There, following a prayer that the dead may rest " in the land of the living, in thy kingdom . . . in the bosom of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob ", etc ., is found this continuation : " And keep for us in peace, O Lord, a Christian, well-pleasing and sinless end to our lives, gathering us under the feet of thy Elect, when Thou willest and as Thou willest, only without shame and offence; through thy only begotten Son our Lord and God and Saviour, Jesus Christ . " We notice here the reference to the elect ( in " electorum tuorum grege " ), the prayer that we may be kept " in peace " ( " in tu?pace disponas " ), the allusion to the " end of our lives " ( " diesque nostros " ) and the unusual " " Per Christum Dominum nostrum " ", making a break in the middle of the Eucharistic prayer.