| Home | All maps |
Strelbickiy RKKA • USSR • TopoMap |
|
||||
| All regional maps | Most popular | Thematic maps |
The long doxology (“For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours…”) does appear in the Latin Pater Noster as Christ taught it in Matthew or Luke. It was a later Greek addition. In the Roman Rite Mass, the Pater Noster stands alone, followed immediately by the embolism Libera nos (“Deliver us, Lord…”). The familiar doxology is used in Protestant traditions and, since 1970, in the Novus Ordo Mass as an optional acclamation after the embolism.
| Latin | Sounds like | Example from Pater Noster | |-------|-------------|-------------------------------| | C before e,i,ae,oe | “ch” (as in church ) | caelis → “cheh-lees” | | T before i + vowel | “ts” (as in pizza ) | tentationem → “ten-tahn-tsee-ohm” | | G before e,i | soft “j” | regnum → “reh-nyoom” | | V | “v” (not “w”) | voluntas → “voh-loon-tahs” | | AE | “eh” (as in bed ) | caelis → “cheh-lees” | pater noster latin pdf
Better yet, some advanced PDFs embed QR codes linking to audio recordings of the prayer chanted or spoken slowly. One of the most frequent questions about a Latin Pater Noster PDF is: Where is “For thine is the kingdom…”? The answer reveals deep liturgical history. The long doxology (“For the kingdom, the power,