That those you renew with your Sacraments Supplices te rogamus, omnipotens Deus, ut, quos tuis reficis sacramentis, tibi etiam placitis moribus dignanter deservire concedas. With you, O Lord, is the fountain of life,Įgo veni, ut vitam habeant, et abundantius habeant, dicit Dominus.Īnd have it more abundantly, says the Lord. P REFACES OF THE S UNDAYS IN O RDINARY T IMEĭomine apud te est fons vitae et in lumine tuo videbimus lumen. May your people’s oblation, O Lord, find favor with you, we pray, Grata tibi sit, quaesumus, Domine, tuae plebis oblatio, per quam et sanctificationem referat, et quae pie precatur obtineat. One or the other may be selected, as circumstances suggest, but preference should be given to an antiphon that is in harmony with the Gospel of the Mass. Two antiphons are provided for Communion, the first from the Psalms, and the second for the most part from the Gospel. Unless a Eucharistic Prayer is used that has a proper Preface, on Sundays one of the Prefaces for Sundays in Ordinary Time is said but on weekdays, a Common Preface is said.Ħ. The Gloria in excelsis (Glory to God in the highest) and the Creed are said on Sundays, Solemnities and major feast days on other weekdays, however, both are omitted.ĥ. They are used in this way:Ī) On Sundays the Mass corresponding to the number of the Sunday in Ordinary Time is ordinarily used, unless there occurs a Solemnity or a Feast of the Lord which takes the place of the Sunday.ī) On weekdays, however, any of the thirty-four Masses may be used, provided the pastoral needs of the faithful are taken into consideration.Ĥ. Thus, in the Missal, thirty-four Masses for the Sundays and weekdays in Ordinary Time are found. If, however, there are thirtythree weeks in Ordinary Time, the first week that would otherwise follow Pentecost is omitted.ģ. The remaining Sundays and weeks are numbered in order until the beginning of Lent.ī) If there are thirty-four weeks in Ordinary Time, after Pentecost the series is resumed with the week that follows immediately the last week celebrated before Lent it should be noted, however, that the Masses of Pentecost Sunday and of the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity take the place of the Sunday Masses. The numbering of Sundays and weeks in Ordinary Time is calculated as follows:Ī) The Sunday on which the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord occurs takes the place of the first Sunday in Ordinary Time the week that follows is counted as the first week in Ordinary Time. It begins on the Monday following the Sunday after January 6 and continues until the beginning of Lent it begins again on the Monday after Pentecost Sunday and ends on the Saturday before the First Sunday of Advent.Ģ. Ordinary Time contains thirty-three or thirty-four weeks.
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