The Early History of the Mass
Dr. Remi Amelunxen
The first Holy Mass, the chief and central act of Catholic worship, was
said on the same night on which Our Lord was betrayed by Judas (cf. 1
Cor 11:23). On Holy Thursday the 12
Apostles had gathered with Our Lord for the paschal meal. The Last
Supper certainly was one of the most important events in History.
After the washing of the feet, they came to the table for the supper.
Then, Our Lord took bread into his Hands, looked up to heaven, gave
thanks, blessed and broke it and gave it to His Apostles saying: “Take
ye and eat. This is My Body.”
The Mass was instituted by Christ at the
Last Supper on Holy Thursday
Last Supper on Holy Thursday
And after the Apostles had received the Body of Christ, He took the chalice in which was wine, gave thanks, blessed it and gave it to His Apostles saying: “Drink ye all of this for this is My Blood, the Blood of the new and eternal Covenant, the Mystery of Faith which shall be shed for you and for many for the remission of sins. Do this in memory of Me.”
Thus, it was Christ himself who gave the essential core of Holy
Sacrifice of the Mass, who established the words of the act of the
Transubstantiation, that central moment when the unleavened bread and
wine were transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ and, then,
elevated them in the sight of the Apostles, who represented the whole
Church, Hierarchy and faithful.
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The New Testament clearly reflects the origin of the Holy Sacrifice of
the Mass in written accounts of the Last Supper (Matt 26:26-28, Mark
14:23-24, Lk 23:19-20, Cor 11:23-25). Sacred Tradition and the
Extraordinary Magisterium clearly substantiated Sacred Scripture.
Importantly, Our Lord said at the Last Supper in Aramaic the words “Mystery of Faith” or Mysterium Fidei, in Latin. This formula was always used in the Tridentine Mass, but was removed from the ICEL Novus Ordo Missae. Mysterium Fidei is the heart of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, the Transubstantiation.
The absence of this formula was gladly accepted by the Protestants,
interpreted by them as a denial of the Real Presence.
Also, many modern liturgists deny that the first Mass occurred on Holy
Thursday, a position that repeats exactly that taken at the time of the
Protestant Revolution. The Protestants consider the first Mass to be on
Good Friday, thus turning the ‘eucharistic supper’ of Holy Thursday into
nothing more than a commemorative meal. This is also a position that
was adopted by progressivists in the New Mass, which abolished the
sacrificial character of the Mass and give emphasis to it as a memorial
supper.
An unbloody Sacrifice
At the last Supper on Holy Thursday, Our Lord Jesus Christ instituted
the visible unbloody sacrifice of the Mass in order to represent the
bloody sacrifice that He would offer on Good Friday on the Cross, where
all of His Blood was shed for the redemption of mankind until the end of
the world. The setting for the first Mass was significant: the paschal
lamb meal that the Jews celebrated every year was to recall the exodus
from Egypt and to prefigure the great expectation of the Redemption
The sacrifice of Moses prefigured
the Passion and Death of Our Lord
the Passion and Death of Our Lord
The words Our Lord used at the Last Supper were quite similar to those
which Moses spoke on the institution of the Old Covenant. After Moses
revealed the law of sacrifice on Mount Sinai, he slaughtered an animal
and sprinkled the blood upon the people, saying: “This is the blood of
the covenant which the Lord hast made with you.” (Ex 24:8)
The sacrifice of Moses was a prelude of Our Lord's Passion and Death.
Jesus Christ desired that His Passion and Death should follow
immediately after the Last Supper, signifying that they were one and the
same act. The sacrifice in the Holy Mass begins at the consecration of
the bread and wine into the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Our Lord,
the Transubstantiation, which is the very heart of the Mass.
According to the Venerable Mary of Agreda in The Mystical City of God,
the Infant Jesus was transfixed after the Angel Gabriel placed Him in
the arms of Our Lady. He revealed to His Mother the details of the Last
Supper, His Passion and Death, and the sword of sorrow that would pierce
her heart. Seven days after the Nativity at the Circumcision, He shed
the first drops of His Precious Blood
– enough to redeem mankind according to Ven Mary of Agreda. But, by the
Divine Plan He was to shed all of His Precious Blood for our
redemption.
At the Last Supper Our Lord transmited to the Apostles the power to
transubstantiate with the words: “Do this in memory of Me,” and all
priestly successors also have this miraculous power (Council of Trent
22, 1).
The first Sacramentaries
In the first three centuries, Greek was the liturgical language at Rome
and the names used for the whole sacrifice of the Mass were Eucharistia, or Eucharist, translated from Greek to Latin it is Divina Sacrificia or Divine Sacrifice, and Sacrificia Dei meaning Sacrifice of God.
In the year 88, the fourth Pope, St. Clement of Rome, martyr, wrote in
his letter to the Corinthinians that Our Lord laid down the order of the
Mass, referring specifically to the Offertory, Consecration and
Communion. St. Clement made it clear this order was established by
Christ: "We must do all things that the Lord told us to do at stated
times” (Chapter xi).
The frontipiece of a Gelasian Sacramentary
dating from the 8th century
dating from the 8th century
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