Verified Claim · The Eucharist
Chrysostom explicitly taught that the sacrifice offered on every Christian altar is the same sacrifice as Calvary — Christ offered once but present on every altar through the ministry of priests.
Chrysostom’s eucharistic theology anticipates in clear terms the Catholic doctrine later systematised at Trent: the Mass is not a repetition of Calvary but a re-presentation of the one sacrifice of Christ. He asks and answers the question directly: we offer every day, but it is one sacrifice, not many.
2 dateable primary sources spanning AD 390–407. Tap any dot to expand.
Chrysostom's distinction between many celebrations and one sacrifice is not Protestant memorial theology. He says the Eucharist is a memorial in the sense that the one sacrifice is made present through the memorial action — not that it is merely a remembrance. The priest offers Christ; Christ is what is offered.
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