User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
From Latin introitus, from verb introire, "to go in or into", from prefix intro-, into, + verb ire, to go.Noun
- The action of entering or going in; an entrance.
- A psalm sung or chanted immediately before the collect, epistle, and gospel, and while the priest is entering within the rails of the altar.
- A part of a psalm or other portion of the Scripture read by the priest at Mass immediately after ascending to the altar.
- An anthem or psalm sung before the Communion service.
- Any composition of vocal music appropriate to the opening of church services.
References
Latin
Verb
introit, infinitive introire- he/she/it goes in
- Third person singular, present indicative active, of introire, go into.
Extensive Definition
The Introit (Latin: introitus,
"entrance") is part of the opening of the celebration of the Roman
Catholic Mass and
the Lutheran
Divine
Service. Specifically, it refers to the antiphon that is spoken or sung
at the beginning of the celebration. It is part of the Proper
of the Mass; that is, the part that changes over the liturgical
year.
The Introit is best known in the Tridentine
Mass; however, it is part of other Catholic Mass liturgies, and
even other Christian liturgies. In Ambrosian
chant and Beneventan
chant, the counterpart of the Introit is called the "ingressa."
In the Sarum rite, it
is called the "officium". Many Lutherans also
have an introit in their liturgy.
Text and liturgical use
Most Introits are taken from Psalms, though many
come from the rest of scripture. Generally
they follow the same structure: two to four lines of scripture
related to the theme of the feastday or celebration. Most often the
choice of scripture passage has something in common with the
liturgical readings that will be featured later in that Mass.
The Introit can be either sung or spoken,
depending on the formality of the Mass as well as the preferences
of the priest and his
congregation. Not all Masses have Introits; traditionally the
service of Holy
Saturday in the Roman
Catholic rite does not.
In many cases the Introit also serves another
purpose: it gives a name to a particular Mass, based on the first
word or phrase of the Introit. Since the Introit for a Mass is
different for each day of the Liturgical
Calendar (sometimes multiple Masses even exist for a single
day, such as Christmas), and
unique Masses exist for special functions, it provides a key for
determining which order of the Mass is to be performed. This is why
a funeral Mass is called a Requiem and the
second Mass of the
Feast of the Sacred Heart is called the Exordium, for example.
As an unusual example, the first Sunday after Easter
Sunday, though having no official liturgical name, is
colloquially labelled "Quasimodo
Sunday" as the first phrase of the Introit is "Quasi modo
geniti infantes..." taken from 1 Pet 2:2. Even though Latin is no longer
mandatory in the celebration of the Mass, the traditional names
remain for purposes of organization of the calendar.
History
The practice evolved from the singing of a
psalm as the priest and
ministers approached the altar, sung verses having been part of the
celebration of the Mass since earliest times. The Liber
Pontificalis claims that the Introit originated by the request
of Celestine I,
but it was in the reign of Gregory I that
the familiar form emerged, and Gregory is popularly believed to
have composed many Introits himself; he is in fact not known to
have composed any music.
Musical setting
In the musical idiom of Gregorian
chant, Introits normally take the form
antiphon-verse-antiphon-doxology-antiphon. Introits,
like Offertories and
Communions,
are believed to have evolved from simpler reciting
tones. Introit melodies show this musical parentage most
clearly, and are often anchored around two reciting notes which may
be repeated or percussed. The melodies are mostly neumatic,
dominated by neumes with
two or three notes per syllable, although syllabic and melismatic passages also
occur.
The Introits of Old Roman
chant share many similarities with their Gregorian cousins, and
often include a repeated extra verse that fell out of use in the
Gregorian repertory.
So, for example, in the text used for the
third/fourth Lord's Day of Advent, we have the antiphon Rorate Caeli
from Isaiah 45:8a:
- RORATE caeli desuper et nubes pluant iustum
- aperiatur terra, et germinet Salvatorem.
The Verse and Antiphon from Psalm 18:2
- Caeli enarrant gloriam Dei /
- et opera manuum eius annuntiat firmamentum
Then the doxology.
- V. Gloria Patri et filio et spirtui sancto,
- R. Sicut erat in principio et nunc et semper et in
- saecula saeculorum. Amen.
- R. Sicut erat in principio et nunc et semper et in
Which is followed by the initial Antiphon (Rorate
... Salvatorem)
Appropriate to the season just before the
Nativity, a translation:
- Bedew us, heavens, from above; ye clouds, rain down the Just
One.
- The heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament declares the work of His hands.
- Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost,
- as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be for ever. Amen.
- The heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament declares the work of His hands.
Footnotes
introit in Czech: Introit
introit in German: Introitus
introit in Finnish: Introitus
introit in French: Introït
introit in Dutch: Introïtus
introit in Polish: Introit
introit in Swedish: Introitus
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Agnus Dei, Alleluia, Anamnesis, Benedicite, Blessing, Canon, Collect, Communion, Consecration, Credo, Dismissal, Epistle, Fraction, Gloria, Gloria Patri, Gloria in
Excelsis, Gospel,
Gradual, Kyrie, Kyrie Eleison, Last Gospel,
Lavabo, Magnificat, Miserere, Nunc Dimittis,
Offertory, Paternoster, Pax, Post-Communion, Preface, Sanctus, Secreta, Te Deum, Tersanctus, Tract, Trisagion, Vedic hymn,
alleluia, answer, anthem, antiphon, antiphony, canticle, chant, chorale, doxology, hallelujah, hosanna, hymn, hymn of praise, hymnody, hymnography, hymnology, laud, mantra, motet, offertory, offertory sentence,
paean, psalm, psalmody, report, response, responsory, versicleNegro spiritual,
anthem, cantata, canticle, chorale, church music, doxology, gospel, gospel music, hymn, hymn-tune, hymnody, hymnology, mass, motet, offertory, offertory sentence,
oratorio, paean, passion, prosodion, psalm, psalmody, recessional, requiem, requiem mass, sacred
music, spiritual,
white spiritual