Deo gratias explained

(Latin for "thanks [be] to God") is a response in the Latin Mass, derived from the Vulgate text of 1 Corinthians 15:57 and 2 Corinthians 2:14.

Description

It occurs in the Mass

The formula Deo gratias was used in extra-liturgical prayers and customs by the Christians of all ages. The rule of St. Benedict prescribes that the doorkeeper shall say Deo gratias, as often as a stranger knocks at the door or a beggar asks for assistance.

When St. Augustine announced to the people the election of his coadjutor and successor, Evodius of Uzalis, they called out Deo gratias thirty-six times.[2]

In Africa it was the salutation used by the Catholics to distinguish themselves from the Donatists who said Deo laudes instead.[3] Therefore, in Africa, Deo gratias was used as a Catholic given name, e.g. St. Deogratias, Bishop of Carthage (r. 453 - 456). The name of the deacon for whom St. Augustine wrote his treatise De catechizandis rudibus was also called Deogratias. Felix of Cantalice (1515 - 1587) used this interjection so often that the people called him "Brother Deogratias".

Musical settings

Deo gratias has been set to music by several composers.

The 15th-century poem "Adam lay ybounden" ends with Deo gratias and it has been set by many composers, including the tenth movement of Benjamin Britten's A Ceremony of Carols (1942).

A 2005 documentary film on the life of Antonín Dvořák is titled Deo Gratias.

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Rubricae missalis Romani commentariis illustratae (1674), 2, 12, ad 4
  2. St. Augustine, Ep. ccxiii al. cx, De Actis Eraclii
  3. St. Augustine, In Ps. cxxxi