Institutes of the Christian Religion (Vol. 2 of 2)
CHAPTER XVIII.03
The Papal Mass Not Only A Sacrilegious Profanation Of The Lord’S Supper, But A Total Annihilation Of It - Reading 03
VI. We are now to treat of the fourth property of the mass, which is, to prevent us from perceiving and reflecting on the death of Christ, and thereby to deprive us of the benefit resulting from it. For who can consider himself as redeemed by the death of Christ, when he sees a new redemption in the mass? Who can be assured that his sins are remitted, when he sees another remission? It is not a sufficient answer, to say, that we obtain remission of sins in the mass, only because it has been already procured by the death of Christ. For this is no other than pretending that Christ has redeemed us in order that we may redeem ourselves. For this is the doctrine which has been disseminated by the ministers of Satan, and which they now defend by clamours, and fire, and sword; that when we offer up Christ to his Father, in the sacrifice of the mass, we, by that act of oblation, obtain remission of sins, and become partakers of the passion of Christ. What remains, then, to the passion of Christ, but to be an example of redemption, by which we may learn to be our own redeemers? Christ himself, when he seals the assurance of pardon in the sacred supper, does not command his disciples to rest in this act, but refers them to the sacrifice of his death; signifying that the supper is a monument, or memorial, appointed to teach us that the expiatory victim by which God was to be appeased ought to be offered but once. Nor is it sufficient to know that Christ is the sole victim, unless we also know that there is only one oblation, so that our faith may be fixed upon his cross.
VII. I come now to the concluding observation; that the sacred supper, in which our Lord had left us the memorial of his passion impressed and engraven, has, by the erection of the mass, been removed, abolished, and destroyed. For the supper itself is a gift of God, which ought to be received with thanksgiving. The sacrifice of the mass is pretended to be a price given to God, and received by him as a satisfaction. As far as giving differs from receiving, so far does the sacrifice of the mass differ from the sacrament of the supper. And this is the most miserable ingratitude of man, that where the profusion of the Divine goodness ought to have been acknowledged with thanksgivings, there he makes God his debtor. The sacrament promised, that by the death of Christ we are not only restored to life, but are perpetually vivified, because every part of our salvation was then accomplished. The sacrifice of the mass proclaims a very different doctrine; that it is necessary for Christ to be sacrificed every day, in order to be of any advantage to us. The supper ought to be distributed in the public congregation of the Church, to instruct us in the communion by which we are all connected together in Christ Jesus. The sacrifice of the mass dissolves and destroys this communion. For the reception of this error rendered it necessary that there should be priests to sacrifice for the people; and the supper, as if it had been resigned to them, ceased to be administered to the Church of believers, according to the commandment of the Lord. A way was opened for the admission of private masses, which represented a kind of excommunication, rather than that communion which had been instituted by our Lord, when the mass-priest separates himself from the whole congregation of believers, to devour his sacrifice alone. That no person may be deceived, I call it a private mass, wherever there is no participation of the Lord’s supper among believers, whatever number of persons may be present as spectators of it.
VIII. With respect to the word mass itself, I have never
been able certainly to determine whence it originated; only I
think it may probably have been derived from the oblations
which used to be made at the sacrament. Hence the ancient
fathers generally use it in the plural number. But to forbear
all controversy respecting the term, I say that private masses
are diametrically repugnant to the institution of Christ, and are
consequently an impious profanation of the sacred supper. For
what has the Lord commanded us? Is it not to take and
divide it among us? [1341] [1342]
IX. In the purer times of the Church, this corruption was
unknown. For, however the more impudent of our adversaries
endeavour to misrepresent this matter, yet it is beyond all
doubt that all antiquity is against them, as we have already
evinced in other points, and may be more fully determined by
a diligent perusal of the ancient fathers. But before I conclude
this subject, I will ask our advocates for masses, since they
know that “the Lord hath” not “as great delight in sacrifices,
as in obeying the voice of the Lord,” and that “to obey is
better than sacrifice,” [1343] [1344]