Christ was Anointed
both Priest and King
This is an
excerpt from a treatise on the Trinity by Faustinus (aka
Faustus) Luciferanus, an Early Church Father who most probably wrote his
treatise "De Trinitate" around 380 AD at the request of the wife of the
Emperor Theodosius (Nn. 39-40; CCl 69, 340-341). It shows how our
Savior Jesus Christ was anointed with the Holy Spirit, the oil of
gladness, as both priest and king. In this he is unlike all Old
Testament figures except Melchizedek. It is used in the Roman Catholic
Office of Readings for the 12th Sunday in Ordinary Time with the
accompanying biblical reading taken from I Samuel 16:1-13, reccounting
the anointing of King David by the prophet Samuel.
Our Savior received a bodily
anointing and so became a true king and a true priest. Both king and
priest he was of his very self; a savior could be nothing less. Hear in
his own words how he himself became a king: I have been appointed king by God on Zion his holy mountain. Hear in the Father’s words that he was a priest: You are a priest for ever in the line of Melchizedek.
Aaron was the first under the law to be made a priest by being anointed
with chrism, yet the Father does not say, “in the line of Aaron”, lest
it be believed that the Saviour’s priesthood could be passed on by
inheritance, for at that time Aaron’s priesthood was transmitted by
lineal descent. But the Savior’s priesthood is not inherited because
this priest lives on for ever. Therefore Scripture says: You are a priest for ever in the line of Melchizedek.
There is, therefore, a savior in the
flesh who is both a king and a priest, though his anointing was not
physical but spiritual. Among the Israelites, those kings and priests
who were actually anointed with oil were either kings or priests. No man
could be both king and priest; he had to be one or the other. Only
Christ was both king and priest; because he had come to fulfil the law,
he alone possessed the twofold perfection of kingship and priesthood.
Those who had been anointed with the
oil of kingship or priesthood, although they received only one of these
anointings, were called messiahs. Our Savior, however, who is the
Christ, was anointed by the Holy Spirit so that the passage in Scripture
might be fulfilled: God, your God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness and raised you above your companions.
The difference, then, between the one Christ and the many christs is in
the anointing, since he was anointed with the oil of gladness, which
signifies nothing other than the Holy Spirit.
This we know to be true from the Savior himself. When he took the book of Isaiah, he opened it and read: The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he has anointed me. He then said that the prophecy was fulfilled in the hearing of those listening.
Peter, the prince of the
apostles, also taught that the chrism which made the Saviour a christ
was the Holy Spirit; that is to say, the power of God. When in the Acts
of the Apostles Peter spoke to that faithful and merciful man, the
centurion, he said among other things: After the baptism which John
preached, Jesus of Nazareth, whom God anointed with the Holy Spirit and
with power, started out in Galilee and travelled about performing
powerful miracles, and freeing all who were possessed by the devil.
So you said that Peter too said that
Jesus in his humanity was anointed with the Holy Spirit and with power.
Thus Jesus in his humanity truly became the Christ. By the anointing of
the Holy Spirit, he was made both king and priest for ever.
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