What Are the Words to This?

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What are the words to the thing we say at Mass around communion which starts something like “May the Lord accept this sacrifice into His hands…”? I tried looking at the sheet in the pews but I don’t recall seeing it. I’ve never been able to understand what the people are saying.
 
What are the words to the thing we say at Mass around communion which starts something like “May the Lord accept this sacrifice into His hands…”? I tried looking at the sheet in the pews but I don’t recall seeing it. I’ve never been able to understand what the people are saying.
If your church does not have missals, you can buy one on a Catholic website. You will be able to follow along much better.
 
If your church does not have missals, you can buy one on a Catholic website. You will be able to follow along much better.
Are missals those books with the readings or the cards with “all” (most) of the prayers on them? If so, then we do have them; however, ours is missing this prayer/saying.
 
Are missals those books with the readings or the cards with “all” (most) of the prayers on them? If so, then we do have them; however, ours is missing this prayer/saying.
Have you looked in the book, or just looked on the cards? If the rest of the mass is in the book, that part is too.
 
Have you looked in the book, or just looked on the cards? If the rest of the mass is in the book, that part is too.
I’ve looked at the daily readings from time to time, but I try not to touch the books too much because they seem to be germy from the kids playing with them as I always tend to catch colds after touching the books. 🤷

The cards at my main parish (I say main because I often can’t make it to Saturday confession so I go to another nearby parish on Friday for confession after Mass and they do have this saying to my knowledge) don’t have this saying for whatever reason. :confused:
 
My husband bought me this one when I was looking into becoming Catholic:

catholicbookpublishing.com/products/379

The one I have is hard cover. The description for this one says it is a cloth cover.

The missal is very easy to use. I don’t use mine any longer, but still have it. 🙂
 
I actually was given a “Year C” book with the readings and the “order of the Mass” in it during RCIA. It’s one of the same books they have stuck in the pews. It might be a missal but I don’t know. I never really looked through it much, but I just opened it and the so called “order of the Mass” seems to go along with the Mass word for word. I tried skimming through it a bit but I didn’t seem to find the saying. :confused:
 
I actually was given a “Year C” book with the readings and the “order of the Mass” in it during RCIA. It’s one of the same books they have stuck in the pews. It might be a missal but I don’t know. I never really looked through it much, but I just opened it and the so called “order of the Mass” seems to go along with the Mass word for word. I tried skimming through it a bit but I didn’t seem to find the saying. :confused:
You know, you are making excuses now. “I never really looked through it much.” Read, don’t skim it. Take it to mass and follow along. You will be able to say the correct responses. If you want to grow in your faith, you need to stop just doing the minimum, which is just showing up.
 
I have two books on the prayers of the Mass that you might find helpful (see my signature). I’ll share the segment on this particular prayer (split into two posts) for free:

After the priest has prayed over the bread and wine and washed his hands, the congregation stands and the priest invites the faithful to pray (the Orate fratres, “Pray brethren”) that the sacrifice being offered will be accepted by God. We stand and respond:

May the Lord accept the sacrifice at your hands, (1 Cor. 11:24-25; 1 Pet. 2:5)
for the praise and glory of his name, (1 Chr. 16:29; Joel 2:26)
for our good (Matt. 26:27; Mark 14:24; Luke 22:19-20)
and the good of all his holy Church. (Eph. 4:12; 5:25-30)

The priest speaks of “my sacrifice and yours” (meum ac vestrum sacrifícium). In the old translation this was rendered as “our sacrifice,” but the Latin distinguishes between what the priest brings to the sacrifice and what we bring to it. The priest offers the bread and wine (and the Eucharist); we participate in the offering by the priest and join to it our very selves.

The bread and wine are changed into the Real Presence of Jesus Christ at the consecration of the Eucharistic Prayer, but this presence is hidden under what the Church calls a “sacramental veil,” the remaining appearance of bread and wine. When we see Christ in Heaven, there will be no veil. In much the same way, we pray that we may be changed to be more like Christ (“configured” to Christ, in the language of the Church) by receiving Holy Communion. This configuration to Christ is imperfect while we are on earth, but it will be perfected when our resurrected and glorified bodies enter Heaven.

Just as the bread and wine will be transubstantiated into Christ, what they represent – ourselves, the Church, the Body of Christ – is, in a sense, transubstantiated as well. By identifying ourselves with the bread and wine, as Archbishop Sheen wrote, we are anticipating the change that will occur in us at the end of time, while conforming our lives to the change taking place now.

Because of what the bread and wine will become (once consecrated), the union of our spiritual sacrifices to the bread and wine during the Offertory is a sign of our participation in Christ and His sacrifice. The bread and wine already have a physical likeness to Christ’s sacrifice, because they are the same elements He used, and the same elements that were offered centuries before Him by Melchizedek. (cf. Gen. 14:18) When we join our spiritual sacrifices to them in the Offertory, each of us gives them a spiritual likeness to Christ’s sacrifice. Finally, in the Eucharistic Prayer, this likeness is perfected as they receive a substantial likeness to Christ’s sacrifice.

The bread and wine (and afterwards, the Eucharist) and ourselves are united as one at the hands of the priest: he offers them physically as we offer them spiritually. The bread and wine that the priest holds during the words of consecration represent us, since they represent the fruits of our labor. Then, as the priest offers the Eucharist to God, we join our very lives – all of our worries, cares, sufferings, and prayers – to Christ in the Eucharist. It is only by joining ourselves to Christ, the perfect sacrifice, that the contribution of our living, spiritual sacrifice can be truly acceptable to the Father. (cf. Rom. 12:1; 1 Pet. 2:5)
 
(“Praying the Mass: The Prayers of the People” continued)

Archbishop Charles Chaput, O.F.M. Cap., of Denver, wrote about the Offertory prayers in a weekly column in December 2002: “This part of the Mass is another invitation for us to offer our lives in a sacrifice of praise to God. Here the common priesthood actively engages in the sacrifice taking place.” This common or baptismal priesthood is part of our identity in Christ. In a sermon from the fifth century, St. Peter Chrysologus, the Bishop of Ravenna (in northern Italy) spoke to his flock about St. Paul’s words in Romans 12:1.

Listen now to what the Apostle urges us to do: “I appeal to you,” he says, “to present your bodies as a living sacrifice.” By this exhortation of his, Paul has raised all men to priestly status. How marvelous is the priesthood of the Christian, for he is both the victim that is offered on his own behalf, and the priest who makes the offering. He does not need to go beyond himself to seek what he is to immolate to God: with himself and in himself he brings the sacrifice he is to offer God for himself.

In a Christian’s self-offering to God, he is following the pattern of Christ Who is both priest and victim. Because Christ is both priest and victim, our share in His priesthood (exercised in intercessory prayer, as well as in this offering of ourselves as living sacrifices of praise) must also include a share in His victimhood. This does not mean that we should expect to undergo a persecution and death as grievous as His, but we should unite the suffering we encounter in our lives to the suffering that Christ endured for our sake. The words of St. Paul to the Colossians are particularly meaningful in this regard: “Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church.” (Col. 1:24) St. Paul is not saying that Christ’s sufferings were imperfect or incomplete, but that our participation in Christ’s sufferings has yet to be fulfilled; in St. Paul’s suffering for the sake of the Church, he is completing his participation in Christ’s life, which he began in his baptism. Heed the Lord’s words that call us to a life of self-offering:

“Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. He who loves his life loses it, and he who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life. If any one serves me, he must follow me.” (John 12:24-26)

Jesus is the true Bread from Heaven, the very “grain” of Heaven. The model He gave us is one of voluntary sacrifice for the good of others. That concern for the good of others is the motivation behind the words we say.

We pray that the Lord will accept the sacrifice for three goods: for the increase of praise and glory to His own holy name, for our good (we who are making this offering), and for the good of all His holy Church; the old translation omitted the word “holy,” but this word has been restored in the new translation. The praise and glory of God and His name is one of the four ends for which Mass is celebrated, and it is particularly by the offering of the Eucharist that He is perfectly glorified. The priest offering the sacrifice, and we who unite ourselves to it and offer it through his hands, benefit by means of that union with the Lord and especially by the graces received in Holy Communion.

As for the good of all the Church, a person need not be present at Mass to receive graces from it. Some Masses are offered particularly for some person or group of people. In addition, remember that the Church is not just made up of those living on earth, but includes those who are undergoing purification in Purgatory. The sacrifice of the Mass is offered for their benefit as well as our own, and each Eucharistic Prayer includes a prayer for the dead. Finally, when the Mass commemorates saints or angels, they are sure to rejoice in God by Whose grace they merited the honor we give them. In this way, not only is the Mass offered for the good of the whole Church, but we again carry out our priestly duty of interceding by offering the Mass for the good of others.
 
I actually was given a “Year C” book with the readings and the “order of the Mass” in it during RCIA. It’s one of the same books they have stuck in the pews. It might be a missal but I don’t know. I never really looked through it much, but I just opened it and the so called “order of the Mass” seems to go along with the Mass word for word. I tried skimming through it a bit but I didn’t seem to find the saying. :confused:
“Seems to go along word for word”.
Well, yeah

That’s why they are there. :o
 
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