A
Entrance Antiphon Cf. Ps 20 (19): 3, 5
May the Lord send you help from the holy place
and give you support from Sion.
May he grant you your hearts’ desire
and fulfill every one of your designs (E.T. alleluia).
The Penitential Act is omitted. The Gloria in excelsis (Glory to God in the highest) is said.
Marajoy: My understanding is that the term "Penitential Act" embraces what we know as forms A, B, and C (the Confiteor, those versicle/responses that nobody uses, and the troped Kyrie "You were sent to heal the contrite ..."), but not the Kyrie proper. The rubric preceding the Kyrie provides, "The Kyrie, eleison (Lord, have mercy) invocations follow, unless they have just occurred in a formula of the Penitential Act." That implies, I think clearly, that the Missal does not consider the Kyrie itself to be a part of the Penitential Act.
The Penitential Act
51. After this, the Priest calls upon the whole community to take part in the Penitential Act, which, after a brief pause for silence, it does by means of a formula of general confession. The rite concludes with the Priest’s absolution, which, however, lacks the efficacy of the Sacrament of Penance.
From time to time on Sundays, especially in Easter Time, instead of the customary Penitential Act, the blessing and sprinkling of water may take place as a reminder of Baptism.[55]
The Kyrie, Eleison
52. After the Penitential Act, the Kyrie, eleison (Lord, have mercy), is always begun, unless it has already been part of the Penitential Act. Since it is a chant by which the faithful acclaim the Lord and implore his mercy, it is usually executed by everyone, that is to say, with the people and the choir or cantor taking part in it.
Each acclamation is usually pronounced twice, though it is not to be excluded that it be repeated several times, by reason of the character of the various languages, as well as of the artistry of the music or of other circumstances. When the Kyrie is sung as a part of the Penitential Act, a “trope” precedes each acclamation.
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