- Euchologion
:"For the "
Book of Common Order ", sometimes called "The Order of Geneva" or "Knox's Liturgy", see that entry."The Euchologion (Greek: "polytonic|εὐχολόγιον"; Slavonic: "Молитвословъ", "Molitvoslov" ; Romanian: "Molitfelnic") is one of the chiefliturgical book s of theOrthodox Church andEastern Catholic Churches , containing the portions of the services which are said by the bishop, priest, or deacon (it corresponds more or less to the Roman CatholicMissal , [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13088b.htm Ritual] , andPontifical combined). There are several different volumes of the book in use.Types of Euchologia
A. The comprehensive version is called the Great Euchologion (Greek: "Εύχολόγιον τό μέγα", "Euchológion to méga"; Slavonic: "Болшой Иерейсий Молитвословъ", "Bolshói Ieréisky Molitvoslóv"; Romanian: "Arhieraticon"), and contains the following:
*The parts for the priest and deacon atVespers ,Orthros (Matins), and theDivine Liturgy , together with supplementary material (Prokeimena , Calendar ofSaints , etc.)
*The remaining Sacred Mysteries (Sacraments), monasticTonsure , Blessing of Waters, etc. The texts for these and the following services are provided in full.
*Services performed by a Bishop (Ordination , Consecration of a Church, etc.)
*Various blessings and prayers for occasional use (Blessing of a House, Visitation of the Sick, Funerals, etc.)
*Services of Supplication (Moleben s):(For a full description of the contents and order of the Great Euchologion, see below, under Content)
B. The other books contain only portions of the Great Euchologion:
*The Priest's Service Book (Greek:" Ίερατικόν", "Hieratikon"; Slavonic: "Слѹжебникъ", "Sluzhébnik"; Romanian: "Liturghier") containing Vespers, Matins, Compline and Divine Liturgy, plus supplementary material
*The Small Euchologion or Book of Needs (Greek: "Άγιασματάριον", "Hagiasmatárion"; "Μικρόν Εύχολόγιον", "Mikron Euchológion"; Slavonic: Требникъ "Trébnik"; Romanian: "Molitfelnic") contains the Mysteries (except Liturgy) which would be used by a priest, as well as the other services that would be commonly called for in a parish.
*The Ritual or Pontifical (Greek: "Ἀρχηιερατικόν", "Archieratikon", Slavonic: "Чиновникъ", "Chinovnik"; Romanian: "Arhieraticon") contains the portions of Vespers, Matins, Liturgy and the Mysteries that are performed by a Bishop.Content
The Euchologion contains first, directions for the deacon at the
Vespers ,Matins , andDivine Liturgy . The priest's prayers and the deacon's litanies for Vespers and Matins follow. Then come the Liturgies: first, rubrics for the holy Liturgy in general, and a long note about the arrangement of the breads at the Proskomide. The Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom is the frame into which the other Liturgies are fitted. The Euchologion contains only the parts of priest and deacon at full length, first for the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, then for those parts ofLiturgy of St. Basil that differ from it; then theLiturgy of the Presanctified Gifts , beginning with the "Hesperinon" (Vespers) that always precedes it.After the Liturgies follow a collection of sacraments and sacramentals with various rules, canons, and blessings. First the rite of churching the mother after child-birth ("euchai eis gynaika lecho"), adapted for various conditions, then certain "Canons of the Apostles and Fathers" regarding
Baptism , prayers to be said overCatechumens , the Rite of Baptism, followed by the washing ("apolousis") of the child, seven days later;Exorcisms ofSt. Basil andSt. John Chrysostom , and the Rite of Consecrating Chrism ("myron") on Holy Thursday. Then follow theOrdination services for deacon, priest, and bishop (there is a second rite of ordaining bishops "according to the exposition of the most holy Lord Metrophanes, Metropolitan of Nyssa"), the blessing of ahegumenos (abbot) and of other superiors of monasteries, a prayer for those who begin to serve in the Church, and the rites for minor orders (reader ,chanter , andsubdeacon ).The ceremonies for receiving novices, clothing monks (
Tonsure ) in the mandyas (the "little habit") and in the "great and angelic habit" (Great Schema ) come next, the appointing of a priest to be confessor ("pneumatikos") and the manner of hearingconfessions , prayers to be said over persons who take a solemn oath, for those who incur canonical punishments, and for those who are absolved from them.Then comes a collection of prayers for various necessities. A long hymn to Our Lady for "forgiveness of sins", written by a monk, Euthymius, follows, and we come to the rites of
betrothal ,marriage (called the "crowning", "Stephanoma", from the most striking feature of the ceremony), the prayers for taking off the crowns eight days later, the rite of second marriages (called, as by us, "digamy", "digamia", in which the persons are not crowned), and the very longunction of the sick ("to hagion elaion"), performed normally by seven priests.Next, blessings for new churches and
antimensia (the corporal containingrelics used for the Liturgy; it is really a kind of portable altar), the ceremony of washing the altar on Holy Thursday, erection of a "Stauropegion" (amonastery that is exempt from the control of the local bishop), the Lesser Blessing of Waters ("hagiasmos"), and the Great Blessing of Waters (used onTheophany ), followed by a sacramental which consists of bathing ("nipter") afterwards.After one or two more ceremonies, such as a rite of the Kneeling Prayer ("gonyklisis") on the evening of
Pentecost , exorcisms, prayers for the sick and dying, come the burial services for laymen, monks, priests. Then follows a miscellaneous collection of prayers and hymns (marked "euchai diaphoroi"), Canons of penance, against earthquakes, for time of pestilence, and war, and two addressed to theTheotokos . More prayers for various occasions end the book.In modern Euchologia, however, it is usual to add the "Apostles" (the readings from the
Epistles ) andGospels for theGreat Feasts (these are taken from the two books that contain the whole collection of liturgical lessons), and lastly the arrangement of the court of the Ecumenical Patriarch, with rubrical directions for their various duties during the Liturgy.Thus the Euchologion is the handbook for bishops, priests, and deacons. It contains only the short responses of the choir, who have their own choir-books (
Triodion ,Pentecostarion , Octoechos,Menaion ).Publication
The most ancient document of the Rite of Constantinople (which is similar to the
Antiochene Rite ) is the "Barberini Euchologion" (gr.336), a Greekmanuscript written around 790 A.D. [E. Whitaker, M. Johnson, "Documents of the Baptismal Liturgy" (Liturgical Press, 2003), ISBN 0814662005, p. 109.]The first printed edition was published at Venice in 1526. This was followed by another, also in Venice, in 1638 of the Euchologion used by
Jacques Goar for his edition. Another edition was published at Venice in 1862, which forms the basis of the current edition of the Great Euchologion, such as that published by Astir at Athens in 1970. The text in the Venetian edition of 1862 was the basis of the edition published in Bucharest in 1703. The 7th edition, edited by Spiridion Zerbos, was printed in 1898 at the Phoenix press ("typographeion ho Phoinix") at Venice, the official Greek Orthodox printing house.The Orthodox Churches that use other liturgical languages have presses (generally at the capital of the country, Moscow, Bucharest, Jerusalem) for their translations. The Euchologion was first translated into Church Slavonic in the 9th century. The definitive version of the Euchologion used in the
Ukrainian Orthodox Church was prepared byPeter Mohyla , and published in 1646 (republished in Paris, 1988). This edition contains some 20 rituals that were of local origin and are not performed in other Eastern churches (e.g., services for the uncovering of holy relics and for the blessing of monasteries).Provost Alexios Maltzew of the Russian Embassy Church at Berlin edited the Euchologion in Old Slavonic and German with notes (Vienna, 1861, reprinted at Berlin, 1892).
A complete Euchologion, in several volumes, was printed in Moscow by the Synodal Press in 1902.
Greek-Catholics use the Propaganda edition and have a compendium ("mikron euchologion") containing only the Liturgies, Apostles and Gospels, baptism, marriage, unction, and confession (Rome, 1872). J. Goar, O. P., edited the Euchologion with very complete notes, explanations, and illustrations ("Euchologion, sive Rituale Græcorum", 2nd ed., Venice, fol., 1720), which became the standard work of reference for Byzantine Rite Catholics.
Oriental Orthodox
Euchologia are also found among the Coptic, Armenian and East Syrian Churches, which differ from the Byzantine. The Euchologion of Bishop Serapion, a contemporary of
St. Athanasius (c.293 – 373), contains texts from theAlexandrian Rite . [Louis Duchesne , "Christian Worship: Its Origin and Evolution" (Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, London, 1903), p. 75.]Notes
External links
* [http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/cdl/2003/0459.html Account of the discovery of the "Euchologion of Mar Sabbas"]
* [http://www.womenpriests.org/traditio/parenti.asp The "Barberini Euchologion"]Catholic, s.v., [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05595b.htm Euchologion]
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