St Irenaeus, "Against the heresies"
The pure offering made by the Church |
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The
Lord taught the Church to make an offering throughout the whole world,
and God accepts this as a pure sacrifice. It is not that God needs any
sacrifice that we might offer, but that whoever offers something is
glorified in the act of offering – if, that is, his gift is accepted.
Making a gift to a king shows our honor and loyalty to him – and it was
because the Lord wanted us to make our offerings in all innocence and
without ulterior motives that he said: When you are offering your
gift at the altar, and you remember that your brother has something
against you, leave your gift there at the altar. First go and be
reconciled to your brother, and then come back and offer your gift.
We ought to offer to God the first fruits of his creation, as even Moses said: Do not come empty-handed into the presence of the Lord your God. Thus whatever we are grateful for, we can show our gratitude to God by gifts and receive back the honor that God can give us.
The new law does not abolish offerings. There were
offerings under the old law and there are offerings now. Then, sacrifice
was made by the people, now it is made by the Church. The only change
is that the sacrifice is not now offered by slaves but by free men. The
Lord remains one and the same – but an offering made by a slave is of a
characteristic kind, and so too is an offering made by a free man: its
nature is a sign of his free status. With God, nothing is purposeless,
or meaningless, or without a good reason. Thus under the old law they
consecrated one tenth of their possessions, while those who have
received their freedom set aside everything they have for the Lord’s
use. They cheerfully and freely give more than the bare minimum because
they have more than the bare minimum of hope. The poor widow put all
that she possessed into the Temple treasury.
For we must make an offering to God, and show
ourselves in every way grateful to him who made us – in purity of
thought, in sincerity of faith, in fervent hope and burning love – as we
offer the first fruits of the things he has created and that are his.
This offering the Church makes alone to her creator, making it with
gratitude from his creation.
For we are offering him the things that are his,
preaching our fellowship and union and proclaiming the resurrection of
body and soul. Just as bread that comes from the earth, once the words
of consecration have been said, is no longer ordinary bread but becomes
the Eucharist, made of two things, earthly and heavenly, so our bodies,
receiving it, are no longer corruptible but have the hope of
resurrection within them.
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