The Lord Be With You

Author: Father Edward McNamara

A ZENIT DAILY DISPATCH

"The Lord Be With You"

By Father Edward McNamara

ROME, 28 SEPT. 2004 (ZENIT) ...

Q: The other day, I was at Mass and the priest kept saying, "The Lord is with you" instead of "The Lord be with you." The use of the indicative mood rather than the imperative sounded to me like an attempt to de-emphasize the unique, sacramental role of the priest (which was especially pronounced when coupled with the mistranslation "And also with you," which, I understand, is about to be replaced by the correct "And with your spirit"). I am not a Latin scholar, but can "Dominus vobiscum" be properly translated "The Lord is with you," and does the celebrant have the authority to render such a translation? — P.S., Columbia, South Carolina

A: Even if it were a correct translation, the priest should not change on his own authority any approved text from the missal. Even if he were an expert Latinist and the official translation were blatantly erroneous he would not be authorized to change it.

In the case at hand the two phrases do not have the same meaning.

"The Lord be with you" expresses a desire that the Lord become ever more present both in the assembly and in each individual member.

"The Lord is with you" is not a desire but a statement of fact, which the priest has no way of knowing whether it is true.

It is probably true of the assembly in virtue of Christ stating that he would be present in any gathering in his name. But the phrase reduces this presence to a static presence whereby the desire of an increasing presence in the assembly is not necessarily implied.

With respect to the individual members of the assembly, there is no way of knowing if the Lord is really with each and every one. The state of their souls is unknown to the celebrant. To be fair, though, it is also true that, on another level, Christ never totally abandons his wayward children while life lasts.

The desire that the Lord "be" with each one is also a prayer that the fruits of the celebration effectively reach each one, in some cases to move toward conversion, in others to deepen their relationship with him. ZE04092822
 

This article has been selected from the ZENIT Daily Dispatch
© Innovative Media, Inc.

ZENIT International News Agency
Via della Stazione di Ottavia, 95
00165 Rome, Italy
www.zenit.org

To subscribe http://www.zenit.org/english/subscribe.html
or email: english-request@zenit.org with SUBSCRIBE in the "subject" field