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Apr 2, 2021 · The word is a shortened English form of the final Latin words of the Mass, “Ite, Missa Est,” which mean “It is ended; be dismissed” or “Mass is ended; go in peace.” We also call Mass “The Lord’s Supper” or “The Eucharist,” or “the Holy Mysteries,” or the “Sacrifice of the Mass.” While all these names illuminate the ...
Oct 20, 2008 · He said along with "Ite, missa est," the Latin phrase now translated as "The Mass is ended, go in peace," the new options are: -- Ite ad Evangelium Domini annuntiandum (Go and announce...
Feb 3, 2019 · In the Catholic liturgy at the dismissal, the Latin phrase used is "Ite, missa est." The usual translation for this is "Go, the Mass has ended." Can someone suggest a proper parsing of this somewhat opaque phrase?
In the new translation, these words are rendered most literally as, “Go forth, the Mass is ended.” The Latin word “Missa” is the derivative of the English word “Mass,” and it carries the sense of mission. What is a blessing? Why are they longer sometimes?
Mar 2, 2011 · • Go forth, the Mass is ended. • Go and announce the Gospel of the Lord. • Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by your life. • Go in peace. The first corresponds to the actual Latin dismissal, which is familiar to many: “Ite, missa est.”
The name that Roman Catholics commonly give to the celebration of the Eucharist – the Mass – comes, most agree, from the Latin words of the dismissal text: Ite Missa est – Go, the Mass is ended. We Catholics call the whole liturgy after the dismissal. Which is odd, but suggests something of the significance that the dismissal has.
ITE, MISSA EST. "Go, the Mass is ended." Concluding words of the priest to the people at the end of the Mass in the Latin Rite. ITE, MISSA EST.