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Lectionary

A lectionary (Latin: lectionarium) is a book or listing that contains a collection of scripture readings appointed for Christian or Jewish worship on a given day or occasion. There are sub-types such as a "gospel lectionary" or evangeliary, and an epistolary with the readings from the New Testament Epistles.

Page from the 11th century "Bamberg Apocalypse", Gospel lectionary. Large decorated initial "C". Text from Matthew 1:18–21 (Bamberg State Library, Msc.Bibl.140).

History edit

By the Medieval era the Jewish community had a standardized schedule of scripture readings from both the Torah and the prophets to be read in the synagogue. A sequential selection was read from the Torah, followed by the "haftarah" – a selection from the prophetic books or historical narratives (e.g. "Judges," "Kings," etc.) closely linked to the selection from the Torah. Jesus may have read a providentially "random" reading when he read from Isaiah 61:1-2, as recorded in Luke 4:16–21, when he inaugurated his public ministry. The early Christians adopted the Jewish custom of reading extracts from the Old Testament on the Sabbath. They soon added extracts from the writings of the Apostles and Evangelists.[1]

Both Hebrew and Christian lectionaries developed over the centuries. Typically, a lectionary will go through the scriptures in a logical pattern, and also include selections which were chosen by the religious community for their appropriateness to particular occasions. The one-year Jewish lectionary reads the entirety of the Torah within the space of a year and may have begun in the Babylonian Jewish community; the three-year Jewish lectionary seems to trace its origin to the Jewish community in and around the Holy Land.[2]

Within Christianity, the use of pre-assigned, scheduled readings from the scriptures can be traced back to the early church, and seems to have developed out of the practices of the second temple period. The earliest documentary record of a special book of readings is a reference by Gennadius of Massilia to a work produced by Musaeus of Marseilles at the request of Bishop Venerius of Marseilles, who died in 452, though there are 3rd-century references to liturgical readers as a special role in the clergy.[3][4]

Western lectionaries edit

In the Latin liturgical rites before the Second Vatican Council edit

Before the liturgical reforms of Vatican II, the Latin liturgical rite used a one-year lectionary consisting of a limited selection of sacred readings from the Scriptures. The reason to these limited selections is to maintain consistency, as is a true feature in the Roman Rite. There is one reading to be proclaimed before the Gospel, either taken from the Old Testament (referred to as Lesson) or from the letters of Saint Paul, Saint John, or Saint Peter (referred to as Epistle).[citation needed]

The Lesson (or Epistle) is contained in a book called the Epistolarium, a liturgical book containing the epistles that were to be said or sung by a subdeacon at a solemn High Mass. The Gospels are contained in a book called Evangeliarium, or more recently called as "Book of the Gospels", that were to be said or sung by a deacon at a solemn High Mass.

However, the Ambrosian Rite and the Mozarabic Rite has two Readings to be proclaimed, called Prophetia and Epistola.

Catholic Mass Lectionary and the Revised Common Lectionary edit

 
Portrait of Rembrandt's mother reading a lectionary, c. 1630 (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam). The painting has more recently been attributed to Gerrit Dou.

After the Second Vatican Council of 1962–1965, the Holy See, even before producing an actual lectionary (in Latin), promulgated the Ordo Lectionum Missae (Order of the Readings for Mass), giving indications of the revised structure and the references to the passages chosen for inclusion in the new official lectionary of the Roman Rite of Mass. It introduced an arrangement by which the readings on Sundays and on some principal feasts recur in a three-year cycle, with four passages from Scripture (including one from the Psalms) being used in each celebration, while on weekdays only three passages (again including one from the Psalms) are used, with the first reading and the psalm recurring in a two-year cycle, while the Gospel reading recurs after a single year. This revised Mass Lectionary, covering much more of the Bible than the readings in the Tridentine Roman Missal, which recurred after a single year, has been translated into the many languages in which the Roman Rite Mass is now celebrated, incorporating existing or specially prepared translations of the Bible and with readings for national celebrations added either as an appendix or, in some cases, incorporated into the main part of the lectionary.

The Roman Catholic Mass Lectionary as revised after Vatican II is the basis for many Protestant lectionaries, most notably the Revised Common Lectionary (RCL) and its derivatives, as organized by the Consultation on Common Texts (CCT) organization located in Nashville, Tennessee. Like the Mass lectionary, they generally organize the readings for worship services on Sundays in a three-year cycle, with four elements on each Sunday, and three elements during daily Mass:

  • First reading (Prima lectio) from the Old Testament or, in Eastertide from certain books of the New Testament;
  • Responsorial psalm (Psalmus responsorium) (ideally, to be sung, as contained in the Simple Gradual) or Gradual (as contained in the Roman Gradual);
  • Second reading (Secunda lectio) from one of the New Testament Letters (only on Sundays and Solemnities); and a
  • Gospel reading (Evangelium).

Three-year cycle edit

 
A German Roman Catholic lectionary for year C on an ambo after Mass

The lectionaries (both Catholic and RCL versions) are organized into three-year cycles of readings. The years are designated A, B, or C. Each yearly cycle begins on the first Sunday of Advent (the Sunday between 27 November and 3 December inclusive). Year B follows year A, year C follows year B, then back again to A.

The Gospel of John is read throughout Easter, and is used for other liturgical seasons including Advent, Christmas, and Lent where appropriate.

Daily lectionaries edit

The Roman Catholic lectionary includes a two-year cycle for the weekday mass readings (called Cycle I and Cycle II). Odd-numbered years are Cycle I; even-numbered ones are Cycle II. The weekday lectionary includes a reading from the Old Testament, Acts, Revelation, or the Epistles; a responsorial Psalm; and a reading from one of the Gospels. These readings are generally shorter than those appointed for use on Sundays. The pericopes for the first reading along with the psalms are arranged in a two-year cycle. The Gospels are arranged so that portions of all four are read every year. This weekday lectionary has also been adapted by some denominations with congregations that celebrate daily Eucharistic services. It has been published in the Episcopal Church's Lesser Feasts and Fasts and in the Anglican Church of Canada's Book of Alternative Services (among others).

This eucharistic lectionary should not be confused with the various Daily Office lectionaries in use in various denominations. The Consultation on Common Texts has produced a three-year Daily Lectionary which is thematically tied into the Revised Common Lectionary, but the RCL does not provide a daily Eucharistic lectionary as such. Various Anglican and Lutheran churches have their own daily lectionaries. Many of the Anglican daily lectionaries are adapted from the one provided in the 1979 Book of Common Prayer.

Other lectionary information edit

In some churches, the lectionary is carried in the entrance procession by a lector. In the Catholic Church, the Book of the Gospels is carried in by a deacon (when there is no deacon, a lector might process in with the Book of the Gospels). When the Book of the Gospels is used, the first two readings are read from the lectionary, while the Book of the Gospels is used for the final reading.

The lectionary is not to be confused with a missal, gradual or sacramentary. While the lectionary contains scripture readings, the missal or sacramentary contains the appropriate prayers for the service, and the gradual contains chants for use on any particular day. In particular, the gradual contains a responsory which may be used in place of the responsorial psalm.

Eastern lectionaries edit

 
Jaharis Byzantine Lectionary, Metropolitan Museum of Art

In the Eastern Churches (Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Eastern Catholic, the Assyrian Church of the East, Ancient Church of the East, and those bodies not in communion with any of them but still practicing eastern liturgical customs) tend to retain the use of a one-year lectionary in their liturgy. Different churches follow different liturgical calendars (to an extent). Most Eastern lectionaries provide for an epistle and a Gospel to be read on each day. Other known witnesses of the Christian Jerusalem-Rite Lectionary are those preserved in Georgian, Caucasian Albanian language, and Armenian translations (6th to 8th centuries CE).

 
An example of Byzantine lectionary — Codex Harleianus (l150), AD 995, text of John 1:18.

Byzantine lectionary edit

Those churches (Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine Catholic) which follow the Rite of Constantinople, provide an epistle and Gospel reading for most days of the year, to be read at the Divine Liturgy; however, during Great Lent there is no celebration of the liturgy on weekdays (Monday through Friday), so no epistle and Gospel are appointed for those days. As a historical note, the Greek lectionaries are a primary source for the Byzantine text-type used in the scholarly field of textual criticism.

Epistle and Gospel edit

The Gospel readings are found in what Orthodoxy usually calls a Gospel Book (Evangélion), although in strict English terms the Greek ones are in the form of an Evangeliary, and an Epistle Book (Apostól). There are differences in the precise arrangement of these books between the various national churches. In the Byzantine practice, the readings are in the form of pericopes (selections from scripture containing only the portion actually chanted during the service), and are arranged according to the order in which they occur in the church year, beginning with the Sunday of Pascha (Easter), and continuing throughout the entire year, concluding with Holy Week. Then follows a section of readings for the commemorations of saints and readings for special occasions (baptism, funeral, etc.). In the Slavic practice, the biblical books are reproduced in their entirety and arranged in the canonical order in which they appear in the Bible.

The annual cycle of the Gospels is composed of four series:

  1. The Gospel of St. John
    read from Pascha until Pentecost Sunday
  2. The Gospel of St. Matthew
    divided over seventeen weeks beginning with the Monday of the Holy Spirit (the day after Pentecost). From the twelfth week, it is read on Saturdays and Sundays while the Gospel of St. Mark is read on the remaining weekdays
  3. The Gospel of St. Luke
    divided over nineteen weeks beginning on the Monday after the Sunday after the Elevation of the Holy Cross. From the thirteenth week, it is only read on Saturdays and Sundays, while St. Mark's Gospel is read on the remaining weekdays
  4. The Gospel of St. Mark
    read during the Lenten period on Saturdays and Sundays — with the exception of the Sunday of Orthodoxy.

The interruption of the reading of the Gospel of Matthew after the Elevation of the Holy Cross is known as the "Lukan Jump".[5] The jump occurs only in the Gospel readings, there is no corresponding jump in the epistles. From this point on the epistle and Gospel readings do not exactly correspond, the epistles continuing to be determined according to the moveable Paschal cycle and the Gospels being influenced by the fixed cycle.

The Lukan Jump is related to the chronological proximity of the Elevation of the Cross to the Conception of the Forerunner (St. John the Baptist), celebrated on 23 September. In late Antiquity, this feast marked the beginning of the ecclesiastical New Year. Thus, beginning the reading of the Lukan Gospel toward the middle of September can be understood. The reasoning is theological and is based on a vision of Salvation History: the Conception of the Forerunner constitutes the first step of the New Economy, as mentioned in the stikhera of the matins of this feast. The Evangelist Luke is the only one to mention this Conception (Luke 1:5–24).

In Russia, the use of the Lukan Jump vanished; however, in recent decades, the Russian Church has begun the process of returning to the use of the Lukan Jump.

Similarly to the Gospel Cycle, Epistle readings follow this plan although some exceptions vary:

  1. Book of the Acts of the Apostles
    read from Pascha until Pentecost Sunday
  2. Letter to the Romans, 1 Corinthians and 2 Corinthians
    From Pentecost to Elevation of the Holy Cross
  3. Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, 1 Thessalonians, 2 Thessalonians, 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, Hebrews
    From Elevation of the Holy Cross to the Circumcision of Christ, 1st of January
  4. James, Hebrews, 1 Peter and 2 Peter
    read from the Circumcision of Christ to the Clean Monday, first weekday of Great Lent.

Old Testament readings edit

Other services have scriptural readings also. There is a Gospel lesson at Matins on Sundays and feast days. These are found in the Evangelion. There are also readings from the Old Testament, called "parables" (paroemia), which are read at vespers on feast days. These parables are found in the Menaion, Triodion or Pentecostarion. During Great Lent, parables are read every day at vespers and at the Sixth Hour. These parables are found in the Triodion.

Syriac and Malankara churches: Catholic, Orthodox edit

 
Small portion of a Coptic lectionary

In the Jacobite Syriac Churches, the lectionary begins with the liturgical calendar year on Qudosh `Idto (the Sanctification of the Church), which falls on the eighth Sunday before Christmas. Both the Old and the New Testament books are read except the books of Revelation, Song of Solomon, and I and II Maccabees. Scripture readings are assigned for Sundays and feast days, for each day of Lent and Holy Week, for raising people to various offices of the Church, for the blessing of Holy Oil and various services such as baptisms and funerals.

Generally, three Old Testament lections, a selection from the prophets, and three readings from the New Testament are prescribed for each Sunday and Feast day. The New Testament readings include a reading from Acts, another from the Catholic Epistles or the Pauline Epistles, and a third reading from one of the Gospels. During Christmas and Easter a fourth lesson is added for the evening service. The readings reach a climax with the approach of the week of the Crucifixion. Through Lent lessons are recited twice a day except Saturdays. During the Passion Week readings are assigned for each of the major canonical hours.

If there is a weekday Liturgy celebrated on a non-feast day, the custom is to read the Pauline epistle only, followed by the Gospel.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Lectionary". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved 2007-07-06.
  2. ^ Elbogen, Ismar. Jewish Liturgy: A Comprehensive History. Original publication 1913. Trans Raymond P. Scheindlin for Jewish Publication Society edition 1993.
  3. ^ "Lectionary". Britannica. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  4. ^ Palazzo, Eric (1998). A History of Liturgical Books from the Beginning to the Thirteenth Century. Liturgical Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-8146-6167-3.
  5. ^ "The Lukan Jump - Professor N.D. Uspensky - From the Desk Manual of the Moscow Patriarchate". www.orthodox.net. Retrieved 2023-01-25.

Further reading edit

  • Evans, Helen C. (2004). Byzantium: faith and power (1261-1557). New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 1588391132.
  • Evans, Helen C.; Wixom, William D. (1997). The glory of Byzantium: art and culture of the Middle Byzantine era, A.D. 843-1261. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 9780810965072.

External links edit

  • Thesaurus Antiquorum Lectionariorum Ecclesiae Synagogaeque A database on ancient and medieval Jewish and Christian lectionaries allowing to automatically compare 25000 readings of ca. 35 lectionaries of many ancient denominations (Jewish Ashkenazy, Sephardic, Yemenite, Byzantine, Italian, Talmuds, Mishnah, Tosefta, Rav Saadia Gaon, some Midrashim, triannual from the Geniza, Armenian rite of Jerusalem, Gallican, Mozarabic, Roman, Byzantine, Coptic, West- and East Syriac, Maronite). Automatic synopsis and automatic calendar reconstruction tools.
  • Greek Orthodox Online Chapel lectionary Lectionary of the Greek Orthodox Church according to the typicon of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
  • Books and Resources Books and resources to learn more about the Eucharistic lectionary.
  • The Roman Catholic Lectionary - based on the New American Bible, as approved by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (also used in the Philippines)
  • (Roman Catholic)
  • The Joint Liturgical Group (UK) – which developed
  • Narrative Lectionary with history, contexts, and links to readings
  • The "Lukan Jump" Orthodox Research Institute
  • Orthodox Christian Lectionary Explained (Russian Orthodox)
  • Lectionary of the Syriac Orthodox Church
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Lectionary" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Roman Catholic Lectionary for Mass Resources for the study of the current Roman Catholic lectionary.
  • "The Four Gospels" a lectionary in Syriac from 1687

lectionary, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 2014, le. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lectionary news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message A lectionary Latin lectionarium is a book or listing that contains a collection of scripture readings appointed for Christian or Jewish worship on a given day or occasion There are sub types such as a gospel lectionary or evangeliary and an epistolary with the readings from the New Testament Epistles Page from the 11th century Bamberg Apocalypse Gospel lectionary Large decorated initial C Text from Matthew 1 18 21 Bamberg State Library Msc Bibl 140 Contents 1 History 2 Western lectionaries 2 1 In the Latin liturgical rites before the Second Vatican Council 2 2 Catholic Mass Lectionary and the Revised Common Lectionary 2 2 1 Three year cycle 2 2 2 Daily lectionaries 2 2 3 Other lectionary information 3 Eastern lectionaries 3 1 Byzantine lectionary 3 1 1 Epistle and Gospel 3 1 2 Old Testament readings 3 2 Syriac and Malankara churches Catholic Orthodox 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editBy the Medieval era the Jewish community had a standardized schedule of scripture readings from both the Torah and the prophets to be read in the synagogue A sequential selection was read from the Torah followed by the haftarah a selection from the prophetic books or historical narratives e g Judges Kings etc closely linked to the selection from the Torah Jesus may have read a providentially random reading when he read from Isaiah 61 1 2 as recorded in Luke 4 16 21 when he inaugurated his public ministry The early Christians adopted the Jewish custom of reading extracts from the Old Testament on the Sabbath They soon added extracts from the writings of the Apostles and Evangelists 1 Both Hebrew and Christian lectionaries developed over the centuries Typically a lectionary will go through the scriptures in a logical pattern and also include selections which were chosen by the religious community for their appropriateness to particular occasions The one year Jewish lectionary reads the entirety of the Torah within the space of a year and may have begun in the Babylonian Jewish community the three year Jewish lectionary seems to trace its origin to the Jewish community in and around the Holy Land 2 Within Christianity the use of pre assigned scheduled readings from the scriptures can be traced back to the early church and seems to have developed out of the practices of the second temple period The earliest documentary record of a special book of readings is a reference by Gennadius of Massilia to a work produced by Musaeus of Marseilles at the request of Bishop Venerius of Marseilles who died in 452 though there are 3rd century references to liturgical readers as a special role in the clergy 3 4 Western lectionaries editIn the Latin liturgical rites before the Second Vatican Council edit Before the liturgical reforms of Vatican II the Latin liturgical rite used a one year lectionary consisting of a limited selection of sacred readings from the Scriptures The reason to these limited selections is to maintain consistency as is a true feature in the Roman Rite There is one reading to be proclaimed before the Gospel either taken from the Old Testament referred to as Lesson or from the letters of Saint Paul Saint John or Saint Peter referred to as Epistle citation needed The Lesson or Epistle is contained in a book called the Epistolarium a liturgical book containing the epistles that were to be said or sung by a subdeacon at a solemn High Mass The Gospels are contained in a book called Evangeliarium or more recently called as Book of the Gospels that were to be said or sung by a deacon at a solemn High Mass However the Ambrosian Rite and the Mozarabic Rite has two Readings to be proclaimed called Prophetia and Epistola Catholic Mass Lectionary and the Revised Common Lectionary edit nbsp Portrait of Rembrandt s mother reading a lectionary c 1630 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam The painting has more recently been attributed to Gerrit Dou After the Second Vatican Council of 1962 1965 the Holy See even before producing an actual lectionary in Latin promulgated the Ordo Lectionum Missae Order of the Readings for Mass giving indications of the revised structure and the references to the passages chosen for inclusion in the new official lectionary of the Roman Rite of Mass It introduced an arrangement by which the readings on Sundays and on some principal feasts recur in a three year cycle with four passages from Scripture including one from the Psalms being used in each celebration while on weekdays only three passages again including one from the Psalms are used with the first reading and the psalm recurring in a two year cycle while the Gospel reading recurs after a single year This revised Mass Lectionary covering much more of the Bible than the readings in the Tridentine Roman Missal which recurred after a single year has been translated into the many languages in which the Roman Rite Mass is now celebrated incorporating existing or specially prepared translations of the Bible and with readings for national celebrations added either as an appendix or in some cases incorporated into the main part of the lectionary The Roman Catholic Mass Lectionary as revised after Vatican II is the basis for many Protestant lectionaries most notably the Revised Common Lectionary RCL and its derivatives as organized by the Consultation on Common Texts CCT organization located in Nashville Tennessee Like the Mass lectionary they generally organize the readings for worship services on Sundays in a three year cycle with four elements on each Sunday and three elements during daily Mass First reading Prima lectio from the Old Testament or in Eastertide from certain books of the New Testament Responsorial psalm Psalmus responsorium ideally to be sung as contained in the Simple Gradual or Gradual as contained in the Roman Gradual Second reading Secunda lectio from one of the New Testament Letters only on Sundays and Solemnities and a Gospel reading Evangelium Three year cycle edit nbsp A German Roman Catholic lectionary for year C on an ambo after MassThe lectionaries both Catholic and RCL versions are organized into three year cycles of readings The years are designated A B or C Each yearly cycle begins on the first Sunday of Advent the Sunday between 27 November and 3 December inclusive Year B follows year A year C follows year B then back again to A Year A Gospel of Matthew Advent 2022 through 2023 Year B Gospel of Mark Advent 2023 through 2024 current year Year C Gospel of Luke Advent 2024 through 2025 The Gospel of John is read throughout Easter and is used for other liturgical seasons including Advent Christmas and Lent where appropriate Daily lectionaries edit The Roman Catholic lectionary includes a two year cycle for the weekday mass readings called Cycle I and Cycle II Odd numbered years are Cycle I even numbered ones are Cycle II The weekday lectionary includes a reading from the Old Testament Acts Revelation or the Epistles a responsorial Psalm and a reading from one of the Gospels These readings are generally shorter than those appointed for use on Sundays The pericopes for the first reading along with the psalms are arranged in a two year cycle The Gospels are arranged so that portions of all four are read every year This weekday lectionary has also been adapted by some denominations with congregations that celebrate daily Eucharistic services It has been published in the Episcopal Church s Lesser Feasts and Fasts and in the Anglican Church of Canada s Book of Alternative Services among others This eucharistic lectionary should not be confused with the various Daily Office lectionaries in use in various denominations The Consultation on Common Texts has produced a three year Daily Lectionary which is thematically tied into the Revised Common Lectionary but the RCL does not provide a daily Eucharistic lectionary as such Various Anglican and Lutheran churches have their own daily lectionaries Many of the Anglican daily lectionaries are adapted from the one provided in the 1979 Book of Common Prayer Other lectionary information edit In some churches the lectionary is carried in the entrance procession by a lector In the Catholic Church the Book of the Gospels is carried in by a deacon when there is no deacon a lector might process in with the Book of the Gospels When the Book of the Gospels is used the first two readings are read from the lectionary while the Book of the Gospels is used for the final reading The lectionary is not to be confused with a missal gradual or sacramentary While the lectionary contains scripture readings the missal or sacramentary contains the appropriate prayers for the service and the gradual contains chants for use on any particular day In particular the gradual contains a responsory which may be used in place of the responsorial psalm Eastern lectionaries edit nbsp Jaharis Byzantine Lectionary Metropolitan Museum of ArtIn the Eastern Churches Eastern Orthodox Oriental Orthodox Eastern Catholic the Assyrian Church of the East Ancient Church of the East and those bodies not in communion with any of them but still practicing eastern liturgical customs tend to retain the use of a one year lectionary in their liturgy Different churches follow different liturgical calendars to an extent Most Eastern lectionaries provide for an epistle and a Gospel to be read on each day Other known witnesses of the Christian Jerusalem Rite Lectionary are those preserved in Georgian Caucasian Albanian language and Armenian translations 6th to 8th centuries CE nbsp An example of Byzantine lectionary Codex Harleianus l150 AD 995 text of John 1 18 Byzantine lectionary edit Those churches Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine Catholic which follow the Rite of Constantinople provide an epistle and Gospel reading for most days of the year to be read at the Divine Liturgy however during Great Lent there is no celebration of the liturgy on weekdays Monday through Friday so no epistle and Gospel are appointed for those days As a historical note the Greek lectionaries are a primary source for the Byzantine text type used in the scholarly field of textual criticism Epistle and Gospel edit The Gospel readings are found in what Orthodoxy usually calls a Gospel Book Evangelion although in strict English terms the Greek ones are in the form of an Evangeliary and an Epistle Book Apostol There are differences in the precise arrangement of these books between the various national churches In the Byzantine practice the readings are in the form of pericopes selections from scripture containing only the portion actually chanted during the service and are arranged according to the order in which they occur in the church year beginning with the Sunday of Pascha Easter and continuing throughout the entire year concluding with Holy Week Then follows a section of readings for the commemorations of saints and readings for special occasions baptism funeral etc In the Slavic practice the biblical books are reproduced in their entirety and arranged in the canonical order in which they appear in the Bible The annual cycle of the Gospels is composed of four series The Gospel of St John read from Pascha until Pentecost Sunday The Gospel of St Matthew divided over seventeen weeks beginning with the Monday of the Holy Spirit the day after Pentecost From the twelfth week it is read on Saturdays and Sundays while the Gospel of St Mark is read on the remaining weekdays The Gospel of St Luke divided over nineteen weeks beginning on the Monday after the Sunday after the Elevation of the Holy Cross From the thirteenth week it is only read on Saturdays and Sundays while St Mark s Gospel is read on the remaining weekdays The Gospel of St Mark read during the Lenten period on Saturdays and Sundays with the exception of the Sunday of Orthodoxy The interruption of the reading of the Gospel of Matthew after the Elevation of the Holy Cross is known as the Lukan Jump 5 The jump occurs only in the Gospel readings there is no corresponding jump in the epistles From this point on the epistle and Gospel readings do not exactly correspond the epistles continuing to be determined according to the moveable Paschal cycle and the Gospels being influenced by the fixed cycle The Lukan Jump is related to the chronological proximity of the Elevation of the Cross to the Conception of the Forerunner St John the Baptist celebrated on 23 September In late Antiquity this feast marked the beginning of the ecclesiastical New Year Thus beginning the reading of the Lukan Gospel toward the middle of September can be understood The reasoning is theological and is based on a vision of Salvation History the Conception of the Forerunner constitutes the first step of the New Economy as mentioned in the stikhera of the matins of this feast The Evangelist Luke is the only one to mention this Conception Luke 1 5 24 In Russia the use of the Lukan Jump vanished however in recent decades the Russian Church has begun the process of returning to the use of the Lukan Jump Similarly to the Gospel Cycle Epistle readings follow this plan although some exceptions vary Book of the Acts of the Apostles read from Pascha until Pentecost Sunday Letter to the Romans 1 Corinthians and 2 Corinthians From Pentecost to Elevation of the Holy Cross Galatians Ephesians Philippians Colossians 1 Thessalonians 2 Thessalonians 1 Timothy 2 Timothy Hebrews From Elevation of the Holy Cross to the Circumcision of Christ 1st of January James Hebrews 1 Peter and 2 Peter read from the Circumcision of Christ to the Clean Monday first weekday of Great Lent Old Testament readings edit Other services have scriptural readings also There is a Gospel lesson at Matins on Sundays and feast days These are found in the Evangelion There are also readings from the Old Testament called parables paroemia which are read at vespers on feast days These parables are found in the Menaion Triodion or Pentecostarion During Great Lent parables are read every day at vespers and at the Sixth Hour These parables are found in the Triodion Syriac and Malankara churches Catholic Orthodox edit nbsp Small portion of a Coptic lectionaryIn the Jacobite Syriac Churches the lectionary begins with the liturgical calendar year on Qudosh Idto the Sanctification of the Church which falls on the eighth Sunday before Christmas Both the Old and the New Testament books are read except the books of Revelation Song of Solomon and I and II Maccabees Scripture readings are assigned for Sundays and feast days for each day of Lent and Holy Week for raising people to various offices of the Church for the blessing of Holy Oil and various services such as baptisms and funerals Generally three Old Testament lections a selection from the prophets and three readings from the New Testament are prescribed for each Sunday and Feast day The New Testament readings include a reading from Acts another from the Catholic Epistles or the Pauline Epistles and a third reading from one of the Gospels During Christmas and Easter a fourth lesson is added for the evening service The readings reach a climax with the approach of the week of the Crucifixion Through Lent lessons are recited twice a day except Saturdays During the Passion Week readings are assigned for each of the major canonical hours If there is a weekday Liturgy celebrated on a non feast day the custom is to read the Pauline epistle only followed by the Gospel See also editBook of Alternative Services Dominical letter Ekphonetic notation Gospel Book Lection Lector List of New Testament lectionaries Liturgical year Manzil Mass liturgy Pericope Revised Common Lectionary The Text This Week Weekly Torah portion The Syro Aramaic Reading of the KoranReferences edit Lectionary Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 2007 07 06 Elbogen Ismar Jewish Liturgy A Comprehensive History Original publication 1913 Trans Raymond P Scheindlin for Jewish Publication Society edition 1993 Lectionary Britannica Retrieved 12 February 2022 Palazzo Eric 1998 A History of Liturgical Books from the Beginning to the Thirteenth Century Liturgical Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 8146 6167 3 The Lukan Jump Professor N D Uspensky From the Desk Manual of the Moscow Patriarchate www orthodox net Retrieved 2023 01 25 Further reading editEvans Helen C 2004 Byzantium faith and power 1261 1557 New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 1588391132 Evans Helen C Wixom William D 1997 The glory of Byzantium art and culture of the Middle Byzantine era A D 843 1261 New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 9780810965072 External links edit nbsp Look up lectionary in Wiktionary the free dictionary Thesaurus Antiquorum Lectionariorum Ecclesiae Synagogaeque A database on ancient and medieval Jewish and Christian lectionaries allowing to automatically compare 25000 readings of ca 35 lectionaries of many ancient denominations Jewish Ashkenazy Sephardic Yemenite Byzantine Italian Talmuds Mishnah Tosefta Rav Saadia Gaon some Midrashim triannual from the Geniza Armenian rite of Jerusalem Gallican Mozarabic Roman Byzantine Coptic West and East Syriac Maronite Automatic synopsis and automatic calendar reconstruction tools Greek Orthodox Online Chapel lectionary Lectionary of the Greek Orthodox Church according to the typicon of the Ecumenical Patriarchate Books and Resources Books and resources to learn more about the Eucharistic lectionary The Revised Common Lectionary The Roman Catholic Lectionary based on the New American Bible as approved by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops also used in the Philippines General Introduction to the Lectionary Roman Catholic The Joint Liturgical Group UK which developed The Four Year Lectionary One Gospel per Year Narrative Lectionary with history contexts and links to readings The Lukan Jump Orthodox Research Institute Orthodox Christian Lectionary Explained Russian Orthodox Lectionary of the Syriac Orthodox Church Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Lectionary Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Roman Catholic Lectionary for Mass Resources for the study of the current Roman Catholic lectionary The Four Gospels a lectionary in Syriac from 1687 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lectionary amp oldid 1191648307, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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