In persona Christi: towards a second naivete.
Ferrara, Dennis Michael
IN ATTEMPTING to implement with some degree of methodological order
the wise Leonine adage that genuine development builds upon the past and
carries it forward, the theologian's first task, as Lonergan noted,
is to determine what the past really was.(1) Given the slow-footed
nature of human knowing,(2) such efforts at precision, while
methodologically necessary, are seldom methodologically pure, especially
when received readings of the past seem to hinder that more
sophisticated understanding which current awareness makes not only
possible but necessary. In such cases, attempts to retrieve the past in
a creative manner inevitably begin with a kind of exorcism in which the
mind "deconstructs" these received readings in order to
establish a new and more contemporary horizon. Well and good, provided
deconstruction is self-critical enough to exorcise itself of a
triumphalist myopia of the present that confuses received truth with
merely historical accretion. For deconstruction is only the first step
of a genuine retrieval. The second, perhaps even more difficult, step is
a reconstruction in which the new insight that provides the basis for
deconstruction is Itself de-absolutized so as to allow the perduring
truth coming out of the past to be positively preserved in a new
instantiation. In this process, the mind experiences a kind of
"second naivete," in which the past comes to view not as a
demon holding it in thrall, but as a previous stage of its own
historical existence and hence as vital to its ongoing self-identity.
The present essay is an attempt at such a "second
naivete" in light of the "deconstruction" of the
representational view of the priesthood developed in my recent articles
on in persona Christi in this journal.(3) For in proposing a ministerial
and "apophatic" notion of the priesthood as an antidote to the
ubiquitous and, I believe now, dangerous myth of representationalism,
these articles, while presupposing the traditional Catholic doctrine of
the transcendental dignity and ecclesial uniqueness of the priesthood -
that the priest truly speaks for Christ in the Church and alone is
competent, by virtue of the sacerdotal character, to consecrate the
Eucharist-failed to explain precisely how this traditional doctrine is
positively preserved, though perforce in a more nuanced sense, within
the horizon of apophaticism. The burden of the present article is to
attempt this more nuanced retrieval, to bring to light, within
apophaticism, the substance of the traditional doctrine in a
"second naivete."
The argument will proceed in two steps, corresponding,
respectively, to the phenomenal (prius quoad nos) and transcendental
(prius quoad se) dimensions of the sacraments. Part l will argue the
essential ecclesiality of the sacraments and the role played therein by
the priest as the representative or "spokesperson" for the
Church (in persona Ecclesiae), thereby further deconstructing the notion
that the priest represents Christ, but at the same time establishing a
horizon of thought that forces us to retrace our steps in order to
specify how and in what precise sense the priest, within this ecclesial
role, acts as the instrument of Christ himself. Accordingly, Part 2 will
attempt, via analyses of the two dimensions of the sacramental word and
of the role played therein by the Spirit of Christ, to deconstruct this
same ecclesiality(4) by viewing it as instrumental of the presence of
Christ, an instrumentality which reaches its recapitulating climax in
the Eucharist as the ecclesial word spoken in persona Christi. An
initial section will attempt to clear the air by distinguishing the
doctrine of the Church on the priesthood from the representationalist
interpretation of this doctrine.
WHAT IS THE DOCTRINE?
That the fundamental teaching of the Church in the matter at hand
concerns the effectiveness and uniqueness of the priest's power to
confect the Eucharist, not the representationalist language and theology
used to explain it, is clear from the Doctrina de sacramento ordinis of
the Council of Trent, which, while staunchly reaffirming against the
Reformers "the constant faith of the Church" in the priestly
power "to offer and administer the body and blood and to forgive
and retain sins,"(5) as well as the distinctiveness of the
sacerdotal character as the foundation for the hierarchical structure of
the Church,(6) makes no mention whatsoever of an alleged priestly
"representation" of Christ. The sufficiency of Trent's
teaching is confirmed by the fact that the representationalist language
used by the later magisterium in reaffirming this teaching is generally
nontechnical and nonthematic in nature (as distinct from the deliberate
coinage of technical terms such as homoousios and transsubstantiatio to
specify the Catholic import of a doctrine under attack), e.g. the
passing statements of Vatican II,(7) or Pope John Paul II's
assertion that the priest acts "in persona Christi ... in specific
sacramental identification with the High and Eternal Priest who is the
author and principal actor of this sacrifice of his."(8) Indeed, it
is precisely when the magisterium's representationalist language
begins to assume a technical air that it begins to strain doctrinal and
theoretical credibility. The 1983 letter of the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) on the subject, for example, takes the
language of "identification" a dangerous step forward when it
asserts that in acting in persona Christi "the one celebrating in a
peculiar and sacramental way is completely the same as the high and
eternal priest'."(9) Even here, however,
"identification" has no technically defined meaning, its
purpose being to highlight the principal authorship of Christ, as the
text goes on to say, although the language remains theologically
confused inasmuch as it transfers the true locus of Christ's
identification in the Eucharist from the Body and Blood to the
ministerial priest. In any case, the main doctrinal affirmation of the
letter does not go beyond what was taught by Trent that only the
ministerial priesthood, in virtue of the sacrament of orders, enjoys the
power of confecting the eucharistic sacrifice in the person of Christ
and of offering it in the name of the whole Christian people."(10)
And the same must be said of Pius XII's encyclical Mediator
Dei, the "father" of 20th-century magisterial representationalism, where we read that the minister at the altar in
offering a sacrifice in the name of all His members represents Christ,
the Head of the Mystical Body,"(11) and that the priest acts for
the people only because he represents Jesus Christ, Who is Head of all
His members and offers Himself in their stead."(12) The language of
representation notwithstanding, the pope's doctrinal intention in
these passages, especially the latter, is clearly to reaffirm(13)
Trent's distinction between the clergy and the laity, a distinction
founded in the priest's power, not shared by the laity, to
consecrate the Eucharist as the minister of Christ. It is precisely in
virtue of this power and ministry, rooted in the sacerdotal character,
that the priest, as the pope goes on to say, "goes to the altar ...
superior to the people" and in this sense may be called a mediator,
whereas the people ... since they in no sense represent the Divine
Redeemer and are not a mediator between themselves and God, can in no
way possess the sacerdotal power."(14) That the affirmation of this
unique priestly power expresses the core of the Catholic faith regarding
the priesthood and, perhaps more tellingly, embodies the enduring
Catholic "sense" of the priesthood, is beyond question; even
in this "age of the laity," one still needs a priest "to
say Mass and hear confessions." But that this doctrinal affirmation
implies that the priest directly represents or is "identified"
with Christ is difficult to maintain even on Pius's own terms, for
he speaks of the priest as "the minister of Christ" who,
precisely as minister, is "inferior to Christ,"(15) a view
which seems better to accord with a theory of instrumentality than with
one of direct representation, much less of "identification."
The correctness of the above interpretation of the magisterial
texts, and, by inference, the acceptability of interpreting them in
terms of the traditional theory of instrumental causality, would, I
believe, be sufficiently clear were it not for the confusion over the
meaning of representation occasioned by Inter insigniores.(16) For apart
from this Declaration, the magisterium's references to
representation concern the interior sacerdotal character, the precise
nature of which, despite the representationalist language used in
describing it, remains elusive, mysterious, and undefined. The
distinctive teaching, I would even say novelty, of Inter insigniores
consists in taking the notion of interior "representation"
literally rather than metaphorically, canonizing it, and transferring it
to the external and visible level on the basis of a view of the
sacraments as bearing a "sacramental reference to constitutive events of Christianity and to Christ himself,"(17) and, more
precisely still, of the sacraments as "represent[ing] what they
signify by natural resemblance."(18) It is on this basis that the
Declaration affirms the necessity of a "`natural resemblance'
. . . between Christ and his minister,"(19) resulting in the
well-known conclusion that only a man can represent Christ in the
celebration of the Eucharist.(20) With this understanding, the priest
appears as a kind of sacramental "double" of Christ, a view
which pushes even further into the background the referential biblical
concepts of apostle, witness, and ambassador, according to which the one
sent speaks in the name and power of the one who sent him and not on his
own authority.(21) And as these biblical concepts recede, there recedes
also the primacy of the living Christ.
The Declaration's inability to ground its assertion of
visible representation in any coherent analysis of the sacramental rites
themselves(22) is evident in its appeal to nuptial imagery, a move
endorsed by Pope John Paul II in Mulieris dignitatem.(23) In all candor,
however, this argument must be judged irrelevant. For, as I pointed out
in my original article, nuptiality, though a valid image of the ultimate
res of the Eucharist as "the sacrament of the [loving union of the]
Bridegroom and the Bride,"(24) is essentially misplaced when
predicated of the concrete liturgical rite, which quite obviously has
the visible form not of a wedding but of a meal, as is acknowledged as a
matter of course even by such a staunch defender of representationalism
as Sara Butler.(25) Nor has the magisterium come forward with a more
satisfying rationale for "visible representation," preferring
instead, as in Ordinatio sacerdotalis,(26) to argue the case against the
ordination of women on the basis of Christ's institution and the
tradition of the Church, a move that brings with it its own set of
problems.
From all this it may fairly be concluded, I think, that the
representationalist view of the priesthood is not the doctrine of the
Church, the substance of which is expressed by the Council of Trent, but
rather a language, for the most part conventional and nontechnical, for
expressing this doctrine, a language which, when pushed to give a
critical account of itself in the light of new questions, has become
profoundly questionable, as evident in the implausible move made by
Inter insigniores from "interior" to "exterior"
representation, a move which, given the axiom agere sequitur esse,
should follow as a matter of course.
IN PERSONA ECCLESIAE: THE SACRAMENTS AS OFFICIAL ACTS OF THE
CHURCH AND THE PRIEST AS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE CHURCH
In my original article, I countered representationalism by
proposing, on the basis of St. Thomas's instrumental view of the
sacerdotal power, a theory of the priest as the "instrument of
Christ." Yet in and of itself, such a theory is insufficient, since
it seems to leave the priest hanging in mid-air between Christ and the
Church. To specify - but also make more problematic - the meaning of
priestly instrumentality, it is therefore necessary to place it in its
ecclesial context by viewing the sacraments as expressive of the Church
as the primordial sacrament of Christ" and thus, as Rahner puts
it, as "the essential functions that bring into activity the very
essence of the Church herself ... in which she herself attains the
highest degree of actualization of what she always is: the presence of
redemptive grace for men, historically visible and manifest as the sign
of the eschatologically victorious grace of God in the world."(27)
In Schillebeeckx's succinct formulation, a sacrament is "a
personal saving act of the risen Christ himself, but realized in the
visible form of an official act of the Church as such."(28)
To speak of the sacraments, then, is to speak of the ecclesial
mediation of Christ's grace, of grace as mediated by an ecclesial
act with its own immanent and identifiable structure. Only when this
ecclesiality is explicitly recognized is it possible to speak
non-mythologically of the sacraments as acts of Christ. More
specifically, the sacraments are, in their proximately available form,
acts of the Church, indeed, official and ritual acts, in which the
Church, as a visible and hierarchically ordered body, incorporates and
commissions new members in Christ, welcomes them back when they have
strayed, strengthens them at the approach of death, renews its
leadership, and above all celebrates its own nature as the Bride and
life-giving Body of Christ. From here it is a small step to viewing the
priest as the minister and representative of the Church in the
celebration of the sacraments. For except in the case of baptism, only a
bishop or priest can confect or serve as the official ecclesial witness
to the sacrament in such a way as is required for its validity as an
official act of the Church and hence as a sacrament of Christ. This
general truth takes on greater specificity in light of the formality of
the ecclesial-priestly word in the sacramental act.
In analyzing the internal structure of the sacraments, Thomas
distinguishes two elements: the natural reality, which serves as the
material and as such indeterminate basis for the sign, and the word,
which serves as its formal and determining component by lending the
natural reality a specifically Christian significance. In the classic
formulation of Augustine, which Thomas adopts at this point, "the
word is added to the element and this becomes a sacrament."(29)
Only when the word is spoken does the natural sign - which we today see
more as an action than as a physical element - take on a spiritual or
Christian meaning "in accordance with the sense of the words which
is held by faith."(30) Thus, immersion into and emergence out of
water may naturally signify cleansing and death and rebirth, but it
signifies our passover in Christ only through the ministerial invocation
of the thrice-holy God. Again, in the sacrament of Order the transfer of
power and authority signified by the traditional laying on of hands takes on a Christian meaning and reality in light of the bishop's
prayer beseeching God to bestow upon his servant here present the
dignity of the presbyterate.
Now if for the moment we prescind from the Eucharist, it is evident
that the proximate subject uttering the sacramental word is not Christ,
but the Church, or rather, the sacramental minister serving as
"spokesperson" for the Church. "I baptize you," I
absolve you from your sins," "May the Lord forgive you by this
holy anointing whatever sins you have committed," etc. The
sacramental word is thus, in its proximately available form, the word of
the Church, not indeed, any word, but precisely that
"official" (Schillebeeckx) word in virtue of which the Church,
through its official minister and representative, actualizes here and
now its own abiding and essential nature as the sacrament of Christ
(Rahner). This view takes on deeper meaning when, in line with
Rahner's theology of the word to be discussed below, we consider
the sacramental word as the culmination of the Church's
proclamation of the gospel, a task which, according to Vatican II
(following up on the Council of Trent),(31) is the central function of
the episcopal and priestly office: "priests, as co-workers with
their bishops, have as their primary duty the proclamation of the gospel
of God to all."(32) Here the proclamation of the word is defined as
an act of "office" (munus) and hence as an "official
word," a teaching reaffirmed, somewhat ironically, by Inter
insigniores itself when it insists that the apostles are the official
witnesses to the Resurrection"(33) and that "the official and
public proclamation of the message . . . belongs exclusively to the
apostolic mission."(34)
To sum up: if the sacraments, in their proximately available form,
are official, self-actualizing acts of the Church as the sacrament of
Christ, and if, further, the power to confect or witness these acts
derives (except in the case of baptism) from the episcopal or sacerdotal
office; and if, finally, the utterance of the word which is the
determining form of these acts constitutes the climax of the apostolic
proclamation of the gospel which it is the precise function of the
episcopal and sacerdotal office to continue - then it seems not only
legitimate but necessary to conceive the priest's ministry as a
ministry not only for but very precisely of the Church, and to view the
priest's role in celebrating the sacraments as one of acting
"in the person of" the Church.. in persona Ecclesiae.
But just at this point arises the necessity of a "second
naivete." How, within the categorial priority of the Church, is it
still possible to speak, as speak we must, of the Church's
sacraments and of its priesthood as that reality in and through which
Christ himself continues to act effectively and visibly as "author
of the Covenant, the Bridegroom and Head of the Church"?(35) How,
most particularly, is rigorous insistence on the ecclesiality of the
sacraments consonant with the unique mystery of the Eucharist? Here the
argument for ecclesial mediation appears truly to founder, for here, it
seems, the priest does take Christ's place directly, to the point
of uttering the historical words of Christ in Christ's very person
and thereby effecting here and now the real presence of Christ's
historical sacrifice. Thomas himself so sharply distinguishes the two
levels of priestly "impersonation" as apparently to place the
consecrating priest "outside the Church".. "The priest in
reciting the prayers of the Mass speaks in the place of the Church, in
whose unity he remains; but in consecrating the sacrament he speaks as
in the person of Christ, whose place he holds by the power of his
orders."(36) An attempt to answer these questions forms the burden
of the next section.
FROM ACT OF THE CHURCH TO ACT OF CHRIST
The Two-Fold Nature of the Sacramental Word
Like its very being, the Church's sacramental word
"serves [Christ] as a living instrument of salvation."(37) A
living instrument, a genuine means and mediation of grace, and yet only
a means, only a mediation. The Church may utter the words of absolution,
for example, but it does so in the name and power of Christ, for
"who can forgive sins but God alone?" (Mark 2:7). These two
dimensions of the Church's sacramentality - that it truly mediates
the grace of God and yet does so only as an instrument of Christ's
saving action - are mirrored in the two dimensions of its sacramental
word, as noted by Schillebeeckx:
[T]he substance of a sacrament always includes a twofold element: an
epiclesis in the form of a request (in forma deprecativa) that is to
say, a prayer in which we plead with the Father by the power of the
Spirit and together with Christ; and a definitive bestowal [of grace]
(in forma indicativa). Both elements are always present, even when they
no longer appear, as was formerly the case, in two separate ritual
moments of the Liturgy. Moreover, the one essential moment (whether it
be an expression in the form of an epiclesis or an exclusively
indicative formula) has in any case the twofold significance.(38)
As Schillebeeckx implies, the sacramental formulae exhibit
considerable variety in exhibiting these two correlative dimensions. In
baptism, for example, the indicative form predominates - "I baptize
you" - with the deprecative form implicit in the trinitarian
invocation and in any case abundantly manifest in the surrounding
prayers), whereas in Order the deprecative form takes precedence, though
with complete confidence that the prayer is heard: "Grant, we
beseech You, Almighty Father, the dignity of the priesthood to this your
servant, etc." In penance, both dimensions are equally evident.
"May our Lord Jesus Christ absolve you, and by his authority I
absolve you of all your sins".
The efficacy of the forma indicativa is essentially misunderstood,
however, unless seen as God's response to the forma deprecativa,
the prayer addressed to God officially by the Church in the name of
Christ and in complete reliance upon the merits of his passion and the
power of his resurrection. Through this ecclesial prayer (which, as
Schillebeeckx says, is always present, if not always with complete
clarity, as an essential element of the sacramental act), there is
fulfilled Christ's promise that whatever we ask the Father in his
name will be granted (John 16:23). The Church prays "in the name
of" and "in reliance upon" Christ, not, moreover, in a
merely external and historical sense, but in an internal and present
sense, since it does so in explicit consciousness of its abiding union
with its head and with his prayer, which, as Schillebeeckx says,
"is always heard,"(39) for "Jesus, because he remains
forever, has a priesthood which does not pass away. Therefore he is
always able to save those who approach God through him, since he forever
lives to make intercession for them" (Hebrews 7:24-25). The
sacramental word as uttered by the Church is thus first and foremost a
word of supplication, a word uttered in faith, for only thus can it be
the word of sacramental efficacy and power without presumption and
blasphemy. "`I baptize you'," says the Church, "not
in my own name or in virtue of my own power, but `in the name of the
Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit'." For the Church can
do nothing on its own. The forma indicativa of a sacrament can never
signify an autonomous exercise of power, as if Christ, in deist fashion,
had left the Church a treasury of grace to be dispensed in its own name
and as it sees fit. For Christ is the present author of grace in every
sacrament. Underlying every authoritative bestowal of grace, therefore,
is the suppliant faith of the Church, operative, as Thomas points out,
through the intention of the ecclesial minister: "The minister of
the sacrament acts in the person of the whole Church, whose minister he
is, for in the words he utters there is expressed the intention of the
Church, which suffices for the perfection of the sacrament."(40)
Underlying both forms of the Church's sacramental word is the
action of the Spirit of Christ, the "soul of the Church."
The Holy Spirit as the Principle of the Church's
Sacramental
Unity-in-Difference with Christ and Its Two-Fold Action in the
Sacramental Word
Many mythic, dangerous, and downright false understandings of the
Church and thus of its sacraments, its priesthood, and its power could
be avoided if from the outset we thematized the fact that the principle
which binds the Church to Christ is at the same time the principle that
differentiates it from him within this unity: the Holy Spirit. Useful
for this purpose is the "excellent analogy" drawn in Lumen
gentium between the sacramental being of Christ and the Church
respectively:
Christ, the one Mediator, established and ceaselessly sustains here
on earth His holy Church, the community of faith, hope, and love, as a
visible structure. Through her He communicates truth and grace to all.
But the society furnished with hierarchical agencies and the Mystical
Body of Christ are not to be considered two realities, nor are the
visible assembly and the spiritual community, nor the earthly Church and
the Church enriched with heavenly things. Rather they form one
interlocked reality which is comprised of a divine and a human element.
For this reason, by an excellent analogy, this reality is compared to
the mystery of the incarnate Word. Just as the assumed nature
inseparably united to the divine Word serves Him as a living instrument
of salvation, so, in a similar way, does the communal structure of the
Church serve Christ's Spirit, who vivifies it by way of building up
the body (cf. Eph 4:16)(41)
Directly, this analogy inculcates the intrinsic and sacramental
union between the two elements of the Church's nature: the earthly,
bodily, and communal on the one hand, and the transcendent and spiritual
on the other. This union is analogous, according to the council, to the
intrinsic and sacramental union between the divine and the human in
Christ. Underlying the similarity that makes the conciliar analogy
possible, however, is the dissimilarity that keeps it only an analogy.
For by linking the Church's visible and communal structure not to
Christ but to Christ's Spirit, the council teaches that it is not
directly but in and through his Spirit that Christ lives in, forms, and
acts through the Church as his body. Such had already been implied in
the previous paragraph on the Holy Spirit as the "soul of the
Church". "In order that we may be unceasingly renewed in Him
(cf. Eph 4:23), He has shared with us His Spirit who, existing as one
and the same being in the head and in the members, vivifies, unifies,
and moves the whole body. This He does in such a way that His work could
be compared by the holy Fathers with the function which the soul
fulfills in the human body, whose principle of life the soul
is."(42)
Specification of the Holy Spirit as the principle uniting Christ
and the Church reveals the intrinsic limits, and thus precludes false or
misleading understandings of, the image of the Church as Christ's
mystical body. For while the body image aptly signifies the communion of
life between Christ and Church, so that one may rightly speak of
"the whole Christ, head and members,"(43) in no way may this
vital communion be thought of as that of a single person. For the
"conjoinedness" of Christ's humanity to the Word is
hypostatic: unio in persona divina. Precisely because of this hypostatic
unity, Christ is not two, but one,(44) more precisely, one in being or
esse:(45) the divinity of person, while not confusing or obliterating
the duality of natures, is yet the ground of its unity.(46) Such unity
does not and cannot obtain between Christ and the Church, for the union
between the two is effected through another divine person. All this
indicates the otherness of Christ and the Church within their
inseparable union. Otherness, not separation; otherness in fact as the
condition of union, a union, however, that does not submerge one
identity in another but preserves both intact and is therefore not
physical and animist, as might be suggested by a literal reading of the
body image, but spiritual and therefore also personal, or, more
precisely, interpersonal, since it concerns two subjects, Christ and the
Church, a union of steadfast faith and enduring love - in a word, a
nuptial union, the union of the Bridegroom and the Bride. The principle
of this union of faith and love is precisely the Holy Spirit, who is
therefore also the transcendentally immanent principle constituting the
Church as subject vis-a-vis Christ. As Thomas puts it: "There is in
the Church a certain continuity by reason of the Holy Spirit, who
numerically one and the same fills and unifies the whole Church, hence
Christ according to his human nature is called head of the Church by
reason of his influence".(47)
It is, in short, not directly but in and through his Spirit that
Christ is united to the Church as its Head and Lord. It is thus also in
and through his Spirit that Christ continues, through the Church, his
saving activity and, in particular, "acts in the sacraments."
Of the two dimensions of the Church's sacramental word, the
forma indicativa and the forma deprecativa, the latter is perhaps more
readily intelligible as the work of the Spirit. For it is the Spirit who
prays within us with "unutterable groanings" (Romans 8:20),
the Spirit "who knows the deep things of God" and who, given
to us, "help[s] us to recognize the gifts he has given us" so
that "we speak ... in words not of human wisdom, but in words
taught by the Spirit" (1 Corinthians 2:10-13), the Spirit by which
the Church is joined to him and through which he rules over it as Lord.
It is because the Church's prayer is uttered in the Spirit that it
is prayer not in some general and undifferentiated sense, but quite
precisely the prayer of the indefectible Bride of Christ (Ephesians
5:25-27), always united to him in the "one flesh" of the
mystical body but as bride having a voice of its own, a voice of
confident prayer and eschatological longing: "The Spirit and the
Bride say, `Come!'" (Revelation 22:18).
Specifying the role of the Spirit in the efficacy of the forma
indicativa is more difficult and complex, but a beginning can be made
when we draw out the trinitarian implications of Rahner's visionary
thesis on the sacramental word as "the supreme realization of the
efficacious word of God,"(48) a thesis which, by making the word
formal for the efficacy and not merely the signification of the
sacraments, goes beyond the unresolved duality of the two in the
previous tradition(49) and provides a starting point for a unified
sacramental theory. In this thesis, Rahner takes up the biblical notion
of God's "mighty creative dabar (word)" to distinguish a
word which is merely "didache (teaching)" from
"proclamation in which the arrival of the thing proclaimed itself
takes place"(50) and so which "takes on the character of an
event" in which "the word which speaks of grace and grace
itself," while not identical, are "essentially related to one
another and form a unity" as "moments of a total
process," in such a way that the word "is the efficacious
proclamation which brings about what it speaks of, the grace announced:
it is truly a word of life, creative word of God."(51)
Here I propose refining Rahner's thesis by attributing the
efficacy of the sacramental proclamation, its instrumental power to make
present and bestow what is outwardly proclaimed, to the action of the
life-giving Breath or Spirit of God (ruah Yahweh) poured out by the
risen Christ. A remote basis for my proposal is provided by the many and
sizable fragments in the scriptural, liturgical, and theological
traditions about the relation between the Spirit and the Word - as the
force empowering the word of the prophets; as the source of the
inspiration of the Word of God in the Scriptures; as the power by which
the Eternal Word was made flesh, lived and preached, delivered himself
into the hands of his Father, and was raised up on the third day; as the
fiery tongues descending upon the Apostles and bursting into the flame
of the pentecostal proclamation. But to focus this diverse and at times
ambiguous evidence into a clear and systematic principle, a more
immediate and certain basis is needed. And this is provided, in my
judgment, by the traditional doctrines of the Spirit of Christ as the
"soul" of the Body of Christ and as the
"sanctifier."
To say that the Spirit is the "soul" of the Body of
Christ is to affirm the Spirit as the dynamic and energizing principle
of the Church's visible and corporate structures and hence as the
moving principle of the activities flowing from them, chief among which
are the sacraments. But also - and given the confusion currently
afflicting the theology of the Trinity, most particularly the doctrinal
deviations parading openly in certain forms of "Spirit
Christology,"(52) it is necessary to state this here explicitly -
it is to insist that the Spirit who so animates the Church is precisely
and only the Spirit of Christ: the "pneumatological corrective," hardly in place, itself is today in dire need of a
"christological recorrective." If, then, as I stated earlier,
it is only possible in light of the animating action of the Spirit to
grasp the Church as Christ's body and the identification with
Christ that it betokens without fear of essential miscalculation, it is
also only as forming the body of Christ that this action of the Spirit
can be grasped in its proper nature. For the body image teaches that
Christ, in and through his Spirit, is indeed himself the inner
"form" of the Church, assimilating it to himself so that the
life it lives is no longer its own but his (see Galatians 2:20), a life
lived according to the pattern set by Christ, "made one with his
sufferings as the body is one with the head" in the hope of the
resurrection, and charged with carrying on his mission of "bringing
all human beings to full union with Christ."(53) All this because
the transcendentally immanent principle of the Church's life, its
"form" and "soul" is the Spirit precisely and only
of Christ, as the council expressly states, the Spirit sent by him as
the risen and exalted Kyrios from the right hand of the Father and not
before (John 7:39; 15:26; 16:7), the Spirit whose animating function
makes the Church Christ's Church, Christ's Body, and hence
able to "serve him," as the council states, "as a living
instrument of salvation." In sum, it is because the moving
principle of the Church's sacramental word of authority "I
baptize you," "I absolve you" - is the Spirit by which
the Church is united to Christ that the sacrament is an act which has
Christ, the "author of the Covenant, the Bridegroom and Head of the
Church,"(54) as its author, an act of the head working through the
body. If as "soul of the Church" the Spirit of Christ is the
transcendent origin of the Church's sacramental word, the Spirit is
also, as "sanctifier," the gift bestowed thereby and hence the
efficacious and real arrival of the word in the addressee, more
precisely, the arrival of the specific grace signified by the word. Such
a view of the action of the Spirit, while not explicitly applied by
Thomas to the sacraments, is nonetheless consonant with his theology of
the Spirit as effecting the real union of grace between God and the
world(55) and as the source of that graced interiority in which the
essence of the New Testament consists.(56) Once again, however, the
grace in question is always and only the grace of Christ, merited by his
cross and bestowed in the power of his Resurrection, the grace,
moreover, which has Christ as its "content," since by it we
are conformed to him as to God's only Son (Romans 8:29), not,
indeed, in literal imitation, but insofar as, led by his Spirit, we live
the paschal mystery of his prototypical humanity in and through our own
"ecclesial" humanity, before and unto the Father.
In sum, the word uttered by the Church in the sacraments is truly
sacramental - a word of confident prayer, uttered in faith by the Bride
of Christ, and a word of grace-bestowing power uttered by his Body in
his name - a two-fold word uttered in the one Spirit by which it is both
united to and yet distinct from him. And yet there remains a final and
supreme word, what Rahner calls "the sacrament of the word
absolutely, the absolute case of the word anywhere":(57) the
Eucharist. And with it the present attempt at a "second
naivete" finds its most proper and most mysterious locus.
The Sacramental Word Spoken In Persona Christi: The
Eucharistic Word
Everything that has been said to this point about the ecclesiality
of the sacraments, the role of the ecclesial and priestly word, and the
vivifying function of the Spirit seems to run aground in face of the
supreme mystery of the Eucharist, where the sacramental word effects the
presence not merely of Christ's power and saving grace, but of his
very person, and indeed precisely under the sign of his death:
"Every time, then, you eat this bread and drink this cup, you
proclaim the death of the Lord until he comes!" (1 Corinthians
11:26). We are faced then with an apparent dilemma: either the Eucharist
exists within the general continuum of the sacraments, as outlined
above, or it exists outside this continuum. If the former, then the
Eucharist differs only in degree but not in kind from the other
sacraments, which is contrary to the Catholic faith; if the latter, then
its unique realism seems so to shatter the unity of the sacramental
system as to constitute a sacrament only in some equivocal sense, which,
though not strictly against the Catholic faith, is certainly against the
entire thrust and tenor of Catholic theology and practice.
Not altogether surprisingly, we seem to face the same dilemma in
regard to the meaning of in persona Christi, the ultimate but to this
point latent subject of the present reflections. On the one hand, the
stress laid in the foregoing account on the ecclesial function of the
priest and the vivifying role of the Holy Spirit seems so to mediate the
priest's relation to Christ as to result in the view explicitly
rejected by the magisterium that the priest utters the Eucharistic word
"only through the effective power conferred on [the priest] by
Christ,"(58) or "in the name of Christ,"(59) rather than
in persona Christi. The representationalist view of the axiom, on the
other hand, seems so to "identify"s the priest with Christ as
to separate him from the Church and "identify" him with
Christ, so that he faces the Church as Christ does, as Head of the Body.
But if a formally "ecclesial" view threatens the uniqueness of
the Eucharist, the representationalist view, as I have argued
previously, threatens the even more fundamental sovereignty of Christ as
Lord of the Church by establishing a symbolic and oper univocity between
the power of the hierarchy and that of Christ, thereby obscuring the
fact that the priestly power is not something outside and above the
Church's graced nature, but is an expression of that nature, is
itself a grace and therefore something received and subordinate, a
receptivity and subordination, moreover, which cannot remain merely
interior and transcendental - and thus "accountable to God
alone" - but must be made visible in the sacramental and social
order of the Church.
This final section will attempt to move beyond this dilemma in the
direction of the nuanced "second naivete" promised at the
outset. I preface it with the following three points.
1. The uniqueness of the priest's action in persona Christi is
a function and expression of Catholic belief in the real presence and
not vice versa. The Church does not believe in the real presence because
it believes that the priest acts in persona Christi; it believes that
the priest acts in persona Christi because it believes in the real
presence. As I wrote in my original article, "in persona Christi in
its pregnant theological sense is not first and foremost for Thomas an
affirmation about the priest; it is an affirmation of the supreme and
unique excellence of the Eucharist: `So great is the dignity of this
sacrament that it is not confected except in the person of
Christ'."(60) For this, the representationalist interpretation
of the axiom is not necessary: to affirm that the priest, in uttering
the Eucharistic word, effects the real presence of Christ, not merely
his "effective" presence, is to affirm the doctrinal substance
of the in persona Christi axiom.
2. The eucharistic presence of Christ effected by the priestly
consecration is not an isolated but an ecclesial presence, the presence
of the Bridegroom to the Bride, of the Head to the Body. Here,
assignation of a representational role to the priest is positively out
of place, since, both symbolically and functionally, it interposes the
priest between Christ and that Church which is, after all, Christ's
and not the clergy's bride, the function of the priest being to
serve as the official ecclesial instrument of their union, the
"marriage-broker," to borrow Paul's image (2 Corinthians
11:2). To say that the priest utters the consecratory words in persona
Christi and to say that he also utters them in persona Ecclesiae must
ultimately, then, be complementary rather than opposed assertions,
either of which would be incomplete and inaccurate without the other.
The problem is how to explain this complementarity in a way that is both
doctrinally faithful and theoretically satisfying.
3. Above and beyond everything, it is essential to acknowledge the
limits of what can be explained here. We are dealing with a supreme
mystery of our faith, with the absolutely supernatural; recognition of
this fact prevents us from mistaking theological theories for the truths
on which they are intended to shed their very imperfect light. The
theory of representation, for example, does not explain the priestly
power, but presupposes it and leaves its mystery intact. And the same is
true of the notion of instrumental causality, however helpful it may be
in eliminating what I believe are, when taken technically and not merely
metaphorically, false and dangerous understandings of the priesthood. In
the end, we understand no more of the priestly power than we do of
Christ's uniquely real presence of which it is the mysterious
instrument. But we believe in both, and that belief is uppermost.
The Eucharist: Word of Christ, Word of the Church
The question before us is how to envision the word of Christ and
the priestly word of the Church not as two separate words but as one
word on two levels, the one the sacramental instrument of the other, the
Eucharist as the word of Christ on the priestly lips of the Church. To
make any headway at all, we must first note that the instrumentality of
the priestly word in this sacrament is unique in the sacramental order.
For in all the other sacraments, the proximate active subject uttering
the word, the efficacious forma indicativa productive of the sacramental
effect, is the Church itself, though in subordination to Christ: "I
baptize you," "I absolve you." In these utterances, the
priest, as Thomas says in a related connection, "speaks in the
person of the Church, in whose unity he remains."(61) In the
celebration of the Eucharist, the same active subjecthood is expressed
in that act in which, after the consecration, the Church through the
priest unites itself with Christ in offering his sacrifice to the
Father, as is evident in the priest's prayer, which names the
active subject of the sacrificial action: "In memory of his death
and resurrection, we offer you, Father, this life-giving bread, this
saving cup" (Eucharistic Prayer 2). In the foundational act of
consecration, however, the priest does not speak "in the person of
the Church" in this sense, i.e. as an active subject distinct from
Christ, but in the very person of Christ: in persona Christi. And in
this (not necessarily representational) sense, the priest, as the
magisterial texts cited at the outset of this article state, does
celebrate the Eucharist as representative of the Church (in persona
Ecclesiae) only because he first celebrates it as representative and
minister of Christ (in persona Christi).
And yet because the consecrating word of Christ is uttered through
and in the Church, it is also the word of the Church, indeed its supreme
word. This is evident first of all from the fact that consecration in
persona Christi is the ultimate expression of the power of the sacrament
of Order, which is precisely the sacrament by which the entire structure
of the Church as a visible and sacramental entity is constituted and
ordered hierarchically. To deny that the consecratory word is a word of
the Church would not only shatter the unity of the sacrament of Order,
but imply that its utterance is not the culminating act of the
Church's priesthood, but one in which the latter transcends its own
nature by becoming not just a sacrament of Christ, but in some sense
Christ himself. Here theology must draw a firm and unequivocal line and
call the theology of the priesthood away from the danger of such an
ideology and back to its doctrinal roots in the theology of grace so as
to preserve its evangelical truth. And the most fundamental aspect of
that truth is this: that to the ancient question which finds expression
in the name Michael - Who is like God? - we can and must add another:
Who is like Christ? And the answer in both cases is the same: No one.
For "Jesus Christ is Lord" (Philippians 2:11) and Jesus Christ
alone.
The precise sense in which the consecration is the act and word of
the Church begins to appear when we analyze the eucharistic form as a
complex whole which consists not simply in the recital of the words of
Christ - "This is my body," "This is my blood" - but
in their recital by way of anamnesis. "Who, the night before he
died, took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to his disciples,
saying. . . " That the priest consecrates in persona Christi,
pertains solely to his recital of the words of Christ. It does not
pertain to the anamnestic form in which Christ's words are
recited.(62) but it is precisely this anamnestic form which makes of the
eucharistic recital the act of the Church's faith, both
subjectively and objectively, and its ultimate proclamation of the
gospel.
The anamnestic form expresses the subjective faith of the Church by
showing that the word of Christ is uttered not at the Church's
discretion, but in direct obedience to Christ's historical command
and in faith in his promise to be with it always. As such it is a
confession of Christ's lordship, more precisely, of the paschal
mystery of his death, his Resurrection, and his coming again in glory,
which three-fold mystery, not the death alone, is the comprehensive
objective significatum and content of this sacrament, as the eucharistic
acclamation in the revised liturgy explicitly proclaims. Recognition of
this objective significance is, it seems to me, an essential first step
in explaining the meaning of in persona Christi, since it specifies the
identity of the one in whose person the priest speaks and thus
eliminates a historicist reading of the axiom. A scriptural warrant for
this interpretation is provided by St. Paul's statement that in
celebrating the Lord's Supper we "proclaim the death of the
Lord until he comes" (1 Corinthians 11:26). For Paul, the Eucharist
is neither a "representation" nor a mere recollection, but a
proclamation (kataggellete), a kerygmatic announcement which has as its
object "the death of the Lord": a proclamation, then, not
simply of the historical death of Jesus of Nazareth on Calvary, but of
the death of Jesus who is now the Christ, the death of him who by the
obedience of his cross was given the name above every name: Kyrios
(Philippians 2:11).
In explaining this further, two distinct issues must be borne in
mind. The first concerns the sacrifice which is made present in the
Eucharist, the second concerns the sacramental signification of this
sacrifice. Discussion of the first issue inevitably encounters the
"mystery presence" theology of Vonier and Casel, according to
which "the sacrament is the representation of the natural
sacrifice."(63) Here, what is made present in the Eucharist is the
sacrifice of Christ in its historical actuality. As Schillebeeckx points
out, however, such a view, if intended literally, is metaphysically
impossible.(64) At the same time, efforts to refute mystery-presence
theology founder, in my judgment, unless they abandon its historicist
presuppositions(65) by embracing, as Schillebeeckx himself does, though
not with complete clarity,66 the scriptural notion, such as is detailed
in chapters 7-10 of the Epistle to the Hebrews, of Christ's
sacrifice as "once for all" (ephapax: Heb 7:26) precisely
because and insofar as it is completed in the heavenly sanctuary (Heb
8:1-2) into which Christ entered with his own blood (Heb 9:11-12),
entering the very presence of God (Heb 9:24). It was precisely this
eternal sacrifice, and neither his historical dying nor yet simply his
death considered as the end of his historical life, that was in fact
signified "in anticipation" by Christ in instituting the
Eucharist. That this is so is evident both from the meal form of the
Eucharist, which reveals it as a sacrament of the eschatological
banquet, as Jesus himself indicated (Matthew 26:29), and from his
explicit characterization of the cup as the blood of the new covenant
(Luke 22:20), which is concluded only insofar as Jesus, sacrifice is
eternally accepted by God (Hebrews 9:15). As Trent itself states, at the
Last Supper, Christ "instituted a new Passover, namely, himself, to
be immolated under visible signs by the Church through the priests in
memory of his own passage from this world to the Father."(67)
"Until he comes." The Christ proclaimed and made present
in the Eucharist is, finally, not simply the Jesus who died, nor yet
only the Christ who rose, but also the Lord who will come again in
glory, the Lord, therefore, of the Church's hope. It is precisely
in this hope that it celebrates Christ's real presence here and
now, his personal presence in saving and redemptive love. The
"sacrament of the Bridegroom and the Bride" is thus also the
foretaste of the heavenly messianic banquet, what Alexander Schmemann
called "the sacrament of the Kingdom."(68)
It is Christ's sacrifice in this comprehensive sense that is
signified by the sacramentum tantum of the Eucharist, of which the
Church is, after all, the proximate author, and in which it expresses by
way of anamnesis Its faith in the eternal efficacy and present reality
of Christ's once-for-all sacrifice. The entire mystery of Christ,
or better yet, Christ in the totality of his saving mystery, is thus
intended and proclaimed in the eucharistic anamnesis, precisely because
it is utered, as Thomas says, "in accordance with the sense of the
words which is held by faith"(69) and so is a word of faith, the
faith neither of this or that individual, nor of the priest, but of the
Church itself, a faith which is operative, as already explained, by way
of the intention by which the priest uses his power to do what the
Church does and apart from which intention the sacrament would be
invalid.
As the ultimate expression of the Church's faith and its
supreme proclamation of the gospel, then, the eucharistic word, taken
globally, can be said to be uttered by the priesr in persona Ecclesiae.
But this brings us only to the threshold of the mystery. For at the
heart of this priestly proclamation is the word of Christ himself: sermo
Christi hoc conficit sacramentum.(70) This the deepest center of the
eucharistic mystery, the absolutely supernatural. For here, in the midst of the ecclesial proclamation, that which is recalled out of the past
becomes actual in the present: the living word of Christ supervenes upon
the priestly anamnesis to change the elements into his body and blood.
This Christ does by the agency of his sovereign Spirit, the fire from
heaven that transforms the gifts, as Eastern theology insists,(71) an
agency exercised by the Spirit not "from below," as anima Ecclesiae, but "from above," as sent by the heavenly Christ
from the Father of Lights, for, like the creation of the world, it is a
strictly divine act.(72) And in this supervening word od Christ, this
descending fire of the Spurut, lies the true meaning and the true
mysteriousness of in persona Christi, for in virtue of this divine fire,
the priestly word of the Church is transformed and sacramentally
identified with the word of Christ.
Sacramentally identified. Does this attempt at a "second
naivete" end, then by reaffirming the "sacramental
identification" of the priest with Christ it set out to repudiate?
It does not. For in my account, what is "sacramentally
identified" with Christ is not the priest, but the priestly word.
This is no mere linguistic subtlety, no dialectical sleight of hand;
underlying it is a shift in the center of gravity of our understanding
of the priestly power from what is "from below" to what is
"from above," from the priest himself to Christ and his
Spirit. In the representationalist view, the efficacy of the eucharistic
word appears as embedded in and hence as deriving from a power
"possessed" by the priest in virtue of the character by which
he is assimilated to the Christ's as a sort of sacramental
"double," enabled thereby to act in Christ's own person
to affect the real presence of Christ. By contrast, my view, which is
based on the traditional anti-Donatist doctrine that the priestly power
is distinct from the priest's person and hence is an
institutionalized charism bestowed for the good of the Church,
depossesses the consecrating priestly word of any hint of autonomy by
formally defining it in light of the sovereign word of Christ expressed
in and through it, and hence, with St. Thomas, as essentially
instrumental in nature. Nor does such a view destabilize the priestly
character and the power flowing from it in the direction of some
actualist or concomitant sense, but rather places it on the absolutely
firm ground of Christ's fidelity to the sacramental word spoken
over the priest at his ordination, leading to a view of the priest as
one over whom the ordaining word of Christ has been permanently spoken,
and the priestly character as that mysterious reality in virtue of which
the priest, far from possessing Christ, is permanently possessed and
appropriated by Christ(73) to accomplish those salvific ends of which
Christ alone can be the author.
In the utterance of the eucharistic word in persona Christi, then,
the Church's priesthood attains that telos towards which, as Rahner
might put it, it always strives to attain by reason of its essence. For
precisely because this word, the utterance of which constitutes the
ultimate realization and manifestation of the priesthood, is in the end
the word not of the priest, nor even of the Church, but is truly the
word of Christ himself spoken in ecclesial form as his efficacious and
present self-giving to us - it is precisely because this is so that we
can and I think must look back from the eucharistic word to define all
other priestly words as lesser participations of that word(74) which
reaches and reveals its ultimate nature in the eucharistic word and
thereby reveals the ultimate nature of the priesthood as the
self-effacing ministry of the word and only on that basis the sacrament
of its presence. Nor should anyone find such a view alarming or even
new, since only on some such basis can it be affirmed that the word of
Scripture, the Book of the Church, is in the end the very Word of God.
At the same time, the word of Christ in the Eucharist is not spoken
into a void, but is supported by that bridal faith of the Church which
is operative via the priestly intention. This underlying ecclesial faith
is not the cause of Christ's presence, nor yet its effect, but
rather the instrument, all disponibility, which, in a way analogous to
Mary's fiat, welcomes Christ's word, allowing it to be spoken
and heard in time, and thereby allows him to be present in the
self-giving by which he fills the Church with the Spirit that is its
true life and that makes it his sacrament in the time and place of this
world, until he comes.
CONCLUSION
The more nuanced "second naivete" of which I spoke at the
outset of this article consists in viewing the priest as the official
ecclesial instrument of Christ's presence through the preaching of
the gospel - as the one who, within the Church, is charged and empowered
by office to recall and proclaim the gospel and make it present in
saving power to and for the faith of the Church, and hence as the holder
of a ministerial office which reaches its transcendent apogee in the
proclamation of the eucharistic word in persona Christi,(75) where
Christ, who is in his person the substance of the gospel, becomes
present in his person as saving Lord. To fulfill this office, the priest
must be transparent of Christ, his individual person disappearing as it
were behind the Word of God so that he may present this Word rather than
anything of his own to the Church and the world. In the Spirit: the
power of the priesthood, as of the Church which it represents, is the
power of Christ's own Spirit, who is specially invoked at the
ordination rite in that "anthem of the Catholic priesthood,"
the Veni, Creator Spiritus, by whose anointing the Lord Jesus himself
proclaimed the gospel of salvation to the poor (Luke 4:18). The
"second naivete" is thus at the same time a horizon shift, in
line with Lumen gentium no. 8, from a baroque to a more evangelical
understanding of the Church's hierarchical structure, which can be
the saving sacrament of Christ in and for the Church only as the
instrument of Christ, who works through it both to will and to
accomplish (Philippians 2:13), "that in all things he may hold the
primacy" (Colossians 1:18). (1) Bernard J. F. Lonergan, commenting
on vetera novis augere et perficere, the phrase used by Leo XIII in
Aeterni Patris in inaugurating the modern revival of Thomism (Verbum:
Word and Idea in Aquinas [Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame, 1967]
220). (2) See the great "walking image" of scientific inquiry
presented by St. Thomas in In III Metaph., lect. 1, 339-41; see also
Summa Theologiae (ST) 1, q. 79, a. 2, and q. 86, a. 3 (3) Dennis Michael
Ferrara, "Representation or Self-Effacement? The Axiom In Persona
Christi in St. Thomas and the Magisterium," TS 55k (1994) 195-224;
"The Ordination of Women: Tradition and Meaning," TS 55 (1994)
706-19; "In Persona Christi': A Reply to Sara Butler," TS
56 (1995) 81-91, the latter in response to Sara Butler, "`In
Persona Christi': A Response to Dennis M. Ferrara," TS 56
(1995) 61-80. See also "In Persona Christi: Representation of
Christ or Servant of Christ's Presence?" Catholic Theological
Society of America Proceedings 50 (1995) 138-45. (4) The formally
ecelesial role of the priest in celebrating the Eucharist was long
advocated by the late Edward J. Kilmartin, S.J. (e.g. "Apostolic
Office: Sacrament of Christ," TS 36 [1975] 243-64; "The
Catholic Tradition of Eucharistic Theology: Towards the Third
Millennium," TS 55f [1994] 405-57 at 412-13 and 439-41). I agree
with Kilmartin's position insofar as it combats the notion of the
priest as directly representing Christ and insofar as it opens up a path
to the East by its important insistence on the eucharistic role of the
Holy Spirit, but not with his apparent replacement of the traditional
understanding of in persona Christi with the notion that the priest acts
as the official representative of the Church of which Jesus Christ is
the head" and therefore in the name of Jesus Christ the Head of the
Church" ("The Catholic Tradition" 440-41), a view which
accords neither with St. Thomas nor with what seems clearly intended by
the pertinent magisterial statements above and beyond their
representationalist wording. In what follows, I try as best I can to
wend my way through this difficult maze. (5) Council of Trent, Sess.
XXIII, Doctrina de sacramento ordinis, cap. I and can. 1, in Conciliorum
Oecumenicorum Decreta, ed. G. Alberigo et al. (Bologna: Istituto per le
Scienze Religiose, 1973) 742-43. (6) Ibid. cap. 4 and can. 6, in
Conciliorum Oecumenicorum Decreta 743-44. (7) For citations and
commentary, see Ferrara, "Representation or Self-Effacemen?"
217-18. (8) Dominicae cenae, Holy Thursday Letter of Pope John Paul II,
nos. 8-9, Acta Apostolicae Sedis (AAS) 72 (1980) 113-48, at 128-29. (9)
Letter of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on the Subject
of the Role of the Ordained Ministry of the Episcopate and Presbyterate
in the Celebration of the Eucharist, Aug. 6, 1983, AAS 75 (1983)
1001-09, at 1006. (10) Ibid. 1001. (11) Mediator Dei: Encyclical Letter
of His Holiness Pius XII on the Sacred Liturgy (Washington) National
Catholic Welfare Conference, 1947) no. 93. For the complete text of the
original, see AAS 39 (1947) 521-95. (12) Ibid. no. 84. (13) Ibid. where
the pope rehearses these points as "errors long condemned."
(14) Ibid. no. 83. (15) Ibid. no. 84. (16) "On the Question of the
Admission of Women to the Ministerial Priesthood" (Inter
insigniores), Declaration of Oct. 15, 1976 of the Sacred Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith (Washington: USCC, 1977). (17) Inter
insigniores no. 4 (18) Ibid. no. 5 (19) Ibid. (20) Ibid. (21) Thomas, it
may be noted, though speaking of sacramental character in general (he
has no detailed analysis of the sacerdotal character) as
"configuring" (configurantur) the faithful to the priesthood
of Christ" (ST 3, q. 63, a. 3), goes on to explain this
configuratio not in terms of a similitudo, a notion which for him
bespeaks a formal indifferentiation between likeness and exemplar (ST 1,
q. 4, a. 3), but as a referring of the one signed to his leader, as
"configuring one to some principal person in whom is invested the
authority over that to which he is assigned," in the way, for
example, that a soldier is marked with the sign of his leader (ibid. ad
2) and hence during battle can be distinguished from the soldiers of the
enemy (ibid. ad 3). Thomas's insistence, detailed in my original
article, on the purely instrumental nature of the character, advances
this referential reading of the character, which retains continuity with
the scriptural understanding of apostle, a step further. (22) The
priest's action in persona Christi formally stems, as Inter
insigniores section 5 itself acknowledges, from the priestly character.
But the latter is essentially interior. By insisting that the axiom
implies an external and visible representation of Christ, the
Declaration is either trivializing the axiom by reducing its essentially
metaphysical meaning to the epistemological level of what is readily
understandable ("a sign that must be readily perceptible"
[ibid]), or is making the priest, as visible sacrament of Christ, part
of the sacramentum tantum of the Eucharist. On the novelty and
unacceptability of the latter view, see Ferrara, "Representation of
Christ" 139 n. 5. At the heart of the Declaration's position
is an erroneous formalizing of the function of the natural sign"
in the Christian sacraments. For the traditional view as expounded by
St. Thomas, see below 7-8, and also Ferrara, "A Reply to Sara
Butler" 85-87. (23) "On the Dignity and Vocation of
Women" (Mulieris dignitatem), Apostolic Letter of Aug. 15, 1988 of
Pope John Paul II (Origins 18 (Oct. 6, 1988] 26; AAS 80 [1988]
1653-1729, at 1715-16). (24) Ibid. (25) Sara Butler, "A Response to
Dennis M. Ferrara" 72. (26) "Priestly Ordination"
(Ordinatio sacerdotalis), Apostolic Letter on Ordination and Women of
Pope John Paul II of May 30, 1994 (Origins 24 [June 9, 1994] 50-52).
(27) Karl Rahner, "The Church and the Sacraments," in
Inquiries (New York: Herder, 1964) 204. (28) E. Schillebeeckx, Christ,
the Sacrament of the Encounter with God (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1963)
54. (29) ST 3, q. 60, a. 5, sed. contra (30) ST 3, q. 60, a. 7 ad 1.
(31) Council of Trent, Sess. 5, Decr. 2, Super lectione et
praedicatione, in Conciliorum Oecumenicorum Decreta 667-70, at 669 n. 9.
(32) Presbyterorum ordinis no. 4, in The Documents of Vatican II, ed. W.
M. Abbott (New York: Guild, 1966). All citations from Vatican II are
taken from the Abbott edition. (33) Inter insigniores no. 2. (34) Ibid.
no. 3. (35) Ibid. no. 5. (36) ST 3, q. 82, a. 7 ad 3. (37) Lumen gentium
no. 8. (38) Schillebeeckx, Christ, the Sacrament of the Encourkter 72.
(39) Ibid. 68. (40) ST 3, q. 64, a. 8 and 2. Although the validity of
the sacrament only requires that the minister place the sacramental sign
with the intention to do what the Church does" (intentio faciendi
id quod facit Ecclesia) and not what the Church "intends"
(intentio faciendi id quod intendit Ecclesia), in "doing what the
Church does" the minister in fact effects what the Church
"intends," namely, the sacramental mediation of Christ's
grace. For while the minister may be devoid of grace, the Church is
indefectible. In its case there can be no disassociation between
"doing" and "intending"; rather, they necessarily
coincide. As Thomas points out, even a minister who thinks the rite he
performs is worthless can intend to do what the Church "does"
and such an intention suffices for validity, since "the minister of
a sacrament acts in the person of the Church, by whose faith any defect
in the minister's faith is made good" (ST 3, q. 64 a 9 ad 1).
(41) Lumen gentium no. 8. (42) ST 1, q. 1, a. 7. (43) Ibid. no. 7. (44)
ST 3, q. 17, a. 1. (45) ST 3, q. 17. a. 2. (46) See below, n. 52. (47)
Thomas Aquinas, De veritate q. 29, a. 4. My approach here differs
sharply from that proposed by David Power, O.M.I., in his otherwise
insightful and confirming essay, "Representing Christ in Community
and Sacrament," in Being a Priest Today, ed. Donald J. Goergen,
O.P. (Collegeville: Liturgical, 1992) 97-123. According to Power,
"the glorified Christ is totally one with the body," a oneness
symbolized by the "one flesh" of the nuptial image, so that
"the sanctifying and worshipful action of Christ in the Church is
the action of the Church itself as a believing community, when it is
united by the ordained ministry" (115). And again: "The
actions of Christ in the Church are the actions of the body, or, there
is only one action, which is that of the body, head and members, as
though one person" (116). This oneness is even said to represent
Thomas's "deepest and most important intuition," though
one that he "subordinated ... to a more hierarchical and
instrumental view of the ordained" (115) in keeping with the
medieval theology of in persona Christi, which "separated the
descending act of God in Christ from the ascending act of Christ in the
Church" (115). Power sees a fateful separation where Thomas and the
medievals posited a fundamental distinction, namely, between God's
gratuitous and prior gift of grace in Christ (the downward movement) and
the ecclesial response of faith and worship (the upward movement). It is
in fact precisely this priority of God's grace within the covenant
- not, as both Power and Inter insigniores section 5 would have it, the
union of love - which is the fundamental theological reality signified
by the nuptial image of Scripture (see Ezekiel 16), making a clear and
subordinating distinction between the Head and the members, the
Bridegroom and the Bride, and hence between in persona Christi and in
persona Ecelesiae not a medieval relic, but an abiding necessity. (48)
Karl Rahner, "The Word and the Eucharist," in Theological
Investigations 4 (Baltimore: Helicon, 1966) 253-86 at 265. (49) Thomas,
for example, does not expressly extend the formality which the word
possesses for sacramental signification to the sacrament's
instrumental efficacy (see ST 3, q. 61, aa. 1 and 4) the result being
that the relation between signification and efficacy lies unresolved in
his thought. (Passing references such as sacramenta significando causant
in De veritate q. 27, a. 4 ad 13 or secundum vim significationis of ST
3, q. 78, a. 2 ad 2 are assigned no clear causal or technical meaning by
Thomas. This irresolution was not removed by Trent (Sess. VII, Decretum
primum de sacramentis, can. 6-8, Conciliorum Oecumenicorum Decreta
684-85). For the manifold and sometimes strained theories developed in
post-Tridentine theology to explain sacramental efficacy, see Bernard
Leeming, S.J., Principles of Sacramental Theology (Westminster: Newman,
1956) 314-44 (50) Rahner, "The Word and the Eucharist" 261.
(51) Ibid. 263. On the word of the priest as the word of God, see also
Karl Rahner, "Priest and Poet," in Theological Investigations
3 (Baltimore: Helicon, 1967) 294-317, at 303. (52) Clear examples are
provided by Roger Haight, S.J., "The Case for Spirit
Christology," TS 53 (1992) 257-87, and John McDade, S.J.,
"Jesus and the Spirit," The Month 27 (1994) 498-503. The
fundamental doctrinal error, as has already been pointed out in
Haight's regard by John Wright, S.K., "Roger Haight's
Spirit Christology," TS 53 (1992) 729-35, is a denial of the
hypostatic union between the Eternal Word and the assumed humanity
(Haight, 276-80; McDade 502-3). In this, the authors seize on the
ambiguity that lingers in Chalcedon's duality of natures while
completely bypassing the formal resolution of this ambiguity by the
explicit affirmation of Christ's divine person at Constantinople II
(see G. L. C. Frank, "The Council of Constantinople II as a Model
Reconciliation Council," TS 52 [1991] 636-50, at 646-47.
Theoretically, both authors suppress the divinity of Christ's
person as being a threat to his human integrity, agency, and historicity (Haight 276; McDade 501), thereby confusing the transcendental nature of
the relation of the divinity to the humanity implied in the Greek
doctrine of enhypostasis with a categorial and hence competing,,
relation. Inevitably, these positions result in neo-modalistic views of
the Trinity, though McDade at least preserves trinitarian language
(502-3), Haight's initial identification of the Spirit with the
economic God as such (268-70) leaving him unable to make any
intelligible reference to the Trinity at all. Unruddered explorations
such as these, which radically reverse the priorities of faith and
thinking in theology, perforce remind us of the words of Bernard
Lonergan: "the article[s] of the Apostles' Creed ... ha[ve] a
clear meaning in the minds of all the faithful, including the
theologians qua fideles. That clear meaning seems to me to exclude in
rather peremptory fashion theories ... that, instead of explaining what
everyone believes ... seem to be incapable of being reconciled with what
everyone believes" ("Christ as Subject: A Reply," in
Collection (I)[New York: Herder, 1967] 164 (53) Lumen gentium no. 8.
(54) ST 1, q. 43, a. 3. (55) Inter insigniores no. 5. (56) ST 1-2, q.
106, a. 1. (57) Rahner, "The Word and the Eucharist" 283. (58)
Inter insigniores no. 5. (59) See n. 9 above. (60) TS 55 (1994) 206,
citing ST 3, q. 82, a. 1. (61) ST 3, q. 82, a. 7 ad 3. (62) In my
original article, I laid formal stress on "the anamnestic nature of
the form of the Eucharist," i.e., on the fact that the priest
recites Christ's words by way of anamnesis, in order to emphasize
the priest's visible otherness from and thus his ministerial
subordination to Christ, the principal speaker ("Representation or
Self-Effacement?" 206-13). The chief inference I drew from this
position is that action in persona Christi pertains to the order of
faith and mystery and not to the order of visible representation (ibid.
211-12). At the same time, my argument could have been construed as
formally identifying the anamnesis with the positive and effective
meaning of in persona Christi; at the very least, it left a hiatus
between the two, a lack of connection between the instrument and the
principal cause, a situation which gave objective grounds to Sara
Butler's charge of a "fundamental flaw" in my thesis,
i.e. that I espoused an "apophatic" notion of sacrament
("A Response to Dennis M. Ferrara" esp. 75 n. 62). The present
argument attempts to remove this imprecision, which was not apparent to
me when I wrote either the original article or my response to Sara
Bitler's criticism. (63) Kilmartin, "The Catholic
Tradition" 408. (64) Schillebeeckx, Christ, the Sacrament of the
Encounter 55-56. (65) Kilmartin, for example, rejects any
eternalizing,, of the historical sacrifice ("The Catholic
Tradition" 410, 452), arguing that the latter can be sacramentally
present in virtue of the transhistorical agency of God as principal
cause (ibid. 411). But this view, besides being based on what seems to
me a strained interpretation of St. Thomas, fails to address the issue:
for the transhistorical element that perforce exists in the Eucharist
cannot be located in God as principal agent, but must be located
precisely in the instrumental cause through which God acts, namely, the
sacrifice of Christ qua homo. (66) Basing himself on the Epistle to the
Hebrews, Schillebeeckx argues that Christ's sacrifice exists
eternally "in the mode of glory" (Christ, the Sacrament of the
Encounter 58). Prior to this, he attempts to root the transhistorical
element of the sacrifice in the eternity of Christ's divine person
(ibid. 57) rather than in the assumed humanity as such, thereby exposing
himself to the same ambiguity that attends Kilmartin's view. (67)
H. Denzinger and A. Schonmetzer, Enchiridion Symbolorum, 33rd ed.
(Barcelona/New York: Herder, 1965) 1741. In this connection, Pius
XII's view that "the Eucharistic species ... symbolize the
actual separation of [Christ's] Body and Blood," so that the
"commemorative representation of His death, which actually took
place on Calvary, is repeated in every sacrifice of the altar, seeing
that Jesus Christ is symbolically shown by separate symbols to be in a
state of victimhood" (Mediator Dei no. 70), must be interpreted in
keeping with Hebrew thought, according to which the body given and the
blood shed each signify, under diverse aspects, the totality of
Christ's self-giving: see the commentary on Luke 22:19-20 by Robert
Karris, O.F.M. in The New Jerome Biblical Commentary, ed. R. Brown, J.
A. Fitzmyer, and R. E. Murphy (Englewood Cliffs: Prentice, 1990) 713-14.
It must be interpreted also in conformity with the fundamental doctrine
that the sacraments effect what they signify. For what is made really
present in the Eucharist can only be what is real and actual at the
present; the risen and ever-living Christ, our "high priest"
who has taken his seat at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in
heaven, minister of the sanctuary and of that true tabernacle set up,
not by man, but by the Lord" (Hebrews 8:2). (68) Alexander
Schmemann, The Eucharist: Sacrament of the Kingdom (Crestwood: St.
Vladimir's Seminary, 1988). (69) ST 3, q. 60, a. 7 ad 1. (70) ST 3,
q. 78, a. 1, sed contra. (71) E. Schillebeeckx, The Eucharist (New York:
Sheed and Ward, 1968) 68-69; Schmemann, The Eucharist, Sacrament of the
Kingdom 213-27. Schmemann, unfortunaltely, expounds the Orthodox
doctrine of the epiclesis via a sharply polemical contrast with the
Western doctrine of anamnesis. It is my hope that the attention given in
the present essay to the role of the Spirit in effecting the eucharistic
conversion (a role which Thomas seems to take for granted [ST 3, q. 78,
a. 4 ad 1] but does not develop) will help promote more fruitful
interchanges between East and West on this controversial point. For a
balanced discussion and a fine harvest of texts from both traditions,
see Y. Congar, "The Eucharistic Epiclesis," in I Believe in
the Holy Spirit, 3 vols. (New York: Seabury, 1983) 3. 228-57. (72) ST 3,
q. 78, a. 2 ad 2; q. 75. a. 4. See also Paul VI's encyclical
Mysterium Fidei no. 46 (AAS 57 [1965] 763-74 at 776-67. Of this strictly
divine power no created thing can be more than an instrument, not even
the human soul of Christ (ST 3, q. 13, a. 2), and a fortiori not the
priest acting in virtue of the sacerdotal character. (73) Thomas's
military metaphor expresses much the same idea; see n. 21 above. (74) On
the degrees of the efficacious word, see Rahner, "The Word and the
Eucharist" 279-80. (75) Given the uniqueness of the eucharistic
conversion and of the priest's role therein, as expounded above,
terminological clarity seems best served if we follow the traditional
and Thomist usage and restrict the term in persona Christi to the
priest's utterance of the ipsa verba Christi at the supreme moment
of consecration and group all "preparatory" ministerial acts,
acts in which the priest, though indeed in the power of the Spirit,
exercises a proper, intra-ecclesial act of his own to "teach, rule,
and sanctify" the faithful in loco Christi and "as minister of
Christ the Head and co-worker of the episcopal order"
(Presbyterorum ordinis no. 12), under the general rubric of in persona
Christi capitis. Such a terminological distinction would reflect the
doctrinal distinction between the ministerial nature of the priestly
office in general and the uniquely apophatic exercise thereof in the
ineffable mystery of the Eucharist: "So great is the dignity of
this sacrament that it is not confected except in persona Christi"
(ST 3, q. 82, a. 1).