Part 6 ‘Memorial Prayer and
Offering’.
Characteristic of all the Eucharistic
Prayers is a statement of offering, which is linked to and in conjunction with
the Memorial Prayer. It is an explicit declaration that the Church is offering
the ‘bread and cup’ or some other elaborated equivalent.
Eucharistic Prayer 1 requests that ‘the
offering be accepted as were the sacrificial gifts of Abel, Abraham and Melchizedek’. Eucharistic
Prayer 11 speaks of offering ‘this life-giving bread, this saving
cup’. Eucharistic Prayer 111 refers to ‘this holy
and living sacrifice,’ while Eucharistic Prayer 1V refers to the
offering ‘Christ’s body and blood’.
The General Instruction of
the Roman Missal (2007) explains this ‘offering’ as follows:
‘In this memorial, the Church- and in
particular the Church here and now assembled- offers the spotless victim to the
Father in the Holy Spirit. The Church’s intention is that the faithful not only
offer this victim, but also learn to offer themselves and so to surrender
themselves, through Christ the Mediator, to an ever more complete union with
the Father and with each other, so that at last God may be all in all’. (p.28).
In other words, there is only one offering
action in the Mass, and it is celebrated during the Eucharistic
Prayer. It is an offering made by the whole Church, but especially
by the community assembled in faith. In a prayer of praise, the
church unites itself to Christ who ‘forever lives to make intercession’
(Heb 7:25).
Since the Eucharistic Prayer is
the pledge of future glory, we also recall the Virgin Mary, the apostles, the
martyrs and all the saints who already share in the heavenly banquet announced
and prefigured by the Eucharist. Therefore, the Eucharistic Prayer
names only those with whom the ecclesial community share the faith.
Christ, through the Church in every
Mass gives us the opportunity to unite, offer and surrender ourselves, our
lives and those whom we love to Him. The Mass is so rich in meaning and provides
us with many grace-filled moments throughout.
Do we fully appreciate the wonderful
gift Christ gives us in the Mass for our pilgrim
journey?
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