Ite, Missa Est: You Are Sent — A Liturgical Graduation
Jeremiah 29:11 • Proverbs 3:5-6
The sending forth (Ite, missa est), vocation as divine calling, and the blessing for the road ahead
Anglican / Episcopal
Scripture, tradition, and reason in balance
The Mass Ends with a Sending
The Ite, Missa Est
In the ancient Roman liturgy, the deacon dismisses the congregation with "Ite, missa est" — literally, "Go, it is the sending." For centuries, Christians have understood that worship culminates not in the Eucharist but in the sending. You are nourished so that you can be sent. You are blessed so that you can be a blessing. [GRADUATE_NAME], your diploma is your "Ite, missa est." You have been nourished — by education, by community, by faith. Now go. You are sent.
Source: Roman Missal / Liturgical dismissal tradition
Vocation: Hearing the Call
The Blessing for the Road
Applications
- 1Pray the Ignatian examen daily for the next month. Each evening, ask: "Where did I see God today? What is God calling me to tomorrow?" Let vocation emerge from reflection.
- 2Receive the blessing. Do not rush past the benediction at graduation. Let the words land. You are being sent with the blessing of God and the prayers of the community.
- 3See your work as vocation, not just career. Ask Ignatius's question regularly: "What am I doing for Christ? What ought I to do?"
- 4Stay connected to the sacramental life. Wherever [NEXT_STEP] takes you, find a faith community. The sending is from the community and back to the community.
Prayer Suggestions
- God of the sending, every Mass ends with "Ite, missa est." Send [GRADUATE_NAME] today with the same power and the same blessing.
- God of vocation, You have been calling since before birth. Help them hear Your voice clearly in the noise of the next chapter.
- Bless them for the road. May the road rise up to meet them. May You hold them in the palm of Your hand. Until we meet again.
- Go in peace, [GRADUATE_NAME]. Go to love and serve the Lord. The sending is now. The blessing is real. The God who calls will sustain. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
The Mission (1986)
In The Mission, Father Gabriel builds a mission in the jungle — not to stay, but to send. He teaches, he serves, he builds community. And when the mission is threatened, his people do not flee. They stay because they have been formed. That is what education does — it forms you. And formation is for mission. [GRADUATE_NAME], you have been formed. Now go. The mission is not behind you. It is ahead.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
"Ite, missa est" — Go, you are sent. The word Mass comes from the sending. Worship is not the destination. It is the launch pad. So is graduation.
Your career is not just a job. It is a vocation — a divine calling. Whether you enter medicine, law, ministry, or the trades, you are answering a call from God.
St. Ignatius didn't ask 'What will make me comfortable?' He asked 'What is Christ asking of me?' That question will ruin every self-serving career plan — and replace it with something eternal.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Ite, missa est mean for graduates?
It means 'Go, you are sent.' The Mass ends with a sending, and graduation is the same. The education was formation; now comes the mission. This template frames graduation not as completion but as commissioning — being sent into the world with blessing and purpose.
How does the concept of vocation apply to graduation?
Vocation (from Latin vocare, 'to call') frames career as divine calling. In the liturgical tradition, discerning vocation is a lifelong practice involving prayer, community, the Ignatian examen, and sacramental life. This template helps graduates see their next step as God's call, not just a career choice.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the graduation / commissioning sermon.