Monday 24 March 2014

Lent 3rd Week Saint Thomas More

Night Office Readings - Ratification of the covenant
 
Thomas More by Hans Holbein the Younger.
TWO YEAR LECTIONARY
PATRISTIC VIGILS
READINGS
Editions Exordium  Books 1982, Augustine  Press2001

LENT

YEAR 2
Monday of the Third Week in Lent Year II

First Reading
From the book of Exodus (24:1-18)
Sirach 45:5-6; Acts 7:38
Responsory
God allowed Moses to hear his voice and led him into the cloud.
– Face to face he gave him his commandments,
that he might teach Jacob his precepts and Israel his decrees.
In the desert assembly
Moses was the mediator between our ancestors and the angel who spoke to him on Mount Sinai
– Face to face ...

Second Reading
From A Treatise upon the Passion by Saint Thomas More
(Chapter 4, sermon 1. Partially modernized)

More's Treatise (or as we should say today "homilies") upon the Passion was probably written in the early months of 1534. This extract from it contrasts the old covenant and the new. The first was ratified by the blood of an animal, the second by the blood of a man who was also God. Through that blood, which he gives us to drink in the blessed sacrament, our sins are forgiven.

In the twenty-fourth chapter of Exodus it is related that Moses, in confirmation of the old law, put half the blood of the sacrifice into a cup, and the other half he shed upon the altar. And after the book of the law had been read he sprinkled the blood upon the people, and said unto them: This is the blood of the covenant that the Lord has made with you in all these words. And so was the Old Testament ratified and confirmed with blood. And in like manner was the New Testament confirmed with blood, saving that, in order to declare the greater excellence of the New Testament brought by the Son of God, above the Old Testament brought by the prophet Moses, whereas the Old Testament was ratified with the blood of a brute beast, the New Testament was ratified with the blood of a reasonable man, and of that man who was also God, that is to say, with the blessed blood of our holy Saviour himself. And that self-same blood did our Lord here give unto his apostles in this blessed sacrament, as he plainly declared himself, saying: This is my blood of the New Testament, or: This is the chalice of the New Testament in my blood which shall be shed for you and for all for the remission of sins.

When our Lord said this, he declared therein the efficacy of the New Testament above the old, in that the old law in the blood of beasts could only promise the remission of sin that was to come later. For as Saint Paul says: It was impossible that sin should be taken away by the blood of brute beasts. But the new law with the blood of Christ does perform the thing that the old law promised, that is, the remission of sin And therefore our Saviour said: This is the chalice of the New Testament in my blood – that is, to be confirmed in my blood – which shall be shed for the remission of sins.

His words also declared the wonderful excellence of this new blessed sacrament above the sacrifice of the paschal lamb, in these words: For you and for all. For in these words our Saviour spoke, says Saint Chrysostom, as though he meant to say: The blood of the paschal Lamb was shed only for the first-born among the children of Israel, but this blood of mine shall be shed for the remission of the sin of all the whole world

Responsory   Revelation 5:9; Psalm 85:9

English Saints: Thomas More and Thomas Cranmer  By Lauren Gilbert

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