On the four o'clock hour of the John & Ken Show on KFI on July 16,
2007, attorney John Manly said the following:
"In Catholicism what we were all taught as kids, at the moment of
consecration, when the priest holds up the host and the bells
ring, that he is in fact Jesus, the theological term for it is
Alter Christus."
That is not what Catholicism teaches. A priest never actually
becomes Jesus. It is the bread and wine that actually become
the body and blood of Christ through a conversion called
transubstantiation.
During mass, the priest is in the role of Christ and it is
through his words the conversion takes place.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church
summarizes:
1413 By the consecration the transubstantiation of the
bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ is brought about.
Under the consecrated species of bread and wine Christ himself,
living and glorious, is present in a true, real, and substantial
manner: his Body and his Blood, with his soul and his divinity (cf.
Council of Trent: DS 1640; 1651).
As far as Manly's silly "alter Christus" reference ... The term is
found nowhere in the Catechism. The term means "another Christ." It has
been said that at ordination, a priest becomes another person, "alter
Christus,"
"signifying" Christ - not actually becoming Christ himself, as
Manly states. The key word is "alter" - "another."
And as John Paul II stated in
a 1997 address, "St Cyprian rightly said that the Christian,
every Christian, is 'another Christ' — Christianus alter Christus"
(bold emphasis mine).
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
By the way, in the same interview, Manly stated,
"He [Cardinal Mahony] gets to go and put on his $1500 suit, his
$1200 pair of shoes, his pointy hat, and run around like a bozo
like he always has, telling people he’s gonna send them to heaven.
It’s sickening."
Needless to say, Cardinal Mahony knows very well that no one
except God himself has the authority to "send" anyone to heaven.
Good ... grief. Does Manly have no shame?