Prayers of the faithful regarding racial tensions?

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For those of you who have been able to watch or attend Mass in the US or other countries with racial tensions and civil unrest, how have the prayers of the faithful reflected this? Have there been prayers against racism or for healing? Prayers for first responders? Prayers for peace?

I’m curious, because the few times I’ve attended Mass, we haven’t prayed about it much.
 
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Yes, in the online masses I followed there was a mention to it, mostly a call for peace and justice.
 
For those of you who have been able to watch or attend Mass in the US or other countries with racial tensions and civil unrest, how have the prayers of the faithful reflected this? Have there been prayers against racism or for healing? Prayers for first responders? Prayers for peace?
Yes, but I can only speak of the masses from the Franciscan parishes I have watched.
 
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My parish has been praying for an outpouring of love and a conversion of heart for all to do the will of God. No mention for either side, just a general prayer for all. We’ve been praying for first responders and others since COVID began so no change on that front.
 
Usually there’s one very general prayer for “Healing the divisions in our community” or similar.

Also, our Archdiocese has been saying a nightly Rosary via Zoom for several months due to the coronavirus, and added a Novena to the Sacred Heart for the intention of healing our racial strife, for the whole month of June.
 
We get our prayers of the faithful from a book that comes with the yearly missal we purchase. They are formulated ahead of time for the whole year in this book.

Sometimes, we get additional prayers of the faithful that come from the diocese or Vatican for special occasions or situations-- like disasters, etc. If we get one of those, I add it into the petitions for the week. I haven’t received any on this topic, although I did get some on COVID a few months ago that I added to the petitions for that week.

We do not roll our own on prayers of the faithful.

Our priest might add something just before he does the concluding prayer.

We did have a statement on the George Floyd murder that came from our bishop and that I posted in the bulletin.
 
No, not at our Masses yet. I’m sure it’s coming. And I’m already cringing. I wish the prayers of the faithful were less political.
 
No, not at our Masses yet. I’m sure it’s coming. And I’m already cringing. I wish the prayers of the faithful were less political.
Not sure why this has to be framed as “political”. It far transcends politics. It is basic human dignity-- which can be found in the corporal works of mercy and the social teaching of the Church.
 
Pray that we/they respond to the Holy Spirit. I understand He is available to all.
 
Well I’m envious of your parish, round these parts it doesn’t go like that. The parish office staff are in full on political war mode and have been for years. One person will write “we pray our troops are supported and are victorious”. Another might write, we pray our lgbt bothers and sisters and family members are allowed to live a life of love and freedom”. Another might be we pray our government leaders build bridges instead of walls”.
It’s my least favorite part of the Mass and it’s incredibly divisive to the body of Christ.
 
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Wow! That’s much worse than saying nothing! I’m surprised your pastor allows it.
 
Usccb has resources for parishes, we just finished Religious Freedom week. The different prayers, intentions, even daily Facebook posts from your parish this week were USccb resources.
 
You are incredibly fortunate. The vast majority of the parishes I have attended since the 1980s have the prayers ‘written’ by anyone from the priest, to the head of the parish council or the DRE, or, in too many parishes to count, the Faithful are encouraged either to write them in ‘the book’ which itself is carried ceremoniously down and then all that particular Mass’ prayers are read aloud, often with the priest at the end responding, “OK, everybody, anybody else have a particular thing they want to pray about’ followed by people calling out various and often conflicting intentions from where they stand. And sometimes there is a particular Sunday of the month for the children where the tots doing all the singing and the reading and come around the altar and, of course, have their prayers for Mommy and Fido and ‘no more tests at school’ with all the requisite “Awwwwws” and loud, “aren’t they PRECIOUS” murmurs to accompany.

I remember that every time I was lucky enough to visit, or to actually wind up in (praise and thank you God) a parish that does what yours does Regarding the Prayers of the Faithful, I gave extra thanks (and extra in the church envelope).

Oh, before anybody gives the usual, “oh you rigid witch you should be thankful the children come to Mass”. . .of course I’m thankful. Crying children, even somewhat disruptive children and downtrodden parents doing their best. . . I am the first to come to them after Mass and thank them for coming and finding something to praise about their children and how important it is for families to come to Church. But that doesn’t mean that even if it’s adorable Arabella lisping infant cuteness that it should be celebrated simply because “she’s so cute’. Anyway my grandsons are the epitome of cuteness anyway, you’d better believe it.

IOW, saying that some things in Mass belong to the provenance of adults or of the clergy (I.e., except in extraordinary cases of an extremely intelligent and articulate small child who has the ability to read and speak with the understanding of a teen, say, children should not be reading the readings at Mass, and under NO circumstances should children or adults, save those who are serving the Mass, be coming up around the altar at the consecration. . .no matter how CUTE they look or sound.
 
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I have just one question about the prayers of the faithful:

Why is it that the only parishioners who are ever sick have names that are impossible to pronounce?
 
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