Mass
(religion)
I. Introduction
Mass
(religion), the ritual of chants, readings, prayers,
and other ceremonies used in the celebration of the Eucharist
in the Roman Catholic church.
The
same name is used in high Anglican churches. Other Protestant
churches call this ritual Holy Communion or the Lord's Supper;
Eastern Orthodox churches call it the Divine Liturgy.
The
word mass comes from the Latin missa ("sent"). It was taken
from the formula for dismissing the congregation: Ite, missa
est ("Go, the Eucharist has been sent forth"), referring
to the ancient custom of sending consecrated bread from
the bishop's Mass to other churches in Rome to symbolize
that church's unity with the bishop in the celebration of
the Mass.
II.
Forms of the Mass
The
earliest form of the celebration of the Mass was the
domestic Eucharist. Archaeological evidence shows that
from the 3rd to the 4th century, Christian communities celebrated
Mass in large homes. The local bishop presided over this
Eucharist.
After
Emperor Constantine the Great's Edict of Toleration (AD313),
public buildings-called basilicas-were adapted to the celebration
of the bishop's Eucharist.
As
the church grew and the number of individual churches increased,
presbyters attached to these churches came to lead the celebration.
Eventually, these presbyters became known as sacerdotes
("priests").
Before
the 8th century, the only form of the Mass was the public
Mass, celebrated by a bishop or priest with a congregation.
In its solemn form (High Mass), most parts are sung. In
its most elaborate form, the papal Mass, the pope is assisted
by the papal nobility, Latin and Eastern Rite deacons, the
papal court, and numerous other functionaries.
The
pontifical Mass (solemn Mass of a bishop) is less elaborate,
although besides deacons, subdeacons, thurifers (incense
bearers), and acolytes, the bishop is also assisted by his
familia (family), assistants who are responsible for taking
care of his regalia (solemn vestments) and insignia (miter,
crosier, and pontifical cross).
The
solemn parish, or monastic, Mass is celebrated with
deacon and subdeacon.
The
simplest form of sung Mass is celebrated by one priest,
with the assistance of acolytes and thurifer.
In
daily celebrations, a simpler form is used in which all
parts of the Mass are read by one priest. This is the Missa
Lecta ("read Mass"), or Low Mass.
Beginning
in the 8th century, the private Mass evolved in the
monasteries of northern Europe. Monks were originally laity,
and they relied on local priests for their sacramental needs
or ordained some of their own members for those needs.
Beginning
in the 8th century, British and Irish monks were ordained
for the missionary work of converting the tribes of northern
Europe that had been subdued by Charlemagne and his successors.
By
the 11th century (after the great missionary age), the growing
monasteries of northern Europe continued to ordain their
monks; so the number of priests eventually far exceeded
the sacramental needs of the monks. Thus, the practice of
private daily celebration of Mass grew until, by the 12th
century, it was common.
III.
Parts of the Mass
By
the 6th century the parts of the Mass were relatively fixed.
Six principal sections can be distinguished.
The
Foremass consists of the Entrance (introit), procession,
and chant, which are then followed by the confession, which
includes a litany (Kyrie Eleison) and which ends with the
Gloria. The Foremass ends with the opening prayer, or first
oration.
The
Readings constitute the second part of the Mass. They
consist of selections from the Old Testament, or from letters
of the New Testament (Epistle), which are followed by a
chant for the Gospel procession. This chant is known as
the Gradual, so called because it was chanted from the steps
(gradus) of the pulpit where the Gospel was read or sung.
The final reading is drawn from one of the four Gospels
and is followed by the sermon (homily).
During
the third part of the Mass -the Offertory- offerings
of bread, wine, and other gifts are brought to the altar
with processional chants and are dedicated to the service
of God with Offertory prayers.
The
fourth section of the Mass is the Eucharistic Prayer.
This section begins with the Preface, an introductory prayer
that concludes with the Sanctus. Then follows the central
Eucharistic prayer, or Canon, which contains the narrative
of Jesus' institution
of the Eucharist.
The
Communion is the fifth, and climactic, section of the
Mass. It opens with the Lord's Prayer (Paternoster, "Our
Father"), continues with the prayer for peace and the greeting
of peace, and concludes with the communion of the clergy
and the faithful, which may be accompanied by the communion
hymn.
The
final section of the Mass, the Concluding Rite, consists
of a final prayer (postcommunion), the blessing (benediction),
and the dismissal (Ite, missa est). A recessional hymn may
be sung as clergy and laity leave the church.
IV.
Liturgical Books
Before
the 13th century a variety of liturgical books were used
in the celebration of the Mass.
The
choir used the Graduale (for the Gradual chant) and Antiphonale
(for the responsive processional chants at the Entrance,
Offertory, Communion, and Recessional). The subdeacon used
the Apostolus (letters of the New Testament), the deacons
the Evangelarium (Gospel), and the presiding celebrant the
Sacramentarium, which contained all the prayers of the Mass.
As
the practice of private Mass grew, the various liturgical
texts were gathered into one book for the priest who performed
all the parts of the Mass alone. This book, called the missal,
contained all the prayers, readings, and chants of the Mass.
The various missals used since the 13th century were standardized
in an official text, the Roman missal (1570), which was
issued by order of the Council of Trent.
Earlier,
in 1298, papal and episcopal ceremonies had been standardized
in the Roman pontifical. The Roman missal and the Roman
pontifical have been revised several times over the centuries.
The
Second Vatican Council (1962-65) introduced a number of
changes into the celebration of Mass. The council returned
to the ancient practice of calling this sacrament and its
celebration by the same name: the Eucharist. The principal
liturgical changes include the introduction of vernacular
languages into the Eucharist, the return to the custom of
allowing the laity to receive both bread and wine, and the
reintroduction of the practice of concelebration (see the
discussion of concelebration below).
V.
Vernacular Liturgy
The
traditional language for the celebration of Mass in the
Roman rite has been Latin, although the Eastern Rite churches
have used a number of vernacular languages (for instance,
Old Slavic, Greek, and Aramaic).
Reform
movements in the Western church from the 14th to the 16th
century called repeatedly for vernacular liturgies.
One
effect of the separation of churches during the Reformation
was the adoption of vernacular languages for the Mass (or
Lord's Supper) in the Protestant churches.
The
Council of Trent (1545-63) saw no dogmatic difficulty in
using vernacular languages in the Mass, but considered sanctioning
their use inopportune at that time.
Vatican
II sanctioned the use of the vernacular in the Roman rite,
and the Mass is now celebrated in almost every language
in the world.
VI.
Communion Under Both Kinds
The
same reform movements called for a return to the ancient
custom of allowing the laity to receive communion under
the forms of bread and wine, a custom that had disappeared
from the Western church by the 8th century (although it
has continued to the present in Eastern Catholic and Orthodox
churches).
The
Council of Trent rejected these appeals, but Vatican II
established certain times and conditions under which the
laity may receive both bread and wine. The conditions have
been broadened, so that the practice has become increasingly
common in the Western church.
VII.
Concelebration
Although
surrounded by priests and deacons, the bishop alone presided
over the celebration of Mass in its original form. As the
church grew, and priests were needed for the masses in parish
churches, concelebration -the celebration of Mass by more
than one priest- became common, although the practice was
restricted to the major feasts of the year.
It
survived in various forms and with varying frequency into
the 13th century. Priests originally concelebrated silently
with the bishop, but the custom of reciting the words of
the Canon aloud developed in the 7th century.
After
the 13th century concelebration survived only in the Mass
for the ordination of priests. In this case, the newly ordained
priests recite all the prayers of the Canon aloud with the
bishop.
Vatican
II, however, restored the rite of concelebration for occasions
when a number of priests gather together and placed limitations
on the times and places in which the Mass can be celebrated
privately.

Contributed
By: Joseph M. Powers, S.J., S.T.M., S.T.D. Professor of
Systematic Theology, The Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley.
Author of Eucharistic Theology, Spirit and Sacrament. Contributor
to Current Trends in Theology.
"Mass,"
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