The Lenten Liturgies
IN THE ORIGINAL GREEK
WITH A NEW ENGLISH TRANSLATION BY
DR. LEONIDAS C. CONTOS, ARCHIMANDRITE
EDITORIAL COMPOSITION BY
SPENCER T. KEZIOS, PROTOBRESBYTER,
SUPERVISING THE FOLLOWING STAFF:
Father Constantine Valantasis
Father Vasilios Thanos
Jennifer Fine Kezios
Maria Ilias
PREFACE
It has
been suggested that our Church is enjoying a "liturgical renewal".
This can mean many things. But amid all the evidence, it can be observed in a
heightened interest among the faithful in vesperal celebrations of the Liturgy
and especially in the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts during Lent. This
edition of The Lenten Liturgies is a response to a need, long felt, for
a bilingual text, organized with great care, so that the complexities of the
service are minimized, while yet providing, as no other edition thus far does,
the complete hymnology and readings for each of the fifteen occasions when the
Presanctified is prescribed to be conducted.
It also
puts into the hands of the faithful the full text of the Liturgy of Saint Basil
the Great, with its hymnological variants, as celebrated on the five Sundays in
Lent. The average worshiper is hardly aware of the differences between this and
the more familiar Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom, since the principal
differences are largely inaudible. But here the exquisite "long"
prayers, the Great Eucharistic Prayer and the wonderfully compassionate Prayer
of Commemoration, are provided in a fresh English translation that conveys
their full force and beauty. As no liberties have been taken with content and
rubrics, so the integrity of language has been meticulously preserved: the
Greek is totally faithful to the received, approved text; the English, though
contemporary in style, is equally faithful to the original Greek, in all its
vigor and grace.
At each
step in the development of The Lenten Liturgies drafts have been
submitted for review and approval to the Commission on Translations appointed
by His Eminence Archbishop Iakovos from among the members of the Holy Synod of
Bishops. His Eminence has of course personally kept abreast of the work in
progress. The publication thus enjoys the authorization of the Church, and for
this we express warm thanks to all who toiled to help make it as free as
possible of error or lapses.
Special
gratitude is owed to Milton and Harriet Sioles of Paradise Valley, Arizona, who
in loving memory of their son Dean so willingly provided a generous grant to
cover the costs of publication.
If the
liturgical renewal is authentic, and we believe it is, then we hope that this
latest offering of NARTHEX PRESS will be received, and widely used, to support
and help sustain that renewal. If this book succeeds in this, in some measure,
we will have had our recompense.
Father
Spencer T. Kezios Father
Leonidas C. Contos
INTRODUCTION
The Liturgy of the
Presanctified Gifts is of very early and, in a sense, practical origin;
practical in that it was seen as the means for the faithful to commune of the
Sacrament on days when the Eucharistic Liturgy could not be celebrated. In
early times, at least until thefourth
century, Communion was considered so much a part of the Eucharistic Sacrifice
that it was unthinkable to attend without partaking. In fact, the faithful
sometimes received the Sacrament more often than they attended the Liturgy,
usually celebrated on Sunday only, the Lord's Day, and this by virtue of taking
the Sacrament home, in a special "arca "fashioned for this purpose.
Tertullian testifies to the practice when he asks, "Will not your husband
know what it is that you secretly consume before any otherfood?" In Syria the practice was still current in the sixth
century. John Moschos, a spiritual writer of the period, speaks of the faithful
taking home with them on Holy Thursday enough of the Eucharist to last the
year.
Of all the Lenten rules, one is
unique to Orthodoxy, and so gives us a key to its liturgical spirit: it forbids
the celebration of the Divine Liturgy on weekdays in Lent, as incompatible with
fasting, the sole exception being the Feast of the Annunciation. But so as not
to deprive the faithful of "the food of immortality", the Liturgy of
the Presanctified Gifts is prescribed, that is, a "Eucharistic
synaxis" without the Consecration. The festal nature of the Eucharist is
thus reserved for Saturdays and Sundays in Lent, while on the days of total
fasting, Wednesdays and Fridays, the people receive the Holy Gifts that were
sanctified on the previous Sunday.
The Presanctified was from the
start an evening service, Communion following Vespers, to be conducted after
the Ninth Hour, i.e. three o'clock in the afternoon. The daylong fast was thus
broken early in the evening, much as the total fast on Sunday is broken after
Communion. It is likely that this service was not always confined to Lent, but
was common to all of the Church's fasting seasons. However, permeated as it is
with the "bright sadness" of Lent, it has taken on a special beauty
and solemnity. As we pray for the Catechumens, those being made ready for Holy
Baptism on Easter Saturday, we sense a direct connection with the Christian
Church of the early centuries, and understand the initial character of Lent as
preparation for Baptism and for Easter.
But it is the Prayers of the
Faithful that really illuminate the Lenten road, giving us a fuller
understanding of the meaning and purpose of the Lenten discipline:
"Liberate all our senses
from killing passion, setting over them as benevolent sovereign our inner
reason. Let the eye be averted from every evil sight, and the ear be deaf to
idle talk. May the tongue be purged of unseemly speech. Purify these lips that
praise You, Lord. Make our hands abstain from wicked deeds, doing only such
things as are pleasing to You, thus sealing with Your grace all our members,
and our mind."
Then, as we prepare for the
Entrance of the pre-consecrated Gifts: "Behold, His spotless body
and lifegiving blood are about to make their entrance at this hour, to be laid
on this mystical table, invisibly attended by a multitude of the heavenly host.
Grant that we may receive them in blameless communion, so that as the eyes of
our understanding see the light, we may become children of light and of
day."
CONTENTS
THE LITURGY OF THE PRESANCTIFIED GIFTS .....
APPENDIX A - HYMNOLOGY AND READINGS ....
APPENDIX B - THE MARTYRIKA BY TONE ......
THE LITURGY OF ST. BASIL THE GREAT .........
ADDENDUM - EPISTLES AND GOSPELS FOR LENT
THE
LITURGY OF THE PRESANCTIFIED GIFTS
Because the Divine Liturgy is
the "Banquet of Christ", a festive, triumphant celebration, the
ancient discipline of the Church came to regard it as out of harmony with the
penitential climate of Great Lent. Yet to provide the faithful with the
"food of immortality", the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts, that
is, with the Eucharistic Gifts consecrated beforehand, at the Liturgy of the
previous Sunday, came into use early on. (It is attested as the approved custom
by the Quinisext Council of 692.)
The Presanctified Gifts were
offered to the faithful, after the ninth hour, about 3:00 p.m., usually at the
end of a day of fasting, in what is actually an elaborated Office of Vespers
with Holy Communion. The Presanctified is conducted from fifteen to eighteen
times a year:
1. On
Wednesday and Friday of the first six weeks of Lent.
2. On
Thursday of the fourth week of Lent.
3. On
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of Holy Week.
The Sacrificial (or
Resurrection) Liturgy is celebrated on all Saturdays and Sundays in Lent, on
the Feast of the Annunciation, on whatever day it falls, and on Holy Thursday.
(Good Friday is an aliturgical day.)
PARTICULARITIES
OF THE PRESANCTIFIED
On the
preceding Sunday, at the Prothesis, after dedicating the principal Amnos, or
"Lamb", to be distributed in Holy Communion that day, the Priest
prepares as many additional "Lambs" as there will be Liturgies of the
Presanctified during that week, saying for each the same dedicatory prayers as
for the first.
However, at the Consecration of
the Gifts all the "Lambs" are presented as one, for Christ is one.
Similarly, at the elevation, all the "Lambs" are elevated together.
At the fraction, the Priest
breaks only that Amnos which he dedicated first at the Prothesis. As for the
others, he takes them one by one in his left hand, and with the spoon in his
right pours a small amount of the Holy and Precious Blood of the Lord crosswise
on the underside incised with the Cross, then places them in the tabernacle.
Readings from the Psalms are an
important element of the Presanctified; the text used here is the translation
from the Greek Septuagint authorized by the Holy Archdiocese in 1993, to be
used "wherever the Psalms occur in our services." It is the product
of a collaboration between Father Leonidas Contos and Father Spencer Kezios for
Narthex Press and Baron Jose deVinck for Alleluia Press.
VESPERS
WITH THE DIVINE LITURGY
OF THE
PRESANCTIFIED GIFTS
PRIEST: Blessed is the Kingdom
of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever
and ever.
READER:
Amen.
Come,
let us worship God our King and bow down before Him.
Come, let us worship Christ God
our King and bow down before Him.
Come, let us worship Christ,
our King and our God, and bow down before Him.
PSALM
103/104
Bless the Lord, O my soul! O Lord, my God, you are great
indeed! Clothed in pomp and brilliance, arrayed with light as with a cloak,
stretching out the sky as a tent-cloth, establishing your lofty halls on
water. You make the clouds your conveyance, you surge on the wings of the wind.
You make the winds your messengers, and flaming fires your attendants.
You settled the earth on its
foundation: it shall stand unmoved from age to age. The abyss covered it like a
garment; the waters stood above the mountains. At your rebuke, they take to
flight, at the peal of your thunder, they flee. They hurdle the hills and run
down the dales to the place you have chosen for them. You have set up a
boundary not to be passed: they shall never return to cover the earth.
Down in the gullies, you make
springs to rise; waters shall flow between the mountains. They shall give drink
to the beasts of the field; wild asses will seek them to quench their thirst.
The birds of the sky shall abide by them; from among the rocks, they will raise
their song. From your lofty halls you refresh the hills; the earth shall be fed
with the fruit of your works.
You make green pastures for the
cattle and food-plants for the service of man, so that bread may be drawn
from the earth, and wine that gladdens the heart of man; so that oil may put a
gleam on his face, and that bread may strengthen the heart of man. The trees of
the plain shall be satisfied, the cedars of Lebanon that he planted. Sparrows
shall build their nests in them, herons shall call them their home. To the deer
belong the high mountains; to rodents, the shelter of the rock.
You have made the moon to mark
the seasons; the sun knows the time of its setting. You establish darkness, and
it is night, wherein the forest creatures prowl. Young lions roar for their
prey, and call out to God for their meat. As the sun rises, they will come
together, and lay themselves down in their dens. Man will go out to his labor,
and work until eventide.
How great are your works, O
Lord! In wisdom you have wrought them all. The earth is filled with your
creatures, even the wide and open sea. Within it are countless creeping things,
living beings small and large. Upon it there are ships a-sailing, and the
great beast you made to have fan. All of them look to you to give them their
food in due season. You provide and they gather up; you open your hands, and
they are full. You hide your face, and they cringe; you suspend their breath,
and they die and return to their dust. You send forth your breath, and they
live; you renew the face of the earth.
May the Lord's glory endure
forever, may the Lord rejoice in his works. He looks upon the earth, and makes
it quake; he touches the mountains, and they smoke. I will sing to the Lord as
long as I live, I will praise my God as long as I last. Would that my thoughts
be pleasing to him, and I will rejoice in the Lord. May the sinners vanish from
the earth, and the wicked be no more. Bless the Lord, O my soul!
The sun
knows the time of its setting. You establish darkness and it
is
night.
How
great are your works, O Lord! In wisdom you have wrought
them
all.
Glory
to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever
and ever. Amen.
Alleluia,
alleluia, alleluia, glory to you, O God. (2) Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia,
glory to you, O God. 0 Lord our hope, glory to you.
THE
GREAT LITANY OF PEACE
DEACON:
In peace let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
For heavenly peace and the salvation of our souls let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
For peace in the whole world, the stability of God's Holy Churches and for the
oneness of all, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
For this holy house, and all who enter it with faith, reverence and godly fear,
let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: For our Archbishop
(N.), our Bishop (N.), the worthy priesthood, the deacons in Christ, for all
the clergy and the people, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: For our country, the
President, and all in public service, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: For this city and this
Parish, for every city and land, and for the faithful who live in them, let us
pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: For temperate weather,
abundance of the goods of the earth, and for peaceful times, let us pray to the
Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: For those who travel,
by land, sea and air, for those who are sick or suffering or in captivity, and
for their safekeeping, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: That we may be spared
all affliction, violence, danger and want, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
Remembering our most holy,
pure, blessed and glorious Lady, the Theotokos and ever-virgin Mary, with
all the saints, let us commend ourselves and one another, and our whole life to
Christ our God.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
THE
PRAYER OF THE FIRST ANTIPHON
PRIEST: (inaudibly) Gracious and merciful Lord, forbearing and generous in
mercy, hear our prayer and heed the voice of our entreaty. Give us a sign of
Your favor. Lead us in Your way, that we may walk in Your truth; gladden our
hearts, that we may be in awe of Your holy name, for You are great in the
wonders You perform. You alone are God, and among all deities none is Your
like, O Lord: mighty in mercy and benevolent in might, helping and comforting
and saving all who trust in Your holy name.
PRIEST: For all glory, honor
and worship are Your due, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now and always and
forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
After which the gates of the Royal doors are closed and the Reader
reads the eighteenth division of the Psalter.
While the first stasis of the Kathisma is being read, the Priest,
making three deep prostrations, opens the Tabernacle (Artophorion) and censing
the gifts, he places the paten (diskarion) on the open antimension on the Holy
Altar. With great reverence he places a "Lamb " upon it. Then,
covering it with the veil, and led by the censer, he proceeds to the Prothesis.
There he pours wine and water into the chalice in the usual way,
covers it with the second veil, then both vessels with the aer. These actions
are accompanied simply by
the "Through the prayers of the Holy Fathers, Lord Jesus Christ, have
mercy on us and save us. " When the Presanctified Gifts have been covered,
he proceeds to the Little Synapte, or short petition.
THE FIRST SETTING
PSALM
119/120
In my distress, I cried out to
the Lord, and he answered me. O Lord, save me from lying lips, and from a
treacherous tongue. What shall be given you and what more shall be done to you,
you deceitful tongue? The sharpened arrows of a warrior with firebrands made of
the broom tree. Woe is me that my exile has been so long; that I have set up
tent in the camp of Kedar. Too long have I stayed among those who hate peace. I
was peaceable, but when I spoke to them, they warred against me without cause.
PSALM
120/121
I lifted
up my eyes to the hills whence help shall come to me. My
help is
from the Lord who made heaven and earth. He will not
suffer
your foot to stumble; nor shall the
Guardian fall asleep.
Behold,
he will neither sleep nor slumber, the Watcher over Israel.
The
Lord will keep watch over you; the Lord is your shade at your
right
hand. The sun shall not scorch you by day, nor shall the moon
fail
you by night. The Lord will preserve you from every evil, the
Lord
will safeguard your life. The Lord will guard your coming and
your
going henceforth and for evermore.
PSALM
121/122
I was happy when they said to
me: "Let us go to the house of the Lord." Our feet stood within your
courts, Jerusalem, Jerusalem built as a city whose people are as one. For there
did the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord as it was decreed to Israel to
give thanks to the name of the Lord. For there have been placed thrones for
judgment, thrones for the house of David. Pray, then, for the peace of
Jerusalem, and may prosperity be with those who love you. May peace be within
your walls, and prosperity upon your towers. For the sake of my brethren and my
friends, I have indeed asked peace for you; for the sake of the house of the
Lord our God, I have earnestly sought your good.
PSALM
122/123
I have lifted up my eyes to you
who dwell in heaven. As the eyes of the servants are on the hands of their
masters, as the eyes of a maid are on the hands of her mistress, so our eyes
are on the Lord our God until he has mercy on us. Have mercy on us, O Lord,
have mercy on us; for we have had more than our fill of contempt: yes, our soul
has been more than glutted. May disgrace fall on the prosperous, and contempt
on the proud.
PSALM
123/124
Had not the Lord been with us,
let Israel now say, had not the Lord been with us at the time men rose against
us, truly, they would have swallowed us alive when their fury was inflamed
against us; truly, the water would have drowned us, the torrent would have
swept over us. Truly, the raging waters would have overwhelmed us. Blessed be
the Lord who has not abandoned us as prey to their teeth. Like a bird of
passage we were rescued from the fowler's net. The snare was torn asunder, and
we escaped. Our help is in the name of the Lord who made heaven and earth.
Glory to the Father and to the
Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
Alleluia,
alleluia, alleluia, glory to You, O God. (3)
Lord,
have mercy. Lord, have mercy. Lord, have mercy.
Glory to the Father and to the
Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
DEACON:
Again in peace let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
Remembering our most holy,
pure, blessed and glorious Lady, the Theotokos and ever-virgin Mary, with
all the saints, let us commend ourselves and one another, and our whole life to
Christ our God.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
THE
PRAYER OF THE SECOND ANTIPHON
PRIEST: (inaudibly) O Lord, do not rebuke us in Your anger; do not chastise
us in Your wrath; but deal with us according to Your loving kindness, as Healer
and Physician of our souls. Guide us to the harbor of Your will; enlighten the
eyes of our hearts that we may know Your truth; and grant that the rest of this
day may be peaceful and without sin, as may our whole life, through the prayers
of the Theotokos and of all tile saints.
PRIEST: For Yours is the
dominion, and Yours the kingdom and the power and the glory, Father, Son and
Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
THE SECOND SETTING OF THE PSALTER
PSALM
124/125
Those who trust in the Lord are
like Mount Sion which cannot be moved, which shall stand forever. Mountains are
all around Jerusalem, as the Lord is around his people, now and forever. For
the Lord will not let the scepter of the wicked rule over the land of the just,
lest the just themselves apply their hands to iniquities. Do good, O Lord, to
those who are good, and to those whose heart is upright. But those who stray
into crooked ways, the Lord will expel with evildoers. Peace upon Israel!
PSALM
125/126
When the Lord returned the
captives of Sion, we were like men dreaming. Then our mouth was filled with
laughter, and our tongue with rejoicing. Then it was said among the Gentiles,
"The Lord has done great things for them. " The Lord has done great
things for us: we have been made to rejoice. O Lord, return our captives as
streams return to the south. Those who weep as they sow shall rejoice as they
reap. Though they went forth shedding tears as they scattered their seeds, they
shall return rejoicing, bearing with them their sheaves.
PSALM
126/127
Unless the Lord build the
house, in vain do the builders toil; unless the Lord guard the city, in vain
does the watchman keep watch. In vain do you rise early: you get up after rest
only to eat the bread of grief, for he provides for his beloved while they
sleep. Behold, the Lord's inheritance is his children, and his reward, the
fruit of the womb. As arrows in the hand of a mighty warrior, so are the
children of the exiles. Blessed the man who will be able to fill his quiver
with them: they shall never be put to shame when they meet their foes at the
gates.
PSALM
127/128
Blessed are all who fear the
Lord, who walk in his ways. You shall eat of your hand's labor: blessed are
you, and it shall be well with you. Your wife shall be like a fruitful vine in
the recesses of your house: your children like olive shoots around your table.
Behold, in this way shall be blessed the man who fears the Lord. May the Lord
bless you from Sion, and may you see the wealth of Jerusalem all the days of
your life. And may you see your children's children. Peace upon Israel!
PSALM
128/129
Often have they assailed me
since my youth: let Israel say it! Often have they assailed me since my youth,
but they have not prevailed over me. The wicked plowed my back: they increased
their iniquity. But the righteous Lord has cut asunder the neck of the sinners.
Let them all be confounded and turned back, those who hate Sion: let them
become like grass on the house-tops which withers before it can sprout;
with which the reaper fills not his hand, nor the binder of sheaves his arms,
while those who pass by do not say, "The blessing of the Lord be upon you!"
We have blessed you in the name of the Lord.
Glory to the Father and to the
Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
Alleluia,
alleluia, alleluia, glory to You, O God. (3)
Lord,
have mercy. Lord, have mercy. Lord, have mercy.
Glory to the Father and to the
Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
DEACON:
Again in peace let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
Remembering our most holy,
pure, blessed and glorious Lady, the Theotokos and ever-virgin Mary, with
all the saints, let us commend ourselves and one another, and our whole life to
Christ our God.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
PRAYER
OF THE THIRD ANTIPHON
PRIEST: (inaudibly) Lord our God, be mindful of us sinners and Your unfit
servants, even as we call upon Your holy name; and do not put us to shame for
having placed our hope in Your mercy; but grant, O Lord, all that we ask for
our salvation; and make us worthy to love and fear You with all our heart, and
in all things to do Your wilt.
PRIEST: For You are a good and
loving God, and to You we offer the glory, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now and
always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
THE THIRD SETTING OF THE PSALTER
PSALM
129/130
Out of
the depths I have cried out to you: Lord, Lord, hear my
voice!
Let your ears be attentive to the voice of my plea. If you
retain
sins, Lord, O Lord, who can stand? With you there is
forgiveness.
For your name's sake, O Lord, I have waited for you.
My soul
has waited for your promise, my soul has hoped in the
Lord.
My soul has trusted in the Lord, from the morning watch till
night.
Let Israel hope in the Lord, for with the Lord there is
steadfast love and in him is
full redemption, and he will redeem Israel from all his iniquities.
PSALM
130/131
O Lord,
my heart is not uplifted, nor are my eyes upraised. I have
not
busied myself with lofty pursuits, nor with wonders too great for
me. If
I have failed to remain humble, but instead have exalted my
soul,
as a weaned child is treated by its mother, so will you deal
with my
soul. Let Israel hope in the Lord, henceforth and forever.
PSALM
131/132
O Lord, remember David and all
his forbearance, how he swore to the Lord, and made a vow to the God of Jacob:
"I will not enter the tent, my abode, nor get up on the couch of my
repose; I will give no sleep to my eyes, nor to my eyelids any slumber, nor to
my temples any rest, until I find a place for the Lord, a tabernacle for the
God of Jacob. " Behold, I have heard of it in Ephrata: we found it in the
forest clearings. Let us enter into his tabernacles, let us worship where his
feet once stood. Arise, O Lord, and go to your rest, you and the ark of your
holiness.
May your priests be clothed in
righteousness, and your faithful ones rejoice. For the sake of David your
servant, turn not away the face of your anointed one. The Lord swore to David a
promise which he will not retract: "One of your own flesh I will place on
your throne. If your sons will keep my covenant and the revelations I will
offer them, their sons also shall be seated upon your throne for evermore.
" For the Lord has elected Sion, he has chosen it for his dwelling:
"This is my home for ever
and ever; here I will dwell because I have chosen it. I will bless abundantly
her provisions; I will feed her poor with bread; I will clothe her priests with
salvation, and the faithful shall exult with joy. There will I raise the pride
of David; I have readied a lamp for my anointed one. I will clothe his enemies
with shame, but on him my crown shall shine.
PSALM
132/133
Behold how good and pleasant it
for brothers to dwell in unity. It is as ointment upon the head, which runs
down over the beard, the beard of Aaron, runs down to the hem of his garment.
It is like the dew of Hermon which falls on the mountains of Sion, for there
the Lord has ordained the blessing: life for evermore.
PSALM
133/134
Behold now, bless the Lord all
you servants of the Lord who stand in the house of the Lord, in the courts of
the house of our God. By night, lift up your hands to the holy places and bless
the Lord. May the Lord who made heaven and earth bless you out of Sion.
Glory to the Father and to the
Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
Alleluia,
alleluia, alleluia, glory to You, O God. (2)
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia,
glory to You, O God. Lord our hope, glory to You.
DEACON:
Again in peace let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
Remembering our most holy,
pure, blessed and glorious Lady, the Theotokos and ever-virgin Mary, with
all the saints, let us commend ourselves and one another, and our whole life to
Christ our God.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
THE
PRAYER OF THE FOURTH ANTIPHON
PRIEST: (inaudibly) Praised by the heavenly powers with hymns that are
never silent and doxologies that never cease, fill our lips with praise of You,
that we may fitly magnify Your holy name. And grant us a portion and share with
all who truly fear You and keep Your commandments; at the intercession of the
holy Theotokos and of all the saints.
PRIEST: For You are our God, a
God who shows mercy and saves, and to You we offer up glory, to the Father and
to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
He then sings the opening verses of Psalm 140/141 in the appointed
tone:
PSALM
140/141
O Lord, I have cried out to
you: hear me, O Lord. Lord, I have cried out to you, hear me; hearken to the
voice of my prayer as I cry out to you, hear me , O Lord.
As the second verse begins, the Priest invokes a blessing on the
incense and the Deacon censes in the usual manner.
Let my prayer rise as incense before
you; the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
Set a
guard, O Lord, over my mouth, and a gate to contain my lips.
Let not
my heart incline to evil deeds, to finding excuses for sinful
doings.
In the
company of men who work iniquity, and I will not partake of
their
delicacies.
Let the
just man chasten me with kindness and chide me. But the oil
of the
wicked shall never touch my head,
yet
even then would I pray for their good will.
Their
judges were dashed against the rock:
they
shall hear my words, how sweet they are.
As a
lump of clay broken on the ground, so shall their bones be
strewn
near the grave.
On you,
Lord, O Lord, my eyes are fixed; in you have I trusted:
take
not my life.
Keep me
from the snare which they have set for me, and from the
traps
of wicked men.
The
wicked shall fall into their own nets, while I alone escape.
PSALM
141/142
With my
voice, I cried out to the Lord, with my voice, I implored
the
Lord.
Before
him, I will pour out my prayer; in his presence, I will tell of
my
distress.
When my
spirit was fainting within me, you knew my paths.
On that
very road I was walking, they set a trap for me.
I
looked to my right and observed: no one was aware of me.
I had
no means of escape: no one would take care of my life.
I cried
out to you, O Lord, and said, "You are my hope, my share
in the
land of the living.
Attend
to my supplication, for I am laid very low.
"Deliver
me from my oppressors, for they are too strong for me.
Release
me from prison, that I may give thanks to your name. "
THE HYMNOLOGY AND OLD TESTAMENT READINGS
FOR EACH PRESANCTIFIED WILL BE FOUND
IN APPENDIX A
APPENDIX A
INDEX
WEDNESDAY
OF THE FIRST WEEK .........
FRIDAY
OF THE FIRST WEEK .............
WEDNESDAY
OF THE SECOND WEEK
FRIDAY
OF THE SECOND WEEK ...........
WEDNESDAY
OF THE THIRD WEEK ........
FRIDAY
OF THE THIRD WEEK ............
WEDNESDAY
OF THE FOURTH WEEK
FRIDAY
OF THE FOURTH WEEK ...........
WEDNESDAY
OF THE FIFTH WEEK .........
FRIDAY
OF THE FIFTH WEEK ............
WEDNESDAY BEFORE PALM SUNDAY
FRIDAY
BEFORE PALM SUNDAY .........
MONDAY
IN HOLY WEEK ..............
TUESDAY
IN HOLY WEEK .............
WEDNESDAY
IN HOLY WEEK ............
PRIEST:
Peace be to you.
DEACON:
Wisdom.
When the reading is concluded, the priest censes the Holy Altar,
pausing at each side, singing antiphonally with the Cantor the
"Katefthynthito", "Let my prayer rise as incense before You...
introducing each reprise with a verse from Psalm
140/141:
PRIEST: Let my prayer rise as
incense before You, the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest then moves to the south of the Holy Table and censes,
chanting aloud.
PRIEST: O Lord, I have cried out to You: hear me;
hearken
to the
voice of my prayer as I cry out to You.
CANTOR: Let my prayer rise as incense before You,
the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest then moves to the rear of the Holy Table and censes,
chanting aloud.
PRIEST: Verse: Set a guard, O Lord, over my mouth, and a gate to contain my
lips.
CANTOR: Let my prayer rise as
incense before You, the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest then moves to the north of the Holy Table and censes,
chanting aloud.
PRIEST: Verse: Let not my heart incline to evil deeds, to finding excuses
for sinful doings, in the company of men who work iniquity, and I will not
partake of their delicacies.
CANTOR: Let my prayer rise as
incense before You, the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest then moves in front of the Holy Table and censes, chanting
aloud.
PRIEST: Glory to the Father and
to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
CANTOR: Let my prayer rise as
incense before You, the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest standing before the Holy Table repeats.
PRIEST:
Let my prayer rise
Coming through the Royal Gates and censing the icon of Christ the
Lord he chants.
as
incense before You.
He the censes the remaining icons and the faithful as the Cantor
chants.
CANTOR:
the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
If the Feast of a Saint is being commemorated the appropraiate
Epistle and Gospel is now read.
The Deacon exits from the north door (or the Priest standing before
the Holy table) and chants the Fervent Supplication.
THE
FERVENT SUPPLICATION
DEACON: Let us say with our
whole heart and our whole mind, let us say.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (threefold)
DEACON: Lord Almighty, God of
our fathers, we pray You, hear us and have mercy.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (3)
DEACON: Have mercy on us, O
God, in Your great goodness; we pray You, hear us and have mercy.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (3)
DEACON:
Again we pray for pious and Orthodox Christians.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (3)
DEACON: Again we pray for our
Archbishop (N.), and our Bishop (N.).
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (3)
According to the practice of the Ecumenical Patriarchate the Litany
ends here.
Prayer
of the Fervent Supplication
PRIEST: (During the Litany of Fervent Supplication: inaudibly) Lord our
God, accept this fervent prayer by Your servants, and have mercy on us, and in
the abundance of Your compassion have pity on us and on all Your people, who
await Your plenteous mercy.
PRIEST: For You are a merciful
and loving God, and to You we give glory: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now and
always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
Here the Priest makes the sign of the Cross over
the Antimension with the Book of Gospels.
THE LITANY FOR THE CATECHUMENS
DEACON:
You who are Catechumens, pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
You faithful, let us pray for the Catechumens.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
That the Lord will show them mercy.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
That He will instruct them in the word of His truth.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
That He will reveal to them the Gospel of righteousness.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
That He will unite them to His Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
Save them, have mercy on them, help them and keep them, O God, in Your grace.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
You who are Catechumens, bow your heads to the Lord.
Prayer
for the Catachumens
PRIEST: (inaudibly) O God, our God, Author and Creator of all things, it is
Your will that all should be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth. Look
upon Your servants the Catechumens, and free them of ancient error and from the
wiles of the enemy. Call them to eternal life, illuminating their souls and
bodies, and numbering them among Your reasoning flock, on which Your holy name
is invoked.
PRIEST: That with us they too
may glorify Your most noble and majestic name, of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit, now and forevermore.
CANTOR:
Amen.
Here the Priest unfolds the Antimension as in the Liturgy of St. John
Chrysostom.
DEACON: All Catechumens,
depart. The Catechumens, depart. All who are admitted for Illumination, depart.
Pray, all you who preparing for Illumination. Let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Catechumens, depart.
Let none of the Catechumens remain.
DEACON: All we faithful once
again in peace let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us, and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
Wisdom!
The
First Prayer of the Faithful
PRIEST: (inaudibly) O God, great and praised, through the lifegiving death
of Your Christ, You have borne us from corruption to immortality. Liberate all
our senses from killing passion, setting over them as a benevolent sovereign
our inner reason. Let the eye be averted from every evil sight, and the ear be
deaf to idle talk.
May the tongue be purged of
unseemly speech. Purify these lips that praise You, Lord. Make our hands
abstain from wicked deeds, doing only such things as are pleasing to You, thus
sealing with Your grace all our members, and our mind.
PRIEST: For all glory, honor
and worship are Your due: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now and forevermore.
CANTOR:
Amen.
DEACON:
Again in peace let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
Wisdom!
The
Second Prayer of the Faithful
PRIEST: (inaudibly) Holy Master, infinitely good, we entreat You, rich in
mercy, to be gracious to us sinners, and to make us worthy to receive Your only
Son and our God, the King of Glory. For behold, His spotless body and
lifegiving blood are about to make their entrance at this hour, to be laid on
this mystical table, invisibly attended by a multitude of the heavenly host.
Grant that we may receive them in blameless communion, so that as the eyes of
our understanding see the light, we may become children of light and of day.
PRIEST: Through the gift of
Your Christ with Whom You are blessed, together with Your all-holy, good
and lifegiving Spirit, now and always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
In place of the Hymn of the Cherubim, which is normally sung at the
Entrance of the Holy Gifts, the following hymn is sung:
CANTOR: Now the Powers of
Heaven minister invisibly with us. For, behold, the King of Glory enters.
The hymn breaks off at this
point. In total silence the Gifts are carried into the Soleas by the priest
whose head is covered by the Aer, then into the Sanctuary, and placed on the
Holy Altar. As these are the Presanctified Gifts, already consecrated, the
people kneel in deep reverence during their Entrance.
They rise as the hymn concludes:
CANTOR: Behold, the mystical
sacrifice, fully accomplished, is ushered in. In fervent faith let us draw
near, that we may become sharers in everlasting life. Alleluia.
THE COMPLETION LITANY
DEACON:
Let us complete our evening prayer to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: For the Precious Gifts
here set forth and presanctified, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: That our loving God,
having received them at His holy and mystical and celestial altar as a sweet
spiritual fragrance, will in turn send upon us His divine grace and the gift of
the Holy Spirit, let us pray.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: That we may be spared
all affliction, violence, danger and want, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
That this whole evening may be
perfect, holy, peaceful and without sin, let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: An angel of peace, a
faithful guide, a guardian of our souls and bodies, let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: Forgiveness of our sins
and offenses let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: All that is good and
profitable for our souls, and peace in the world, let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: That we may live out
our lives in peace and repentance, let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: A Christian end to our
lives, peaceful, free of suffering and shame, and a good defense at the dread
judgment seat of Christ, let us ask.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: Having prayed for the
unity of the faith, and for the communion of the Holy Spirit, let us commend
ourselves and one another, and our life to Christ our God.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
PRIEST: During the Completion Litany: (inaudibly) O God of ineffable and
unseen mysteries, in You are hidden the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, yet
You have revealed to us this Liturgy and, in Your great love for mankind,
appointed us sinners to offer gifts and sacrifices to You, for our sins and for
the failings of the people. Invisible King, You perform works great and
inscrutable, glorious and extraordinary, beyond number. Look upon us Your
undeserving servants as we stand, as at Your throne of the Cherubim at this Your
holy altar, where Your only-begotten Son, our God, rests in the awesome
mysteries here offered.
Freeing us all, and Your
faithful people, of all uncleanness, sanctify all of us, soul and body, with a
sanctification that cannot be taken away. Thus, partaking of these divine
Blessings with pure conscience, faces unblushing, hearts enlightened, and being
quickened by them, we may be united to Your Christ Himself, our true God. For
He said: "He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood, abides in me and I in him.
" Having Your Word indwelling and moving within us, we may thus become the
temple of Your all-holy and worshipful Spirit, free of every wide of the
Evil One affecting our acts, our words, our thoughts, and so obtain the
blessings promised to us as to Your Saints who have pleased You through the
ages.
PRIEST: And make us worthy,
Master, with confidence and without fear of reproach, to make bold to call You,
the heavenly God, Father, and to say:
UNISON: Our Father who art in
heaven, hallowed by Thy name. Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as
it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our
trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us; and lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from evil.
PRIEST: For Yours is the
kingdom and the power and the glory, of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
PRIEST:
Peace be to all.
CANTOR:
And to you spirit.
DEACON:
Let us bow our heads to the Lord.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
PRIEST: (inaudibly) O God, You alone are compassionate and good. Dwelling
on high, yet looking upon the lowly, regard Your people with tender eye and
safeguard diem. Count us all worthy to partake without reproach of these Your
lifegiving Mysteries. For it is to You that we bow our heads, in the hope of
Your rich mercy.
Lifting the Asterisk from the Paten:
PRIEST: Through the grace,
mercy and love for us of Your only-begotten Son, with Whom You are
blessed, together with Your all-holy, good and lifegiving Spirit, now and
always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
PRIEST: (inaudibly) Lord Jesus Christ, hear us from Your holy dwelling
place and from the throne of glory of Your kingdom and come to sanctify us.
Though enthroned with the Father on high, yet present here in our midst,
unseen, deign by Your mighty hand to give us a share of Your Pure Body and
Precious Blood, and through us to all Your people.
With the Holy Gifts still covered by the veil, the Priest touches the
consecrated "Lamb ".
DEACON:
Let us be attentive
PRIEST:
The Presanctified Holy Gifts for the holy people of God.
CANTOR: One is holy, one is
Lord, Jesus Christ, to the glory of God the Father. Amen. (Followed by the Communion Hymn:)
CANTOR: Taste and see how good
the Lord is. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia.
THE
FRACTION AND COMMUNION
The priest now uncovers the Gifts and performs the fraction in the
usual manner.
DEACON:
Master, break the Holy Bread.
He breaks the Amnos into its four quarters.
PRIEST: (In a low voice:) The Lamb of God is broken and shared, broken but
not divided; forever eaten yet never consumed, but sanctifying those who
partake of Him.
DEACON:
Master, fill the Cup.
He places the portion marked IC (Jesus) in the
chalice, saying:
PRIEST:
The fullness of the Holy Spirit.
DEACON:
Amen.
DEACON:
Master, bless the Zeon.
PRIEST: Blessed is the fervor
of Your Saints, now and forevermore. Amen.
Pouring the Zeon into the chalice, he says:
DEACON:
The fervor of faith, full of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
THE PRAYERS BEFORE COMMUNION
Ibelieve, Lord, and confess that You are truly the Christ, Son of
the living God, Who came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the
greatest. I also believe that this is truly Your spotless Body, and that this
is truly Your precious Blood. Wherefore I pray to You: have mercy on me and
forgive my offenses, whether intended or not, whether committed in word or in
deed, knowingly or unknowingly; and count me worthy to share without judgment
in Your pure Mysteries, for remission of sins and for everlasting life. Amen.
You have beguiled me with yearning, O Christ, and by love
divine transformed me. Consume my sins in ethereal flame, and let me be filled
with the sheer delight of You, O Gracious Lord, that leaping for joy, I may
magnify both Your Advents.
How shall I, so unworthy, come
into the splendor of Your Saints? If I make bold to enter the bridal feast, my
clothing will reproach me since it is not a wedding garment. Then I shall be
bound and cast out by the angels. In Your love, Lord, purge my soul and save
me.
Loving Master, Lord Jesus
Christ my God, let not these holy gifts become a judgment against me because of
my unworthiness, but for the cleansing and sanctification of both soul and
body, and as a pledge of the future life and the kingdom. It is good for me to
cling to God, to place in Him my hope for salvation.
And as he makes three prostrations before the
altar:
Receive me today, Son of God,
as a partaker of Your mystical supper; for I will not reveal the Mystery to
Your enemies, nor give You a kiss as did Judas. But as the thief I confess You:
Lord, remember me in Your kingdom.
Bowing to the people in a gesture of mutual forgiveness, he then
turns to the altar to receive, saying to the DEACON:
PRIEST:
Brother and con-celebrant, forgive me the unworthy Priest.
DEACON:
May the Lord forgive both you and us.
PRIEST:
May the Lord forgive me a sinner, and have mercy on me.
(3)
He then takes a portion of the Lamb, saying:
PRIEST: Behold, I approach
Christ, our immortal King and God. The precious and most holy Body of our Lord
God and Savior Jesus Christ is given to me (N.) the unworthy Priest, for the
forgiveness of sins and life everlasting.
Then, drinking from the cup:
Behold, again I approach
Christ, our immortal King and God. The precious and most holy, pure and
lifegiving Blood of our Lord God and Savior Jesus Christ is given to me (N.)
the unworthy Priest, for forgiveness of sins and life everlasting.
Wiping the rim of the chalice and reverencing it,
he adds:
This has touched my lips; it
takes away my iniquities and cleanses me of my sins.
The deacon then also receives according to the
established order.
Then the following prayer:
PRIEST: We thank You, God and
Savior of all, for all the blessings You have bestowed on us, and for the
communion of the Holy Body and Blood of Your Christ. And we pray You, loving
Lord, keep us in the shelter of Your wings, and grant that, to our very last
breath, we may partake worthily of Your sanctifying blessings, for the enlightenment
of soul and body, for the inheritance of the heavenly kingdom.
THE COMMUNION OF THE FAITHFUL
DEACON: With the fear of God,
with faith and with love, draw near.
CANTOR: God is Lord and has
revealed Himself to us. Blessed is He that comes in the name of the Lord.
When all have received the Holy Eucharist, the Priest holds the
chalice aloft and says:
PRIEST:
God, save Your people and bless Your inheritance.
In place of the customary "We have seen the
light... " we sing:
CANTOR: I will bless the Lord
at all times; his praise shall be ever on my lips. Taste the heavenly bread and
the cup of life, and see how good the Lord is. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia.
PRIEST:
(As he censes the Holy Gifts: inaudibly) Be
exalted, O , above the heavens, and let Your glory be over all the earth (3)
The Deacon receives the Paten from the Priest and takes it to the
Prothesis.
The Priest lifting the Chalice prays before the
Holy Table.
PRIEST:
(inaudibly) Blessed is our God
Then, holding the Chalice aloft, covered, he faces the people and
adds:
always,
now and ever and to the ages of ages.
CANTOR:
Amen.
After returning the Holy Vessels to the Prothesis the Priest folds
the Antimension.
DEACON: Let us be attentive!
Having received the divine, holy, pure, immortal, life giving and awesome
Mysteries of Christ, let us give fitting thanks to the Lord.
Help us, save us, have mercy on
us, and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
Having asked that this whole
evening may be perfect, holy, peaceful and free of sin, let us commend
ourselves and one another, and our whole life to Christ our God.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
He makes the sign of the Cross with the Book of Gospels over the now
folded Antimension.
PRIEST: For You are our
sanctification, and to You we give the glory: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now
and always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
PRIEST:
Let us depart in peace.
DEACON:
Let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR: Lord, have mercy. Lord,
have mercy. Lord, have mercy. Holy Father, give the blessing.
PRIEST: (Standing before the icon of Christ) Almighty Lord, You have
created all things in wisdom. In Your inexpressible providence and great
goodness You have brought us to these saving days, for the cleansing of our
souls and bodies, for control of our passions, in the hope of the Resurrection.
After the forty days You delivered into the hands of Your servant Moses the
tablets of the law in characters divinely traced. Enable us also, O benevolent
One, to fight the good fight, to complete the course of the fast, to keep the
faith inviolate, to crush underfoot the heads of unseen tempters, to emerge
victors over sin and to come, without reproach, to the worship of Your Holy
Resurrection. For blessed and glorified is Your most honorable and majestic
name, of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, now and forevermore.
CANTOR: Amen. May the name of
the Lord be praised, from this time forth and to the endless ages.
This is sung three times as the Priest goes to the
Prothesis, saying:
PRIEST: Lord our God, You have
guided us to these most holy days, and admitted us as participants to Your
awesome Mysteries. Unite us to Your spiritual flock and declare us heirs to
Your kingdom, now and forever. Amen.
DEACON:
Let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
PRIEST: May the blessing of the
Lord and His mercy come upon you, through His divine grace and love, always,
now and forevermore.
CANTOR:
Amen.
THE
DISMISSAL
PRIEST:
Glory to You, O God, our hope, glory to You.
May Christ our true God,
through the intercessions of His most pure and holy Mother; the power of the
precious and lifegiving Cross; the protection of the honorable, bodiless
heavenly powers; the supplications of the honorable, glorious Prophet and
Forerunner John the Baptist; the holy, glorious and victorious Martyrs; our
venerable and godly Fathers; the holy and righteous ancestors Joachim and Anna;
of Saint (the Saint of the day) whose memory we keep today; and of all the
Saints, have mercy on us and save us, for He is good and loves mankind.
NOTE: The reading of Psalms 33/34 and 144/145 is prescribed at this
point as the faithful receive the antidoron.
PSALM
33/34
READER: I will bless the Lord
at all times; his praise shall be ever on my lips. My soul shall glory in the
Lord: let the meek hear and rejoice. Magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt
his name together. I sought the Lord, and he heard me, and delivered me from
all my fears. Approach the Lord and be enlightened, and your face shall never
be shamed. This wretched man cried out, and the Lord heard him, and delivered
him from all his afflictions.
The angel will stand guard
around those who fear the Lord and save them. Taste and see how good the Lord
is. Blessed is the man who hopes in him. Fear the Lord, all you his faithful
ones, for those who fear him shall want for nothing. The rich have become poor
and hungry, but those who seek the Lord shall not lack any good. Come,
children, hear me: I will teach you the fear of the Lord. Which of you desires
life, and loves to see the good days? Keep your tongue from wickedness, and
your lips from deceitful speech; turn away from evil, and do good; seek peace
and pursue it.
The eyes of the Lord are upon
the just and his ears are open to their pleas; the face of the Lord is turned
against sinners, to erase their memory from the earth. The just cried out and
the Lord heard them, and he delivered them from all their trials. The Lord is
close to the broken-hearted, and he will save the humble in spirit. Many
are the trials of the righteous, but out of them all the Lord will deliver
them. He protects every bone in their body: not a single one of them will be
broken. The death of sinners is painful; those who hate justice shall be
damned. The Lord will redeem the souls of his servants, and none of those who
hope in him shall be lost.
PSALM
144/145
I will exalt you, my God and my
king, and bless your name for ever and ever. Every day I will bless you, and
praise your name for ever and ever. The Lord is great and greatly to be
praised, and to his greatness there is no end. Age after age will praise your
works, and proclaim your might. They will tell the glorious splendor of your
holiness, they will recount your wondrous works; they will speak of the power
of your awesome deeds, they will declare your greatness. They will recall your
abundant goodness and will exult in your righteousness. The Lord is gracious
and merciful: he is long-suffering and abounding in love.
The Lord is good towards
everyone, and his grace extends over all his works. Let all your works give
thanks to you, Lord, and all your faithful ones bless you. They shall speak of
the glory of your kingdom and tell of your power, to make known your might to
the children of men, and the glorious splendor of your kingdom. Your kingdom is
a kingdom for all ages and your dominion is for all generations. The Lord keeps
faith in all his promises and is hallowed in all his works. The Lord supports
all who are failing, and raises up all who are bowed down.
The eyes of all look up to you,
and you give them their food in due season. You open your hands and satisfy all
living beings; the Lord is just in all his ways, and faithful in all his works.
The Lord is close to all who pray to him, those who call upon him in truth. He
will meet the desire of those who fear him, and hear their pleas and save them.
The Lord keeps watch over those who love him, but the wicked he will utterly
destroy. My mouth will speak the praise of the Lord, and let all flesh bless
his holy name, for ever and to all eternity.
PRIEST: Through the prayers of
our Holy Fathers, Lord Jesus Christ our God, have mercy on us and save us.
CANTOR:
Amen.
WEDNESDAY
OF THE FIRST WEEK
The following verses and hymns are chanted at the "O Lord I have
cried out... "
Verse: Release me from prison, that I
may give thanks to your name.
Sticheron Idiomelon in the eighth tone.
Come, faithful ones, as we fast
bodily, let us also fast in spirit. Let us undo every tie to injustice; let us
break all stifling covenants with violence; let us burst every wrongful
contract; let us give bread to the hungry and bring the poor and homeless into
our houses, that we may receive from Christ His great mercy.
Verse: The just shall gather around me when you give me
my due reward.
Come, faithful ones, as we fast
bodily, let us also fast in spirit. Let us undo every tie to injustice; let us
break all stifling covenants with violence; let us burst every wrongful
contract; let us give bread to the hungry and bring the poor and homeless into
our houses, that we may receive from Christ His great mercy.
Verse: Out of the depths I have cried out to you: Lord, O
Lord, hear my voice.
Martyrikon
If there is any excellence, if
there is anything worthy of praise, it is due to the Saints. For they inclined
their necks to the sword for You who made the heavens incline and descended.
They shed their blood for You who emptied Yourself and took on the form of a
servant. They were humbled even to death, imitating Your humility.
Through their prayers, in the
abundance of Your compassion, O God, have mercy on us.
Verse: Let your ears be attentive to
the sound of my plea.
Prosomoion of Joseph.
In the second tone.
Sending you forth as flashes of
light into all the world, Jesus the true Sun dispelled the darkness of error by
the brilliance of your spiritual preaching, God-witnessing Apostles; and
He enlightened those who were caught in the miserable gloom of ignorance.
Implore Him, therefore, to send us light in His great mercy.
Verse: If you retain sins, Lord, O Lord, who can stand?
With you there is forgiveness.
By the
same hymnographer. In the second tone.
The virtuous Elijah, mounting a
divine chariot and made transparent by fasting, was raised to heavenly heights.
Envy him, my poor soul, and fast from all evil, envy and discord, and from the
fruits of pleasure, that you may escape the torment of eternal hell-fire,
crying out to Christ, "Lord, glory to You!"
Verse: For your name's sake, O Lord, I have waited for
you. My soul has waited for your promise, my soul has hoped in the Lord.
A hymn
by Theodore. In the fifth tone.
Divine Apostles, fervent
intercessors for the world and champions of the Orthodox, having the advantage
of boldness before Christ our God, ask for us, we pray you most venerable ones,
that we may make good use of the time of fasting, and so receive the grace of
the consubstantial Trinity. Glorious great preachers, pray for our souls.
There follow four prosomoia from the Menaion, with the appropriate
verses, relating to the Saint of the following day or, should there be one, of
the Saint of the day being celebrated.
As the dogmatic hymn (doxastikon) is sung, the Royal Doors are
opened. The Deacon and Priest exit the Sanctuary from the north door and come
to the chancel (soleas) carrying the censer, and the Entrance takes place.
If however it is a Feast day, e.g. St. Haralambos, the Forty Holy
Martyrs, as well as during Holy Week, and there is to be a Gospel reading, the
Book of the Gospels is carried.
DEACON:
Let us pray to the Lord. (in a low voice)
PRIEST: (inaudibly) At nightfall, dawn and noon, we sing to You, we bless
You, we give thanks to You, and we beseech You, Master of all, Lord and lover
of mankind: guide our prayers aright as an offering of incense before You. Let
not our hearts be led to wicked thoughts or words, but deliver us all from
those who pursue our souls. For it is on You, Lord, Lord, that our eyes are
fixed, and in You that we have our hope; do not put us to shame, O our God. For
all glory, honor and adoration are Your due, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now
and always and forever and ever. Amen.
DEACON:
Master, bless the Entrance.
PRIEST: Blessed is the Entrance
of the holy people of God, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
The Deacon (or the Priest) censing towards the East (or on the vigil
of a Feast holding the Gospel Book aloft) says aloud:
DEACON:
Wisdom! Attend!
In the Presanctified the Entrance Hymn is not usually sung but
intoned.
O joyful radiance of the holy
glory of the immortal Father, the heavenly, holy, blessed Jesus Christ! Having
come to the setting of the sun and seen the evening light, we praise God:
Father, Son and Holy Spirit. It is fitting at all times to raise a song of
praise in measured melody, 0 Son of God, giver of life. Behold, the universe
sings Your glory.
Having reentered the Sanctuary, the Deacon
announces:
DEACON:
The evening.
READER:
Prokeimenon. Fifth tone. Psalm 11.
You, O
Lord, will safeguard us and save us.
Save
me, O Lord, for the pious man is no more.
DEACON:
Wisdom.
READER:
The Reading is from Genesis. (1:24-32 and 2:1-3)
DEACON:
Let us be attentive.
READER: And God said, "Let
the earth bring forth living creatures according to their kinds: cattle and
creeping things and beasts of the earth according to their kinds. " And it
was so. And God made the beasts of the earth according to their kinds and the
cattle according to their kinds, and everything that creeps upon the ground
according to its kind. And God saw that it was good.
Then God said, "Let us
make man in our image, after our likeness; and let them have dominion over the
fish of the sea, and over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, and over
all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps upon the earth. "
So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male
and female he created them. And God blessed them, and God said to them,
"Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it; and have
dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the air and over every
living thing that moves upon the earth. " And God said, "Behold, I
have given you every plant yielding seed which is upon the face of all the
earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit; you shall have them for food. And
to every beast of the earth, and to every bird of the air, and to everything
that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given
every green plant for food. " And it was so. And God saw everything that
he had made, and behold, it was very good. And there was evening there was morning,
a sixth day.
Thus the heavens and the earth
were finished, and all the host of them. And on the seventh day God finished
his work which he had done, and he rested on the seventh day from all his work
which he had done. So God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it, because on
it God rested from all his work which he had done in creation.
READER:
Prokeimenon. Seventh tone. Psalm 12
Look
upon me, and hear me, O Lord my God!
Verse: How long, O Lord, will you forget
me? Forever?
And he chants in a louder voice:
Order!
The Priest, holding aloft the censer and a lighted candle, stands
before the Holy Table and says:
PRIEST:
Wisdom! Let us attend!
Then, turning to the people, standing in the Royal Arch he proclaims:
PRIEST:
The light of Christ enlightens all!
He blesses the congregation making the sign of the Cross with the
candle and returns before the Holy Table.
READER:
The reading is from Proverbs. (2:11-22)
DEACON:
Wisdom. Let us be attentive.
READER: My son, if you receive
my words and treasure up my commandments with you, making your ear attentive to
wisdom and inclining your heart to understanding; yes, if you cry out for
insight and raise your voice for understanding, if you seek it like silver and
search for it as hidden treasures; then you will understand the fear of the
Lord and find the knowledge of God.
For the Lord gives wisdom; from
his mouth come knowledge and understanding; he stores up sound wisdom for the
upright; he is a shield to those who walk in integrity, guarding the paths of
justice and preserving the way of his saints. Then you will understand
righteousness and justice and equity, every good path; for wisdom will come
into your heart, and knowledge will be pleasant to your soul; discretion will
watch over you; understanding will guard you; delivering you from the way of
evil, from men of perverted speech, who forsake the paths of uprightness to
walk in the ways of darkness, who rejoice in doing evil and delight in the
perverseness of evil; men whose paths are crooked, and who are devious in their
ways.
You will be saved from the
loose woman, from the adventuress with her smooth words, who forsakes the
companion of her youth and forgets the covenant of her God; for her house sinks
down to death, and her paths to the shades; none who go to her come back nor do
they regain the paths of life.
So you
will walk in the way of good men and keep to the paths of the righteous. For
the upright will inhabit the land, and men of integrity will remain in it; but
the wicked will be cut off from the land, and the treacherous will be rooted
out of it.
PRIEST:
Peace be to you.
DEACON:
Wisdom.
When the reading is concluded, the priest censes the Holy Altar,
pausing at each side, singing antiphonally with the Cantor the
"Katefthynthito", "Let my prayer rise as incense before You...
introducing each reprise with a verse from Psalm
140/141:
PRIEST: Let my prayer rise as
incense before You, the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest then moves to the south of the Holy Table and censes,
chanting aloud.
PRIEST: O Lord, I have cried out to You: hear me;
hearken
to the
voice of my prayer as I cry out to You.
CANTOR: Let my prayer rise as incense before You,
the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest then moves to the rear of the Holy Table and censes,
chanting aloud.
PRIEST: Verse: Set a guard, O Lord, over my mouth, and a gate to contain my
lips.
CANTOR: Let my prayer rise as
incense before You, the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest then moves to the north of the Holy Table and censes,
chanting aloud.
PRIEST: Verse: Let not my heart incline to evil deeds, to finding excuses
for sinful doings, in the company of men who work iniquity, and I will not
partake of their delicacies.
CANTOR: Let my prayer rise as
incense before You, the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest then moves in front of the Holy Table and censes, chanting
aloud.
PRIEST: Glory to the Father and
to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
CANTOR: Let my prayer rise as
incense before You, the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
The priest standing before the Holy Table repeats.
PRIEST:
Let my prayer rise
Coming through the Royal Gates and censing the icon of Christ the
Lord he chants.
as
incense before You.
He the censes the remaining icons and the faithful as the Cantor
chants.
CANTOR:
the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice.
If the Feast of a Saint is being commemorated the appropraiate
Epistle and Gospel is now read.
The Deacon exits from the north door (or the Priest standing before
the Holy table) and chants the Fervent Supplication.
THE
FERVENT SUPPLICATION
DEACON: Let us say with our
whole heart and our whole mind, let us say.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (threefold)
DEACON: Lord Almighty, God of
our fathers, we pray You, hear us and have mercy.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (3)
DEACON: Have mercy on us, O
God, in Your great goodness; we pray You, hear us and have mercy.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (3)
DEACON:
Again we pray for pious and Orthodox Christians.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (3)
DEACON: Again we pray for our
Archbishop (N.), and our Bishop (N.).
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy. (3)
According to the practice of the Ecumenical Patriarchate the Litany
ends here.
Prayer
of the Fervent Supplication
PRIEST: (During the Litany of Fervent Supplication: inaudibly) Lord our
God, accept this fervent prayer by Your servants, and have mercy on us, and in
the abundance of Your compassion have pity on us and on all Your people, who
await Your plenteous mercy.
PRIEST: For You are a merciful
and loving God, and to You we give glory: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now and
always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
Here the Priest makes the sign of the Cross over
the Antimension with the Book of Gospels.
THE LITANY FOR THE CATECHUMENS
DEACON:
You who are Catechumens, pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
You faithful, let us pray for the Catechumens.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
That the Lord will show them mercy.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
That He will instruct them in the word of His truth.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
That He will reveal to them the Gospel of righteousness.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
That He will unite them to His Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
Save them, have mercy on them, help them and keep them, O God, in Your grace.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
You who are Catechumens, bow your heads to the Lord.
Prayer
for the Catechumens
PRIEST: (inaudibly) O God, our God, Author and Creator of all things, it is
Your will that all should be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth. Look
upon Your servants the Catechumens, and free them of ancient error and from the
wiles of the enemy. Call them to eternal life, illuminating their souls and
bodies, and numbering them among Your reasoning flock, on which Your holy name
is invoked.
PRIEST: That with us they too
may glorify Your most noble and majestic name, of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit, now and forevermore.
CANTOR:
Amen.
Here the Priest unfolds the Antimension as in the Liturgy of St. John
Chrysostom.
DEACON: All Catechumens,
depart. The Catechumens, depart. All who are admitted for Illumination, depart.
Pray, all you who preparing for Illumination. Let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Catechumens, depart.
Let none of the Catechumens remain.
DEACON: All we faithful once
again in peace let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us, and keep us, 0 God, in Your grace.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
Wisdom!
The
First Prayer of the Faithful
PRIEST: (inaudibly) O God, great and praised, through the lifegiving death
of Your Christ, You have borne us from corruption to immortality. Liberate all
our senses from killing passion, setting over them as a benevolent sovereign
our inner reason. Let the eye be averted from every evil sight, and the ear be
deaf to idle talk.
May the tongue be purged of
unseemly speech. Purify these lips that praise You, Lord. Make our hands
abstain from wicked deeds, doing only such things as are pleasing to You, thus
sealing with Your grace all our members, and our mind.
PRIEST: For all glory, honor
and worship are Your due: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now and forevermore.
CANTOR:
Amen.
DEACON:
Again in peace let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON:
Wisdom!
The
Second Prayer of the Faithful
PRIEST: (inaudibly) Holy Master, infinitely good, we entreat You, rich in
mercy, to be gracious to us sinners, and to make us worthy to receive Your only
Son and our God, the King of Glory. For behold, His spotless body and
lifegiving blood are about to make their entrance at this hour, to be laid on
this mystical table, invisibly attended by a multitude of the heavenly host.
Grant that we may receive them in blameless communion, so that as the eyes of
our understanding see the light, we may become children of light and of day.
PRIEST: Through the gift of
Your Christ with Whom You are blessed, together with Your all-holy, good
and lifegiving Spirit, now and always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
In place of the Hymn of the Cherubim, which is normally sung at the
Entrance of the Holy Gifts, the following hymn is sung:
CANTOR: Now the Powers of
Heaven minister invisibly with us. For, behold, the King of Glory enters.
The hymn breaks off at this
point. In total silence the Gifts are carried into the Soleas by the priest
whose head is covered by the Aer, then into the Sanctuary, and placed on the
Holy Altar. As these are the Presanctified Gifts, already consecrated, the
people kneel in deep reverence during their Entrance.
They rise as the hymn concludes:
CANTOR: Behold, the mystical
sacrifice, fully accomplished, is ushered in. In fervent faith let us draw
near, that we may become sharers in everlasting life. Alleluia.
THE COMPLETION LITANY
DEACON:
Let us complete our evening prayer to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: For the Precious Gifts
here set forth and presanctified, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: That our loving God,
having received them at His holy and mystical and celestial altar as a sweet
spiritual fragrance, will in turn send upon us His divine grace and the gift of
the Holy Spirit, let us pray.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: That we may be spared
all affliction, violence, danger and want, let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
DEACON: Help us, save us, have
mercy on us and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
That this whole evening may be
perfect, holy, peaceful and without sin, let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: An angel of peace, a
faithful guide, a guardian of our souls and bodies, let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: Forgiveness of our sins
and offenses let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: All that is good and
profitable for our souls, and peace in the world, let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: That we may live out
our lives in peace and repentance, let us ask of the Lord.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: A Christian end to our
lives, peaceful, free of suffering and shame, and a good defense at the dread
judgment seat of Christ, let us ask.
CANTOR:
Grant this, O Lord.
DEACON: Having prayed for the
unity of the faith, and for the communion of the Holy Spirit, let us commend
ourselves and one another, and our life to Christ our God.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
PRIEST: During the Completion Litany: (inaudibly) O God of ineffable and
unseen mysteries, in You are hidden the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, yet
You have revealed to us this Liturgy and, in Your great love for mankind,
appointed us sinners to offer gifts and sacrifices to You, for our sins and for
the failings of the people. Invisible King, You perform works great and
inscrutable, glorious and extraordinary, beyond number. Look upon us Your
undeserving servants as we stand, as at Your throne of the Cherubim at this
Your holy altar, where Your only-begotten Son, our God, rests in the
awesome mysteries here offered.
Freeing us all, and Your
faithful people, of all uncleanness, sanctify all of us, soul and body, with a
sanctification that cannot be taken away. Thus, partaking of these divine
Blessings with pure conscience, faces unblushing, hearts enlightened, and being
quickened by them, we may be united to Your Christ Himself, our true God. For
He said: "He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood, abides in me and I in
him. " Having Your Word indwelling and moving within us, we may thus
become the temple of Your all-holy and worshipful Spirit, free of every
wide of the Evil One affecting our acts, our words, our thoughts, and so obtain
the blessings promised to us as to Your Saints who have pleased You through the
ages.
PRIEST: And make us worthy,
Master, with confidence and without fear of reproach, to make bold to call You,
the heavenly God, Father, and to say:
UNISON: Our Father who art in
heaven, hallowed by Thy name. Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as
it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our
trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us; and lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from evil.
PRIEST: For Yours is the
kingdom and the power and the glory, of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit, now and always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
PRIEST:
Peace be to all.
CANTOR:
And to you spirit.
DEACON:
Let us bow our heads to the Lord.
CANTOR:
To You, O Lord.
PRIEST: (inaudibly) O God, You alone are compassionate and good. Dwelling
on high, yet looking upon the lowly, regard Your people with tender eye and
safeguard diem. Count us all worthy to partake without reproach of these Your
lifegiving Mysteries. For it is to You that we bow our heads, in the hope of
Your rich mercy.
Lifting the Asterisk from the Paten:
PRIEST: Through the grace,
mercy and love for us of Your only-begotten Son, with Whom You are
blessed, together with Your all-holy, good and lifegiving Spirit, now and
always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
PRIEST: (inaudibly) Lord Jesus Christ, hear us from Your holy dwelling
place and from the throne of glory of Your kingdom and come to sanctify us.
Though enthroned with the Father on high, yet present here in our midst,
unseen, deign by Your mighty hand to give us a share of Your Pure Body and
Precious Blood, and through us to all Your people.
With the Holy Gifts still covered by the veil, the Priest touches the
consecrated "Lamb ".
DEACON:
Let us be attentive
PRIEST:
The Presanctified Holy Gifts for the holy people of God.
CANTOR: One is holy, one is
Lord, Jesus Christ, to the glory of God the Father. Amen. (Followed by the Communion Hymn:)
CANTOR: Taste and see how good
the Lord is. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia.
THE
FRACTION AND COMMUNION
The priest now uncovers the Gifts and performs the fraction in the
usual manner.
DEACON:
Master, break the Holy Bread.
He breaks the Amnos into its four quarters.
PRIEST: (In a low voice:) The Lamb of God is broken and shared, broken but
not divided; forever eaten yet never consumed, but sanctifying those who
partake of Him.
DEACON:
Master, fill the Cup.
He places the portion marked IC (Jesus) in the
chalice, saying:
PRIEST:
The fullness of the Holy Spirit.
DEACON:
Amen.
DEACON:
Master, bless the Zeon.
PRIEST: Blessed is the fervor
of Your Saints, now and forevermore. Amen.
Pouring the Zeon into the chalice, he says:
DEACON:
The fervor of faith, full of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
THE PRAYERS BEFORE COMMUNION
Ibelieve, Lord, and confess that You are truly the Christ, Son of
the living God, Who came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the
greatest. I also believe that this is truly Your spotless Body, and that this
is truly Your precious Blood. Wherefore I pray to You: have mercy on me and
forgive my offenses, whether intended or not, whether committed in word or in
deed, knowingly or unknowingly; and count me worthy to share without judgment
in Your pure Mysteries, for remission of sins and for everlasting life. Amen.
You have beguiled me with
yearning, O Christ, and by love divine transformed me. Consume my sins in
ethereal flame, and let me be filled with the sheer delight of You, O Gracious
Lord, that leaping for joy, I may magnify both Your Advents.
How shall I, so unworthy, come
into the splendor of Your Saints? If I make bold to enter the bridal feast, my
clothing will reproach me since it is not a wedding garment. Then I shall be
bound and cast out by the angels. In Your love, Lord, purge my soul and save
me.
Loving Master, Lord Jesus
Christ my God, let not these holy gifts become a judgment against me because of
my unworthiness, but for the cleansing and sanctification of both soul and
body, and as a pledge of the future life and the kingdom. It is good for me to
cling to God, to place in Him my hope for salvation.
And as he makes three prostrations before the
altar:
Receive me today, Son of God,
as a partaker of Your mystical supper; for I will not reveal the Mystery to
Your enemies, nor give You a kiss as did Judas. But as the thief I confess You:
Lord, remember me in Your kingdom.
Bowing to the people in a gesture of mutual forgiveness, he then
turns to the altar to receive, saying to the DEACON:
PRIEST:
Brother and con-celebrant, forgive me the unworthy Priest.
DEACON:
May the Lord forgive both you and us.
PRIEST:
May the Lord forgive me a sinner, and have mercy on me.
(3)
He then takes a portion of the Lamb, saying:
PRIEST: Behold, I approach
Christ, our immortal King and God. The precious and most holy Body of our Lord
God and Savior Jesus Christ is given to me (N.) the unworthy Priest, for the
forgiveness of sins and life everlasting.
Then, drinking from the cup:
Behold, again I approach
Christ, our immortal King and God. The precious and most holy, pure and
lifegiving Blood of our Lord God and Savior Jesus Christ is given to me (N.)
the unworthy Priest, for forgiveness of sins and life everlasting.
Wiping the rim of the chalice and reverencing it,
he adds:
This has touched my lips; it
takes away my iniquities and cleanses me of my sins.
The deacon then also receives according to the
established order.
Then the following prayer:
PRIEST: We thank You, God and
Savior of all, for all the blessings You have bestowed on us, and for the
communion of the Holy Body and Blood of Your Christ. And we pray You, loving
Lord, keep us in the shelter of Your wings, and grant that, to our very last
breath, we may partake worthily of Your sanctifying blessings, for the
enlightenment of soul and body, for the inheritance of the heavenly kingdom.
THE COMMUNION OF THE FAITHFUL
DEACON: With the fear of God,
with faith and with love, draw near.
CANTOR: God is Lord and has
revealed Himself to us. Blessed is He that comes in the name of the Lord.
When all have received the Holy Eucharist, the Priest holds the chalice
aloft and says:
PRIEST:
God, save Your people and bless Your inheritance.
In place of the customary "We have seen the
light... " we sing:
CANTOR: I will bless the Lord
at all times; his praise shall be ever on my lips. Taste the heavenly bread and
the cup of life, and see how good the Lord is. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia.
PRIEST:
(As he censes the Holy Gifts: inaudibly) Be
exalted, O , above the heavens, and let Your glory be over all the earth (3)
The Deacon receives the Paten from the Priest and takes it to the
Prothesis.
The Priest lifting the Chalice prays before the
Holy Table.
PRIEST:
(inaudibly) Blessed is our God
Then, holding the Chalice aloft, covered, he faces the people and
adds:
always,
now and ever and to the ages of ages.
CANTOR:
Amen.
After returning the Holy Vessels to the Prothesis the Priest folds
the Antimension.
DEACON: Let us be attentive!
Having received the divine, holy, pure, immortal, life giving and awesome
Mysteries of Christ, let us give fitting thanks to the Lord.
Help us, save us, have mercy on
us, and keep us, O God, in Your grace.
Having asked that this whole
evening may be perfect, holy, peaceful and free of sin, let us commend
ourselves and one another, and our whole life to Christ our God.
CANTOR: To You, O Lord.
He makes the sign of the Cross with the Book of Gospels over the now
folded Antimension.
PRIEST: For You are our
sanctification, and to You we give the glory: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now
and always and forever and ever.
CANTOR:
Amen.
PRIEST:
Let us depart in peace.
DEACON:
Let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR: Lord, have mercy. Lord,
have mercy. Lord, have mercy. Holy Father, give the blessing.
PRIEST: (Standing before the icon of Christ) Almighty Lord, You have
created all things in wisdom. In Your inexpressible providence and great
goodness You have brought us to these saving days, for the cleansing of our
souls and bodies, for control of our passions, in the hope of the Resurrection.
After the forty days You delivered into the hands of Your servant Moses the
tablets of the law in characters divinely traced. Enable us also, O benevolent
One, to fight the good fight, to complete the course of the fast, to keep the
faith inviolate, to crush underfoot the heads of unseen tempters, to emerge
victors over sin and to come, without reproach, to the worship of Your Holy
Resurrection. For blessed and glorified is Your most honorable and majestic
name, of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, now and forevermore.
CANTOR: Amen. May the name of the
Lord be praised, from this time forth and to the endless ages.
This is sung three times as the Priest goes to the
Prothesis, saying:
PRIEST: Lord our God, You have
guided us to these most holy days, and admitted us as participants to Your
awesome Mysteries. Unite us to Your spiritual flock and declare us heirs to
Your kingdom, now and forever. Amen.
DEACON:
Let us pray to the Lord.
CANTOR:
Lord, have mercy.
PRIEST: May the blessing of the
Lord and His mercy come upon you, through His divine grace and love, always,
now and forevermore.
CANTOR:
Amen.
THE
DISMISSAL
PRIEST:
Glory to You, O God, our hope, glory to You.
May Christ our true God,
through the intercessions of His most pure and holy Mother; the power of the
precious and lifegiving Cross; the protection of the honorable, bodiless
heavenly powers; the supplications of the honorable, glorious Prophet and
Forerunner John the Baptist; the holy, glorious and victorious Martyrs; our
venerable and godly Fathers; the holy and righteous ancestors Joachim and Anna;
of Saint (the Saint of the day) whose memory we keep today; and of all the
Saints, have mercy on us and save us, for He is good and loves mankind.
NOTE: The reading of Psalms 33/34 and 144/145 is prescribed at this
point as the faithful receive the antidoron.
PSALM
33/34
READER: I will bless the Lord
at all times; his praise shall be ever on my lips. My soul shall glory in the
Lord: let the meek hear and rejoice. Magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt
his name together. I sought the Lord, and he heard me, and delivered me from
all my fears. Approach the Lord and be enlightened, and your face shall never
be shamed. This wretched man cried out, and the Lord heard him, and delivered
him from all his afflictions.
The angel will stand guard
around those who fear the Lord and save them. Taste and see how good the Lord
is. Blessed is the man who hopes in him. Fear the Lord, all you his faithful
ones, for those who fear him shall want for nothing. The rich have become poor
and hungry, but those who seek the Lord shall not lack any good. Come,
children, hear me: I will teach you the fear of the Lord. Which of you desires
life, and loves to see the good days? Keep your tongue from wickedness, and
your lips from deceitful speech; turn away from evil, and do good; seek peace
and pursue it.
The eyes of the Lord are upon
the just and his ears are open to their pleas; the face of the Lord is turned
against sinners, to erase their memory from the earth. The just cried out and
the Lord heard them, and he delivered them from all their trials. The Lord is
close to the broken-hearted, and he will save the humble in spirit. Many
are the trials of the righteous, but out of them all the Lord will deliver
them. He protects every bone in their body: not a single one of them will be
broken. The death of sinners is painful; those who hate justice shall be
damned. The Lord will redeem the souls of his servants, and none of those who
hope in him shall be lost.
PSALM
144/145
I will exalt you, my God and my
king, and bless your name for ever and ever. Every day I will bless you, and
praise your name for ever and ever. The Lord is great and greatly to be
praised, and to his greatness there is no end. Age after age will praise your
works, and proclaim your might. They will tell the glorious splendor of your
holiness, they will recount your wondrous works; they will speak of the power
of your awesome deeds, they will declare your greatness. They will recall your
abundant goodness and will exult in your righteousness. The Lord is gracious
and merciful: he is long-suffering and abounding in love.
The Lord is good towards
everyone, and his grace extends over all his works. Let all your works give
thanks to you, Lord, and all your faithful ones bless you. They shall speak of
the glory of your kingdom and tell of your power, to make known your might to
the children of men, and the glorious splendor of your kingdom. Your kingdom is
a kingdom for all ages and your dominion is for all generations. The Lord keeps
faith in all his promises and is hallowed in all his works. The Lord supports
all who are failing, and raises up all who are bowed down.
The eyes of all look up to you,
and you give them their food in due season. You open your hands and satisfy all
living beings; the Lord is just in all his ways, and faithful in all his works.
The Lord is close to all who pray to him, those who call upon him in truth. He
will meet the desire of those who fear him, and hear their pleas and save them.
The Lord keeps watch over those who love him, but the wicked he will utterly
destroy. My mouth will speak the praise of the Lord, and let all flesh bless
his holy name, for ever and to all eternity.
PRIEST: Through the prayers of
our Holy Fathers, Lord Jesus Christ our God, have mercy on us and save us.
CANTOR:
Amen.
FRIDAY
OF THE FIRST WEEK
The following verses and hymns are chanted at the "O Lord I have
Cried out... "
CANTOR: Verse: Release me from prison, that I may give thanks to your name.
Idiomelon
in the fifth tone.
Come, faithful ones, let us
perform God's works in the light, conducting ourselves becomingly as in the
day, willingly setting aside every wrongful judgment against our neighbor, so
as not to put an obstacle for scandal in his path. Let us have done with
desires of the flesh, while increasing the gifts of the soul. Let us give bread
to the needy, and so come to Christ in penitence, crying, "Our God, have
mercy on us. "
Verse: The just shall gather around me when you give me
my due reward.
Come, faithful ones, let us perform
God's works in the light, conducting ourselves becomingly as in the day,
willingly setting aside every wrongful judgment against our neighbor, so as not
to put an obstacle for scandal in his path. Let us have done with desires of
the flesh, while increasing the gifts of the soul. Let us give bread to the
needy, and so come to Christ in penitence, crying, "Our God, have mercy on
us. "
The Manyrika, in the eight tones, form Appendix II, beginning on page
160. The priest will announce the tone for the given week.
The following four Idiomela are for St. Theodore
of Tyre.
Second
tone.
CANTOR: Verse: From the morning watch till night, let Israel hope in the
Lord.
Come, all you devotees of the
martyrs, let us rejoice spiritually and celebrate; for today the Martyr
Theodore sets before us a mystical table, to gladden us celebrants to cry out
to him: "Rejoice, invincible Champion, who brought to naught the threats
of earthly tyrants; rejoice, who gave your earthly body over to tortures for
Christ our God; rejoice, who proved yourself as a soldier of the heavenly army.
For all this we implore you, Martyrs' pride, intercede for our souls. "
Verse: For with the Lord is steadfast love and in him is
full redemption, and he will redeem Israel from all his iniquities.
Martyr Theodore, with the God-given
grace of your miracles you enfold all who come to you in faith. By that grace
we praise you, saying: You free captives, you heal the sick, you enrich the
poor and rescue those at sea. You restrain your petitioners from running away
in vain, and make clear the injury done to those who are plundered, O Champion.
Thus you train soldiers to abstain from pillage; compassionately you grant the
petitions of the young; you become a fervent protector of those who hold your sacred
memorial. With them, most holy Champion, number us who hymn your martyrdom in
asking of Christ His great mercy.
Verse: Praise the Lord, all you
nations; exalt him all you peoples.
You proved yourself God's
supreme gift, Martyr Theodore; for even after the end, as if still alive, you
grant the askings of those who come to you. Thus, when a woman's son was
captured at spear's point by a pagan army, the widow stood drenching your
Church with her tears, while you, mounting a white horse in your pity, presented
her invisibly with her son, never ceasing afterward to work miracles with him.
But entreat Christ our God that our souls may be saved.
Verse: For mighty is his love for us, and the
truthfulness of the Lord endures forever.
Named after divine gifts, I
honor you, thrice-blessed Theodore. For as an unwaning luminary of the
divine light, you lit up all creation with your deeds. Mightier than fire, you
put down the flames and shattered the skull of the evil dragon. Wherefore
Christ, won over by your deeds, crowned your holy head, Great Martyr and
Champion. Having boldness before God, pray earnestlyfor oursouls.
Doxastikon
in the sixth tone.
Glory
to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit.
Using the apostate Tyrant as
his instrument, the Evil One sought by a cruel device to defile the devout
people as they purified themselves by fasting, giving them food polluted by
abominable sacrifices. But you foiled his intrigue by a wiser one of your own.
Coming before the Hierarch, you explained yourprofound plan while revealing the monstrous may be kept harmless
against the machinations of the Evil One.
trickery. Therefore, offering
you a sacrifice of thanksgiving, we proclaim you a savior, conducting annual
memorial of the miracle, beseeching God, through your intercessions, Great
Martyr Theodore, that we
The
Theotokion in the tone of the Day.
Now and
always and forever and ever. Amen.
As the dogmatic hymn (doxastikon) is sung, the Royal Doors are
opened. The Deacon and Priest exit the Sanctuary from the north door and come
to the chancel (soleas) carrying the censer, and the Entrance takes place.
If however it is a Feast day, e.g. St. Haralambos,
the Forty Holy Martyrs, as well as during Holy Week, and there is to be a
Gospel reading, the Book of the Gospels is carried.
DEACON:
Let us pray to the Lord.(in a low voice)
PRIEST: (inaudibly) At nightfall, dawn and noon, we sing to You, we bless
You, we give thanks to You, and we beseech You, Master of all, Lord and lover
of mankind: guide our prayers aright as an offering of incense before You. Let
not our hearts be led to wicked thoughts or words, but deliver us all from
those who pursue our souls. For it is on You, Lord, Lord, that our eyes are
fixed, and in You that we have our hope; do not put us to shame, O our God. For
all glory, honor and adoration are Your due, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, now
and always and forever and ever. Amen.
DEACON:
Master, bless the Entrance.
PRIEST: Blessed is the Entrance
of the holy people of God, now and always and forever and ever. Amen.
The Deacon (or the Priest) censing towards the East (or on the vigil
of a Feast holding the Gospel Book aloft) says aloud:
DEACON:
Wisdom! Attend!
In the Presanctified the Entrance Hymn is not usually sung but
intoned.
O joyful radiance of the holy glory of the immortal
Father, the heavenly, holy, blessed Jesus Christ! Having come to the setting of
the sun and seen the evening light, we praise God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
It is fitting at all times to raise a song of praise in measured melody, O Son
of God, giver of life. Behold, the universe sings Your glory.
Having reentered the Sanctuary, the Deacon
announces:
DEACON:
The evening.
READER:
Prokeimenon. Fifth tone. Psalm 19.
May the
Lord hear you on the day of affliction.
May the
name of the God of Jacob shield you.
DEACON:
Wisdom.
READER:
The Reading is from Genesis. (2:20-25, 3: 1-20)
DEACON:
Let us be attentive.
READER: Adam gave names to all
cattle, and to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for
the man there was not found a helper fit for him. So the Lord caused a deep
sleep to fall upon Adam, and while he slept he took one of his ribs and closed
up its place with flesh; and the rib which the Lord God had taken from Adam he
made into a woman and brought her to Adam. Then Adam said, "This at last
is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, because
she was taken out of Man. " Therefore a man leaves his father and his
mother and cleaves to his wife, and they become one flesh. And the man and his
wife were both naked, and were not ashamed.
Now the serpent was more subtle
than any other wild creature that the Lord God had made. He said to the woman,
"Did God say, 'You shall not eat of any tree of the garden'?" And the
woman said to the serpent, "We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the
garden; but God said, 'You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree which is in
the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die."'
But the serpent said to the woman, "You will not
die. For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you
will be like God, knowing good and evil. " So when the woman saw that the
tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree
was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate; and she also
gave some to her husband, and he ate. Then the eyes of both were opened, and
they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig lea