- Lectionary
A Lectionary is a book or listing that contains a collection of
scripture readings appointed for Christian orJudaic worship on a given day or occasion.History
In antiquity the Jews created a schedule of scripture readings assigned to be read in the
synagogue . Selections were read from theTorah and thehaftorah . Jesus likely read one of these pre-assigned readings when he read from ]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 use of pre-assigned, scheduled readings from the scriptures can be traced back to the
early church . Not all of the Christian Church used the same lectionary, and throughout history, many varying lectionaries have been used in different parts of the Christian world. Until theSecond Vatican Council , most Western Christians (Roman Catholics ,Old Catholics ,Anglicans ,Lutherans , and thoseMethodists who employed the lectionary ofWesley ) used a lectionary that repeated on a one-year basis. This annual lectionary provided readings for Sundays and, in those Churches that celebrated the festivals ofsaint s, feast-day readings. TheEastern Orthodox Church and many of the Oriental Churches continue to use an annual lectionary.Lectionaries from before the invention of the [printing press] contribute to understanding the textual history of the Bible. See also
List of New Testament lectionaries .Western Lectionaries
Roman Lectionary and the Revised Common Lectionary
The roots and history of the
Revised Common Lectionary (RCL) and the Roman Catholic Lectionary originated in the Roman Catholic Church, where it generally goes by the Latin name "Ordo Lectionum Missae".Since the Second Vatican Council of 1962–1965, the revised lectionary of the Roman Catholic Church has been a foundation-block upon which many contemporary lectionaries have been based, most notably the
Revised Common Lectionary (RCL), and its derivatives, as organized by theConsultation on Common Texts (CCT) organization located inNashville, Tennessee . TheUnited States Conference of Catholic Bishops and many traditional mainline American Protestant denominations are members. The CCT thereby represents the majority of American Christians.Most of the current lectionaries used by western
Christian denomination s organize the scripture passages to be read in worship services for each week of the year. The listing for a given week includes:*A reading from the
Old Testament ;
*A responsorialPsalm ;
*A reading from one of theEpistles ;
*A reading from one of theGospel s.3 year cycle
The Lectionary (both Roman and RCL versions) is organized into a three-year cycle of readings. The reading cycle is denoted by letter as "A", "B", or "C". The year A cycle begins at the
Advent and Christmas near the end of those years whose number is evenly divisible by 3, e.g., 2001, 2004, 2007. Year B follows year A, and year C follows year B.* Year A: Most Gospel readings from the
Gospel of Matthew .
* Year B: Most Gospel readings from theGospel of Mark .
* Year C: Most Gospel readings from theGospel of Luke .The
Gospel of John is read throughoutEastertide , and is used for other liturgical seasons includingAdvent ,Christmastide , andLent where appropriate.There is also a 2 year cycle for the weekday readings (year 1 and year 2).
Other lectionary information
For churches that hold weekday services, the Lectionary provides shorter readings:
*A reading from the
Old Testament or theEpistles
*A responsorialPsalm ;
*A reading from one of theGospel s.These readings are generally much shorter than the weekend readings. The pericopes for the first reading along with the psalms are arranged in a 2-year cycle. The Gospels are arranged so that all four are read every year.
In some churches, the Lectionary is carried in the entrance procession by a
lector . In the Roman Catholic Church, it is prohibited to process with the Lectionary, but aGospel Book may be carried by adeacon or instituted lector. When a Gospel Book is used, the first three readings are read from the Lectionary, while the Gospel Book is used for the final reading.The Lectionary is not to be confused with a
missal ,gradual orsacramentary . 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 aresponsory which may be used in place of the responsorial psalm.Eastern Lectionaries
In the Eastern Churches (
Eastern Catholic —i.e., those united with Rome—Eastern Orthodox ,Oriental Orthodox , theAssyrian 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.Byzantine lectionary
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 theDivine Liturgy ; however, duringGreat 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 theByzantine text-type used in the scholarly field oftextual criticism .Epistle and Gospel
The Gospel readings are found in a
Gospel Book ("Evangélion") and an Epistle Book ("Apostól"). There are differences in the precise arrangement of these books between the various national churches. In theHellenic (Greek Orthodox) practice, the readings are in the form ofpericope s (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 withHoly Week . Then follows a section of readings for the commemorations ofSaints 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 theBible .The annual cycle of the Gospels is composed of four series:
#"The Gospel of St. John"
#:read from Pascha untilPentecost 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 theElevation 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 theSunday of Orthodoxy .The interruption of the reading of the Gospel of Matthew after the Elevation of the Holy Cross is known as the [http://www.orthodox.net/ustav/lukan-jump.html "Lukan Jump"] The jump occurs only in the Gospel readings, there is no corresponding jump in the Epistle. 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 onSeptember 23rd . Inlate 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 ().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.
Old Testament Readings
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 theOld Testament , called "parables" ("Paroemia"), which are read atVespers on feast days. These parables are found in theMenaion ,Triodion orPentecostarion . During Great Lent, parables are read every day at Vespers and at theSixth Hour . These parables are found in the Triodion.yriac Orthodox
In the
Syriac Orthodox Church , 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 theNew Testament books are read except the books of Revelation,Song of Solomon , and I andII 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
lection s, a selection from theprophet s, 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 theCatholic Epistles or thePauline Epistles , and a third reading from one of theGospel s. 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. ThroughLent lessons are recited twice a day except Saturdays. During thePassion Week readings are assigned for each of the majorcanonical hours .Extra-Christian usage theory
As per theory expressed in English Edition of 2007 ("Die syro-aramäische Lesart des Koran: Ein Beitrag zur Entschlüsselung der Koransprache", 2000), a book by German
philologist and professor of ancientSemitic andArabic languagesChristoph Luxenberg [ [http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/dettaglio.jsp?id=7025&eng=y The Virgins and the Grapes: the Christian Origins of the Koran] ] which takes a philological and text-critical approach to the study of theQur'an and is considered a major, but controversial work in the field of Qur'anicphilology , the wordQur'an itself is derived from 'qeryana', aSyriac term from theChristian liturgy that means ‘lectionary ’ a book of liturgical readings. The book being a Syro-Aramaic lectionary, with hymns andBiblical extracts, created for use in Christian services. This lectionary was translated intoArabic as a missionary effort. It was not meant to start a new religion, but to spread an older one. [ [http://www.lebanonwire.com/0307/03071213DS.asp Giving the Koran a history:] ]References
ee also
*
Revised Common Lectionary
*Mass (liturgy)
*Liturgical year
*Gospel Book
*Ekphonetic notation
*Lector
*Pericope
*Lection
*The Text This Week
*Book of Alternative Services External links
* [http://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/divinity/lectionary The Revised Common Lectionary]
* [http://www.nccbuscc.org/nab The Roman Catholic Lectionary] - based on theNew American Bible , as aprroved by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (also used in the Philippines)
* [http://www.catholicliturgy.com/index.cfm/FuseAction/DocumentContents/Index/2/SubIndex/11/DocumentIndex/126 General Introduction to the Lectionary] (Roman Catholic)
* [http://www.byzcath.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1383&Itemid=114 Lectionary of the Byzantine (Eastern Orthodox) Church]
* [http://www.lectionarylite.com/ "LectionaryLite"] Lectionary criticism website
* [http://www.seemslikegod.org/lectionary.htm John Shearman's Liberal Lectionary]
* [http://www.orthodoxresearchinstitute.org/articles/liturgics/peter_archbishop_liturgical_matters.htm The "Lukan Jump"] Orthodox Research Institute
* [http://www.orthodox.net/ustav/lectionary-explained.html Orthodox Christian Lectionary Explained] (Russian Orthodox)
* [http://sor.cua.edu/Lectionary/ Lectionary] of the Syriac Orthodox Church
*CathEncy|wstitle=Lectionary
* [http://www.lectionarycentral.com Lectionary Central] For the study and use of the traditional Western Eucharistic lectionary.
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