Chapter, Paragraph
1 4,8| our needs; the singing of psalms and hymns, expressive of
2 4,9| consists in the singing of Psalms expressive of penitence
3 4,9| of the reading of three Psalms. Then follow: the troparion
4 4,9| that each Hour has its own Psalms and concluding prayers,
5 5,3| which are collected the Psalms, or sacred songs of the
6 5,3| during the reading of the Psalms. At Sunday and feast-day
7 5,3| salvation The verses of the Psalms are separated by the singing
8 5,4| selected verses from the Psalms are read (“Lord, I have
9 5,4| The last verses of the Psalms, in which is expressed the
10 6,1| The Six Psalms.”~At an All-Night Vigil,
11 6,1| then slowly reads six Psalms (3, 37, 62, 87, 102 and
12 6,1| 102). While the three last Psalms are read, the priest, standing
13 6,2| Kathismata.~After the Six Psalms, we offer up to God our
14 6,2| expressing, in the words of the Psalms, our consciousness of our
15 6,2| long continued reading of Psalms, interspersed only with
16 6,3| with the Royal Gates open, Psalms 134 and 135, which begin, “
17 6,8| The Psalms of Praise.~ The third and
18 6,8| the canon are chanted the Psalms 148, 149 and 150, which
19 6,8| therefore, called the “Psalms of Praise:” “Let every breath
20 6,8| deacon calls out before these Psalms are sung: “Holy is the Lord
21 6,8| Sticheræ on “the Praises.” The Psalms of Praise end with a hymn
22 6,8| Great Doxology.~ After the Psalms of Praise with their sticheræ
23 6,8| which precedes the Six Psalms. The Great Doxology:~ ~“
24 6,9| service begins with two Psalms, two troparia, a Theotokion,
25 7,1| on earth.~ ~The Typical Psalms and the Antiphons.~ Having
26 7,1| On Sundays and feast-days Psalms 102 and 145 are sung; they
27 7,1| my being...”~ When these Psalms are sung, the Beatitudes
28 7,1| prophetic verses selected from Psalms appropriate to the festive
29 7,1| by a short verse from the Psalms, containing a prophecy concerning
30 7,1| Great Ectenia, of the two Psalms, 102 (“Bless the Lord, O
31 7,1| Typical Antiphons. These Psalms are followed by the hymn “
32 8,1| points: 1) of the three Psalms prescribed for each Hour,
33 8,2| Matins after the Polyeleos Psalms.~ On the Sunday following
34 8,2| consist of the reading of Psalms and penitential prayers,
35 8,2| Hour: 1) After the Three Psalms the kathisma is read; 2)
36 8,2| Hours are read, in which the Psalms, the troparia, the paremiæ,
37 9,3| During all these proceedings Psalms are sung. When the Altar
38 9,3| altar. To the singing of psalms, the bishop rubs the board
39 9,3| the Altar, the prescribed psalms are sung, but no prayer
40 10,2| begins with the chanting of Psalms 90 and 118, which set forth
41 11 | Psalter, containing 150 Psalms, is divided into 20 kathismata
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