- Great Doxology
The Great Doxology is an ancient hymn of praise to the
Trinity which is chanted or read daily in the Eastern Orthodox and Greek-Catholic Churches.The hymn is based on . The hymn is one of the most famous liturgical exclamations of praise (
doxology ) in the history of the Christian Church.The Great Doxology comes from an ancient Greek hymn dating from at least the
3rd century , and perhaps even the1st century . A very similar form is found in the "Codex Alexandrinus" (5th century ) and in Pseudo-Athanasius (sometime prior to the4th century ). The hymn has been extended further than these earlier examples (and what could be interpreted as allusions tosubordinationism have been corrected).As currently used, the hymn is found in several different forms:
The Great Doxology—Chanted by the choir, at
Matins on Sundays and Feast days. The Great Doxology ends with theTrisagion . [Parry (1999), p. 166]The Lesser Doxology—Read by the Reader on simple weekdays at Matins and at
Compline . The verses are slightly rearranged from the Great Doxology, the verse from Psalm 119 is repeated in a different manner, and the Trisagion at the end is replaced by a different doxology.Vouchsafe, O Lord—a much more abbreviated form (essentially, the last half of the Lesser Doxology), which is read (except during
Bright Week , when it is sung) every day atVespers .At each of these hymns, the words “Vouchsafe, O Lord, to keep us this day without sin,” will be altered to correspond with the time of day:
*At Matins: "this day"
*At Vespers: "this evening"
*At Compline: "this night"There is a Latin version of the hymn, "
Gloria in Excelsis Deo ", which though shorter than the Greek original, has come into wide use in the Western liturgical tradition. According to tradition, the Latin translation was made by St.Hilary of Poitiers (300 to367 ). St. Hilary had been banished toPhrygia for four years (c.356 ) by the emperorConstantius II because of his defense of the faith againstArianism .POV-statement|date=December 2007 In the East he would have been exposed to the hymn during his exile, and could very easily have brought a version of it back with him.Notes
References
*cite book
last = Parry
first = Ken
authorlink =
coauthors = David Melling (editors)
title = The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity
publisher = Blackwell Publishing
date = 1999
location = Malden, MA.
id =ISBN 0-631-23203-6
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