Bouyer Life&Liturgy chXI PDF
Bouyer Life&Liturgy chXI PDF
Bouyer Life&Liturgy chXI PDF
143-157
One most remarkable feature of both the Jewish and the Eucharist (thanksgiving)
is that, however solemn and public it is, it is always performed by a single man. We
have not as yet emphasized this characteristic, but it is time to do so now. The
eucharist, of course, is the concern of the whole liturgical assembly. It is not performed
until that assembly has been asked not only to pay attention to it, but to assent to it;
and it is concluded by the very solemn Amen of all the people. But yet, only one man
“makes” the Eucharistic Prayer.
In the Old Covenant, it was the head of the family, or, in the communities of
pious Jews who were expecting the Messias, the spiritual leader who was to say the
eucharist. (Let us notice the fact that this substitution of spiritual leader for head of a
family brings out the Jewish idea of the teacher as a father, an idea which prepares us
to see how the primitive Church could easily think of Jesus as at once the Word and
the Son of God.).
But in the New Covenant, it is the bishop, or the priest whom be has designated
when he is not present himself, who is to say the Eucharist Let us remember the phrase
of St Ignatius: “Let no Eucharist be accounted valid except that which a bishop.” But
what is it that assigns this leitourgia to the bishop, making it so definitely his work that
nobody can perform it in his stead except those co-workers whom he himself has
endowed with the power to do so? There is no doubt that the answer is: because the
[143] holds the place of our Lord amongst us. Not only is he considered the “locum
tenens” of Christ, but it is Christ Himself, personally, Who is considered as being
present and as acting in and through the bishop, so that what the bishop does, Christ
does. And, consequently, whenever and wherever the Eucharist is performed in the
Church, there is always but one single Eucharist, that of Christ Himself.
But how is it that the bishop's Eucharist is to be considered as Christ's own
Eucharist? And why is it so important that there should be no other Eucharist but
Christ's one Eucharist in the New Covenant? The answer to the first question is that
the bishop is the apostolos of Christ: he whom Christ has sent in such a way that He
Himself is in him. And the answer to the second question is that Christ is the apostolos
of the Father, He whom the Father has sent so that He Himself is in Him. This is to
say, finally, that the great point of the Christian Eucharist is that in it the thanksgiving
of man is one with the Word of God: it is the Word of God made man Who now out of
man's thanksgiving makes the Mystery: “Christ in you, the hope of glory.” (Col 1:27)
We have just stated, in a nutshell, one chief aspect of the Mystery which we will
now develop point by point.