P
PolishK
Guest
Is there a set date in the Church? If so, when is the Mass held this year? I’ve only been to one and I believe it was toward the end of the year.
Thanks for your help!
Thanks for your help!
A requiem Mass is also called a Mass for the Dead. Of course, any Mass may be celebrated with the intention of praying for the repose of someone’s soul.Is there a set date in the Church? If so, when is the Mass held this year? I’ve only been to one and I believe it was toward the end of the year.
Thanks for your help!
And I believe it is something that is now found only in the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite - it includes several variations from High Mass, the inclusion of the Dies Irae, and the Rite of Absolution before the casket.A Requiem Mass is a [specific kind of] funeral Mass, and if I recall correctly, it can be done on any day except Sundays and during the Triduum.
A Requiem Mass is a [specific kind of] funeral Mass, and if I recall correctly, it can be done on any day except Sundays and during the Triduum.
I’m confused by these postings. It doesn’t concur with my understanding. That doesn’t mean I’m right. These things contradict what I believed to be correct.And I believe it is something that is now found only in the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite - it includes several variations from High Mass, the inclusion of the Dies Irae, and the Rite of Absolution before the casket.
I know because I’ll be serving in one such Mass for the first time on Monday.
No this not true. The “Requiem Mass” in the old rite was officially known as the “Mass of the Dead”. The term “Requiem Mass” alludes to the entrance antiphon: Requiem aeternam dona eis Domine: et lux perpetua luceat eis (and also the Gradual which has the same verse). It isn’t “official” terminology.And I believe it is something that is now found only in the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite - it includes several variations from High Mass, the inclusion of the Dies Irae, and the Rite of Absolution before the casket.
I know because I’ll be serving in one such Mass for the first time on Monday.
I understand now: you’re referring to one type of Mass for the dead (a.k.a. requiem Mass).The only thing I know to be termed “Requiem Mass” is this.
I did however read that a Requiem Mass could be (was?) offered on All Soul’s Day - see here.
Now here is the history of this Mass, and among other things
- liturgical color is black (vestments and ornaments) with one exception
- it is by its very nature extra ordinem officii, that is, it has no relation to the office of the day, so it may be rightly considered a votive Mass, which means it may not be celebrated “except for some reasonable cause” (nisi rationabili de causa), since “the Mass should, as far as possible, accord with the Office”; and therefore neither may requiem Masses be celebrated without reasonable motive; and this reasonable motive does not exist when the Mass is not to be offered for one, or several, dead, in particular, or for all the dead in general.
This was All Souls’ Day Mass.Thanks for your responses and insight.
A few years ago, I attended a “Requiem Mass” that was held for all the departed souls of that year. The Mass took place sometime near the end of the year… Perhaps, before Advent?
I already planned on lifting him up at the Mass on All Souls’ Day.
True that. It really makes you feel small before God, and make eternity seem enormous.A requiem mass is one of the most beautiful things this side of heaven.