Holy Ascension of Christ Orthodox Church Thomas Sunday Great

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Holy Ascension of Christ Orthodox Church Thomas Sunday Great Православная Церковь Вознесения Христова Holy Ascension of Christ Orthodox Church Ὀρθόδοξος Ἐκκλησία Ἀναλήψεως τοῦ Χριστοῦ Pentecostarion Thomas Sunday Great Vespers Priest: Glory to the Holy… Choir: Amen; Clergy: Christ is risen…, 2 ½ times; Choir finishes Blessed is the Man At Lord I have cried: Pentecostarion 10; Glory, Both now: Thou didst come to Thy disciples… Litya: Pentecostarion Aposticha: Pentecostarion Troparia: Whilst the tomb was sealed… thrice Matins Christ is risen… thrice; Six Psalms After God is the Lord: Whilst the tomb was sealed…, twice; Glory, Both now: Repeat After each Kathisma: Sessional Hymns of the Pentecostarion Polyeleos and Magnifcation of the Pentecostarion (Evlogitaria not sung) Sessional Hymns of the Pentecostarion Hymns of Ascent, Tone 4, Antiphon I: From my youth… Prokeimenon of the Pentecostarion 1st Matins Gospel Having beheld the Resurrection, thrice Psalm 50; Glory: Through the prayers of the Apostles…; Both now: Through the prayers of the Theotokos; Have mercy on me, O God; Jesus having risen from the dead… Canon Pentecostarion 8 Glory to Thee, our God, glory to Thee Katavasia, Irmoi of Pascha It is the day of Resurrection… After Ode 3: Hypakoe from the Pentecostarion After Ode 6: Kontakion and Ikos of the Pentecostarion (After Ode 8: We do not sing My soul doth magnify...) Holy is the Lord, our God Exapostilaria: Pentecostarion Praises: Pentecostarion 4; Glory; Pentecostarion; Both now: Most blessed art thou… After the Great Doxology: Whilst the tomb was sealed… After the dismissal: Glory, Both now: 1st Gospel Sticheron At the Hours Troparion: Pentecostarion Kontakion: Pentecostarion .
Recommended publications
  • The Angel Cried out (1887) | Angel Vopiyashe 2:57
    PYOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY (1840–1893) All-Night Vigil, Op. 52 (1881) An Essay in Harmonizing liturgical chants Vsenoshchnoye bdeniye Opït garmonizatsiy bogosluzehbnïh pesnopeniy 1. Bless the Lord, O My Soul | Blagoslovi, dushe moya, Ghospoda 6:48 2. Kathisma: Blessed is the Man | Kafizma: Blazhen muzh 3:20 3. Lord, I Call | Ghospodi, vozzvah 0:58 4. Gladsome Light | Svete tihiy 2:25 5. Rejoice, O Virgin | Bogoroditse Devo 0:44 6. The Lord is God | Bog Ghospod 1:02 7. Praise the Name of the Lord | Hvalite imia Ghospodne 4:00 8. Blessed Art Thou, O Lord | Blagosloven yesi, Ghospodi 4:29 9. From My Youth | Ot yunosti moyeya 1:42 10. Having Beheld the Resurrection of Christ | Voskreseniye Hristovo videvshe 2:14 11. Common Katavasia: I Shall Open My Lips | Katavasiya raidovaya: Otverzu usta moya 5:17 12. Theotokion: Thou Art Most Blessed | Bogorodichen: Preblagoslovenna yesi 1:21 13. The Great Doxology | Velikoye slavosloviye 6:40 14. To Thee, the Victorious Leader | Vzbrannoy voyevode 0:55 15. Hymn in Honour of Saints Cyril and Methodius (1885) | Gimn v chest Sv. Kirilla i Mefodiya 2:44 16. A Legend, Op. 54 No. 5 (1883) | Legenda 3:12 17. Jurists’ Song (1885) | Pravovedcheskaya pesn 2:02 18. The Angel Cried Out (1887) | Angel vopiyashe 2:57 Latvian Radio Choir SIGVARDS KĻAVA, conductor he Latvian Radio Choir, led by Sigvards Kļava, presents a second album of sacred works by TPeter Tchaikovsky for choir. As with the first, its centrepiece is an extensive multi-movement composition – in this case, the All-Night Vigil.
    [Show full text]
  • 7Th Sunday After Pentecost Sunday of the Holy Fathers of the First Six Ecumenical Councils
    1 7th Sunday after Pentecost Sunday of the Holy Fathers of the First Six Ecumenical Councils VESPERS: Tone 6 P. Regular Beginning C. Lord I have cried... 1. O Christ, triumphant over hell,/ Thou hast ascended upon the Cross,/ to raise up with Thyself those dwelling in the darkness of death./ Free among the dead,/ Thou pourest forth life from Thine own light:// O almighty Saviour, have mercy upon us. 2. Christ, having trampled upon death today,/ according to His word, rose up bestowing joy upon the world,/ that all of us shouting this hymn might say:/ O Fount of life, O Light that no man can approach,// O almighty Saviour, have mercy upon us. 3. Whither shall we sinners fly from Thee, O Lord,/ Who art everywhere in the creation?/ Into heaven? Thy abode is there./ Into hell? Thou hast trampled upon death./ Into the uttermost parts of the sea?/ Thy hand reaches thither, O Master./ We run to Thee and falling before Thee we pray:// O Thou, risen from the dead, have mercy upon us. Stichera for the Holy Fathers (Tone 6) 5/6 Before the ages Thou wast begotten of the womb of the Father without mother/ before the morning star;/ yet Arius calleth Thee a creature, refusing to glorify Thee as God,/ with audacity mindlessly confusing Thee, the Creator, with a creature,/ laying up for himself fuel for the everlasting fire./ But the Council in Nicaea proclaimed Thee to be the Son of God,// Who art equally enthroned with the Father and the Spirit. 7/8 Wisely did ye mend the robe of Christ/ which had been rent and torn by the jaws of dogs, O honoured fathers,/ unable to endure the sight of His nakedness,/ as of old Shem and Japheth could not bear to see their father’s nakedness./ And ye put to shame the mindlessness of those of like mind with Arius,// the namesake of wrath.
    [Show full text]
  • Matins of Great and Holy Saturday (Friday Night)
    Matins of Great and Holy Saturday (Friday Night) The priest, vested in a dark epitrachelion, opens the curtain, takes the censer, and begins: Priest: Blessed is our God always, now and ever and unto ages of ages. Reader: Amen. Glory to Thee, O God; glory to Thee! While the following prayers are being read, the priest censes the altar, the sanctuary, and the people. Reader: O Heavenly King, the Comforter, the Spirit of Truth, Who art everywhere and fillest all things, Treasury of blessings, and Giver of Life, come and abide in us, and cleanse us from every impurity, and save our souls, O Good One. Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us! (3) Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, now and ever and unto ages of ages. Amen. O most-holy Trinity, have mercy on us. O Lord, cleanse us from our sins. O Master, pardon our transgressions. O Holy One, visit and heal our infirmities for Thy name’s sake. Lord, have mercy. (3) Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, now and ever and unto ages of ages. Amen. Our Father, Who art in heaven, hallowed be 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 debts as we forgive our debtors, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one. Priest: For Thine is the Kingdom, and the power, and the glory of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, now and ever and unto ages of ages.
    [Show full text]
  • The Service of Matins
    eMatins powered by AGES The Service of Matins Sunday, April 16, 2017 Pascha Katavasias of Pascha Text in English Sources VPA Copyright © 2016 by Virgil Peter Andronache SD Copyright © 2016 by Fr. Seraphim Dedes GOA © The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America HC Liturgical Texts courtesy and copyright of Holy Cross Press, Brookline, MA JMB Copyright © 2015 by John Michael Boyer EL Copyright Archimandrite Ephrem © NKJV Scripture taken from the New King James Version™. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved. OCA Copyright © 1996–2015. All rights reserved. JR Copyright © 2014 by Fr. Juvenaly Repass RSV Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright © 1946, 1952, and 1971 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved. SAAS Scripture taken from the St. Athanasius Academy Septuagint™. Copyright © 2008 by St. Athanasius Academy of Orthodox Theology. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Disclaimer The translation, rubrics, Greek and English texts are for the purposes of worship only and is subject to change without notice and should not be construed as a commitment by the authors, translators, developers, and personnel associated with its publication. Every effort has been made to make this booklet as complete and as accurate as possible, but no warranty of fitness is implied. Published in the United States of America: May God bless our country. All rights reserved. This booklet and the materials contained within it remain the property
    [Show full text]
  • THO 3347 Byzantine Liturgy of the Hours and Liturgical Year Winter 2015, Thursdays 17:30-20:30, Room 1141
    1 THO 3347 Byzantine Liturgy of the Hours and Liturgical Year Winter 2015, Thursdays 17:30-20:30, Room 1141 Professor: Fr. Michael Winn Office Phone: 613-727-1255, Cell Phone: 613-894-5833 Email: [email protected] (please use only this email address for this course) SYLLABUS January 15, 2015 Introduction; Distribution of Syllabus, Course Overview Class 1 January 22, 2015 Byzantine Liturgy of the Hours I Class 2 Anthropological, Sociological, and Psychological Issues; Related to the Celebration of the Hours Reading: George Guiver, Company of Voices: Daily Prayer and the People of God, 3-45. January 29, 2015 Byzantine Liturgy of the Hours II Class 3 New Testament, Pre-Nicean, and Patristic Heritage; History of the Byzantine Office in Particular Reading: George Guiver, Company of Voices: Daily Prayer and the People of God, 49-114. Supplemental Reading: Robert Taft, The Liturgy of the Hours in East and West, 3-29, 273-291. READING QUIZ #1 will occur at the beginning of this class. February 5, 2015 Byzantine Liturgy of the Hours III Class 4 General Theology of the Liturgy of the Hours Reading: George Guiver, Company of Voices: Daily Prayer and the People of God, 149-200. Supplemental Reading: Robert Taft, The Liturgy of the Hours in East and West, 331-373. February 12, 2015 Byzantine Liturgy of the Hours IV Class 5 Byzantine Vespers: Structure and Meaning Readings: Robert Taft, “Thanksgiving for the Light: Towards a Theology of Vespers,” in Beyond East and West: Problems in Liturgical Understanding, 127-149. Alexander Schmemann, For the Life of the World, 59-65.
    [Show full text]
  • From Pascha to Pentecost: the Penticostarion Period
    GREEK ORTHODOX METROPOLIS OF FROM PASCHA TO PENTECOST: TORONTO: YOUTH DEPARTMENT THE PENTICOSTARION PERIOD Table of Contents Pascha and the 2 Vespers of Love CHRIST IS RISEN! TRULY HE IS RISEN! Feastdays of 2 Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ and how He is more than convert entire nations into chil- Bright Week Christ, a simple man that rose from the dren of God. dead. This Man who rose from the dead is the God-Man Throughout this period (which is Thomas Sunday 3 called the Penticostarion Period), we ΧΡΙΣΤΟΣ ΑΝΕΣΤΗ! (Θεάνθρωπος), who has will experience this joy and victory Sunday of the 3 authority over things in Heaven of God over death and the devil. ΑΛΗΘΩΣ ΑΝΕΣΤΗ! and on earth. He made the Myrrh-bearing We hope that this PDF file will With this Paschal salutation, we Women help you all in your journey in this greet you all in the Name of our period, both with the iconography Lord Jesus Christ, “who has risen Sunday of the 4 and the Biblical readings, as well as from the dead!” Paralytic with the short descriptions of each Pascha is the “feast of feasts and day. Mid-Pentecost 4 festival among all the festivals, on This PDF file is especially dedicated to which we the people bless Christ all the Altar Boys and Myrofores that Sunday of the 4 to the ages.” (8th Katavasia of helped out during Holy Week, so that Samaritan Pascha) It is the time where we, millions of Orthodox Christians could Woman both as a Church and individually, get closer to our Lord and Savior Jesus celebrate Christ’s victory over Christ.
    [Show full text]
  • A Concise Glossary of the Genres of Eastern Orthodox Hymnography
    Journal of the International Society for Orthodox Church Music Vol. 4 (1), Section III: Miscellanea, pp. 198–207 ISSN 2342-1258 https://journal.fi/jisocm A Concise Glossary of the Genres of Eastern Orthodox Hymnography Elena Kolyada [email protected] The Glossary contains concise entries on most genres of Eastern Orthodox hymnography that are mentioned in the article by E. Kolyada “The Genre System of Early Russian Hymnography: the Main Stages and Principles of Its Formation”.1 On the one hand the Glossary is an integral part of the article, therefore revealing and corroborating its principal conceptual propositions. However, on the other hand it can be used as an independent reference resource for hymnographical terminology, useful for the majority of Orthodox Churches worldwide that follow the Eastern Rite: Byzantine, Russian, Bulgarian, Serbian et al., as well as those Western Orthodox dioceses and parishes, where worship is conducted in English. The Glossary includes the main corpus of chants that represents the five great branches of the genealogical tree of the genre system of early Christian hymnography, together with their many offshoots. These branches are 1) psalms and derivative genres; 2) sticheron-troparion genres; 3) akathistos; 4) canon; 5) prayer genres (see the relevant tables, p. 298-299).2 Each entry includes information about the etymology of the term, a short definition, typological features and a basic statement about the place of a particular chant in the daily and yearly cycles of services in the Byzantine rite.3 All this may help anyone who is involved in the worship or is simply interested in Orthodox liturgiology to understand more fully specific chanting material, as well as the general hymnographic repertoire of each service.
    [Show full text]
  • Service and Akathist to Saint Elisabeth Romanov
    SERVICE ТО OUR VENERABLE MOTHER, THE HOLY NEW MARTYR GRAND DUCHESS ELIZABETH Commemorated on July 5 AT LITTLE VESPERS At “Lord, I have cried..., ’’ stichera for four verses, in the Seventh Tone : ome, let us praise and hymn the nun and martyr Elizabeth, C a faithful warrior in Christ’s army, an illustrious star which super- naturally arose in the West and finished its course in the East, and which by its appearance gave light to the darkness of this godless age, only to shine even more brightly afterwards in the Kingdom of Christ our God, for He is the King of Glory, the Dayspring of all dawns. (twice) ell us, О Elizabeth, what mysteries thou dost now behold: T the things which thou didst desire to see from thy youth, and for whose sake thou didst forsake the imaginary pleasures of this passing life, and didst account as nothing the malice of thy tormentors. Thus may we also be incurably wounded by this blessed desire; and having suffered well the pain of this salutary sickness, may we ignore what is temporal in order to obtain eternal good things. 1 witnesses of the Lord, ye holy martyrs, clear mirrors of the hile resplendent in royal glory on earth, thou didst have О divine glory, if the night of godlessness had not been il- Wthe Kingdom of God within thyself, О Grand Duchess lu¬mined by the light of your struggles, how would we have seen Elizabeth; therefore, thou art rightly called a royal martyr, and thou the path to salvation? And if the Russian land had not been made hast received a most precious crown from Christ, the King of Glory, fertile by your blood, how would it have been kept from drying up with Whom thou now dost reign.
    [Show full text]
  • The Great Canon of St. Andrew of Crete
    THE GREAT CANON OF SAINT ANDREW OF CRETE ON MONDAY OF THE FIRST WEEK OF GREAT LENT DURING THE GRAND COMPLINE, WE BEGIN THE FIRST SECTION OF THE GREAT CANON AFTER THE READING OF PSALM 69 (70). THE REFRAINS ARE SUNG AFTER EACH TROPARION. AT EACH REFRAIN WE MAKE THE SIGN OF THE CROSS AND A FULL PROSTRATION. ODE 1 TONE 6 Irmos: A helper and a protector, He has become my salvation. This is my God, I will glorify Him, my father’s God will I exalt, for gloriously has He been glorified. Refrain: Have mercy on me, O God, have mercy on me. TROPARIA Where shall I begin to lament the deeds of my wretched life? How shall I begin, O Christ, to relieve my present tears? But as Thou art deeply compassionate, grant me forgiveness of sins. Come, O wretched soul, and together with thy body confess to the Creator of all so that henceforth, thou shalt abstain from thy past foolishness and offer tears of repentance to God. Having rivaled the first-formed Adam by my transgressions, I have found myself stripped naked of God, of the everlasting kingdom and all of its delights, because of my sins. Woe is me, O wretched soul, for thou art become like the first Eve! For thou hast looked in wickedness and wast bitterly wounded; for thou hast touched the tree and rashly tasted the forbidden fruit. In the place of the physical Eve, the temptation of Eve hath taken flesh in my mind, showing me what seems to be sweet; but making me taste and swallow bitterness.
    [Show full text]
  • The Night of Great and Holy Friday (The Matins Service of Great Saturday) the LAMENTATIONS
    The Night of Great and Holy Friday (The Matins Service of Great Saturday) THE LAMENTATIONS The priest, standing before the Royal Doors, makes three metanias and says in an audible voice: DEACON: Bless, Master. PRIEST: Blessed is our God, always, now and ever, and unto ages of ages. PEOPLE: Amen. PRIEST: Glory to thee, our God, glory to thee. O heavenly King, O Comforter, the Spirit of Truth, who art in all places, and fillest all things, treasury of good things, and Giver of life, come and dwell in us, and cleanse us from every stain and save our souls, O Good One. PEOPLE: Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us. Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us. Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us. Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit: now and ever, and unto ages of ages. Page 571 All-Holy Trinity, have mercy on us. Lord, cleanse us from our sins. Master, pardon our iniquities. Holy God, visit and heal our infirmities for thy Name’s sake. Lord, have mercy. Lord, have mercy. Lord, have mercy. Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit: now and ever, and unto ages of ages. Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name; thy kingdom come; thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily1 bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us.
    [Show full text]
  • The Amomos in the Byzantine Chant: a Diachronical Approach with Emphasis on Musical Settings of the 19Th and 20Th Centuries
    DOI: 10.2478/ajm-2018-0002 Artes. Journal of Musicology no. 17-18 2018 24-73 The Amomos in the Byzantine chant: a diachronical approach with emphasis th th on musical settings of the 19 and 20 centuries DIMOS PAPATZALAKIS Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Greece∗ Abstract: The book of the Psalms constitutes the main source from where the Offices of the Orthodox church draw their stable parts. It has been diachronically one of the most used liturgical books of the cathedral and the monastic rite. In this paper we focus on the Psalm 118, which is well known under the designation “Amomos”. In the first part of our study we look for the origin of the book of the Psalms generally. Afterwards we present the Offices in which the Amomos is included, starting from the Byzantine era and the use of the Amomos in the cathedral and the monastic services. Then, we negotiate the question of its use in the post-Byzantine era. In the next section we quote the most important settings of the Byzantine, post-Byzantine and new- Byzantine composers in Constantinople, Smyrna and Thessaloniki, as well as some evidence of their lives and their musical works. In the next section we introduce some polyprismatic analyses for the verses of the first stanza of the Amomos, which are set to music in 19th and 20th centuries. After some comparative musicological analyses of the microform of the compositions or interpretations, we comment on the music structure of the settings of Amomos in their liturgical context. Our study concludes with some main observations, as well as a list of the basic sources used to write this paper.
    [Show full text]
  • MATINS of the RESURRECTION Also Known As Paschal Matins
    MATINS OF THE RESURRECTION also known as Paschal Matins Metropolitan Cantor Institute Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania March 2011 The service of Matins on Pascha – Easter Sunday – is the most joyous morning celebration of the church year. The feast of Pascha commemorates the day that our Lord, God and Savior Jesus Christ rose from the dead, and appeared to his disciples – the myrrhbearing women and the apostles. This service is different from all other celebrations of Matins; it begins with a procession around the church, and consists entirely of festive elements – the singing of the great Paschal Canon of Saint John Damascene, and the chanting of the Psalms of Praise (Psalms 148-150) with the paschal stichera. After the service, the priest customarily blesses baskets of paschal foods – some of which are symbolic, and others being the foods from which the faithful abstained during the Great Fast and Holy Week. The text and music for this service are based on the Resurrection Matins booklet published by the Byzantine Seminary Press is 1976. Any official texts and music which have been published since that time by the Byzantine Catholic Church sui juris of the United States of America have been used here, superseding previous texts and musical settings. In addition, incorrect accents in the original Resurrection Matins booklet have been corrected throughout, although wherever possible the “flow” of the earlier music has been kept. Since 1976, it has become common to sing “Having beheld the Resurrection” in Kievan tone 6. The harmonization, which is fairly easy, adds greatly to the singing of this hymn.
    [Show full text]