The Never-Expendable Sacrifice of Christ


            Speaking with some Christians outside of the Catholic Church, you may never know that the Catholic understanding of Christ’s sacrifice on the Cross is one of comprehensive scope and infinite depth. Upon hearing that we call the Mass a “Sacrifice,” some squirm and cringe at the sound, because they perceive wrongly that Catholics somehow do not believe Christ’s sacrifice on the cross was “once-for-all,” and that we nullify Christ’s words from the cross itself, “It is finished” (John 19:30). In fact, though, Catholics would go above and beyond the incomplete understanding of Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice that teaches the sacrifice is limited to history. Catholics believe his sacrifice to be an eternal, never-expendable source.
Practically, when I write that the sacrifice of the cross is never-expendable, I mean that it can be offered over and over again, without ever being diminished or depleted. Here I specifically point to the Mass itself, which is the continually repeated act of obedience of the Church to Christ’s own command. Catholics look at the Deposit of Faith, handed down through the centuries, and see that Christ’s sacrifice began at the Last Supper, when he said, “This is my body… This is my blood… Do this in remembrance of me” (1 Corinthians 11:23-26). The Eucharistic celebration, called the Mass, is our form of worship, following out the command to “remember” the Lord’s death and resurrection for our redemption and freedom.
Perhaps it is not so obvious to the English speaker’s ears, but “do this in remembrance” was to the apostles clearly a call to offer sacrifice. A “memorial sacrifice” was often commanded by the Lord to the people of Israel. In fact, Passover itself, which was the foreshadowing of Christ’s own Passover, was a memorial sacrifice; it was a memorial of the event in which God won for the people of Israel their freedom from slavery in Egypt (Exodus 12:14,17). As the Catechism points out, a memorial sacrifice is not an empty act of intellectual memory; it is, rather, something that recalls and, to some degree, makes present now that which had historically happened. So, the Israelites sacrificed and then ate entirely a lamb for Passover every year. Other items were used to make present the event of the Exodus out of Egypt and God’s magnificent power to save (CCC, 1363). The same is true for the Mass: Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice is made truly present in the act of remembrance, even Christ himself fully-present, and the sacrificial value is made truly available again and again.
What is the purpose of doing it again and again, though, if Christ did it once-for-all in the first century? The simple answer is, first, that Christ commanded it. Secondly, the continual and repeated offering makes present to us in the here and now that “Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world” (John 1:29). Yes, Christ offered himself up two thousand years ago, but that same sacrifice is not limited to time and space: we can receive it in its fullness now, in our own time. Every time someone is baptized with water and Spirit, the saving merit of the Cross is made present for that soul in that moment. The same is true for the Eucharist in the Mass, except that the entire sacrifice itself is made present and available to us, for the reception of grace and the forgiveness of sins. The event of the Cross is brought to the present moment at each Mass.
In fact, the Council of Trent in the year 1562, following the mass exodus of millions of Catholics to Protestantism, reaffirmed that the sacrifice of the Mass “is truly propitiatory.” What the Council meant by this statement is that the Sacrifice of the Mass has the same exact merit and value of Christ’s original sacrifice made in the first century. The reason is simply because it is one and the same sacrifice with that on the cross, being re-presented (CCC, 1366). Why would we want to neglect such a great gift, to offer up the greatest sacrifice of all time to God for the salvation of the world? After all, after the priestly office and authority handed on to the apostles, we the Church are all called to a holy and royal priesthood to offer sacrifices (1 Peter 2:9).
In God’s infinite mercy and wisdom, he has made it so that we, too, with Mary can stand at the foot of the cross and offer up the Son to the Father in thanksgiving, praise, and petition for forgiveness and grace, to grow in holiness and sanctification. This is the infinite plenitude of the Cross, that “from his fullness, we all have received grace upon grace” (John 1:16 NRSVCE). Every Mass brings a renewed grace of salvation, equal to the same and once-for-all sacrifice on the Cross. And through this Sacrifice, we are able to present ourselves as a “living sacrifice” by partaking and participating in the one Sacrifice, present in the Eucharist (Romans 12:1).
The boundless scope of Christ’s sacrifice, then, encompasses not only the eternal aspect (i.e., not limited to history) of Christ’s saving act, but also that his sacrifice is an inexhaustible source of grace in which we can participate. All of our prayers, works, joys and sufferings are able to be united to the sacrifice of the Cross, and the Mass. Only through the Cross of Christ can we offer any personal sacrifices up to God (CCC, 2031, 618). As the Church is Christ’s body, we are able to participate in his sacrifice to the Father. All of our good works and our sufferings are granted merit as a gift simply because they are united to the one and same Lord to whom we belong, as his body (CCC, 1368, 2008). Therein lies the infinite value of Christ’s sacrifice: the one Sacrifice redeems and restores every single faithful believer to justice and makes us able and valid participants in the priesthood of Christ, and especially through the Mass, we can access the fruits of that sacrifice an infinite number of times. Nothing can diminish it. Nothing can expend it.




For from the rising of the sun to its setting my name is great among the nations, and in every place incense is offered to my name, and a pure offering; for my name is great among the nations, says the Lord of hosts.
    -- Malachi 1:11 NRSVCE

The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not a sharing in the blood of Christ? The bread that we break, is it not a sharing in the body of Christ? Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread. Consider the people of Israel; are not those who eat the sacrifices partners in the altar?
    --1 Corinthians 10:16-18 NRSVCE

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