Many people say a short prayer before eating their meals. These prayers are often called a blessing or grace. Some of them are poems that are recited, while others are spontaneous prayers of thanks.
Prayer is traditionally before the meal. But hey better safe than sorry ;-)
Yes, it is recommended to eat a small meal before the Eid al-Fitr prayer, as it is a Sunnah (tradition) of Prophet Muhammad to eat something sweet before attending the prayer.
Grace before meal in tagalog is "pasasalamat o panalangin bago kumain". Any thanksgiving prayer before meal will do as long as it is sincere and it came from the heart, I believe that God will hear it and so happy to bless us more.
Muslims can eat before the Fajr prayer (dawn) and after the Maghrib prayer (sunset) during the fasting month of Ramadan. This means that the pre-dawn meal (suhoor) should be consumed before Fajr prayer time, and the evening meal (iftar) is eaten after the Maghrib prayer at sunset.
Some examples of group prayer include praying together before a meal, participating in a religious service or ceremony, gathering for a prayer circle, or joining in a community prayer event.
Catholics typically say grace before a meal by making the sign of the cross, then saying a prayer thanking God for the food and asking for His blessings.
You don't! You dip it before the blessing so that there is no interruption between the blessing and eating, but you make the blessing and then eat.
bacause it's disrespectful for God. Although, you need to pray before each meal thanking God for your food.
Many if not most Witnesses will say a prayer of thanks before eating a meal. They don't call it grace.
I bowed my head in silent prayer before the meal. She sent up a prayer for guidance before making a difficult decision. The community gathered together to offer their prayers for those affected by the tragedy.
I have eaten the noon meal together with monks and nuns in several Mahayana monasteries in Taiwan, and there was no verbal prayer either right before or right after the meal other than the sound of a gong and someone intoning the syllable "OM" ("Aum") each time over a PA system. What made the occasions memorable is that the Buddhist Venerables are taught to treat eating, not as something you do for pleasure, but simply as "medicine for hunger." Thus, there was no talking throughout the meal, which only lasted about ten to fifteen minutes. You were not obliged to eat everything before you, but once you started an item, you had to finish it. At the end of the meal, everyone filed out as quietly as they had filed in.
the mother says a special prayer i think