Wednesday, May 26, 2021

The problem of the usus

Lutherans have always had a problem when it comes to the moment of Christ's presence in the Sacrament.  On the one hand, we have taken great pains to say that this moment of the sacramental union cannot be pinpointed to a precise instant but on the other hand at some point we know that Christ is where He has promised to be.  On the one hand, this hesitance is rooted in our refusal to see the power to effect Christ's presence as something deposited in the priest in ordination.  On the other hand, this is shaped by our insistence that it remains Christ's Supper and He is the One who fulfills its promise and makes present His flesh and blood in bread and wine.  But the soft underbelly of Lutheranism is the refusal to take a firm stand and thus allow the muddle to allow such ridiculous opinions as receptionism (the idea that the presence of Christ in the Sacrament happens only at the moment the elements are consumed).  Worse, the refusal to speak forthrightly on this has also allowed us the shame of how the elements are treated after the supper (from disrespect to downright impiety).  Finally, our hesitance to say what we ought and ought not to do, has left some to invent practices clearly at odds with our Confessions (online Sacraments).

If you want the definitive work on the subject, survey Dr. Edward F. Peters ThD dissertation, The Origin and Meaning of the Axiom: "Nothing Has the Character of a Sacrament outside of the Use" in Sixteenth- Century and Seventeenth Century Lutheran Theology.  You might also want to survey Dr. Bjarne Teigen's The Lord's Supper in the Theology of Martin Chemnitz.  Another resource might be Dr. Arthur Carl Piepkorn's The Moment at Which the Sacramental Union Begins.  

The whole point of the usus (the ancient rule or standard, “Nihil habet rationem sacramenti extra usum a Christo institutum” or’ “extra actionem divinitus institutum, in English: Nothing has the nature of a sacrament apart from the use instituted by Christ” or “apart from the action divinely instituted”) (F.C., S.D., VII,85; Trig.p. 1001; Tappert, p. 584) is not the moment at which the sacramental union begins or ends but the protection of the Sacrament as gift and blessing meant to be received, that is, to be eaten and drunk.  The distortion of the usus to deal with other questions has not helped the matter of clarity or consistency in confession and practice.  The context of this was and is against those uses of the Sacrament except for the faithful reception as Christ intends (here, Lutherans would insist that exposition of the Sacrament or benediction -- outside its reception -- is not the use for which Christ intended the Supper).  It stands to reason if our Lord has given the command to eat and drink of His body and blood and there is no eating and drinking, then the blessing attached to that communion is lost to us and there is no Sacrament.

The question of at what point Christ is present and at what point, if any, Christ is no longer present is a separate issue from the question of the usus of the Sacrament.  They might be related but they are not the same.  The sad reality is that even some of the great names of Lutheranism have wandered into the weeds in this question, doing exactly what Lutherans insist they do not do, allowing reason or logic to answer instead of simple Scripture.  So it is true that David Chytraeus, Andreas Quenstedt, CFW Walther, Wilhelm Loehe, and Franz Pieper have written in such way that it appears they believe the presence of Christ happens at the reception and there is no presence in the distribution or in the reliquae that remain after the distribution.  Some, in making this judgment, have cited exceptional circumstances -- spillage, for example.  Because they do not want to believe Christ's blood would be spilled, they have presumed it cannot be spilled because it is not present yet.  It is a little like heading down the path of what might be if a man were alone on a desert island.  Rules from such unusual circumstances are seldom helpful and may violate the very truths of our confession.

While it is certainly true that the Lutheran Confessions do not separate the consecration from distribution from the reception, this does not mean that this precludes us from addressing what happens at each juncture of the one, complete act.  The consecration is one action.  The Words of Christ are addressed to elements not as magical words or incantation but as Words of Promise that are efficacious and deliver what they promise.  The pastor speaks as the voice of Christ speaking and doing what He has promised.  It is not some peculiar power given to the pastor that is at work here but the Word of Christ doing what Christ has promised to do.  Thus, there is involved in the consecration the intent to receive what the Words of Christ promise.  We can have confidence here that what those Words say, the Words do, so that what is distributed and received is the body and blood of Christ, quite apart from our faith or lack thereof or our convictions about the Real Presence or lack thereof.  

The sanctus bells ring not to draw attention to the clock and the time in which this presence occurs but to the Word that speaks and to what that Word effects.  In the same way, the elevation is the natural ceremonial confession of what we believe, teach, and confess about the Words of Christ.  We adore Christ here, acknowledging His presence where He has promised to be.  Because Christ is to be adored, faith rejoices to do so.  We are not distinguishing the bread from the body or the wine from the blood because this sacramental union compels us to see them together.  Not bread that is less than bread but bread that is more -- the body of Christ.  In the same way the wine -- not less than wine but more, the blood of Christ.  We are not worshiping an object any more than one worships an object when one bows before the Incarnate Lord Jesus.  It is simply foolishness to make such a charge.

Distribution is handled in a manner appropriate to what is being distributed.  This is the most sacred gift of God, the flesh of His Son for us to eat and His blood for us to drink.  The use of the houseling cloth or distribution paten or simply holding the purificator under the chin reminds us that this is not just bread and not just wine.  While there is some antiquity to distributing in the hand, it is neither universal or necessarily laudable to do so.  The pastor distributes into the mouth out of reverence for what is being distributed.  The distribution remains until all that is consecrated is consumed, whether later the sick or against the next communion.  Why is this so hard?  The Lord calls on us to eat and drink with the promise that what we eat and drink are His flesh for the life of the world and His blood that cleanses us from all sin.  The Lord does not give time limits to such distribution.

After the Supper, what remains cannot be treated apart from its use.  Luther and others have warned against treating the consecrated host as mere host and mingling with the unconsecrated and also what remains in the flagon or cruet.  Though most Lutherans would look askance at reservation of the reliquae, the truth is most Lutherans reserve without tabernacle.  In the sacristy, a plastic container and separate cruet are marked consecrated to keep them separate.  Why not give what remains its due and honor the Lord with a fitting place of reservation for later distribution or commune all that remains?  By the way, consume it at the altar so that the people see and understand it.  Better this than to do it after the service in the sacristy, behind closed doors.  Sure, over the years there have been practices less than salutary (like sending the Eucharist like a welcome coffee cake to a new bishop).  But that these excesses have occurred does not mean we must deny the obvious.  Take and eat; take and drink.  And what we take and eat and take and drink is what Christ says it is until we eat and drink it.  Unless we do not intend to eat and drink it at all, for then it is not His sacrament but something else.

Perhaps there are Lutherans who believe in two miracles, Christ filling the bread with His body and the wine with His blood AND then Christ departing leaving only bread and wine.  Perhaps there are Lutherans who like such fancifulness but not this one.

Frankly, when did you ever find a Lutheran who wanted to omit the reception?  When did you ever find a Lutheran who thought that being a spectator at the mass was as beneficial as eating and drinking as Christ invites and commands?  When did you ever find a Lutheran who wanted to take the host and mount it for adoration in place of the reception?  When did you ever find a Lutheran who wanted to intentionally violate the usus by taking bits and pieces away from the whole action?  You don't!  You won't!  But I tell what you might find.  You might find Lutherans who toss away leftover reliquae like yesterday's garbage, who treat the elements on the altar and after the Supper with little respect, who ignore spills and leave a trail of crumbs as if it did not matter a bit, and who tinker with the Lord's institution as if it were a suggestion instead of a testament (substituting juice and other breads as they see fit).  The problem with the usus is not Lutherans reserving for some use apart from reception.  The problem is that receptionism and a narrow view of the usus has led us to forget what it is that the pastor holds in his hand and gives to us in Christ's name and treat it as if it were something ordinary, common, and sentimental more than real.

Finally, make sure that the vessels used for distribution are cleansed with clean water, the water reverently poured into the piscina or on the ground, and those vehicles of grace treated in accord with what they carried.  This means careful rinsing and pouring down the piscina the rinsed water even from individual cups (whether glass or plastic).  To do anything less is to admit that these vessels conveyed nothing more than earthly elements and to deny our confession.  Honor the usus.  But do not dishonor the Lord by putting an expiration date where He has put none or by presuming some sort of sophistry designed to minimize our responsibility for reverence instead of encouraging it.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

According to Dr. Eugene Klug:

“Luther had little concern for the precise "moment" of the Real Presence. Neither the so-called consecrationists, nor the distributionists, nor the receptionists, nor any other such breed, can claim him for their side. "The words are the first thing,” Luther says simply, "for without the words the cup and bread would be nothing. Further, without bread and cup, the body and blood of Christ would not be there. Without the body and blood of Christ, the new testament would not be there. Without the new testament, forgiveness of sins would not be there. Without forgiveness of sins, life and salvation would not be there.” So this is the issue, the hinge on which all things turn, “since all this constitutes one sacramental reality,” says Luther.

“The Lutheran church is a liturgical church, but it is also the church that knows that God's Word prescribes no specific form of worship as necessary. The enabling word and power in the Sacrament is Christ's. When the pastor consecrates the bread and wine in the midst of his congregation he is setting aside these elements for the use which Christ commanded. The questions of when the Real Presence begins, when it ends, what happens when a wafer is dropped or wine spilled are really irrelevant. "For the whole action of the institution hangs together" with the offering, receiving, and eating, says Chemnitz. "When therefore the bread is taken, blessed, divided, offered, and received according to the institution, this action is not rightly said to be either before or apart from the use of the Supper, which has its bounds in the entire action of the institution.” Therefore, Chemnitz regards as “revolting disputes,” triggered by scholastic pettiness, such questions as these: "what about those particles to which the use has not yet come, that is, which have not been distributed, received, and eaten?"" or what is it that "a mouse which gnaws the bread is eating?"

“Therefore, it is claiming too much to attach extremist views to Chemnitz and to say that he had the mind of Luther in so thinking. This is, however, the claim of Bjarne W.Teigen. In connection with Article VII (paragraph 126) of the Formula of Concord Teigen has concluded that the reason why Chemnitz is urging a proper veneration of the Sacrament is that "the consecration effects the Real Presence" According to Teigen, “there can be no question that Chemnitz believes that the consecration in a valid observance of the Supper achieves the Real Presence, and he could not for theological reasons accept the position that we cannot fm from Scripture within the Sacramental usrcs when the Real Presence of Christ's body and blood begins.” Teigen asserts that "throughout all his writings he [Chemnitz] assumes that the consecration effects the Real Presence" and that this consecra- tion is the repetition of the verba, “the powerful creative words of Christ: The end result of this doctrine is that the consecration has achieved the sacramental union.”

“What Luther and Chemnitz refuse to try to do, that is, fm the moment of Christ's presence in the Sacrament, Teigen presumes to do for them. It is certainly asserting too much to say that Chemnitz "in all his writings assumes that the consecration effects the Real Presence." The only point in The Lord's Supper which remotely approaches such a claim is the passage in which Chemnitz states that "when the word or institution of Christ comes to these elements, then not only one substance is present as before, but at the same time also the very body and blood of Christ.” The context, however, does not support Teigen's assertion, nor does the rest of Chemnitz's beautiful treatment of the Sacramental Presence, which he, like Luther, always sees as running straight back to the Lord's instituting word, as the Formula of Concord states.”

http://www.ctsfw.net/media/pdfs/klugsacramentalpresence.pdf

Carl Vehse said...

The LCMS CTCR document,"Theology and Practice of the Lord's Supper" (May, 1983), states:

Our Lutheran Confessions, quoting from the Wittenberg Concord (1536), are lucid in their rejection of any view which would confer some extraordinary status upon the elements apart from their sacramental use.

And after quoting FC SD VII, 14-15, the CTCR footnotes:

21. The problem with the "consecrationist-receptionist" discussion is that each side runs the risk of separating in one direction or the other what has been Biblically joined together.

Janis Williams said...

If a person has a treasured piece of jewelry (for example, I have a crucifix I wear each day), they do not toss it in the sink, or somewhere it might be lost or damaged. In the same way, I take joy in pastors who respect the Table of the Lord. They don’t just pile the remaining elements, veil, etc in the middle of the altar like tossing your napkin on the table after dinner.

This is Christ’s Holy Supper; why do we have to tie ourselves down to the exact second His Presence (which is already there in the Divine Service from the Invocation - and before) appears in the elements?

We are arguing over the salt and pepper shakers on the table while the world takes away our house. The theologians will argue, but those of us in the pews KNOW Christ is present, and there for our forgiveness and salvation.

When Christ healed, he healed some at the beginning of their illness, some after years of suffering, and some after they died. We were all dead in trespasses and sin, and have been made alive again by Baptism, Word, and Sacrament. (That is, Christ). What do the dead know of when they came to life? They only know that once they were dead, and now they live…