Offertory
WordNet
noun
(1) The part of the Eucharist when bread and wine are offered to God
(2) The offerings of the congregation at a religious service
WiktionaryText
Etymology
From Latin offertorium, from verb offere, offer, + suffix -torium.
Noun
- money offered or donated during a church service
- 1914: Stephen Leacock, Arcadian Adventures with the Idle Rich - Before a month had passed the congregation at the evening service at St. Asaph's Church was so slender that the offertory, as Mr. Furlong senior himself calculated, was scarcely sufficient to pay the overhead charge of collecting it.
- the part of a church service when offerings are collected
- 1922: Upton Sinclair, They Call Me Carpenter - I sat through the sermon, and the offertory, and the recessional.
- music sung or played during the offertory of a church service
- c.1390: Geoffrey Chaucer, Canterbury Tales - But alderbest [best of all] he sang an offertory: / For well he wiste [knew], when that song was sung, / He muste preach,...
- 1922: Sinclair Lewis, Babbitt - There was an impressive musical program, conducted by Sheldon Smeeth, educational director of the Y.M.C.A., who also sang the offertory.