Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,2 | community, and for these common prayers there were gradually
2 1,2 | appointing of the times for common prayer, certain feast-days
3 1,3 | external signs of prayer are common to all men; such are: inclinations
4 2,1 | to offer up to God their common prayers, and to receive
5 2,1 | which they assemble for common prayer are likewise called
6 2,8 | to take their food at a common table after the end of divine
7 2,11| may join mentally in the common prayers of the worshippers.
8 3,1 | themselves, owing to their common grace of priesthood. But
9 3,1 | s blessing, recites the common prayers, reads portions
10 3,2 | prompted them to appear at the common worship in clean, festive
11 3,2 | ground. This garment remains common to all classes of ordained
12 3,2 | course of time it became common to all bishops, and they
13 4,2 | each portion of the day by common prayer. This resulted in
14 7,1 | liturgy” was given to any common business conducted on a
15 7,1 | Royal Gates are closed.~ ~Common Prayers.~ After hearing
16 7,1 | the Triple Ectenia. These common prayers are followed by
17 8,2 | feast: “In confirming the common Resurrection, O Christ God,
18 9,5 | three times to each. This common cup signifies that they
19 10,1 | the refectory and at their common work. They are called to
20 10,3 | the Feast-day Menaion, the Common Menaion, the Lenten Triodion,
21 10,3 | the Monthly Meneæ. In the Common Menaion we find the prayers
22 11 | distributed on Saturday, or, as is common nowadays, Sunday.~ *The
23 11 | meant mutual support, and common power over the household.~ *
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