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The Eucharistic Prayer of Mass
(from the USCCB)

The Eucharistic Prayer or Canon of the Mass is the central prayer of the entire celebration. Most Catholics have been made aware from their earliest days that during the Eucharistic Prayer the bread and wine are transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ. What many Catholics are not aware of, however, is that the Eucharistic Prayer is about more than adoring Christ who becomes present in our midst.

The Church tells us that liturgy (and the Mass is the highpoint and heart of liturgy) is the action of Christ the Priest and His Body, the Church. In the celebration of Mass, during the Eucharistic Prayer, not only does Christ become present, body and blood, soul and divinity, under the forms of bread and wine, but Christ's saving action, His passion, death and resurrection are once again enacted and offered to the Father by Christ Himself in the person of the Priest or Bishop, and by all present.

This is a truth of enormous significance! This action of Christ which brought about our redemption from sin and eternal death, offered once for all on Calvary, becomes present again for us, here and now, in this time and place, so that we can join in Christ's perfect offering and we can ourselves participate in His perfect worship.

Read carefully any of the Eucharistic Prayers. You will see that the prayer is offered, not to Christ, but to the Father: Father, you are holy indeed ...; Father, we bring you these gifts ...; Father, we ask you .... It is worship offered to the Father by Christ as it was at the moment of His passion, death and resurrection, but now it is offered through the Priest or Bishop acting in the person of Christ - in persona Christi - and it is offered as well by all of us who are part of Christ's Body, the Church. This is the action of Christ's Body - the Church at Mass.

When the Priest or Bishop prays the Eucharistic Prayer he prays
we bring you these gifts; we ask you ...; we offer. That we signifies that all the baptized present at this Eucharistic celebration make this offering in union with Christ, pray this prayer in union with Him. And what is most important, we do not offer Christ alone; we are called to offer ourselves, our lives, our individual efforts to grow more like Christ and our efforts as a community of believers to spread God's Word and to serve His people, to the Father in union with Christ through the hands of the Priest or Bishop. Most wonderful of all, although our offering is in itself imperfect, joined with the offering of Christ it becomes perfect praise and thanksgiving to the Father.

And so, during the Eucharistic Prayer at Mass, we have more to do than to look forward to the moment of Consecration and remain there while the prayer of the Bishop or  Priest continues. Before the Consecration we join in the prayer of praise and thanksgiving to the Father known as the Preface and affirm that praise and thanksgiving in our singing of the Sanctus (Holy, Holy, Holy). Following the Consecration we join together in the Memorial Acclamation which proclaims our common faith in Christ's Real Presence and is an acclamation expressing our gratitude to Christ for His wonderful gift of salvation. But then our prayer moves on and we are called to offer Christ, and ourselves with Christ to the Father: 'We offer to you, Father, this holy and living sacrifice...' and to pray with the Priest or Bishop that 'we who are nourished by His Body and Blood may be filled with the Holy Spirit and become one body, one spirit in Christ...'; we then join our prayers with the prayers of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary and all the saints for our Holy Father the Pope, our Bishops and clergy and all God's people, living and dead. At the conclusion of the Eucharistic Prayer the Priest or Bishop sums up all that has gone before: ' Through Him (Christ), with Him (Christ), in Him '(Christ) in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all glory and honor is yours, almighty Father, forever and ever.' And we who are privileged to make our own offering through, with and in Christ, respond with the most important acclamation of the Mass, the great AMEN by which we profess the action of Christ to be our action as well.

 

Based upon Roman Missal Formational Materials provided by the Secretariat for the Liturgy of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, ©2002.

The Ways We Worship, Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J.
Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J. Videos

 

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The Eucharist
Contact: Fr. Mario Marzocchi, SSS
E-Mail

 

 

48th International Eucharistic Congress

The Eucharist: Light and Life of the
New Millennium

October 10-17, 2004
Guadalajara, Mexico

49th International
Eucharistic Congress
Quebec, Canada

Church Documents

Second Vatican Council: Sacred Liturgy

The Eucharist in the Documents of Vatican II

The Catechism and the Eucharist

USCCB: The Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist (Espa
ñol)

Papal Documents               

The Eucharist: Witness of the Fathers

On the Holy Eucharist, Leo XIII


On the Mystical Body of Christ, Pius XII

On the Sacred Liturgy, Pius XII

On the Holy Eucharist, Paul VI 

Paul VI: Eucharisticum Mysterium

Paul VI: Approaching Jesus Today

Servant of God
John Paul II on the Holy Eucharist

John Paul II on the Priesthood

     Eucharistic Spirituality

Eymard Library . . . Writings

Eymard . . . In His Own Words

Life and Letters of Saint Peter Julian Eymard

Little Book of Acts - Saint Peter Julian Eymard

Our Lady of the Most Blessed Sacrament

Eymard's Our Father

Eymard's Way of Praying

The Fire and the Flame

Uniquely Called By The Eucharist

Eucharistic Adoration

  

Pastoral Theology

 Liturgical Hymns of
Saint Thomas Aquinas


 Adoro Te
Verbum Supernum
Pange Lingua
Sacris Solemni
Lauda Si
on

Various

Resources on the Year of the Eucharist, 2004-2005
Prayer of Saint Catherine of Siena
Receiving Holy Communion - Bp. Thomas J. Tobin
The Catholic Liturgical Library
The Tabernacle: Its History, Structure, and Custody

 

       

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web master contact: Father Mario Marzocchi, SSS