"Gathered and Sent"
The Mass is bracketed by two important rites: the Rite of Gathering and the Rite of Dismissal. The Rite of Gathering begins with God's call to gather together in communion, united as the Body of Christ—the "People of God"— to worship, glorify, and give thanksgiving to our God, to celebrate Christ's saving presence among us, inviting us to ackowledge our sins, to listen to God's Word, to profess our faith, offer prayers, and to share and be nourished by Christ's body and blood. 1 After the Priest gives the final blessing "May almighty God bless you, the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit," the Rite of Dismissal ends the Mass with the Priest or Deacon exhorting those present to "Go forth, the Mass is ended," taken from the Latin words Ite Missa est," (literally, "Go, it is the dismissal"). The word "Mass" is from the Latin Missa , which means "to be sent," as if on a mission. Hence, the forms u...