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The Raccolta 1878 · Public-domain source

403. The Heroic Act

A prayer from The Raccolta 1878, sourced from an older public-domain edition.

Source text / OCR-cleaned

403. The Heroic Act

This heroic act of charity in behalf of the souls in purga- tory consists in a voluntary offering, made by any one of the faithful in their favour, of all works of satisfaction done by him in this life, as well as of all suffrages which shall be offered for him after his death; by this act he deposits all these works and suffrages into the hands of the Blessed Virgin, that she may distribute them in behalf of those holy souls whom it is her good pleasure to deliver from the pains of purgatory, at the same time that he declares that by this personal offering he only forgoes in their behalf the special and personal benefit of these works of satis- faction, so that, if he is a priest, he is not hindered from applying the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass according: to the intention of those who give him alms for that purpose. This heroic act of charity, called also a vow of oblation, was instituted by F. Caspar Oliden, a Theatine. It was he who propagated it, and it was at his prayer that it was enriched with many Indulgences. i. An Indult of a privileged altar, personally, every day in the year to all priests who have made this offering. ii. Plenary, daily, applicable only to the departed. I, 111, IV. iii. Plenary, every Monday to all who hear Mass in suffrage for the souls in purgatory. IJ, III, IV. (See Instructions, p. 1.) N.B.—All Indulgences granted, or to be granted and gained by the faithful who have made this offering, are ap- plicable to the holy souls in purgatory. - Forall the faithful who cannot hear Mass on Monday, the Mass heard on Sundays is available for gaining Indulgence No. iii. In the case of those who are not yet communicants, or who are hindered from communicating, their respective ordinaries may authorize confessors to

Source note

Where this comes from

This page is part of PRYR’s public-domain library buildout from The Raccolta (1878). OCR has been cleaned enough for reading, but high-value pages should still be proofed against the scan before app-native use.

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