While I was
looking up something else, I came across this passage from Oscar Cullmann’s “The
Christology of the New Testament” and I thought I’d pass it along, as it really
is central to the differences between Protestants and Roman Catholics:
Before we examine more closely this
correspondence between the perfection of the High Priest and the perfection of
the brothers, we must first consider an aspect of Jesus’ high priestly work
which … indicates the chasm between the theology of Hebrews and all Gnosticism
and mythology. We think of the once-for-all
character (ἐφάπαξ) of the high priestly work. It stands in express
opposition to the necessity of the continual repetition of the Old Testament priest’s
work. We see again in this respect how Jesus not only fulfils the Old Testament priesthood, but also overcomes all its
inadequacies.
The writer of Hebrews emphasizes the ἐφάπαξ
so strongly in order to demonstrate this opposition. He describes a final and
decisive act which in its very uniqueness brings salvation to men. This
uniqueness points primarily to the idea that the act of salvation will not be
repeated by Jesus the High Priest himself, but it also suggests that the
brothers cannot repeat the act, despite the solidarity of the High Priest with
their humanity. This ‘one time’ means ‘once for all time’: ‘…he entered once
for all into the Holy Place, taking not the blood of goats and calves but his
own blood, thus securing an eternal redemption’ (Heb. 9:12); ‘…he has appeared
once for all at the end of the age to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself’
(9:26); ‘…we have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus
Christ once for all’ (10:10). Corresponding to ‘once for all’ we read in 10:14,
‘for all time’ (εἰς τὸ διηνεκὲς). The saving character of this historically
unrepeatable fact is decisive and unending. What the High Priest Jesus
completed on the human level is therefore the centre of all events, the decisive
midpoint of time. Every cultic event from now on is concentrated on the
historical event of this High Priest’s human life, lived at one single time,
with its one crowning climax in his atoning death.
Christian worship is therefore possible
only on the basis of unreserved respect for this ἐφάπαξ. As I have previously
pointed out, Protestants are incorrect in describing the Catholic mass as a ‘repetition’
of the sacrificial act of Jesus. Catholic theologians have always rejected this
interpretation. They speak rather of ‘making
present’ Christ’s act. But does not also this description of the mass violate
the ἐφάπαξ of Hebrews—above all when one designates the mass a ‘sacrifice’? It
is just the sacrifice as such which cannot be made present in the way it is
supposed to happen in the Catholic mass.
The danger of falling back to the level
of Old Testament priesthood arises when the high priest must always present the
sacrifice anew. Christian worship in light of that ‘one time’ which means ‘once
for all time’ is possible only when even the slightest temptation to ‘reproduce’
that central event itself is avoided. Instead, the event must be allowed to
remain the divine act of the past time where God the Lord of time placed it—at
that exact historical moment [when it occurred]. It is the saving consequences
of this atoning act, not the act itself, which become a present event in our
worship. The Lord present in worship is the exalted Kyrios of the Church and the world, raised to the right hand of
God. He is the risen Lord who continues his mediating work on the basis of his
unique, completed work of atonement. The words εἰς τὴν ἐμὴν ἀνάμνησιν (in
remembrance of me, 1 Cor 11:24. 25) describe the connection between his
crucifixion and the celebration of the Lord’s supper. This means ‘in
remembrance of that which I have completed, on the basis of which I now dwell among
you as the resurrected Lord’.
This was one
of the things that struck me most, when I read through the New Testament at age
19. Roman Catholic doctrine on the Eucharist, arguably its most central
doctrine, is at odds with what the writer to the Hebrews is not only saying
clearly, but emphasizing. This is a clear case of biblical perspicuity vs Roman
Catholic obfuscation.
Look at this
contradiction through the Bryan
Cross paradigm, through the Roman
Catholic Hermeneutic:
From a Catholic point of view, we never
assume as part of our theological methodology that a prima facie contradiction
within the Tradition is an actual contradiction. Out of humility toward the Tradition,
we instead assume as a working hypothesis that the appearance of a
contradiction is due to our own ignorance or misunderstanding. So from a
Catholic point of view, if we have at hand an explanation that integrates the
apparently conflicting pieces of evidence, we already have a good reason to
accept it rather than conclude that there is an actual contradiction…
Jesus
had a word for this, too: “Thus you
nullify the word of God by your tradition that you have handed down. And you do
many things like that” (Mark 7:13).
"Roman Catholic view of Eucharist not only contradicts, but violates Hebrews “ἐφάπαξ”"
ReplyDeleteDon't forget the Eastern Orthodox too!
;-)
Hi Truth, I would be less comfortable making that kind of blanket statement about the EO's, only because I am less comfortable with knowing what they believe. You may well be right though.
ReplyDelete