A MYSTERY OF FAITH
15. First of all, We want to recall something that you know very well but
that is absolutely necessary if the virus of every kind of rationalism is to
be repelled; it is something that many illustrious martyrs have witnessed to
with their blood, something that celebrated fathers and Doctors of the
Church have constantly professed and taught. We mean the fact that the
Eucharist is a very great mystery—in fact, properly speaking and in the
words of the Sacred Liturgy, the mystery of faith. "It contains within it,"
as Leo XIII, Our predecessor of happy memory, very wisely remarked, "all
supernatural realities in a remarkable richness and variety of miracles."
(4)
Relying on Revelation, Not Reason
16. And so we must approach this mystery in particular with humility and
reverence, not relying on human reasoning, which ought to hold its peace,
but rather adhering firmly to divine Revelation.
17. St. John Chrysostom who, as you know, dealt with the Mystery of the
Eucharist in such eloquent language and with such insight born of devotion,
had these most fitting words to offer on one occasion when he was
instructing his faithful about this mystery: "Let us submit to God in all
things and not contradict Him, even if what He says seems to contradict our
reason and intellect; let His word prevail over our reason and intellect.
Let us act in this way with regard to the Eucharistic mysteries, and not
limit our attention just to what can be perceived by the senses, but instead
hold fast to His words. For His word cannot deceive." (5)
18. The scholastic Doctors made similar statements on more than one occasion.
As St. Thomas says, the fact that the true body and the true blood of Christ
are present in this Sacrament "cannot be apprehended by the senses but only
by faith, which rests upon divine authority. This is why Cyril comments upon
the words, This is my body which is delivered up for you, in Luke 22, 19, in
this way: Do not doubt that this is true; instead accept the words of the
Savior in faith; for since He is truth, He cannot tell a lie." (6)
19. Hence the Christian people often follow the lead of St. Thomas and sing
the words: "Sight, touch and taste in Thee are each deceived; The ear alone
most safely is believed. I believe all the Son of God has spoken; Than
truth's own word, there is no truer token."
20. And St. Bonaventure declares: "There is no difficulty over Christ's
being present in the sacrament as in a sign; the great difficulty is in the
fact that He is really in the sacrament, as He is in heaven. And so
believing this is especially meritorious. " (7)
Example of the Apostles
21. Moreover, the Holy Gospel alludes to this when it tells of the many
disciples of Christ who turned away and left Our Lord, after hearing Him
speak of eating His flesh and drinking His blood. "This is strange talk,"
they said. "Who can be expected to listen to it" Peter, on the contrary,
replied to Jesus' question as to whether the twelve wanted to go away too by
promptly and firmly expressing his own faith and that of the other Apostles
in these marvelous words: "Lord, to whom should we go? Thy words are the
words of eternal life." (8)
22. It is only logical, then, for us to follow the magisterium of the Church
as a guiding star in carrying on our investigations into this mystery, for
the Divine Redeemer has entrusted the safeguarding and the explanation of
the written or transmitted word of God to her. And we are convinced that "whatever
has been preached and believed throughout the whole Church with true
Catholic faith since the days of antiquity is true, even if it not be
subject to rational investigation, and even if it not be explained in words."
(9)
Proper Wording of Great Importance
23. But this is not enough. Once the integrity of the faith has been
safeguarded, then it is time to guard the proper way of expressing it, lest
our careless use of words give rise, God forbid, to false opinions regarding
faith in the most sublime things. St. Augustine gives a stern warning about
this when he takes up the matter of the different ways of speaking that are
employed by the philosophers on the one hand and that ought to be used by
Christians on the other. "The philosophers," he says, "use words freely, and
they have no fear of offending religious listeners in dealing with subjects
that are difficult to understand. But we have to speak in accordance with a
fixed rule, so that a lack of restraint in speech on our part may not give
rise to some irreverent opinion about the things represented by the words.''
(l0)
24. And so the rule of language which the Church has established through the
long labor of centuries, with the help of the Holy Spirit, and which she has
confirmed with the authority of the Councils, and which has more than once
been the watchword and banner of orthodox faith, is to be religiously
preserved, and no one may presume to change it at his own pleasure or under
the pretext of new knowledge. Who would ever tolerate that the dogmatic
formulas used by the ecumenical councils for the mysteries of the Holy
Trinity and the Incarnation be judged as no longer appropriate for men of
our times, and let others be rashly substituted for them? In the same way,
it cannot be tolerated that any individual should on his own authority take
something away from the formulas which were used by the Council of Trent to
propose the Eucharistic Mystery for our belief. These formulas—like the
others that the Church used to propose the dogmas of faith—express concepts
that are not tied to a certain specific form of human culture, or to a
certain level of scientific progress, or to one or another theological
school. Instead they set forth what the human mind grasps of reality through
necessary and universal experience and what it expresses in apt and exact
words, whether it be in ordinary or more refined language. For this reason,
these formulas are adapted to all men of all times and all places.
Greater Clarity of Expression Always Possible
25. They can, it is true, be made clearer and more obvious; and doing this
is of great benefit. But it must always be done in such a way that they
retain the meaning in which they have been used, so that with the advance of
an understanding of the faith, the truth of faith will remain unchanged. For
it is the teaching of the First Vatican Council that "the meaning that Holy
Mother the Church has once declared, is to be retained forever, and no
pretext of deeper understanding ever justifies any deviation from that
meaning." (11)
EUCHARISTIC MYSTERY IN SACRIFICE OF THE MASS
26. For the joy and edification of everyone, We would like to review with
you, Venerable Brothers, the doctrine on the Mystery of the Eucharist that
has been handed down, and that the Catholic Church holds and teaches with
unanimity.
Re-enactment at Heart of Doctrine
27. It is a good idea to recall at the very outset what may be termed the
heart and core of the doctrine, namely that, by means of the Mystery of the
Eucharist, the Sacrifice of the Cross which was once carried out on Calvary
is re-enacted in wonderful fashion and is constantly recalled, and its
salvific power is applied to the forgiving of the sins we commit each day."
(12)
28. just as Moses made the Old Testament sacred with the blood of calves,
(13) so too Christ the Lord took the New Testament, of which He is the
Mediator, and made it sacred through His own blood, in instituting the
mystery of the Eucharist. For, as the Evangelists narrate, at the Last
Supper "he took bread, and blessed and broke it, and gave it to them, saying,
This is my body, given for you; do this for a commemoration of me. And so
with the cup, when supper was ended, This cup, he said, is the new testament,
in my Blood which is to be shed for you." (l4) And by bidding the Apostles
to do this in memory of Him, He made clear that He wanted it to be forever
repeated. This intention of Christ was faithfully carried out by the
primitive Church through her adherence to the teaching of the Apostles and
through her gatherings to celebrate the Eucharistic Sacrifice. As St. Luke
is careful to point out, "They occupied themselves continually with the
Apostles' teaching, their fellowship in the breaking of bread, and the fixed
times of prayer." (l5) The faithful used to derive such spiritual fervor
from this practice that it was said of them that "there was one heart and
soul in all the company of the believers." (16)
New Offering of the New Testament
29. Moreover, the Apostle Paul, who faithfully transmitted to us what he had
received from the Lord, (17) is clearly speaking of the Eucharistic
Sacrifice when he points out that Christians ought not take part in pagan
sacrifices, precisely because they have been made partakers of the table of
the Lord. "Is not this cup we bless," he says, "a participation in Christ's
Blood? Is not the Bread we break a participation in Christ's Body? . . . To
drink the Lord's cup, and yet to drink the cup of evil spirits, to share the
Lord's feast, and to share the feast of evil spirits, is impossible for you."
(18) Foreshadowed by Malachias, (19) this new oblation of the New Testament
has always been offered by the Church, in accordance with the teaching of
Our Lord and the Apostles, "not only to atone for the sins and punishments
and satisfactions of the living faithful and to appeal for their other needs,
but also to help those who have died in Christ but have not yet been
completely purified." (20)
Offered Also for the Dead
30. We will pass over the other citations and rest content with recalling
the testimony offered by St. Cyril of Jerusalem, who wrote the following
memorable words for the neophytes whom he was instructing in the Christian
faith: "After the spiritual sacrifice, the un-bloody act of worship, has
been completed, we bend over this propitiatory offering and beg God to grant
peace to all the Churches, to give harmony to the whole world, to bless our
rulers, our soldiers and our companions, to aid the sick and afflicted, and
in general to assist all those who stand in need; we all pray for all these
intentions and we offer this victim for them . . . and last of all for our
deceased holy forefathers and bishops and for all those who have lived among
us. For we have a deep conviction that great help will be afforded those
souls for whom prayers are offered while this holy and awesome victim is
present." In support of this, this holy Doctor offers the example of a crown
made for an emperor in order to win a pardon for some exiles, and he
concludes his talk with these words: "In the same fashion, when we offer our
prayers to God for the dead, even those who are sinners, we are not just
making a crown but instead are offering Christ who was slaughtered for our
sins, and thus begging the merciful God to take pity both on them and on
ourselves.'' (21) St. Augustine attests that this custom of offering the "sacrifice
which ransomed us" also for the dead was observed in the Church at Rome,
(22) and he mentions at the same time that the universal Church observed
this custom as something handed down from the Fathers. (23)
The Universal Priesthood
31. But there is something else that We would like to add that is very
helpful in shedding light on the mystery of the Church; We mean the fact
that the whole Church plays the role of priest and victim along with Christ,
offering the Sacrifice of the Mass and itself completely offered in it. The
Fathers of the Church taught this wondrous doctrine. (24) A few years ago
Our predecessor of happy memory, Pius XII, explained it. (25) And only
recently the Second Vatican Council reiterated it in its Constitution on the
Church, in dealing with the people of God. (26) To be sure, the distinction
between the universal priesthood and the hierarchical priesthood is
something essential and not just a matter of degree, and it has to be
maintained in a proper way. (27) Yet We cannot help being filled with an
earnest desire to see this teaching explained over and over until it takes
deep root in the hearts of the faithful. For it is a most effective means of
fostering devotion to the Eucharist, of extolling the dignity of all the
faithful, and of spurring them on to reach the heights of sanctity, which
means the total and generous offering of oneself to the service of the
Divine Majesty.
No Mass is "Private"
32. It is also only fitting for us to recall the conclusion that can be
drawn from this about "the public and social nature of each and every Mass."
(28) For each and every Mass is not something private, even if a priest
celebrates it privately; instead, it is an act of Christ and of the Church.
In offering this sacrifice, the Church learns to offer herself as a
sacrifice for all and she applies the unique and infinite redemptive power
of the sacrifice of the Cross to the salvation of the whole world. For every
Mass that is celebrated is being offered not just for the salvation of
certain people, but also for the salvation of the whole world. The
conclusion from this is that even though active participation by many
faithful is of its very nature particularly fitting when Mass is celebrated,
still there is no reason to criticize but rather only to approve a Mass that
a priest celebrates privately for a good reason in accordance with the
regulations and legitimate traditions of the Church, even when only a server
to make the responses is present. For such a Mass brings a rich and abundant
treasure of special graces to help the priest himself, the faithful, the
whole Church and the whole world toward salvation—and this same abundance of
graces is not gained through mere reception of Holy Communion.
33. And so, We recommend from a paternal and solicitous heart that priests,
who constitute Our greatest joy and Our crown in the Lord, be mindful of the
power they have received from the bishop who ordained them—the power of
offering sacrifice to God and of celebrating Mass for the living and for the
dead in the name of the Lord. (79) We recommend that they celebrate Mass
daily in a worthy and devout fashion, so that they themselves and the rest
of the faithful may enjoy the benefits that flow in such abundance from the
Sacrifice of the Cross. In doing so, they will also be making a great
contribution toward the salvation of mankind.
CHRIST SACRAMENTALLY PRESENT IN THE SACRIFICE OF THE MASS
34. The few things that We have touched upon concerning the Sacrifice of the
Mass encourage Us to say something about the Sacrament of the Eucharist,
since both Sacrifice and Sacrament pertain to the same mystery and cannot be
separated from each other. The Lord is immolated in an unbloody way in the
Sacrifice of the Mass and He re-presents the sacrifice of the Cross and
applies its salvific power at the moment when he becomes sacramentally
present— through the words of consecration—as the spiritual food of the
faithful, under the appearances of bread and wine.
Various Ways in Which Christ is Present
35. All of us realize that there is more than one way in which Christ is
present in His Church. We want to go into this very joyful subject, which
the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy presented briefly, (30) at somewhat
greater length. Christ is present in His Church when she prays, since He is
the one who "prays for us and prays in us and to whom we pray: He prays for
us as our priest, He prays in us as our head, He is prayed to by us as our
God" (31); and He is the one who has promised, "Where two or three are
gathered together in my name, I am there in the midst of them." (32) He is
present in the Church as she performs her works of mercy, not just because
whatever good we do to one of His least brethren we do to Christ Himself,
(33)but also because Christ is the one who performs these works through the
Church and who continually helps men with His divine love. He is present in
the Church as she moves along on her pilgrimage with a longing to reach the
portals of eternal life, for He is the one who dwells in our hearts through
faith, (34) and who instills charity in them through the Holy Spirit whom He
gives to us. (35)
36. In still another very genuine way, He is present in the Church as she
preaches, since the Gospel which she proclaims is the word of God, and it is
only in the name of Christ, the Incarnate Word of God, and by His authority
and with His help that it is preached, so that there might be "one flock
resting secure in one shepherd." (36)
37. He is present in His Church as she rules and governs the People of God,
since her sacred power comes from Christ and since Christ, the "Shepherd of
Shepherds," (37) is present in the bishops who exercise that power, in
keeping with the promise He made to the Apostles.
38. Moreover, Christ is present in His Church in a still more sublime manner
as she offers the Sacrifice of the Mass in His name; He is present in her as
she administers the sacraments. On the matter of Christ's presence in the
offering of the Sacrifice of the Mass, We would like very much to call what
St. John Chrysostom, overcome with awe, had to say in such accurate and
eloquent words: "I wish to add something that is clearly awe-inspiring, but
do not be surprised or upset. What is this? It is the same offering, no
matter who offers it, be it Peter or Paul. It is the same one that Christ
gave to His disciples and the same one that priests now perform: the latter
is in no way inferior to the former, for it is not men who sanctify the
latter, but He who sanctified the former. For just as the words which God
spoke are the same as those that the priest now pronounces, so too the
offering is the same." (38) No one is unaware that the sacraments are the
actions of Christ who administers them through men. And so the sacraments
are holy in themselves and they pour grace into the soul by the power of
Christ, when they touch the body. The Highest Kind of Presence.
These various ways in which Christ is present fill the mind with
astonishment and offer the Church a mystery for her contemplation. But there
is another way in which Christ is present in His Church, a way that
surpasses all the others. It is His presence in the Sacrament of the
Eucharist, which is, for this reason, "a more consoling source of devotion,
a lovelier object of contemplation and holier in what it contains" (39) than
all the other sacraments; for it contains Christ Himself and it is "a kind
of consummation of the spiritual life, and in a sense the goal of all the
sacraments." (40)
39. This presence is called "real" not to exclude the idea that the others
are "real" too, but rather to indicate presence par excellence, because it
is substantial and through it Christ becomes present whole and entire, God
and man. (41) And so it would be wrong for anyone to try to explain this
manner of presence by dreaming up a so-called "pneumatic" nature of the
glorious body of Christ that would be present everywhere; or for anyone to
limit it to symbolism, as if this most sacred Sacrament were to consist in
nothing more than an efficacious sign "of the spiritual presence of Christ
and of His intimate union with the faithful, the members of His Mystical
Body." (42)
The Proper Use of Symbolism
40. It is true that the Fathers and Scholastics had a great deal to say
about symbolism in the Eucharist, especially with regard to the unity of the
Church. The Council of Trent, in re-stating their doctrine, taught that our
Saviour bequeathed the Eucharist to His Church "as a symbol . . . of the
unity and charity with which He wished all Christians to be joined among
themselves," "and hence as a symbol of that one Body of which He is the
Head." (43)
41. When Christian literature was still in its infancy, the unknown author
of the work called the "Didache or Teaching of the Twelve Apostles" had this
to write on the subject: "As far as the Eucharist is concerned, give thanks
in this manner: . . . just as this bread had been broken and scattered over
the hills and was made one when it was gathered together, so too may your
church be gathered into your kingdom from the ends of the earth." (44)
42. St. Cyprian too, in the course of laying stress on the Church's unity in
opposition to schism, said this: "Finally the Lord's sacrifices proclaim the
unity of Christians who are bound together by a firm and unshakeable
charity. For when the Lord calls the bread that has been made from many
grains of wheat His Body, He is describing our people whose unity He has
sustained; and when He refers to wine pressed from many grapes and berries
as His Blood, once again He is speaking of our flock which has been formed
by fusing many into one." (45)
43. But before all of these, St. Paul had written to the Corinthians: "The
one bread makes us one body, though we are many in number; the same bread is
shared by all." (46)
Symbolism Inadequate to Express Real Presence
44. While Eucharistic symbolism is well suited to helping us understand the
effect that is proper to this Sacrament—the unity of the Mystical Body—still
it does not indicate or explain what it is that makes this Sacrament
different from all the others. For the constant teaching that the Catholic
Church has passed on to her catechumens, the understanding of the Christian
people, the doctrine defined by the Council of Trent, the very words that
Christ used when He instituted the Most Holy Eucharist, all require us to
profess that "the Eucharist is the flesh of Our Savior Jesus Christ which
suffered for our sins and which the Father in His loving kindness raised
again." (47) To these words of St. Ignatius, we may well add those which
Theodore of Mopsuestia, who is a faithful witness to the faith of the Church
on this point, addressed to the people: "The Lord did not say: This is
symbol of my body, and this is a symbol of my blood, but rather: This is my
body and my blood. He teaches us not to look to the nature of what lies
before us and is perceived by the senses, because the giving of thanks and
the words spoken over it have changed it into flesh and blood." (45)
45. The Council of Trent, basing itself on this faith of the Church, "openly
and sincerely professes that after the consecration of the bread and wine,
Our Lord Jesus Christ, true God and man, is really, truly and substantially
contained in the Blessed Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist under the outward
appearances of sensible things." And so Our Savior is present in His
humanity not only in His natural manner of existence at the right hand of
the Father, but also at the same time in the sacrament of the Eucharist "in
a manner of existing that we can hardly express in words but that our minds,
illumined by faith, can come to see as possible to God and that we must most
firmly believe." (49)
CHRIST PRESENT IN THE EUCHARIST THROUGH TRANSUBSTANTIATION
46. To avoid any misunderstanding of this type of presence, which goes
beyond the laws of nature and constitutes the greatest miracle of its kind,
(50) we have to listen with docility to the voice of the teaching and
praying Church. Her voice, which constantly echoes the voice of Christ,
assures us that the way in which Christ becomes present in this Sacrament is
through the conversion of the whole substance of the bread into His body and
of the whole substance of the wine into His blood, a unique and truly
wonderful conversion that the Catholic Church fittingly and properly calls
transubstantiation. (51) As a result of transubstantiation, the species of
bread and wine undoubtedly take on a new signification and a new finality,
for they are no longer ordinary bread and wine but instead a sign of
something sacred and a sign of spiritual food; but they take on this new
signification, this new finality, precisely because they contain a new "reality"
which we can rightly call ontological. For what now lies beneath the
aforementioned species is not what was there before, but something
completely different; and not just in the estimation of Church belief but in
reality, since once the substance or nature of the bread and wine has been
changed into the body and blood of Christ, nothing remains of the bread and
the wine except for the species—beneath which Christ is present whole and
entire in His physical "reality," corporeally present, although not in the
manner in which bodies are in a place.
Writings of the Fathers
47. This is why the Fathers felt they had a solemn duty to warn the faithful
that, in reflecting upon this most sacred Sacrament, they should not pay
attention to the senses, which report only the properties of bread and wine,
but rather to the words of Christ, which have power great enough to change,
transform, "transelementize" the bread and wine into His body and blood. As
a matter of fact, as the same Fathers point out on more than one occasion,
the power that does this is the same power of Almighty God that created the
whole universe out of nothing at the beginning of time.
48. "Instructed as you are in these matters," says St. Cyril of Jerusalem,
at the end of a sermon on the mysteries of the faith, "and filled with an
unshakeable faith that what seems to be bread is not bread—though it tastes
like it—but rather the Body of Christ; and that what seems to be wine is not
wine—even though it too tastes like it—but rather the Blood of Christ . . .
draw strength from receiving this bread as spiritual food and your soul will
rejoice." (52)
49. St. John Chrysostom insists upon the same point with these words: "It is
not man who makes what is put before him the Body and Blood of Christ, but
Christ Himself who was crucified for us. The priest standing there in the
place of Christ says these words, but their power and grace are from God.
This is my Body, he says, and these words transform what lies before him."
(53)
50. Cyril, the Bishop of Alexandria, is in wonderful harmony with John, the
Bishop of Constantinople, when he writes in his commentary on the Gospel of
St. Matthew: "He said This is my body and this is my blood in a
demonstrative fashion, so that you might not judge that what you see is a
mere figure; instead the offerings are truly changed by the hidden power of
God Almighty into Christ's body and blood, which bring us the life-giving
and sanctifying power of Christ when we share in them." (54)
51. Ambrose, the Bishop of Milan, in a clear statement on the Eucharistic
conversion, has this to say: "Let us be assured that this is not what nature
formed but what the blessing has consecrated; and there is greater power in
the blessing and in nature, since nature itself is changed through the
blessing." To confirm the truth of this mystery, he recounts many of the
miracles described in the Sacred Scriptures, including Christ's birth of the
Virgin Mary, and then he turns his mind to the work of creation, concluding
this way: "Surely the word of Christ, who could make something that did not
exist out of nothing, can change things that do exist into something they
were not before. For it is no less extraordinary to give new natures to
things than it is to change nature." (55)
Constant Teaching of the Popes and the Councils
52. But this is no time for assembling a long list of evidence. Instead, We
would rather recall the firmness of faith and complete unanimity that the
Church displayed in opposing Berengarius who gave in to certain difficulties
raised by human reasoning and first dared to deny the Eucharistic
conversion. More than once she threatened to condemn him unless he
retracted. Thus it was that Our predecessor, St. Gregory VII, commanded him
to swear to the following oath: "I believe in my heart and openly profess
that the bread and wine that are placed on the altar are, through the
mystery of the sacred prayer and the words of the Redeemer, substantially
changed into the true and proper and lifegiving flesh and blood of Jesus
Christ our Lord, and that after the consecration they are the true body of
Christ—which was born of the Virgin and which hung on the Cross as an
offering for the salvation of the world—and the true blood of Christ—which
flowed from His side—and not just as a sign and by reason of the power of
the sacrament, but in the very truth and reality of their substance and in
what is proper to their nature." (56)
53. We have a wonderful example of the stability of the Catholic faith in
the way in which these words meet with such complete agreement in the
constant teaching of the Ecumenical Councils of the Lateran, Constance,
Florence and Trent on the mystery of the Eucharistic conversion, whether it
be contained in their explanations of the teaching of the Church or in their
condemnations of error.
54. After the Council of Trent, Our predecessor, Pius VI, issued a serious
warning, on the occasion of the errors of the Synod of Pistoia, that parish
priests not neglect to speak of transubstantiation, which is listed among
the articles of the faith, in the course of carrying out their office of
teaching. (57) Similarly, Our Predecessor of happy memory, Pius XII,
recalled the bounds beyond which those who were carrying on subtle
discussion of the mystery of transubstantiation might not pass; (58) and We
Ourself, at the National Eucharistic Congress that was recently celebrated
at Pisa, bore open and solemn witness to the faith of the Church, in
fulfillment of Our apostolic duty. (59)
55. Moreover, the Catholic Church has held firm to this belief in the
presence of Christ's Body and Blood in the Eucharist not only in her
teaching but in her life as well, since she has at all times paid this great
Sacrament the worship known as "latria," which may be given to God alone. As
St. Augustine says: "It was in His flesh that Christ walked among us and it
is His flesh that He has given us to eat for our salvation; but no one eats
of this flesh without having first adored it . . . and not only do we not
sin in thus adoring it, but we would be sinning if we did not do so." (60)
ON THE WORSHIP OF LATRIA
56. The Catholic Church has always displayed and still displays this latria
that ought to be paid to the Sacrament of the Eucharist, both during Mass
and outside of it, by taking the greatest possible care of consecrated
Hosts, by exposing them to the solemn veneration of the faithful, and by
carrying them about in processions to the joy of great numbers of the
people.
57. The ancient documents of the Church offer many evidences of this
veneration. The bishops of the Church always urged the faithful to take the
greatest possible care of the Eucharist that they had in their homes. "The
Body of Christ is meant to be eaten by the faithful, not to be treated with
irreverence," is the serious warning of St. Hippolytus. (61)
58. In fact, the faithful regarded themselves as guilty, and rightly so as
Origen recalls, if, after they had received the body of the Lord and kept it
with all reverence and caution, some part of it were to fall to the ground
through negligence. (62)
59. These same bishops were severe in reproving any lack of due reverence
that might occur. We have evidence of this from the words of Novatian, whose
testimony is trustworthy in this matter; He felt that anybody deserved to be
condemned who "came out after Sunday service bringing the Eucharist with
him, as was the custom, . . . and carried the holy body of the Lord around
with him," going off to places of amusement instead of going home. (63)
60. In fact, St. Cyril of Alexandria denounced as mad the opinion that the
Eucharist was of no use to sanctification if some of it were left over for
another day. "For Christ is not altered," he says, "and His holy body is not
changed; instead the power and force and life-giving grace of the blessing
remain in it forever." (64)
61. Nor should we forget that in ancient times the faithful—whether being
harassed by violent persecutions or living in solitude out of love for
monastic life—nourished themselves even daily on the Eucharist, by receiving
Holy Communion from their own hands when there was no priest or deacon
present. (65)
62. We are not saying this with any thought of effecting a change in the
manner of keeping the Eucharist and of receiving Holy Communion that has
been laid down by subsequent ecclesiastical laws still in force; Our
intention is that we may rejoice over the faith of the Church which is
always one and the same.
Corpus Christi, Another Instance of Latria
63. This faith also gave rise to the feast of Corpus Christi, which was
first celebrated in the diocese of Liege—especially through the efforts of
the servant of God, Blessed Juliana of Mount Cornelius—and Our predecessor,
Urban IV, established for the universal Church. It has also given rise to
many forms of Eucharistic devotion that have, through the inspiration of
God's grace, grown with each passing day. Through them the Catholic Church
is eagerly striving to pay honor to Christ and to thank Him for such a great
gift and to beg His mercy.
EXHORTATION TO FOSTERING EUCHARISTIC DEVOTION
64. And so We beseech you, Venerable Brothers, to take this faith, which
means nothing less than maintaining complete fidelity to the words of Christ
and the Apostles, and preserve it in its purity and integrity among the
people entrusted to your care and vigilance, with all false and pernicious
opinions being completely rejected; and We beseech you to foster devotion to
the Eucharist, which should be the focal point and goal of all other forms
of devotion.
65. May the faithful, thanks to your constant efforts, come to realize and
experience more and more that: "he who wants to live can find here a place
to live in and the means to live on. Let him approach, let him believe, let
him be incorporated so that he may receive life. Let him not shy away from
union with the members, let him not be a rotten member that deserves to be
cut away, nor a distorted member to be ashamed of: let him be beautiful, let
him be fitting, let him be healthy. Let him adhere to the body; let him live
for God on God: let him labor now upon earth, so that he may afterwards
reign in heaven." (66)
Daily Mass and Holy Communion
66. It is desirable to have the faithful in large numbers take an active
part in the sacrifice of the Mass each and every day and receive the
nourishment of Holy Communion with a pure and holy mind and offer fitting
thanks to Christ the Lord for such a great gift. They should remember these
words: "The desire of Jesus Christ and of the Church to see all the faithful
approach the sacred banquet each and every day is based on a wish to have
them all united to God through the Sacrament and to have them draw from it
the strength to master their passions, to wash away the lesser sins that are
committed every day and to prevent the serious sins to which human frailty
is subject." (67) And they should not forget about paying a visit during the
day to the Most Blessed Sacrament in the very special place of honor where
it is reserved in churches in keeping with the liturgical laws, since this
is a proof of gratitude and a pledge of love and a display of the adoration
that is owed to Christ the Lord who is present there.
Dignity Bestowed by Eucharist
67. No one can fail to see that the divine Eucharist bestows an incomparable
dignity upon the Christian people. For it is not just while the Sacrifice is
being offered and the Sacrament is being confected, but also after the
Sacrifice has been offered and the Sacrament confected—while the Eucharist
is reserved in churches or oratories—that Christ is truly Emmanuel, which
means "God with us." For He is in the midst of us day and night; He dwells
in us with the fullness of grace and of truth. (68) He raises the level of
morals, fosters virtue, comforts the sorrowful, strengthens the weak and
stirs up all those who draw near to Him to imitate Him, so that they may
learn from his example to be meek and humble of heart, and to seek not their
own interests but those of God. Anyone who has a special devotion to the
sacred Eucharist and who tries to repay Christ's infinite love for us with
an eager and unselfish love of his own, will experience and fully
understand—and this will bring great delight and benefit to his soul—just
how precious is a life hidden with Christ in God (69) and just how
worthwhile it is to carry on a conversation with Christ, for there is
nothing more consoling here on earth, nothing more efficacious for progress
along the paths of holiness.
68. You also realize, Venerable Brothers, that the Eucharist is reserved in
churches or oratories to serve as the spiritual center of a religious
community or a parish community, indeed of the whole Church and the whole of
mankind, since it contains, beneath the veil of the species, Christ the
invisible Head of the Church, the Redeemer of the world, the center of all
hearts, "by whom all things are and by whom we exist." (70)
69. Hence it is that devotion to the divine Eucharist exerts a great
influence upon the soul in the direction of fostering a "social" love, (71)
in which we put the common good ahead of private good, take up the cause of
the community, the parish, the universal Church, and extend our charity to
the whole world because we know that there are members of Christ everywhere.
A Sign and Cause of Unity
70. Because, Venerable Brothers, the Sacrament of the Eucharist is a sign
and cause of the unity of Christ's Mystical Body, and because it stirs up an
active "ecclesial" spirit in those who are more fervent in their Eucharistic
devotion, never stop urging your faithful, as they approach the Mystery of
the Eucharist, to learn to embrace the Church's cause as their own, to pray
to God without slackening, to offer themselves to God as an acceptable
sacrifice for the peace and unity of the Church; so that all the sons of the
Church may be united and feel united and there may be no divisions among
them but rather unity of mind and intention, as the Apostle commands. (72)
May all those who are not yet in perfect communion with the Catholic Church
and who glory in the name of Christian despite their separation from her,
come as soon as possible to share with us, through the help of God's grace,
in that unity of faith and communion that Christ wanted to be the
distinctive mark of His disciples.
A Special Task for Religious
71. This zeal at prayer and at devoting oneself to God for the sake of the
unity of the Church is something that religious, both men and women, should
regard as very specially their own since they are bound in a special way to
adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, and they have, by virtue of the vows
they have pronounced, become a kind of crown set around it here on earth.
The Tridentine Decree
72. The Church in the past has felt and still feels that nothing is more
ancient and more pleasing than the desire for the unity of all Christians,
and We want to express this in the very same words that the Council of Trent
used to conclude its decree on the Most Holy Eucharist: "In conclusion, the
Council with paternal love admonishes, exhorts, begs and implores 'through
the merciful kindness of our God (73) that each and every Christian may come
at last to full agreement in this sign of unity, in this bond of charity, in
this symbol of harmony; that they may be mindful of the great dignity and
the profound love of Our Lord Jesus Christ, who gave up His precious life as
the price of our salvation and who gave us His flesh to eat (74); and that
they may believe and adore these sacred mysteries of His body and blood with
such firm and unwavering faith, with such devotion and piety and veneration
that they will be able to receive that supersubstantial (75) bread often and
it will truly be the life of their souls and the unfailing strength of their
minds, so that 'fortified by its vigor,' (76) they may be able to move on
from this wretched earthly pilgrimage to their heavenly home where, without
any veil, they will eat the 'bread of angels' (77) that they now eat beneath
the sacred veils." (78)
73. May the all-merciful Redeemer, who shortly before His death prayed to
the Father that all who were to believe in Him might be one, just as He and
the Father are one, (79) deign to hear this most ardent prayer of Ours and
of the whole Church as quickly as possible, so that we may all celebrate the
Eucharistic Mystery with one voice and one faith, and through sharing in the
Body of Christ become one body, (80) joined together by the same bonds that
Christ wanted it to have.
A Word to the Eastern Churches
74. We also want to address with fraternal affection those who belong to the
venerable Churches of the East, which have had so many glorious Fathers
whose testimony to belief in the Eucharist We have been so glad to cite in
this present letter of Ours. Our soul is filled with great joy as We
contemplate your belief in the Eucharist, which is ours as well, as we
listen to the liturgical prayers you use to celebrate this great mystery, as
we behold your Eucharistic devotion, as we read your theological works
explaining or defending the doctrine of this most sacred Sacrament.
A Final Prayer
75. May the most blessed Virgin Mary, from whom Christ the Lord took the
flesh that "is contained, offered, received" (81) in this Sacrament under
the appearances of bread and wine, and may all the saints of God and
especially those who were more inflamed with ardent devotion toward the
divine Eucharist, intercede with the Father of mercies so that this common
belief in the Eucharist and devotion to it may give rise among all
Christians to a perfect unity of communion that will continue to flourish.
Lingering in Our mind are the words of the holy martyr Ignatius warning the
Philadelphians against the evil of divisions and schisms, the remedy for
which is to be found in the Eucharist. "Strive then," he says, "to make use
of one single thanksgiving. For there is only one flesh of Our Lord Jesus
Christ, and only one chalice unto the union of His blood, only one altar,
only one bishop . . ." (82)
76. Fortified by the most consoling hope of blessings that will accrue to
the whole Church and to the whole world from an increase in devotion to the
Eucharist, as a pledge of heavenly blessings We lovingly impart Our
apostolic blessings to you, Venerable Brothers, and to the priests,
religious and all who are helping you, as well as to all the faithful
entrusted to your care.
Given at St. Peter's, Rome, on the third day of September, the feast of Pope
St. Pius X, in the year 1965, the third of Our Pontificate.
PAUL VI
NOTES
LATIN TEXT: Acta Apostolicae Sedis, 57 (1965), 753-74.
ENGLISH TRANSLATION: The Pope Speaks, 10 (Fall, 1965), 309-28.
REFERENCES:
(1) Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, c. 2, n. 47; AAS LVI (1964), 113
[Cf. TPS IX, 325.].
(2) Jn. 6.55.
(3) Cf. Jn 17.23.
(4) Encyclical letter Mirae caritatis: Acta Leonis XIII, XXII (1902-1903)
122.
(5) Homily on Matthew, 82.4; PG 58.743.
(6) Summa Theol. III,(a) q. 75, a. 1, c.
(7) In IV Sent., dist. X, P. I, art. un., qu. I; Opera omnia, tome IV, Ad
Claras Aquas (1889), 217.
(8) Jn. 6.61-69.
(9) St. Augustine, Against Julian, VI, 5.11; PL 44.829.
(10) City of God, X, 23; PL 41.300.
(11) Dogmatic Constitution on the Catholic Faith, c. 4.
(12) Cf. Council of Trent, Teaching on the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, c. I.
(13) Cf. Ex 24.8.
(14) Lk 22.19-20; cf. Mt 26.26-28; Mk 14.22-24.
(15) Acts 2.42.
(16) Acts 4.32.
(17) 1 Cor 11.23 ff.
(18) 1 Cor 10.16.
(19) Cf. Mal 1.11.
(20) Council of Trent, Doctrine on the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, c. 2.
(21) Catecheses, 23 [myst. 5]. 8-18; PG 33.1115-1118.
(22) Cf. Confessions IX, 12.32; PL 32.777; cf. ibid. IX 11, 27; PL 32.775.
(23) Cf. Serm 172.2.; PL 38.936; cf. On the care to be taken of the dead,
13, PL 40.593.
(24) Cf. St. Augustine, City ot God, X, 6; PL 42.284.
(25) Cf. Encyclical letter Mediator Dei; AAS XXXIX (1947), 552.
(26) Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, c. 2, 11; AAS LVII (1965), 15
[Cf. TPS v. 10, p. 366.].
(27) Cf. ibid., c. 2, n. 10; AAS LVII (1965), 14 [Cf. TPS v. 10, p.
365-366.].
(28) Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, c. 1, n. 27; AAS LVI (1964), 107
[Cf. TPS IX, 322.].
(29) Cf. Roman Pontifical.
(30) Cf. c. 1, n. 7; AAS LVI (1964), 100-101.
(31) St. Augustine, On Psalm 85.1: PL 37.1081.
(32) Mt 18.20.
(33) Cf. Mt 25.40.
(34) Cf. Eph 3.17.
(35) Cf. Rom 5.5.
(36) St. Augustine, Against the Letter ot Petiliani, III, 10.11; PL 43.353.
(37) St. Augustine, On Psalm 86.3; PL 37.1102.
(38) Homily on the Second Epistle to Timothy 2.4; PG 62.612.
(39) Aegidius Romanus, Theorems on the Body of Christ, theor. 50 (Venice,
1521), p. 127.
(40) St. Thomas, Summa Theol., IIIa, p. 73, a. 3, c.
(41) Cf. Council of Trent, Decree on the Holy Eucharist, c. 3.
(42) Pius XII, Encyclical letter Humani generis; AAS XLII (1950), 578.
(43) Decree on the Holy Eucharist, Introduction and c. 2.
(44) Didachè, 9.1; F.X. Funk, Patres Apostolici, 1.20.
(45) Epistle to Magnus, 6; PL 3.1139.
(46) 1 Cor 10.17.
(47) St. Ignatius, Epistle to the Smyrnians, 7.1; PG 5.714.
(48) Commentary on Matthew, c. 26; PG 66.714.
(49) Decree on the Most Holy Eucharist, c. 1.
(50) Cf. Encyclical letter Mirae caritatis; Acta Leonis XIII, XXII
(1902-1903), 123.
(51) Cf. Council of Trent, Decree on the Most Holy Eucharist, c. 4 and canon
2.
(52) Catecheses, 22.9 [myst. 4] PG 33.1103.
(53) Homily on Judas' betrayal, 1.6; PG 49.380; cf. Homily on Matthew 82.5;
PG 58.744.
(54) On Matthew 26.27; PG 72.451.
(55) On Mysteries 9.50-52; PL 16.422-424.
(56) Mansi, Collectio amplissima Conciliorum, XX, 524D.
(57) Const. Auctorem fidei, August 28, 1794.
(58) Allocution of September 22, 1956, AAS XLVIII (1956), 720 [Cf. TPS III,
281-282.].
(59) AAS LVII (1965), 588-592.
(60) On Psalm 98.9; PL 37.1264.
(61) Apostolic Tradition; ed. Botte, La Tradition Apostolique de St.
Hippolyte, Muenster (1963), p. 84.
(62) Fragment on Exodus; PG 12.391.
(63) On Shows; CSEL III,(3) 8.
(64) Epistle to Calosyrius; PG 76.1075.
(65) Cf. Basil, Epistle 93; PG 32.483-486.
(66) St. Augustine, Treatise on John 26.13; PL 35.1613.
(67) Decree of the Sacred Congregation of the Council, December 20, 1905,
approved by St. Pius X; AAS XXXVIII (1905), 401.
(68) Cf. Jn 1.14.
(69) Cf. Col 3.3.
(70) 1 Cor 8.6.
(71) Cf. St. Augustine, On the literal interpretation of Genesis XI, 15.20;
PL 34.437.
(72) Cf. 1 Cor 1.10.
(73) Lk 1.78.
(74) .Jn 6.48 ff.
(75) Mt 6.11.
(76) 3 Kgs 19.8.
(77) Ps 77.25.
(78) Decree on the Most Holy Eucharist, c. 8.
(79) Cf.Jn 17.20-21.
(80) Cf. 1 Cor 10.17.
(81) C.I.C., canon 801.
(82) Epistle to the Philadelphians 4; PG 5.700.