Lectionary
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A Lectionary is a book or listing that contains a collection of scripture readings for Christian worship.
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[edit] History
The ancient Hebrews/Jews created pre-assigned lectionary-like scripture reading schedules for the Old Testament Torah, even before Jesus’ time. Jesus likely read from one of these pre-assigned readings when he read from Isaiah 61:1-2, as recorded in Luke 4:16-21, when he claimed his Divinity in public. Both Hebrew and Christian lectionaries hop and skip through the Torah/Bible and include verses which are generally favored by the bureaucracy of the religious community that designed each individual lectionary over the centuries. Pre-assigned/scheduled scripture readings are traceable back to parts of the early church during the first few centuries after Jesus’ earthly ministry. Not all of the Christian Church used lectionaries, but some parts did, including those that ultimately formed the Roman Catholic Church. 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.
Throughout history, many varying lectionaries have been used in different parts of the Christian world. Until the Second Vatican Council, most Western Christians (Roman Catholics, Old Catholics, Anglicans, Lutherans, and Methodists who employed the Lectionary of Wesley) used a lectionary that repeated on a one year basis. This lectionary provided readings for Sundays and, in those Churches that celebrated the festivals of saints, feast-day readings.
Since the Second Vatican Council in the early 1960s, 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 derivitives, as organized by the Consultation on Common Texts (CCT) organization located in Nashville, TN. The National Conference of Catholic Bishops of the United States and many traditional mainline American Protestant denominations are members. The CCT thereby represents the majority of American Christians.
Hi nga pla kay jLo Jlius at rJay..heheheh...fiz ouT...
ArriBa here....
[edit] Pattern of the Roman Lectionary and Revised Common Lectionary (RCL)
Most of the current lectionaries used by western Christian denominations 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 Responsorial Psalm;
- A reading from one of the Epistles;
- A reading from one of the Gospels.
[edit] The 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 the Gospel of Mark.
- Year C: Most Gospel readings from the Gospel of Luke.
The Gospel of John is always read for Easter, and is used for other liturgical seasons including Advent, Christmas, and Lent where appropriate. hehehehe...musta kau???
[edit] Other lectionary information
For churches that hold weekday services, the Lectionary provides a two-year cycle of shorter readings:
- A reading from the Old Testament or the Epistles
- A Responsorial Psalm
- A reading from one of the Gospels.
These readings are generally much shorter than the weekend readings.
In the Eastern Churches (those united with Rome, the Eastern Orthodox, the Oriental Orthodox, and those bodies not in communion with either but still practicing eastern liturgical customs) tend to retain the use of a one year lectionary in their liturgy, and follow a different liturgical calendar (to an extent) than the western Churches. Most Eastern Lectionaries provide for an Epistle and a Gospel to be read on each day of the 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 a Gospel Book may be carried by a deacon or instituted lector (but not a lay reader deputed to read in the place of a 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 or sacramentary; while the Lectionary contains scripture readings, the others contain the appropriate prayers for the service.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- The Revised Common Lectionary
- The Roman Catholic Lectionary
- Lectionary criticism website. *Website: www.LectionaryLite.Com
- John Shearman's Liberal Lectionary