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| Chapter VIII. Of the Prayer which follows the Psalm. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VIII.
Of the Prayer which follows the Psalm.
That practice too which
we have observed in this country—viz., that while one sings to
the end of the Psalm, all standing up sing together with a loud voice,
“Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy
Ghost”—we have never heard anywhere throughout the East,
but there, while all keep silence when the Psalm is finished, the
prayer that follows is offered up by the singer. But with this hymn in
honour of the Trinity only the whole Psalmody695
695 Antiphona. The
word must certainly be used here not in the later sense of
“antiphon,” but as descriptive of the whole of the Psalmody
of the office. Cf. note on c. i. | is
usually ended.696
696 In the Eastern
offices the Psalter is divided into twenty sections called καθίσματα,
each of which is subdivided into three στάσεις, at the close
of each of which the Gloria is said, and not, as in the West, after
every Psalm. This Western custom which Cassian here notices seems to
have originated in Gaul, and thence spread to other churches as,
according to Walafrid Strabo, at Rome it was used but rarely after the
Psalms in the ninth century. See Walafrid Strabo, c. xxv. ap. Hittorp.
688. The earliest certain indications of the use of the hymn itself are
found in the fourth century. See S. Basil De Spiritu
Sancto, c. xxix.; Theodoret, Eccl. Hist., II. xxiv.,
Sozomen, Eccl. Hist., III. xx. The Greek form is
Δὁξα
πατρὶ καὶ
ὑἱῷ καὶ ἁγίῳ
πνευμάτι καὶ
νῦν καὶ ἀεὶ
καὶ ἐις τοὺς
ἀιῶνας τῶν
ἀιωνῶν,
ἀμήν. The additional words in use in the
West, “sicut erat in principio,” were first adopted
in the sixth century, being ordered by the Council of Vaison,
a.d. 529, “after the example of the
apostolic see.” | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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