Difference between revisions of "Canon (mass)"

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(New page: The '''canon''' (Latin for “rule” or “model”) '''of the Mass''' is a common Western term for the anaphora or eucharistic prayer. It has also been called the ''Canon actionis'' (Can...)
 
(Roman Canon: added link)
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==Roman Canon==
 
==Roman Canon==
Parts of the canon of the Roman rite are attested to as early as St Ambrose of Milan’s ''De sacramentis'' in the late fourth century. The author of the Roman canon is unknown, although Pope [[Gregory the Dialogist]] tells us that the author was a ''scholasticus'', or “learned man.” The text of the canon has remained virtually unchanged since the papacy of the Dialogist.  
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Parts of the canon of the Roman rite are attested to as early as the ''De sacramentis'' of St [[Ambrose of Milan]] in the late fourth century. The author of the Roman canon is unknown, although Pope [[Gregory the Dialogist]] tells us that the author was a ''scholasticus'', or “learned man.” The text of the canon has remained virtually unchanged since the papacy of the Dialogist.  
  
 
===Structure===
 
===Structure===

Revision as of 01:29, August 26, 2008

The canon (Latin for “rule” or “model”) of the Mass is a common Western term for the anaphora or eucharistic prayer. It has also been called the Canon actionis (Canon of action), Prex canonica (canonical Prayer), Praedicatio canonis (canonical foretelling), Prex (prayer), Prex mystica (mystical Prayer), and Praedicatio (foretelling).

Roman Canon

Parts of the canon of the Roman rite are attested to as early as the De sacramentis of St Ambrose of Milan in the late fourth century. The author of the Roman canon is unknown, although Pope Gregory the Dialogist tells us that the author was a scholasticus, or “learned man.” The text of the canon has remained virtually unchanged since the papacy of the Dialogist.

Structure

The structure of the Roman canon is as follows:

  • Praefatio
  • Sanctus
  • Te igitur (“Therefore, most gracious Father, ….”)
  • Memento dei vivi (commemoration of the living)
  • Communicantes (commemoration of the Saints)
  • Hanc igitur (“Graciously accept….”)
  • Quam oblationem (“O God, deign to bless….”)
  • Qui pridie (the Institution narrative, beginning “Who, the day before he suffered….”)
  • Unde et memores (“Mindful therefore….”)
  • Supra quae (“Deign to regard….”)
  • Supplices te rogamus (“Most humbly we implore you….”)
  • Memento dei defunti (Commemoration of the departed)
  • Nobis quoque pecatoribus (“To us sinners also”)
  • Per quem haec omnia (“Through whom….”)

Sources

  • Enrico Mazza, The Origins of the Eucharistic Prayer (Pueblo, 1995). ISBN 978-0814661192.