Chris
McDonnell, UK
chris@mcdonnell83.freeserve.co.uk
Previous articles by Chris Comments
welcome here
April
5, 2017
A
Bidding Prayer or two this Sunday
How
are they to be formed? In some parishes, it is those in the pews who are
invited to seek the prayer of the community for a particular need. For
many, such spontaneous prayer is a challenge and there is not the
confidence to take up the offer. That is understandable but with gentle
encouragement, it can be achieved. So we resort to a written form, usually
led by the Reader for the Sunday, with an introduction from the Celebrant.
Who
has the task of writing the text of our Bidding Prayers? This is an
activity that, with some thought and preparation, we all can share in and
that ought to include the younger ones attending Mass with their parents.
It could be an occasion to talk together in preparation for celebrating
together.
And
what should we pray for? It is a time for reflection on local needs and
concerns, to make others aware that they are not alone, that we too care
for them as fellow walkers on the journey. Our sharing with them in the
joys and sorrows, the excitement and difficulties that go to make the
daily pattern of our existence is important and supportive. Our Bidding
Prayers should not be a list of 'asks' but also a time of 'thank-you'. The
story of the cured lepers is easily forgotten.
It
might, and on occasions should, include incidents of national or
international significance. Given the troubled world in which we live
events happen beyond the boundaries of our small communities that none the
less deeply affect us. Recent terrorist attacks, both in
When
a wedding is being celebrated with a Nuptial Mass or a Requiem Mass is
being offered following a death, then the fashioning of the Bidding
Prayers takes on a real significance. They bring a particular and almost
informal contribution to the gathering in the words of the people rather
than the formularies of an accepted text.
A
few years back I was asked to write the Bidding Prayers for the Requiem
Mass of our organist and choir master, Brian Hobbs. I wrote the first line
‘We come to celebrate the life of Brian’, and then realised the
implications. It was hastily re-written!