Latria
Roman Catholics, Anglicans, Eastern Orthodox Christians especially adore with latria during their religious service, the Mass or Divine Liturgy. Other religious groups, such as Protestants and Muslims, do not have a Eucharistic sacrifice; Catholics consider that they literally participate in the sacrifice at the foot of Calvary, that what Christ offered once "participates in the divine eternity" (CCC § 1085), and thus have a very active sense of the worship of latria.
Protestants and others fault Catholic and Orthodox Christians for revering Mary or the Saints, declaring their distinction among latria, hyperdulia, and dulia to be hair-splitting, and furthermore reject Augustine, Jerome, Thomas de Aquina, and others as authorities. Protestantism considers the Catholic conception of the central religious service to be an error, arguing that the sacrifice of the Cross was unique (which Catholics also believe), and needn't and shouldn't be repeated, Heb 6:6, 9:25-28. Catholics counter this with verses such as Malachi 1:10-11 and by stating that they don't "repeat" the Sacrifice of the Cross but they re-present it (make it present again). Protestantism also contends that the sacrificial aspect of Mass was unknown to the Primitive Church and is opposed to the Bible both in its general sense and specific instructions. The former assertion is a question of historical fact which Catholics answer with the writings of the early Christians and the Church Fathers; the latter is a matter of Scriptural interpretation, which Catholics contend is determined by the Church's Magisterium (bound by "Sacred Tradition"), and which Protestants contend is determined by the individual.
External links
- Latria from the Catholic Encyclopedia
- Honor - Latria, Hyperdulia, Dulia, and Simple Honor from Antipope Pius XIII
- City of God, Chapter X St. Augustine (A.D. 354-430) on latria
- The Sacrifice of the Mass/Divine Liturgy and the Eucharist