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After the Sign of the Cross and the greeting, the priest says, “Let us pray.”
When the priest then prays the Collect (pronounced KAH-lekt), he “collects” all those individual prayers and unites them into one voice before the Father. That’s why it’s called the Collect: it gathers — or collects — the prayers of the faithful into a single, solemn petition.
Each Collect follows a classic, time-tested pattern:
Address to God the Father – “O God, who…”
A reason or attribute – recalling something about God’s nature or saving work
The petition – asking for a specific grace or transformation
Conclusion through Christ – “Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son…”
This structure beautifully mirrors how we approach God in prayer: we acknowledge who He is, recall His goodness, ask for what we need, and present our prayer through Christ in the Holy Spirit.
Each Collect expresses the theme of the liturgical day or season.
The priest prays the Collect with hands extended — a gesture of intercession, representing Christ the High Priest. The people respond “Amen,” making the prayer their own.
The word Collect comes from the Latin collecta, meaning “gathering.”
In summary:
By Father Bryan KujawaAfter the Sign of the Cross and the greeting, the priest says, “Let us pray.”
When the priest then prays the Collect (pronounced KAH-lekt), he “collects” all those individual prayers and unites them into one voice before the Father. That’s why it’s called the Collect: it gathers — or collects — the prayers of the faithful into a single, solemn petition.
Each Collect follows a classic, time-tested pattern:
Address to God the Father – “O God, who…”
A reason or attribute – recalling something about God’s nature or saving work
The petition – asking for a specific grace or transformation
Conclusion through Christ – “Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son…”
This structure beautifully mirrors how we approach God in prayer: we acknowledge who He is, recall His goodness, ask for what we need, and present our prayer through Christ in the Holy Spirit.
Each Collect expresses the theme of the liturgical day or season.
The priest prays the Collect with hands extended — a gesture of intercession, representing Christ the High Priest. The people respond “Amen,” making the prayer their own.
The word Collect comes from the Latin collecta, meaning “gathering.”
In summary: