Holy Mass
The Mass: A Perfect Prayer
God relates to us and saves us not as isolated individuals, but as members
of His people. For this reason, praying with other Christians and with the
Church in communal prayer is as necessary for spiritual health and growth as
having personal prayer time. Personal prayer is a Christian's lifeline to God,
but it is also a preparation for prayer with the community of God's people -
the Church.
In communal prayer, we come together as God's people to fulfill our most exalted task
- to worship and praise our Creator as a united body. Jesus gave the great
example of communal prayer when He gave us the Lord's Prayer, in which Jesus
taught us to address God as "Our Father". The "Our Father" has been described
by Tertullian as 'the summary of the whole gospel', and St Augustine claimed
that no biblical prayer was missing from the Lord's Prayer. It is no wonder
therefore that this example of communal worship is an essential part of the
liturgy and prayed in Mass.
The liturgy is the official communal prayer of the whole Church. The central
liturgical celebration of the Church is the Mass itself.
The "once and for
all" sacrifice of Jesus on Calvary and his glorious resurrection from the
dead are not only commemorated in the Mass, but are actually made present
in sacramental form (the Holy Eucharist), as well as in the person of the
priest who acts in Jesus' name and by His authority. Christ is also
present in the Word "since it is he himself who speaks when the holy Scriptures
are read", and in the song and prayer of the people of God, for He promised
"where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst
of them". Thus it is the whole community of the church, united with its head
that celebrates the liturgy - "an action of the whole Christ" (CCC1136).

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