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Collect Information

In Christian liturgy, a collect (stressed on the first syllable: /ˈkɒlɛkt/, US dict: kol′·ekt) is both a liturgical action and a short, general prayer. In the Middle Ages, the prayer was referred to in Latin as collectio, but in the more ancient sources, as oratio. In English, and in this usage, "collect" is pronounced with the stress on the first syllable. Collects appear in the liturgy of the Mass of the Roman Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, and some other rites.

Contents

Liturgical collect

Traditionally, the liturgical collect was a dialog between the celebrant and the people. It followed a hymn of praise (such as the "in Excelsis Deo", if used) after the opening of the service, with a greeting by the celebrant "The Lord be with you", to which the people respond "And also with you" or "And with your spirit." The celebrant invites all to pray with "Let us pray". In the more ancient practice, an invitation to kneel was given, and the people spend some short time in silent prayer, after which they were invited to stand. Then, the celebrant concluded the time of prayer by "collecting" their prayers in a unified petition of a general form, referred to as a collect. Many of these still in use by churches of the West were originally composed in Latin, wherein they adhere to a flowing chanted style. Traditionally, a collect consisted of a single sentence, although this was often accomplished through non-standard punctuation, with a colon or semi-colon taking the place of a period. In some contemporary liturgical texts, this practice has been discontinued in favor of more standard sentence constructions.

In contemporary Catholic usage, the collect corresponds to the Opening Prayer. It is sung or recited audibly throughout by the celebrant, and follows the invocation "Let us pray" usually without a (significant) period of silent prayer, and may or may not employ the greeting dialog ("The Lord be with you / And also with you" or "The Lord be with you / And with your spirit").

Typically two or three collects may be used in a traditional Roman Mass.

For the Anglican rite, Thomas Cranmer (d. 1556) translated into English and retained collects for each Sunday of the year in the Book of Common Prayer; they have been part of subsequent alternative liturgies.

Similarly, Lutheran liturgies have typically retained traditional collects for each Sunday of the liturgical year. In the newly released Evangelical Lutheran Worship, however, the set of prayers has been expanded to incorporate different Sunday collects for each year of the lectionary cycle, so that the prayers more closely coordinate with the lectionary scripture readings for the day. In order to achieve this expansion from one year's worth of Sunday collects to three years, modern prayer texts have been added to the existing traditional set.

Form

Collects (the liturgical action and the prayer) have a recognizable form:

Examples of the prayers

"A Collect for Purity"

Latin composition
Deus, cui omne cor patet et omnis uoluntas loquitur, et quem nullum latet secretum: purifica per infusionem Sancti Spiritus cogitationes cordis nostri, ut perfecte te diligere et digne laudare mereamur, per Dominum nostrum Iesum Christum. Amen.
English translation
Almighty God, to you all hearts are open, all desires known and from you no secrets are hid: cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of your Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love you and worthily magnify your holy name, through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
English translation in the Book of Common Prayer, 1662
Almighty God, to whom all hearts be open, all desires known, and from whom no secrets are hid; Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of thy Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love thee, and worthily magnify thy holy Name; through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Analysis

"A Collect for the Renewal of Life"

English composition
O God, the King eternal, whose light divides the day from the night and turns the shadow of death into the morning: Drive far from us all wrong desires, incline our hearts to keep your law, and guide our feet into the way of peace; that, having done your will with cheerfulness during the day, we may, when night comes, rejoice to give you thanks; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Analysis

References

See also

Look up collect in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
·  ·Gregorian chants of the Roman Mass
Ordinary Kyrie · Gloria · Credo · Sanctus · Agnus Dei · Ite missa est , Benedicamus Domino or Requiescant in pace
Proper Introit · Gradual · Alleluia or Tract · Sequence · Offertory · Communion
Accentus Collect · Epistle · Gospel · Secret · Preface · Canon · Postcommunion
·  · Order of Mass in the Roman Rite
Forms Pre-Tridentine Mass · Tridentine Mass (extraordinary form) · Mass of Paul VI
Types Missa Cantata · Coronation Mass · Chapter and Conventual Mass · High Mass · Low Mass · Nuptial Mass · Papal Mass · Pontifical High Mass · Red Mass · Requiem Mass · Missa sine populo · Votive Mass
Introductory rites Vesting prayers · asperges · Introit · Penitential Rite / confiteor · Kyrie · Gloria · collect · Dominus Vobiscum · oremus
Liturgy of the Word Old Testament reading · Responsorial Psalm · Epistle · gradual · tract · sequentia · Alleluia · Gospel · homily · credo (Nicene Creed) · general intercessions · offertory · Orate fratres · secret prayer
Liturgy of the Eucharist Eucharistic Prayer · Canon of the Mass (texts & rubrics / history) · Preface (Sursum corda / Sanctus / Hosanna) · Words of Institution (Transubstantiation) · Elevation · Memorial Acclamation / Mysterium fidei · Epiclesis · Lord's Prayer · Embolism · Doxology · Sign of peace / Pax · Agnus Dei · Fraction · Holy Communion · Communion (chant) · Ablutions · Postcommunion (Thanksgiving) · Dismissal (Ite missa est / Benedicamus Domino) · Last Gospel
Participants Acolyte · altar server (female) · bishop · boat boy · cantor · choir · crucifer · deacon · Extraordinary minister of Holy Communion · laity (Eucharistic Congress) · lector · priest · subdeacon · usher
Objects Alb · ambo · altar · altar bell · altar candle · altar candlestick · altar crucifix · altar rails · aspergillum · ciborium · collectarium · collection basket · corporal · chalice · chasuble · Credence table · cruet · dalmatic · episcopal sandals · evangeliary · flabellum · funghellino · headcover · holy water · humeral veil · incense (use) · kneeler · lavabo · lectionary (revised) · liturgical book · mantilla · manuterge · misericord · music · pall · pallium · Paschal candle · paten · piscina · processional cross · pyx · Roman Missal · Roman Pontifical · sacramental bread (wafer) · sacramental wine (or mustum) · sacramentary · sanctuary lamp · stole · surplice · tabernacle · thurible · triple candlestick · tunicle · vestment (pontifical) · votive candle · vimpa · water
Concepts and actions Antiphon · Blood of Christ · Body of Christ · church etiquette · closed communion · commemoration · Communion and the developmentally disabled · Communion under both kinds · Crucifixion of Jesus (atonement) · ecclesiastical Latin · Eucharistic discipline · Eucharistic fast · First Communion · General Instruction of the Roman Missal · genuflection · grace (ex opere operato) · Host desecration · infant communion · In persona Christi · intercession of saints · intinction · Koinonia · the Last Supper · liturgical colours · liturgical year (proper) · Melchizedek priesthood · Order of Mass · prayer (effects of prayer) · Ordines Romani · Real Presence · reserved sacrament · responsory · Sign of the Cross · Sunday (Lord's Day) · viaticum
Related Agape feast · benediction of the Blessed Sacrament · Catholic liturgy · Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments · Council of Trent · church music (Mass) · Corpus Christi (feast) · Ecclesia de Eucharistia · Epiousios · Eucharistic adoration · Eucharistic miracle · Eucharistic theology · Fourth Council of the Lateran · historical roots of Catholic Eucharistic theology · Holy Day of Obligation · Liturgical Movement · Missale Romanum · Mysterium Fidei (encyclical) · origin of the Eucharist · Pope Pius XII Liturgy Reforms · Pro multis · Quo Primum · Roman Catholic theology · Sacraments of the Catholic Church · sacristy · Summorum Pontificum · traditionalist Catholic · Tra le sollecitudini · Vatican II (Sacrosanctum Concilium) · Year of the Eucharist
Catholicism Portal
·  · Order of the Divine Service in Lutheranism
Books and hymnals Agenda · Evangelical Lutheran Hymn-Book · Evangelical Lutheran Worship · Lutheran Book of Worship · Lutheran Hymnal · Lutheran Hymnal with Supplement · Lutheran Service Book · Lutheran Worship · Service Book and Hymnal
Preparatory Service Entrance hymn and Trinitarian formula (know as the Invocation) · Penitential Rite including the Confiteor and Declaration of Grace (or asperges on Easter)
The Service of the Word Introit · Gloria Patri · oremus · Kýrie · Gloria · Dominus Vobiscum · collect · Old Testament reading · gradual (or Responsorial Psalm) · Epistle · Alleluia (or tract) · Gospel · hymn of the day · homily or postil (sermon) · Nicene Creed · offertory · Prayers of the Faithful
The Service of the Eucharist preface (sursum corda) · sanctus (Hosanna) · Anaphora (Epiclesis) · Words of Institution (Sacramental Union) · Memorial Acclamation · Lord's Prayer · sign of peace / pax (elevation) · Agnus Dei · Distribution · nunc dimittis · postcommunion · Benedicamus Domino · Benediction · Dismissal · ite missa est
Participants Acolyte · bishop · cantor · choir · crucifer · deacon · elder · laity · lector · Pastor (or Priest) · usher
Objects Alb · altar · altar bell · altar candle · altar cloth · altar crucifix · altar rails · ciborium · collection basket · chalice · chasuble · dalmatic · Geneva gown · holy water · humeral veil · incense (use) · kneeler · liturgical book · music · Paschal candle · paten · piscina · processional cross · sacramental bread (wafer) · sacramental wine · sanctuary lamp · stole · surplice · thurible · tunicle · vestment · votive candle
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