Bishop Eric Menees
We are continuing our examination of the 2019 Book of Common
Prayer’s (BCP) Holy Eucharist. Last week we looked at the “offertory” and this
week we turn to the beginning of the Liturgy of the Table – The Sursum Corda.
This Latin term – Sursum Corda – literally means “Lift up your heart” and is
the beginning of the Eucharistic Prayer also known as the Great Thanksgiving.
The Holy Eucharist is our thanksgiving to God for His favor and goodness
towards us as well as the heart of our worship on the Lord’s Day. However it
can also be, for those fortunate enough, a daily practice as well.
Holy Eucharist is a communal act of worship, and in the
Anglican tradition it cannot be celebrated by the priest alone. However, a
priest is required in order to celebrate Holy Eucharist and he does so not on
his own behalf but on behalf of the community gathered.
And so Holy Eucharist begins with the invitation to the
community to “Lift up your hearts” as a way of making ourselves open and
vulnerable to the Lord God Almighty.
Lifting up our hearts to God is at the heart, no pun
intended, of worship.
Why do we lift up our hearts? To give thanks and praise to
God!
The Sursum Corda
The People remain standing. The Celebrant faces them and
sings or says
The Lord be with you.
People: And with your spirit.
Celebrant: Lift up your hearts.
People: We lift them up to the Lord.
Celebrant: Let us give thanks to the Lord our God.
People: It is right to give him thanks and praise.
This coming Sunday I invite you to ponder the importance of
this invitation to lift your heart to the Lord and to give God your thanks and
praise!
1 comment:
This moment is appropriately placed after the Opening Collect for Purity at the very beginning of the service which asks God to cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of His Holy Spirit. After the Liturgy of the Word and especially after the Confession and Absolution of Sin which cleanses our hearts to a degree that hopefully will be acceptable to God when we offer our hearts (ourselves) as a living sacrifice with humility and hope holy and acceptable to God.
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