Mass of the Presanctified
The Mass of the Presanctified is Christian liturgy traditionally celebrated on Good Friday in which the consecration is not performed. Instead, the Blessed Sacrament that was consecrated at an earlier Mass and reserved is distributed.
The liturgy had developed by the time of the Quinisext Council. In the Roman and Anglican Rites it is used only on Good Friday, while in some Old Catholic Rites it is used on both Good Friday and Holy Saturday.
In both the Ordinary and the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, the term "Mass of the Presanctified" is not used in the Missal and other liturgical books, the ceremony having been retitled Solemn Afternoon Liturgy of the Passion and Death of the Lord in the 1955 revisions of Pope Pius XII. It is also called the Solemn Commemoration of the Lord's Passion.
The Divine Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts is used in the Eastern Orthodox Church and those Eastern Catholic Churches which follow the Byzantine Rite only on the weekdays of Great Lent, and on Monday through Wednesday of Holy Week. At each of these Presanctified Liturgies, the Sacred Mysteries would have been consecrated the previous Sunday.