Vatican approves special 'Mass in the Time of Pandemic'
VATICAN CITY —The Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Sacraments has approved a special "Mass in the Time of Pandemic" to
plead for God's mercy and gift of strength in the midst of the coronavirus
pandemic.
The Mass opens with a prayer that God would "look with
compassion on the afflicted, grant eternal rest to the dead, comfort to
mourners, healing to the sick, peace to the dying, strength to health care
workers, wisdom to our leaders and the courage to reach out to all in
love."
In a letter dated March 30, Cardinal Robert Sarah, prefect of the
congregation, and Archbishop Arthur Roche, congregation secretary, said,
"In these days, during which the whole world has been gravely stricken by
the COVID-19 virus," many bishops and priests have asked "to be able
to celebrate a specific Mass to implore God to bring an end to this
pandemic."
The congregation granted the request and provided special prayers
and suggestions for the Scripture readings to be used.
The "Mass in the Time of Pandemic," the congregation
said, can be celebrated on any day "except solemnities; the Sundays of
Advent, Lent and Easter (season); days within the Octave of Easter; the commemoration
of All the Faithful Departed (All Souls' Day); Ash Wednesday; and the days of
Holy Week."
The offertory prayer for the Mass reads: "Accept, O Lord,
the gifts we offer in this time of peril. May they become for us, by your
power, a source of healing and peace. Through Christ our Lord."
One of the suggested Gospel readings is Mark 4:35-41, the story
of the disciples in the boat on the stormy Sea of Galilee; it is the same
reading Pope Francis used March 27 for his special prayer service and blessing
"urbi et orbi" (to the city and the
world), begging God to end the pandemic.
One of the optional first readings is Lamentations 3:17-26, which
includes the lines: "I will call this to mind, as my reason to have hope:
The favors of the Lord are not exhausted, his mercies are not spent; they are
renewed each morning, so great is his faithfulness. My portion is the Lord,
says my soul, therefore will I hope in him."
A passage from St. Paul's Letter to the Romans also could be
used, proclaiming: "If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did
not spare his own Son but handed him over for us all, how will he not also give
us everything else along with him?"
The new Mass ends with the "prayer over the people,"
which says: "O God, protector of all who hope in you, bless your people,
keep them safe, defend them, prepare them, that, free from sin and safe from
the enemy, they may persevere always in your love. Through Christ our
Lord."
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