Chapter One
The Paschal Mystery in the Age of the Church
Article 1:
The Liturgy - Work of the Holy Trinity
I. The Father — Source and Goal of the Liturgy
1077 "Blessed be the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
who has blessed us in Christ with
every spiritual blessing in the
heavenly places, even as he chose
us in him before the foundation
of the world, that we should be
holy and blameless before him.
He destined us before him in love
to be his sons through Jesus Christ,
according to the purpose of his
will, to the praise of his glorious
grace which he freely bestowed
on us in the Beloved." (Ephesians 1:3-6)
1078 Blessing is a divine and
life-giving action, the source
of which is the Father; his blessing
is both word and gift. (eu-logia, bene-dictio) When applied
to man, the word blessing means
adoration and surrender to his
Creator in thanksgiving.
1079 From the beginning until
the end of time the whole of God's
work is a blessing. From the liturgical
poem of the first creation to
the canticles of the heavenly
Jerusalem, the inspired authors
proclaim the plan of salvation
as one vast divine blessing.
1080 From the very beginning God
blessed all living beings, especially
man and woman. The covenant with
Noah and with all living things
renewed this blessing of fruitfulness
despite man's sin which had brought
a curse on the ground. But with
Abraham, the divine blessing entered
into human history which was moving
toward death, to redirect it toward
life, toward its source. By the
faith of the father of all
believers, who embraced
the blessing, the history of salvation
is inaugurated.
1081 The divine blessings were
made manifest in astonishing and
saving events: the birth of Isaac,
the escape from Egypt (Passover
and Exodus), the gift of the promised
land, the election of David, the
presence of God in the Temple,
the purifying exile, and return
of a small remnant. The
Law, the Prophets, and the Psalms,
interwoven in the liturgy of the
Chosen People, recall these divine
blessings and at the same time
respond to them with blessings
of praise and thanksgiving.
1082 In the Church's liturgy the
divine blessing is fully revealed
and communicated. The Father is
acknowledged and adored as the
source and the end of all the
blessings of creation and salvation.
In his Word who became incarnate,
died, and rose for us, he fills
us with his blessings. Through
his Word, he pours into our hearts
the Gift that contains all gifts,
the Holy Spirit.
1083 The dual dimension of the
Christian liturgy as a response
of faith and love to the spiritual
blessings the Father bestows on
us is thus evident. On the one
hand, the Church, united with
her Lord and "in the Holy
Spirit," (Luke 10:21) blesses the Father "for
his inexpressible gift (2 Corinthians 9:15) in her
adoration, praise, and thanksgiving.
On the other hand, until the consummation
of God's plan, the Church never
ceases to present to the Father
the offering of his own gifts
and to beg him to send the Holy
Spirit upon that offering, upon
herself, upon the faithful, and
upon the whole world, so that
through communion in the death
and resurrection of Christ the
Priest, and by the power of the
Spirit, these divine blessings
will bring forth the fruits of
life to the praise of his
glorious grace. (Ephesians 1:6)
II. Christ's Work in the Liturgy
Christ glorified . . .
1084 Seated at the right
hand of the Father and pouring
out the Holy Spirit on his Body
which is the Church, Christ now
acts through the sacraments he
instituted to communicate his
grace. The sacraments are perceptible
signs (words and actions) accessible
to our human nature. By the action
of Christ and the power of the
Holy Spirit they make present
efficaciously the grace that they
signify.
1085 In the liturgy of the Church,
it is principally his own Paschal
mystery that Christ signifies
and makes present. During his
earthly life Jesus announced his
Paschal mystery by his teaching
and anticipated it by his actions.
When his Hour comes, he lives
out the unique event of history
which does not pass away: Jesus
dies, is buried, rises from the
dead, and is seated at the right
hand of the Father once
for all.
(Romans 6:10; Hebrews 7:27; 9:12; cf. John 13:1; 17:1) His Paschal mystery is a real
event that occurred in our history,
but it is unique: all other historical
events happen once, and then they
pass away, swallowed up in the
past. The Paschal mystery of Christ,
by contrast, cannot remain only
in the past, because by his death
he destroyed death, and all that
Christ is - all that he did and
suffered for all men - participates
in the divine eternity, and so
transcends all times while being
made present in them all. The
event of the Cross and Resurrection abides and draws everything toward
life.
. . . from the time of the Church
of the Apostles . . .
1086 "Accordingly, just as
Christ was sent by the Father
so also he sent the apostles,
filled with the Holy Spirit. This
he did so that they might preach
the Gospel to every creature and
proclaim that the Son of God by
his death and resurrection had
freed us from the power of Satan
and from death and brought us
into the Kingdom of his Father.
But he also willed that the work
of salvation which they preached
should be set in train through
the sacrifice and sacraments,
around which the entire liturgical
life revolves." (Vatican II, Sacrosanctum Concilium 6)
1087 Thus the risen Christ, by
giving the Holy Spirit to the
apostles, entrusted to them his
power of sanctifying: (cf. John 20:21-23) they became
sacramental signs of Christ. By
the power of the same Holy Spirit
they entrusted this power to their
successors. This apostolic
succession structures the
whole liturgical life of the Church
and is itself sacramental, handed
on by the sacrament of Holy Orders.
. . . is present in the earthly
liturgy . . .
1088 To accomplish so great
a work — the dispensation
or communication of his work of
salvation - "Christ is always
present in his Church, especially
in her liturgical celebrations.
He is present in the Sacrifice
of the Mass not only in the person
of his minister, 'the same now
offering, through the ministry
of priests, who formerly offered
himself on the cross,' but especially
in the Eucharistic species. By
his power he is present in the
sacraments so that when anybody
baptizes, it is really Christ
himself who baptizes. He is present
in his word since it is he himself
who speaks when the holy Scriptures
are read in the Church. Lastly,
he is present when the Church
prays and sings, for he has promised
'where two or three are gathered
together in my name there am I
in the midst of them."' (Vatican II, Sacrosanctum Concilium 7; Matthew 18:20)
1089 "Christ, indeed, always
associates the Church with himself
in this great work in which God
is perfectly glorified and men
are sanctified. The Church is
his beloved Bride who calls to
her Lord and through him offers
worship to the eternal Father."(Vatican II, Sacrosanctum Concilium 7)
. . . which participates in the
liturgy of heaven
1090 "In the earthly liturgy
we share in a foretaste of that
heavenly liturgy which is celebrated
in the Holy City of Jerusalem
toward which we journey as pilgrims,
where Christ is sitting at the
right hand of God, Minister of
the sanctuary and of the true
tabernacle. With all the warriors
of the heavenly army we sing a
hymn of glory to the Lord; venerating
the memory of the saints, we hope
for some part and fellowship with
them; we eagerly await the Savior,
our Lord Jesus Christ, until he,
our life, shall appear and we
too will appear with him in glory." (Vatican II, Sacrosanctum Concilium 8; cf. Vatican II, Lumen Gentium 50)
III. The Holy Spirit and the Church in the Liturgy
1091 In the liturgy the Holy Spirit
is teacher of the faith of the
People of God and artisan of God's
masterpieces, the sacraments
of the New Covenant. The desire
and work of the Spirit in the
heart of the Church is that we
may live from the life of the
risen Christ. When the Spirit
encounters in us the response
of faith which he has aroused
in us, he brings about genuine
cooperation. Through it, the liturgy
becomes the common work of the
Holy Spirit and the Church.
1092 In this sacramental dispensation
of Christ's mystery the Holy Spirit
acts in the same way as at other
times in the economy of salvation:
he prepares the Church to encounter
her Lord; he recalls and makes
Christ manifest to the faith of
the assembly. By his transforming
power, he makes the mystery of
Christ present here and now. Finally
the Spirit of communion unites
the Church to the life and mission
of Christ.
The Holy Spirit prepares for the
reception of Christ
1093 In the sacramental economy
the Holy Spirit fulfills what
was prefigured in the Old Covenant.
Since Christ's Church was "prepared
in marvelous fashion in the history
of the people of Israel and in
the Old Covenant," (Vatican II, Lumen Gentium 2)
the Church's liturgy has retained
certain elements of the worship
of the Old Covenant as integral
and irreplaceable, adopting them
as her own:
- notably, reading the Old Testament;
- praying the Psalms;
- above all, recalling the saving
events and significant realities
which have found their fulfillment
in the mystery of Christ (promise
and covenant, Exodus and Passover,
kingdom and temple, exile and
return).
1094 It is on this harmony of
the two Testaments that the Paschal
catechesis of the Lord is built,
(cf. Vatican II, Dei Verbum 14-16; Luke 24:13-49) and then, that of the Apostles
and the Fathers of the Church.
This catechesis unveils what lay
hidden under the letter of the
Old Testament: the mystery of
Christ. It is called typological because
it reveals the newness of Christ
on the basis of the figures (types)
which announce him in the deeds,
words, and symbols of the first
covenant. By this re-reading in
the Spirit of Truth, starting
from Christ, the figures are unveiled.
(cf. 2 Corinthians 3:14-16) Thus the flood and Noah's ark
prefigured salvation by Baptism, (cf. 1 Peter 3:21) as did the cloud and the crossing
of the Red Sea. Water from the
rock was the figure of the spiritual
gifts of Christ, and manna in
the desert prefigured the Eucharist, "the
true bread from heaven." (John 6:32; cf. 1 Corinthians 10:1-6)
1095 For this reason the Church,
especially during Advent and Lent
and above all at the Easter Vigil,
re-reads and re-lives the great
events of salvation history in
the "today" of her liturgy.
But this also demands that catechesis
help the faithful to open themselves
to this spiritual understanding
of the economy of salvation as
the Church's liturgy reveals it
and enables us to live it.
1096 Jewish liturgy and Christian
liturgy. A better knowledge of
the Jewish people's faith and
religious life as professed and
lived even now can help our better
understanding of certain aspects
of Christian liturgy. For both
Jews and Christians Sacred Scripture
is an essential part of their
respective liturgies: in the proclamation
of the Word of God, the response
to this word, prayer of praise
and intercession for the living
and the dead, invocation of God's
mercy. In its characteristic structure
the Liturgy of the Word originates
in Jewish prayer. The Liturgy
of the Hours and other liturgical
texts and formularies, as well
as those of our most venerable
prayers, including the Lord's
Prayer, have parallels in Jewish
prayer. The Eucharistic Prayers
also draw their inspiration from the Jewish tradition. The relationship
between Jewish liturgy and Christian
liturgy, but also their differences
in content, are particularly evident
in the great feasts of the liturgical
year, such as Passover. Christians
and Jews both celebrate the Passover.
For Jews, it is the Passover of
history, tending toward the future;
for Christians, it is the Passover
fulfilled in the death and Resurrection
of Christ, though always in expectation
of its definitive consummation.
1097 In the liturgy of the New
Covenant every liturgical action,
especially the celebration of
the Eucharist and the sacraments,
is an encounter between Christ
and the Church. The liturgical
assembly derives its unity from
the "communion of the Holy
Spirit" who gathers the children
of God into the one Body of Christ.
This assembly transcends racial,
cultural, social - indeed, all
human affinities.
1098 The assembly should prepare
itself to encounter its Lord and
to become a people well
disposed. The preparation
of hearts is the joint work of
the Holy Spirit and the assembly,
especially of its ministers. The
grace of the Holy Spirit seeks
to awaken faith, conversion of
heart, and adherence to the Father's
will. These dispositions are the
precondition both for the reception
of other graces conferred in the
celebration itself and the fruits
of new life which the celebration
is intended to produce afterward.
The Holy Spirit recalls the mystery
of Christ
1099 The Spirit and the Church
cooperate to manifest Christ and
his work of salvation in the liturgy.
Primarily in the Eucharist, and
by analogy in the other sacraments,
the liturgy is the memorial of
the mystery of salvation. The
Holy Spirit is the Church's living
memory. (cf. John 14:26)
1100 The Word of God. The Holy
Spirit first recalls the meaning
of the salvation event to the
liturgical assembly by giving
life to the Word of God, which
is proclaimed so that it may be
received and lived:
In the celebration of the liturgy,
Sacred Scripture is extremely
important. From it come the lessons
that are read and explained in
the homily and the psalms that
are sung. It is from the Scriptures
that the prayers, collects, and
hymns draw their inspiration and
their force, and that actions
and signs derive their meaning. (Vatican II, Sacrosanctum Concilium 24)
1101 The Holy Spirit gives a spiritual
understanding of the Word of God
to those who read or hear it,
according to the dispositions
of their hearts. By means of the
words, actions, and symbols that
form the structure of a celebration,
the Spirit puts both the faithful
and the ministers into a living
relationship with Christ, the
Word and Image of the Father,
so that they can live out the
meaning of what they hear, contemplate,
and do in the celebration.
1102 "By the saving word
of God, faith . . . is nourished
in the hearts of believers. By
this faith then the congregation
of the faithful begins and grows."
(Vatican II, Presbyterorum Ordinis 4) The proclamation does not stop
with a teaching; it elicits the
response of faith as consent and
commitment, directed at the covenant
between God and his people. Once
again it is the Holy Spirit who
gives the grace of faith, strengthens
it and makes it grow in the community.
The liturgical assembly is first
of all a communion in faith.
1103 Anamnesis. The liturgical
celebration always refers to God's
saving interventions in history. "The
economy of Revelation is realized
by deeds and words which are intrinsically
bound up with each other. . .
. [T]he words for their part proclaim
the works and bring to light the
mystery they contain." (Vatican II, Dei Verbum 2) In
the Liturgy of the Word the Holy
Spirit "recalls" to
the assembly all that Christ has
done for us. In keeping with the
nature of liturgical actions and
the ritual traditions of the churches,
the celebration "makes a
remembrance" of the marvelous
works of God in an anamnesis which
may be more or less developed.
The Holy Spirit who thus awakens
the memory of the Church then
inspires thanksgiving and praise
(doxology).
The Holy Spirit makes present
the mystery of Christ
1104 Christian liturgy not only
recalls the events that saved
us but actualizes them, makes
them present. The Paschal mystery
of Christ is celebrated, not repeated.
It is the celebrations that are
repeated, and in each celebration
there is an outpouring of the
Holy Spirit that makes the unique
mystery present.
1105 The Epiclesis (invocation
upon) is the intercession
in which the priest begs the Father
to send the Holy Spirit, the Sanctifier,
so that the offerings may become
the body and blood of Christ and
that the faithful by receiving
them, may themselves become a
living offering to God. (cf. Romans 12:1)
1106 Together with the anamnesis,
the epiclesis is at the heart
of each sacramental celebration,
most especially of the Eucharist:
You ask how the bread becomes
the Body of Christ, and the wine
. . . the Blood of Christ I shall
tell you: the Holy Spirit comes
upon them and accomplishes what
surpasses every word and thought.
. . . Let it be enough for you
to understand that it is by the
Holy Spirit, just as it was of
the Holy Virgin and by the Holy
Spirit that the Lord, through
and in himself, took flesh.
(St. John Damascene, De fide orth. 4,13:PG 94,1145A)
1107 The Holy Spirit's transforming
power in the liturgy hastens the
coming of the kingdom and the
consummation of the mystery of
salvation. While we wait in hope
he causes us really to anticipate
the fullness of communion with
the Holy Trinity. Sent by the
Father who hears the epiclesis
of the Church, the Spirit gives
life to those who accept him and
is, even now, the "guarantee" of
their inheritance. (cf. Ephesians 1:14; 2 Corinthians 1:22)
The communion of the Holy Spirit
1108 In every liturgical action
the Holy Spirit is sent in order
to bring us into communion with
Christ and so to form his Body.
The Holy Spirit is like the sap
of the Father's vine which bears
fruit on its branches. (cf. John 15:1-17; Galatians 5:22) The most
intimate cooperation of the Holy
Spirit and the Church is achieved
in the liturgy. The Spirit who
is the Spirit of communion, abides
indefectibly in the Church. For
this reason the Church is the
great sacrament of divine communion
which gathers God's scattered
children together. Communion with
the Holy Trinity and fraternal
communion are inseparably the
fruit of the Spirit in the liturgy. (cf. 1 John 1:3-7)
1109 The epiclesis is also a prayer
for the full effect of the assembly's
communion with the mystery of
Christ. "The grace of the
Lord Jesus Christ and the love
of God and the fellowship of the
Holy Spirit"
(2 Corinthians 13:13) have to remain with us always
and bear fruit beyond the Eucharistic
celebration. The Church therefore
asks the Father to send the Holy
Spirit to make the lives of the
faithful a living sacrifice to
God by their spiritual transformation
into the image of Christ, by concern
for the Church's unity, and by
taking part in her mission through
the witness and service of charity.
In Brief
1110 In the liturgy of the Church,
God the Father is blessed and
adored as the source of all the
blessings of creation and salvation
with which he has blessed us in
his Son, in order to give us the
Spirit of filial adoption.
1111 Christ's work in the liturgy
is sacramental: because his mystery
of salvation is made present there
by the power of his Holy Spirit;
because his Body, which is the
Church, is like a sacrament (sign
and instrument) in which the Holy
Spirit dispenses the mystery of
salvation; and because through
her liturgical actions the pilgrim
Church already participates, as
by a foretaste, in the heavenly
liturgy.
1112 The mission of the Holy Spirit
in the liturgy of the Church is
to prepare the assembly to encounter
Christ; to recall and manifest
Christ to the faith of the assembly;
to make the saving work of Christ
present and active by his transforming
power; and to make the gift of
communion bear fruit in the Church.
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