Daily Archives: September 8, 2008

Sacraments, Mission, and Divine Action

By virtue of the church’s inclusion in the totus Christus, the base-practices of the church (Baptism, Eucharist, the preached Word) which were instituted by Christ in his incarnation reveal and embody the apocalyptic promise of the final communio. The sacramental practices of the church participate in the christic and pneumatic dynamism of the immanent triune life which is the promised transfiguration of the world in Christ. The sacramental base-practices of the church, rightly understood, are the form and splendor of the inter-trinitarian love translated into the life of humanity through the Son. In baptism a person is drawn into the circle of triune love, which embraces, heals, and captivates the brokenness of sinful humanity. Through baptism the Spirit unites the believer with Christ, drawing her into the communion of the Trinity which exists on earth as the church. Likewise, through the Eucharist, the members of the body of Christ gather together by the Spirit in the peace that has been wrought by word of the cross which makes all things one. In the Eucharist the one loaf is consumed by the one body thereby assuming the members together into a truly united, truly catholic ekklesia.

The Word and sacraments are at once the divine verbum externum (vera visibli) and the gratuitous unio mystica. They are the sovereign work of God extra nos and simultaneously the divine condescension en nobis. Thus, the church bears witness to and corresponds to Christ because as his body she stands in contiguous relation to the head, thus participating in the reality of his hypostatic person and thus in the triune life of God. The church and Christ exist as one body in contiguous relation, intimately connected, yet distinct. Therefore, through the sacramental base-practices of the church the Spirit continually actualizes the reality of divine-human communion in the church which is constantly being transfigured–indeed revolutionized–through the depths of the triune love mediated therein. The sacramental mediation of the church is in a sense an extension of the soteriological mediation of the Son, but the church is only that extension in the mode of pathos, of receptivity, humility, and poverty before the sheer gratuity of God’s action pro nobis in the cross and resurrection of Chist. Thus, the expansive and ubiquitous outpouring of the pneumatic love of God in and as the totus Christus draws the entire creation into the ecclesial communio such that in the eschaton all things are found within the infinite communio that is the Trinity.

The church then, in its practice of the Word and sacraments, participates in and recieves the movement of the Trinity into the world. Not in any way because of what she is in herself, for in herself she is nothing. But rather because of the gracious outpouring of the love of God by the Holy Spirit which enflames and enlivens, drawing the church into the apocalyptic movement of God into the world. God’s saving action in the world is not static, but gratuitous and infinitely expansive, intruding and interrupting the world of sin and alienation. Thus, through Christ and the Spirit the triune Lord “makes room” for the church within God ‘saction for the salvation of the world, allows us at once participation in God’s eternal communion and participation in his trinitarian mission to drawn all persons into sacramental, spousal communion with God in the ecclesial communion.

The Dark Side of the Sexual Revolution

“Here is the dark side of 1960s ‘sexual liberation’: the full commodification of sexuality. . . . sex is an absolute necessity, to renounce it is to wither away, so love cannot flourish without sex; simultaneously, however, love is impossible precisely because of sex; sex which ‘proliferates as the epitome of late capitalism’s dominance, has permanently stained human relationships as inevitable reproductions of the dehumanizing nature of liberal society; it has essentially, ruined love.’”

– Slavoj Žižek, Violence: Six Sideways Reflection (New York: Verso, 2008), 35-36.

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