Worship circles general characteristics. Daily cycle of worship. Diagram of the daily cycle of worship

And the Jewish lunar calendar is usually counted from the evening - approximately from the moment the sun sets below the horizon. According to Byzantine time calculation, the day is divided into 12 daytime hours (from dawn to sunset) and 12 night hours (from dusk to dawn), which are grouped into 4 day guards and at 4 - night guards.

The daily cycle consists of the following services:

  • Small Vespers is the first service of the coming day; it can be performed before Great Vespers (shortly before sunset), only when there is an all-night vigil. In normal parish practice, the ROC is almost never performed. On the patronal feast day, at small vespers, in some churches (for example, in the Church of the Life-Giving Trinity in Ostankino), an akathist for the temple holiday is performed.
  • Vespers. Usually begins a series of services each day. However, some prayers at the beginning of Vespers refer back to the previous (outgoing) day, for example, the Great Prokeimenon. During all-night vigils, Great Vespers (or Great Compline) should be joined by a special service:
  • Compline can be either great or small. Excluded when performing an all-night vigil. Sometimes it is read privately (in home prayers). On Bright Week it is replaced by the Easter hour. In parish practice, it is rarely performed after Vespers and dinner.
  • The Midnight Office can be daily, Saturday, holiday, Sunday and Easter. Just like Compline, it is excluded during the All-Night Vigil, sometimes it is read in private, and on Bright Week it is replaced by the Easter hour. In parishes, only the Easter Midnight Office is usually celebrated once a year (on Easter night). In monasteries, the Midnight Office is often combined with a fraternal prayer service at the beginning of the day. At the present time, the Midnight Office is being replaced by prayers for the coming sleep and morning prayers. Among Christian Old Believers, the practice of the laity remained the celebration of the Midnight Office in the morning and the Compline Office in the evening.
  • Matins is the longest service of the daily cycle; in the era of persecution, the night and morning services of Christians were the safest. Currently, Matins can be daily, sixfold, doxological, polyeleous, vigil, hallelujah (usually Lenten), Easter, funeral. Despite its name, Matins in the modern liturgical practice of the Russian Orthodox Church is much more often performed not in the morning, but in the evening - directly joining Vespers (or lithium), and the First Hour adjoins Matins. In the morning, Matins is served: 1) if it could not be served in the evening, 2) during Great Lent, 3) in some monasteries regularly, in accordance with ancient tradition.
  • Watch :
    • First hour. Corresponds to our 7 o’clock in the morning - it sanctifies the coming day with prayer, recalling the night prayer of the Savior, the incessant angelic praise and the appearance of the Lord Jesus Christ at the trial of Caiaphas.
    • The third hour - 9 o'clock in the morning - the trial of Pilate over Christ and the descent of the Holy Spirit on the apostles are remembered.
    • The sixth hour - noon, 12 noon - the Fall of Adam and the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ are remembered.
    • The ninth hour - 15 o'clock in the afternoon - the death on the Cross of the Lord Jesus Christ is remembered.
  • Interhours can only take place during weekdays Petrov, Assumption and Nativity fasts,
    • Interhour of the first hour,
    • Interhour of the third hour,
    • Between the hours of the sixth hour,
    • Between the hours of nine o'clock.

The liturgy can also be performed only once a day, but it stands apart, as if outside of time - it is not included in the daily circle of worship, although it is its pinnacle. The Liturgy is served either after the Sixth Hour, or in conjunction with Vespers (in this case, the first part of Vespers replaces the first part of the Liturgy of the Catechumens - Figurative. The Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts is always combined with Vespers. At Hallelujah services (usually in Lent), figurative ones are performed separately from the Liturgy ( immediately after the Ninth Hour), and on some days there is no Liturgy at all. After the full Divine Liturgy, according to the rules, it is necessary to have a meal with Order of panagia. On days of fasting, when there was no Liturgy, the first meal in ancient Egyptian monasteries was served only after the Ninth Hour (three o'clock in the afternoon) and even after sunset.

The daily liturgical circle was formed in the monasteries of the East by the 6th century. Initially, each of the services of the daily cycle in monasteries and hermits was performed separately, at the appointed time for each of them. Subsequently, for the convenience of believers, they were combined into three public services: evening, morning and afternoon.

  • The evening service consists of the ninth hour, vespers and compline.
  • Morning - from the midnight office, matins and the first hour.
  • Daytime - from the third and sixth hours and the Liturgy.

On the eve of major holidays and Sundays, evening service, which combines: Vespers, Matins and the first hour. This kind of worship is called

Following the example of Christians of apostolic times, the Orthodox Church sanctifies all days of the week by performing church services. Each day of the week is dedicated to some important event in the history of the Church or a particularly revered saint.

All services of the week together form the so-called weekly, or seven-day liturgical circle.

The first day of the week is Sunday. It is dedicated to the memory of the Resurrection of Christ. At night, after Saturday, on the third day after His suffering and death on the Cross, the Lord Jesus Christ was resurrected. And from the tomb, surrounded by heavenly radiance, came the Savior of the world - the Life-Giver Christ the Lord. He was resurrected by the power of His Divinity.

On Monday - the first day of the week after the Resurrection - the Church glorifies the closest servants of God - the Angels. The angelic world was created before man. The word "Angel" translated from Greek language means "Messenger". These are disembodied, disembodied spirits. But sometimes the Lord allows them to appear to people in bodily form, revealing to them the will of God.

On Tuesday, the holy prophet, Forerunner and Baptist of the Savior John is glorified. In the words of the Lord Himself, “from born by wives no one greater than John the Baptist has risen." An ascetic and ascetic, at the command of God, came to the Jordan Valley to announce to people about the imminent appearance of the Savior in the world. “Repent, for the Kingdom of God is at hand,” the prophet called, “Create fruits worthy of repentance.” Fix your life. Meet the One who will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.

On Wednesday, the Church remembers the betrayal of our Lord Jesus Christ by Judas to the Jewish high priests. For the price of a slave, for thirty pieces of silver, one of the apostles - Judas Iscariot - betrayed his Teacher and Lord to His enemies to die on the Cross. Therefore, Wednesday is a day of fasting in the Orthodox Church.

The service is held on Wednesday Life-giving Cross The Lord's. The Son of God died on the Cross for our sins as a man, so that the sons of men would be delivered from eternal death and enter the Kingdom of God, into Eternal Life.

On Thursday, the Church glorifies the apostles - the first heralds of the Gospel about the accomplished redemption of man. With their preaching, the apostles turned the hearts of many people to Christ.

All the apostles, except John the Theologian, suffered martyrdom. John the theologian died in captivity at a very old age. The number of Christians after the death of the holy apostles grew year by year, and the Christian faith spread throughout the entire earth.

On Friday, the Church remembers the Passion of the Cross and the death of the Savior. Therefore, on this day - a day of fasting, as well as on Wednesday, on Orthodox churches Services are performed to the Life-giving Cross of the Lord.

With His suffering and death, Christ redeemed us from eternal death. And when we hear the words of the Apostle Paul addressed to the Christians of Corinth: “You are bought with a price,” then we understand that this appeal is to us, to our heart, to our soul. We are bought at a price.

On Saturday, the Lord finished the creation of the world and “rested from His works.” His creation was beautiful. Blessed peace was also bequeathed to people on the Sabbath day.

Saturday is dedicated to the remembrance and glorification of all the faithful servants of God, enjoying bliss in the abodes of the Heavenly Father. We also remember all deceased Orthodox Christians in the faith and hope of the resurrection.

As the ever-present Representative for Christians before the Throne of Her Son, Holy Mother God is remembered and glorified by the Church on all days of the week, but She is especially revered on Sunday, Wednesday and Friday.

The weekly Liturgical circle ends and begins again. We return to the same events again and again. We comprehend the height and depth of the grace-filled spiritual life in Christ.

1. Circle of daily worship

Even in the Old Testament it was established to sanctify church prayer certain hours of the day. This custom also passed into Christianity. Services intended for St. Church for public prayer and performed every day at the appointed hours, a total of nine: 1) Vespers, 2) Compline, 3) Midnight Office, 4) Matins, 5) First Hour, 6) Third Hour, 7) Sixth Hour, 8) Ninth Hour and 9) Divine Liturgy. These services constitute the circle of daily worship and are called “everyday.” Each of these services develops a specific thought associated with specific sacred memories.

Church and liturgical days, according to ancient custom, start in the evening. Therefore, the cycle of daily worship begins with Vespers.

Vespers is that service that is performed at the end of the day, in the evening, in gratitude for the past day and in consecration of the coming night. It begins with the reading of the opening psalm 103, in which the wisdom of the Creator of the universe is glorified and consists of prayers for all members of the Church and their needs, from reading psalms and singing verses with a prayer to God to hear us and glorify the Lord Jesus Christ, Mother of God and saints, from petitions for various spiritual benefits and ends with the prayer of Simeon the God-Receiver, “Now you let go...”, and sometimes with a prayer containing the Archangel’s greeting to the Blessed Virgin Mary, “Virgin Mother of God, rejoice...” Thus, Vespers reminds us of the times of the Old Testament, which began with the creation world and ending with the birth into the world of the Savior of the world.

Compline is celebrated before going to bed and consists of reading psalms and prayers, in which God is asked for forgiveness of sins, help and intercession from enemies visible and invisible, seeking to capture our souls and especially dangerous during sleep, the Symbol of Faith, the prayer to the Mother of God “Undefiled, Heavenly..." and to Christ the Savior about blessing us, "as we go to sleep." Compline is celebrated at later hours, after Vespers. It can be Great or Small. Great Compline is celebrated only during Great Lent, as well as on the eve of the holidays of the Nativity of Christ, Epiphany and Annunciation (when it falls on the weekdays of Great Lent). Little Compline is celebrated throughout the year.

The Midnight Office is a service that should be performed at midnight or, in any case, long before dawn, before Matins. Since in the parable of the ten virgins the Lord Jesus Christ portrayed Himself as the bridegroom who came at midnight, Christians had the custom of consecrating this hour with prayer in order to meet the Lord, like the wise virgins, vigilant. In addition, midnight is sacred for a Christian because of the memory that the Lord at that time grieved and grieved in the Garden of Gethsemane until he sweated blood, was betrayed by the treacherous Judas, and was subjected to bitter insults at the trial of the high priest. The Midnight Office consists of reading the penitential Psalm 50 and Psalm 118, which depicts the bliss of blameless people, from the Creed, the song “Behold the bridegroom comes at midnight...” and prayers for the dead. Thus, the Midnight Office disposes us to repentance, constant keeping of the law of the Lord and spiritual wakefulness in anticipation of the unexpected Second Coming of Christ.

Matins is a divine service that takes place early in the morning, even before sunrise. It encourages those praying to thank the Lord for peace during the past night and for the gift of the coming day, and also reminds of the appearance of the Savior in the world and the resurrection of Christ. Matins begins with prayer for the King and then consists of the reading of six psalms depicting the conversation of the human soul with God, prayer for the well-being of the Church of God and all its members, reading kathismas, glorifying God and His saints in troparia, sedals and canons, psalms of praise and the Great Doxology and, finally, from petitions for various spiritual benefits.

The first, third, sixth and ninth hours are called prayers compiled according to the same type: initial prayers, three psalms related to the remembered event, troparion, theotokos, the general final prayer of all hours, Compline and Midnight Office “And for all time and for every hour...", and a special closing prayer at the end of each hour. The first hour, according to the hitherto accepted reckoning in the East, corresponds to the 7th o'clock in the morning according to our reckoning, the Third hour to the 9th o'clock in the morning, the Sixth hour to 12 o'clock in the afternoon and the Ninth hour to 3 o'clock in the afternoon. In the first hour we glorify God for giving us sensual light, for at this hour the sun rises; at the third hour the descent of the Holy Spirit on the apostles is remembered, at the sixth hour the crucifixion of the Lord Jesus Christ and at the ninth hour His death on the cross.

The Divine Liturgy is the focus, the main service of the entire daily cycle, in relation to which all other services are, as it were, only preparation for its worthy celebration and communion of the Holy Mysteries of Christ. Therefore, a clergyman who wishes to celebrate the Divine Liturgy undertakes, according to church rules, serve, or at least just listen to or read at home all the other services of the daily circle.

At the beginning, all these services, especially in monasteries, were performed separately, each at its own time of day. But later, for the convenience of believers busy with everyday life, they began to be grouped into three groups: in the evening - the Ninth Hour, Vespers and Compline, early in the morning - Midnight Office, Matins and the First Hour, in the afternoon in the pre-dinner time - the Third, Sixth Hours and the Divine Liturgy . This order is somewhat modified during Great Lent, when, according to the Rule, the Ninth Hour and Vespers precede the Divine Liturgy. On the eve of the Great Feasts, the All-Night Vigil is celebrated, consisting of Vespers, Matins and the First Hour. In the event of an All-Night Vigil, the Ninth Hour and Small Vespers are served before it, which is an abbreviation Great Vespers, and Compline and the Midnight Office are completely eliminated, since if the vigil actually takes place throughout the night, there is no time left for them. At present, due to human weakness and neglect, the All-Night Vigil has retained only its name, and its duration does not even cover half the night, for in secular churches it often lasts only one and a half or two hours.

From the book Explanatory Typikon. Part I author Skaballanovich Mikhail

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From the book Liturgics author (Taushev) Averky

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Services of the daily circle The daily circle of worship refers to those services that are performed daily during the day. These are Vespers, Compline, Midnight Office, Matins, first hour, third hour, sixth hour, ninth hour. Divine Liturgy, which is usually served after

DAILY CIRCLE OF SERVICES
order Orthodox services, performed in the church during the day. There should be nine daily services: Vespers, Compline, Midnight Office, Matins, the first hour, the third hour, the sixth hour, the ninth hour and the Divine Liturgy.
Following the example of Moses, who, describing God’s creation of the world, begins the “day” in the evening, so in Orthodox Church the day begins in the evening - evening. Vespers is a service performed at the end of the day, in the evening. With this service we thank God for the passing day.
Compline is a service consisting of reading a series of prayers in which we ask the Lord God for forgiveness of sins and to grant us, as we go to sleep, rest in body and soul and to protect us from the wiles of the devil during sleep.
The Midnight Office is a service intended to be performed at midnight, in remembrance of the Savior's night prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane. This service encourages believers to always be ready for the day Last Judgment, which will come suddenly, like “the bridegroom at midnight,” according to the parable of the ten virgins.
Matins is a service performed in the morning, before sunrise. With this service we thank God for the past night and ask Him for mercy for the coming day.
The first hour, corresponding to our seventh hour of the morning, sanctifies the day that has already come with prayer.
At the third hour, corresponding to our ninth hour in the morning, the descent of the Holy Spirit on the apostles is remembered.
At the sixth hour, corresponding to our twelfth hour of the day, the crucifixion of our Lord Jesus Christ is remembered.
At the ninth hour, corresponding to our third in the afternoon, we remember the death on the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.
The Divine Liturgy is the most important service. On it the entire earthly life of the Savior is remembered and the sacrament of St. Communion established by the Savior Himself at the Last Supper. The Liturgy is served in the morning, before lunch.
All these services in ancient times in monasteries and hermits were performed separately, at the appointed time for each of them. But then, for the convenience of believers, they were combined into three services: evening, morning and afternoon.
The evening service consists of the ninth hour, Vespers and Compline.
Morning - from the midnight office, matins and the first hour.
Daytime - from the third and sixth hours and liturgy.
On the eve of major holidays and Sundays, an evening service is performed, which combines: Vespers, Matins and the first hour. Such a service is called an all-night vigil (all-night vigil), because among the ancient Christians it lasted all night. The word "vigil" means "to be awake."

Source: Encyclopedia "Russian Civilization"


See what “DAILY CIRCLE OF SERVICES” is in other dictionaries:

    In Orthodoxy there is a series of services performed throughout the day. According to the Charter, the daily cycle consists of the following services: Vespers Compline Midnight Office a service intended to be performed at midnight, in remembrance... ... Wikipedia

    WORSHIP CIRCLE- the name adopted in liturgics for the temporary cycles of services. In Christ. There are 4 churches, daily, weekly and 2 annual (moving and fixed). The daily cycle of worship includes services that should be performed daily at... ... Orthodox Encyclopedia

    WORSHIP CIRCLE, a set of public worship services (see WORSHIP in Christianity). The liturgical Charter of the Orthodox Church distinguishes between three cycles of church services: daily (or daily), sedemic (weekly) and... ... encyclopedic Dictionary

    East Syriac (in Russian literature often East Syriac) liturgical rite is a liturgical rite preserved in the Dolchalcedonian Assyrian Church of the East and in some Eastern Catholic churches that separated from it... ... Wikipedia

    ALEXANDRIAN SERVICE (RITE)- liturgical type (see Liturgical families), adopted in ancient times in the Alexandrian Church. Perhaps its origins are in the prayer rite of Egypt. Jews A. b. grew up in the sophisticated intellectual life of Greek-speaking Alexandria, with its... Orthodox Encyclopedia

    The Maronite rite is one of the eastern liturgical rites used in Maronite worship catholic church. Together with the West Syriac rite, it belongs to the West Syriac group of the Antiochene liturgical tradition.... ... Wikipedia

    HOURS (Greek horai): 1) any divine service of the daily cycle ([liturgical or canonical] hour; hence the names of the books containing the corresponding rites: “Book of Hours (see Book of Hours)”, “Liturgy of the Hours (see LITURGY OF THE HOURS)”). In this regard... ... encyclopedic Dictionary

    - (also sometimes called the Milanese rite, Latin ritus Ambrosianus) one of the Latin Western liturgical rites, used in the archdiocese of Milan (with the exception of Monza), as well as in more than 100 parishes of the dioceses of Pavia, Bergamo (both ... ... Wikipedia

    NE. (c. 480 547?), founder of Western monasticism. Born in Nurcia, a town in the Sabine Mountains in Umbria, Italy, c. 480; died at Monte Cassino c. 547. Two main sources of information about the life and ministry of St. Benedict's second book... ... Collier's Encyclopedia

    APOSTOLIC TRADITION- [Greek ̓Αποστολικὴ παράδοσις], in a broad sense, part of the Holy. Traditions, in church scientific literature and patrolology the supposed core of a whole series of liturgical canonical monuments, give a detailed picture of the structure of church life in the 3rd century,... ... Orthodox Encyclopedia

Books

  • Psalms from the divine services of the daily circle, explained by Euthymius Zigaben according to patristic interpretations, Tupikov S.. The daily liturgical circle of the Orthodox Church, performed according to the Book of Hours, mainly consists of psalms of the Old Testament Psalter of the Tsar and the Prophet David. Deep antiquity and Church Slavonic…

And also on the eve of the holidays of Christmas and Epiphany. At present, the order of the daily liturgical circle in parish practice is usually not observed - the ninth hour, Compline and Midnight Office are omitted. The services of the daily liturgical circle are contained in the Book of Hours.

Weekly (weekly) circle of services

Weekly liturgical circle- a thematic sequence of services within one week. Each day of the week is specifically dedicated to a specific topic:

  • Sunday - Resurrection of Christ.
  • Monday - glorification of the ethereal forces of the Angels.
  • Tuesday - Glorification of St. John the Baptist and the prophets.
  • Wednesday is the remembrance of the betrayal of Judas (and since this essentially began the time of the Passion of the Lord, the service of the Cross is performed, and the day is fast).
  • Thursday - Glorification of Sts. Apostles and St. Nicholas the Wonderworker.
  • Friday - the remembrance of the sufferings on the cross and the death of the Savior; service of the Cross, fast day).
  • Saturday is the glorification of the Mother of God and all the saints. The deceased are also remembered.

Eight-week osmotic circle of worship

The divine service of the weekly liturgical circle is subordinated to one of the eight voices, etc. Eight-week vocal cycles are formed, repeated several times throughout the year. The counting of voices begins on Easter Day with the first tone. Services are a collection of changeable components the services of the weekly liturgical circle are contained in the octoech. See also osmoconciliation.

Annual circle of services (fixed)

Annual liturgical circle— a thematic sequence of services throughout the year. There are different types of movable and fixed annual liturgical circles.

Fixed annual liturgical circle- associated with the solar calendar - includes the worship of the fixed twelfths and other holidays and the daily celebrations of saints.

Movable annual liturgical circle- associated with the lunar calendar (see Easter) - includes the services of Great Lent (and the three preceding weeks) and Pentecost.

The services of the fixed annual liturgical circle are contained in the menaia, the moving ones - in the Lenten Triodion (Lent) and the Colored Triodion (Pentecost).

The connection of the moving and fixed annual liturgical circles is carried out using the Markov chapters given in the charter (named after their compiler, monk Mark). The worship service of each day is a combination of an almost unchanging basis from the prayers of the daily liturgical circle with changing prayers related to the liturgical theme of a given day from the menaion and octoechus or triodion (Lenten or Colored), and during Lent and Pentecost, prayers from the octoechus are almost not used.

Eleven-week circle of Gospel readings and stichera at Sunday Matins

A circle that is usually “forgotten” when listing liturgical circles... For reading at Sunday matins, 11 fragments were selected from all four Gospels, telling about the events after the Resurrection of Christ. These fragments are read one by one (the number is always indicated in the liturgical calendar). Each of these 11 fragments is associated with its own special “gospel stichera,” which should be sung to “glory” after the stichera on the praises.

Liturgical circles
Liturgical circles are a certain repeating sequence of services or prayers that compose them.
1. Daily liturgical circle - the sequence of services of one day. The complete daily liturgical circle consists of the ninth hour, Vespers, Compline, Midnight Office, Matins, first, third and sixth hours, pictorial or liturgy. This order changes on days when the All-Night Vigil is celebrated (Compline and Midnight Office are omitted), some days of Great Lent, as well as on the eve of the holidays of the Nativity of Christ and Epiphany.
The liturgical day begins in the evening. (Following the example of the prophet and seer of God Moses, who, describing God’s creation of the world, begins the “day” in the evening, so in the Orthodox Church the day begins in the evening - vespers.)
Vespers is a service performed at the end of the day, in the evening. With this service we thank God for the passing day.
Compline is a service consisting of reading a series of prayers in which we ask the Lord God for forgiveness of sins and that He would give us, as we go to sleep, peace of body and soul and save us from the wiles of the devil during sleep.
Midnight Office - a service intended to be performed at midnight, in remembrance of the Savior's night prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane. This service calls on believers to always be prepared for the Day of Judgment, which will come suddenly, like “the bridegroom at midnight,” according to the parable of the ten virgins.
Matins is a service performed in the morning, before sunrise. With this service we thank God for the past night and ask Him for mercy for the coming day.
The first hour, corresponding to our seventh hour of the morning, sanctifies the day that has already come with prayer.
At the third hour, corresponding to our ninth hour in the morning, the descent of the Holy Spirit on the apostles is mentioned.
At the sixth hour, corresponding to our twelfth hour of the day, the crucifixion of our Lord Jesus Christ is remembered.
At the ninth hour, corresponding to our third in the afternoon, we remember the death on the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.
The Divine Liturgy is the most important service. On it, the entire earthly life of the Savior is remembered and the sacrament of Holy Communion, established by the Savior Himself at the Last Supper, is performed. The Liturgy is served in the morning, before lunch.
All these services in ancient times in monasteries and hermits were performed separately, at the appointed time for each of them. But then, for the convenience of believers, they were combined into three services: evening, morning and afternoon.




At present, the order of the daily liturgical cycle in parish practice is usually not observed - the ninth hour, Compline and Midnight Office are omitted. The services of the daily liturgical circle are contained in the Book of Hours.

Diagram of the daily cycle of worship.
Evening
1. Ninth hour - (3 pm)
2. Vespers
3. Compline

Morning
1. Midnight Office - (12 o'clock at night)
2. Matins
3. First hour - (7 am)

Day
1. Third hour - (9 am)
2. Sixth hour - (12 noon)
3. Liturgy

See also. Byzantine clock.
***
2. Weekly liturgical circle - a thematic sequence of services within one week.
On Sunday, the Church remembers and glorifies the Resurrection of Christ.
On Monday (the first day after Sunday), ethereal forces are glorified - Angels, created before man, the closest servants of God.
On Tuesday, Saint John the Baptist is glorified as the greatest of all prophets and righteous people.
On Wednesday, the betrayal of the Lord by Judas is remembered and, in connection with this, a service is performed in memory of the Cross of the Lord (fast day).
On Thursday, the Holy Apostles and St. Nicholas the Wonderworker are glorified.
On Friday, the suffering of the cross and the death of the Savior are remembered and a service is performed in honor of the Cross of the Lord (fast day).
On Saturday - the day of rest - the Mother of God, who is blessed every day, is glorified, the forefathers, prophets, apostles, martyrs, saints, the righteous and all the saints who have achieved rest in the Lord. All those who have died in true faith and hope for resurrection and eternal life are also remembered.

The services - a set of variable components of the divine service of the weekly liturgical circle - are contained in the octoech. The divine service of the weekly liturgical circle is subordinated to one of the eight voices, etc. Eight-week vocal cycles are formed, repeated several times throughout the year. The counting of voices begins on Easter Day with the first tone.
The first day of the weekly liturgical circle is considered to be Sunday.
***
3. Annual liturgical circle— a thematic sequence of services throughout the year. There are different types of movable and fixed annual liturgical circles. The fixed annual liturgical circle - associated with the solar calendar - includes the worship of the fixed twelve and other holidays and the daily celebrations of saints. The moving annual liturgical circle - associated with the lunar calendar (see Easter) - includes the services of Lent (and the three preceding weeks) and Pentecost.
Every day of the year is dedicated to the memory of certain saints, as well as special sacred events - holidays and fasts.
Of all the holidays, the largest is the holiday of the Holy Christ's Resurrection(Easter). This is a holiday, a holiday and a triumph of celebrations. Easter occurs no earlier than March 22 (April 4, new style) and no later than April 25 (May 8, new style), on the first Sunday after the spring full moon.
Then there are twelve great holidays in the year established in honor of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Mother of God, which are called the twelve.
There are holidays both in honor of great saints and in honor of the ethereal Heavenly Powers - Angels.
Therefore, all the holidays of the year are divided according to their content into those of the Lord, the Mother of God and the saints.
According to the time of celebration, holidays are divided into fixed holidays, which occur every year on the same days of the month, and moving holidays, which, although they occur on the same days of the week, fall on different days of the month in accordance with the time of celebration of Easter. By solemnity church service holidays are divided into great, medium and small.
Great holidays always have all-night vigil; Average holidays are not always the case.
Liturgical church year starts September 1 old style, and the entire annual circle of services is built in relation to the Easter holiday.

The services of the fixed annual liturgical circle are contained in the menaia, the moving ones - in the Lenten Triodion (Lent) and the Colored Triodion (Pentecost). The connection of the moving and fixed annual liturgical circles is carried out using the Markov chapters given in the charter (named after their compiler, monk Mark).
The divine service of each day is a combination of an almost unchanging basis from the prayers of the daily liturgical circle with changing prayers related to the liturgical theme of the given day from the Menaion and Octoechos or Triodion (Lenten or Colored), and during Lent and Pentecost, prayers from the Octoechos are almost not used.
Daily liturgical cycle in Orthodoxy- a series of services performed throughout the day.
According to the Charter, the daily cycle consists of the following services:
Vespers
Compline
Midnight Office
Matins
Watch:
First hour
Third hour
Sixth hour
Ninth hour
Fine
Between hours
Interhour of the first hour
Interhour of the third hour
Interhour of the sixth hour
Interhour of the ninth hour
Liturgy
Formed in the monasteries of the East by the 4th century; Initially, services in monasteries and hermits were performed separately, at the appointed time for each of them. Subsequently, for the convenience of believers, they were combined into three public services: evening, morning and afternoon.
The evening service consists of the ninth hour, vespers and compline.
Morning - from the midnight office, matins and the first hour.
Daytime - from the third and sixth hours and the Liturgy.
In modern (with late XIX) in the practice of the Russian Church, Compline and the Midnight Office are usually served in private by monastics; in monasteries, the midnight office is often combined with a fraternal prayer service at the beginning of the day. For Orthodox Christians-Old Believers, the practice of the laity remains the celebration of the Midnight Office in the morning and the Vespers in the evening.
On the eve of major holidays and Sundays, an evening service is performed, which combines: Vespers, Matins and the first hour. Such a service is called an all-night vigil (all-night vigil), because among the ancient Christians it lasted all night. The word “vigil” means “to be awake.”
Daily cycle of worship: is change necessary?

Alexandra Sopova
“The Book of Hours is designed to be read every day. There is a perception of the day and the whole year as a sacred time of salvation. The sanctification of time is the key goal of the Book of Hours as a book,” said priest Mikhail Zheltov at the round table “Contents and modern practice performing services of the daily cycle”, held in the Danilov Monastery under the auspices of the All-Church Postgraduate School.

The round table was attended by the resident of the Danilov Monastery, Abbot Peter (Meshcherinov), the rector of the Church of St. Tatiana at Moscow State University, Archpriest Maxim Kozlov, the rector of the Church of the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia in Strogino, Archpriest Georgy Krylov, the executive editor of the “Journal of the Moscow Patriarchate” Sergei Chapnin, the teacher of PSTGU Alexey Cherkasov and others.
Participants round table agreed with the idea that the Book of Hours should be edited.
May be edited based on appeal to tradition or in pursuit of practicality. If we focus on tradition, then it is not clear which century’s practice should we focus on? If it’s for convenience, the factor of personal experience plays a role.
In the early Middle Ages, two types of worship were established: there was the practice of cathedral churches (no more than two prayer meetings per day, a small number of key readings and chants), and for the zealous - ascetic communities with a more complete range of services and a more complete volume of the Psalter. The third type is monastic worship. Later, it was the monastic charter that was taken as the basis for those who want to perform the full liturgical circle in private prayer.
If you make an adjustment, you need to answer the question, what era and what set liturgical books is an ideal for the Russian tradition; then see whether this ideal fits into the liturgical space that needs to be revived; further, introduce differentiation into services according to type: parish, episcopal and monastic, and perhaps others will be needed.
Rector of the Church of St. mts. Tatiana Archpriest Maxim Kozlov noted that parish services overlap with the daily cycle only partially. A curious parishioner will see many services only in the Book of Hours. “It is possible to save a large Russian forest by publishing part of the circulation just for practical application, without those services that are not used,” suggested Father Maxim.
The embarrassment that evening prayers are performed in the morning and vice versa, according to Archpriest Maxim, is usually short-lived. “The problem is different: for a significant part of our flock, Vespers and Matins remain incomprehensible.” Anyone who wants to understands the Liturgy (fortunately, its text has been published with translation and commentary), and those who don’t want to do so should not be forced to do so. And with the all-night vigil there are more difficulties even for those who want to understand it. And the point here is not even the structure of the service or the fatigue from its duration.
There are several ways to make worship understandable. One way is to publish appropriate collections of chants, similar to the collections of texts from the Colored and Lenten Triodion, Octoechos, already published by St. Tikhon’s Orthodox Theological University. “On the twelfth holidays, we have half the church standing with books and following the text,” Archpriest shared his observation. Maxim Kozlov.
The second way is to sing clearly and read clearly. This has been talked about for a long time, but apparently this should be controlled by the clergy - with punishment for those who read and sing poorly, and encouragement for those who read and sing well.
Also, the rector of the university church noted that it is necessary to correlate the liturgical circle and personal prayer rule Christian. “Do I need to read the three canons and the evening rule before Communion if I was at the all-night vigil? What if I take communion two days in a row?” - such questions are often asked by parishioners. According to Rev. Maxim Kozlov, public worship should not completely replace personal cell rule, as happened among Catholics. But it is possible to work out some kind of compromise so that during long services the reduction of the personal rule is regular and occurs without remorse, and not with the individual blessing of the priest.
With any adjustment to the charter, prot. Maxim Kozlov called for following one rule: “not to shake what stands firmly.”

Rule in the subway

The executive editor of the Journal of the Moscow Patriarchate, Sergei Chapnin, noted the paradoxical nature of the situation when a personal daily circle is evening and morning prayers, and a person’s weekly circle is all-night vigil and liturgy, i.e. in fact, a real daily cycle.
Referring to Archimandrite Sophrony (Sakharov), Sergei Chapnin noted that not only for monks, but also for laity, theological ideas from morning rule do not correspond to the “Christian tasks of the day”: “We have changed psychologically compared to the authors of these prayers.”
The first thing that is needed, according to Sergei Chapnin, is an understanding of the prayer rhythm in which the Church advises modern man to live. Time intervals have emerged that can be used for prayer: for example, a forty-minute metro ride or an hour by train. “You must not adapt to the structure of time modern man completely, but take it into account,” he says.
According to priest Mikhail Zheltov, it’s bad in prayer rule that it does not include a biblical element, whereas the Book of Hours consists mainly of psalms.
Archpriest Maxim Kozlov raised the question of the authority of the text of the morning and evening rules itself, and the extent to which it is binding for the laity. " Perfect family The laity of the Domostroy era does not know the evening and morning rules, she reads Vespers and Matins,” recalled the rector of the university church. The prayers of the morning and evening rules do not fit in with either the Book of Hours or the parish service. They do not imply a changeable element, as if their compilers thought that a person does not have psychology, he does not form habits, etc. Dryness in prayer occurs in many who read the same pages every day for 15 years.
According to Father Maxim, we need to look for options: you can read Compline with the canon instead of evening prayers; You can draw up a separate cell rule for the twelve holidays, for Sundays and weekdays. Before Communion, the canon of the holiday can replace the canon of repentance. On the day of Communion, instead of repenting according to the theme of the evening rule, a person would like to thank God with words mainly prayers of thanksgiving. “Of course, now no one will publish a variable prayer book,” summed up Rev. Maxim Kozlov, “but it would be good if the laity did not themselves think about which troparion to insert in honor of the holiday into their rule, but that the Church offered them general, infallible options.”

Prayer from the Heart
Priest Mikhail Zheltov noted that prayers as a genre “are generally the most boring text: a formulaic beginning, a formulaic end, in the middle there is a recollection of prototypes and some kind of petition.” However, the conference participants agreed that prayer should not be boring and alien, printed or written, it should be personal. Sergei Chapnin suggested encouraging people to learn the rule by heart: it is not entirely correct that the skill of a prayerful mood is associated with a book in front of one’s eyes. Then personal prayer will naturally flow out in traditional words. PSTGU teacher Alexey Cherkasov noted the need to popularize the Book of Hours - for example, through classes in Sunday schools. When you imagine the course of the service, it becomes more interesting, and participation in it becomes more conscious.
The conference posed questions rather than provided answers. In order for generally accepted options for solving existing problems to emerge, numerous discussions are needed, and ultimately, decisions by the hierarchy.
Internet publication "Tatiana's Day"

Andrey isographer: MONOCIC RULE The monks have a “thousandth” rule: 3 bows, according to the rules of the day, 6 prayers of Jesus, 50 bows to the Mother of God, and 50 bows to the Angel. The beginning and end of the rule are also read out. Others, by blessing, either the middle rule: 2; 4; 50 + 50, or small: 1; 3; 50+50. Canons with an akathist are read in addition to the rule on Sundays and holidays. In his personal time, everyone, having been blessed by the abbot, can do whatever he wants. Can read, can go fishing or do Ekibana. Idle talk after forgiveness is strictly prohibited. The guilty must be subject to penance. monk Aviv (Tuinov) When I lived in a monastery in Kunichi, the late nun Tekusa told me about the rule like this: 1. If a monk is not in a monastery but lives alone, then he must pray for the daily circle of worship every day, and pointed out the twelve psalms twice on day 2. Then every day he must pray the correct canons together with the akathist (however, in the monastery they prayed like that - every day) 3. he must pray his rule, i.e. ten ladders of which three are earthly. 4. She also said that if a monk lives outside the monastery, he must read three kathismas daily. 5. Well, it is clear that in the morning (at night, depending on who gets up to their rule when, since monks living separately from the monastery, get up to the rule in different ways) the midnight service and before bedtime the evening service. In the monastery, they prayed daily for the daily cycle of worship, and in in this order: - the correct canons at 16:00 - immediately after the correct canons, Vespers and Vespers - at 3:00 in the morning they began the Midnight Office, then Matins and prayed all the way up to the first hour inclusive - at 09:00 in the morning they prayed the hours and liturgy of the Lestovka monks prayed in their cells , schemaniks carried a double rule, that is, 20 ladders
Monastic rule

Monastic penance.
If a monk carelessly goes to bed in his robe, he bows 200 times.
And don’t sleep in a cassock either, because if you desecrate it, you will incur a lot of work to clean it.
If a monk takes off his paramand with a cross on purpose or suddenly, due to some mistake, he should bow 1000 times.
If the monk goes in a doll or robe to a waste place, for the necessary needs of the body for defecation, let him bow 300 times.
If he just urinates, 150 bows.
If the monk dine without a robe, he will bow 1000 times.
Even if he drinks without wearing a robe, and in addition to the meal, he will make 50 bows.
If a monk opens a pipe without a robe, or pours water into a washbasin, bows 25 times.
The monk, even in his robe, will pick up a washcloth or a basin with his hand and make 50 bows.
Blessing for penance. Bless R. B. Mr. I pray to God in penance for my mistake.
If a monk takes up something small in a filthy mantle or without a mantle that is clean and dubious, let him bow 17.
Whether a monk gives a haircut to a commoner, or he cuts the hair of a commoner, both of them bow 1000 bows.
If the monk loses his mantle or paramand, or anything else from the monastic image, for which he will receive penance to death, bows according to the reasoning of the confessor. If the rank is burned in a fire, there is no penance for this.
If a monk prays Vespers or Evening Vespers without a mantle, or another prayer, putting on a second mantle, let him sing.
The monk in prayer will lower the cathedral mantle to the floor, or step on a nude, or grab with unclean hands either the doll, or the paramand, or the kamilavka, or drop it on the floor, whichever of the above, or hastily put on a cassock, or a robe, or a doll, or kamilavka without the usual prayers and bows, or without a mantle will be blessed, or bless someone, or forgive someone, for this there is no special penance, but is replaced by the everyday canon.
Helmsman, ch. 58, pr. 18. Nikifor kidar. sheet 97 vol.: It is not appropriate for a monk to perform a service other than the mantle. Ch. 26. Ave. 59. Vas. Vel. l. 622: If anyone does work in any place without a robe, let him be without blessing. Helmsman Ch. 54. Question 15. vol. the hedgehog speaks to you. Vel. in his small prohibitions, as if there will be no blessing as he sins. Answer. I am also deprived of the existence of a certain blessing given in the church of those who spoke.
Anfora consumption inoch., l. 78 rev. 3rd count. Bol. consumption Joseph. Patr. 10th summer, l. 436: It is not worthy for a monk to have his hair cut by a simple layman, but someone or a monk is sanctified.
Nomocanon, that is, “The Ruler of the Law on Foreign Trades”, tr. monk l. 29, 2nd account, will. You. Vel.: If a monk does not honor the first, 3rd, 6th and 9th hours, he is worthy of eating. And if he does not rule all his rules, God considers him dead and let him be forbidden as it should be.
If someone is a presbyter, or a deacon, or a monk who knows the scriptures, but neglects matins, or the hours, or vespers, even on a journey, but is concerned about the affairs of life, he despises his rule, and has been prohibited for two years, let him perform 800 prostrations.
If a monk loses his watch, let him bow 200 times.
Having lost the Midnight Office, let him do the veneration. 100.
Having lost Matins, let him make 200 bows.
The canon of the monk is the essence of the small image of worship. - 300, and the great one - 600.
If a monk laughs or talks without permission except when necessary, according to the rule, it is prohibited to bow 50 times.
If the monk is in the whole church council, and at the end he is not found, let him make a bow 50.
Even if a monk is at a feast with the worldly, listening and helping, and even more so blessing them, he is prohibited from excommunication for 6 weeks, and committing dry eating for every day of 100 bows.
33. Even if a monk sits in his house, it is as if God counts this layman.
34. If a monk leaves his bed and falls asleep on a friend without a blessing, guilt, 50 bows.
35. If a monk gets drunk, or slander, or laughs without fear, he is prohibited for 5 weeks. If he vomits from drinking too much, or from gluttony, he is prohibited, as below in this Nomocanon about priests.
37. A monk, if he lies freely, is prohibited from 100 great bows. If he saves a soul or a neighbor, there is no sin.
If the monk laughs above the instructions, bow 50 times.
100. If a monk walks the same mile with his wife, let him leave for seven days, bowing 100 times.
104. If a simple monk beats anyone, let him first be reconciled to him and also bow 300 times.
105. The monk, after the evening service of poison and drink, fasts for one week of dry eating and worship. 200. Whenever the need commands food and drink, the second one sings the evening service.
106. If the monk ungirds himself on his bed, let him bow 50 times.
Even if a monk, without the command of his abbot, does what is necessary, not for the benefit, but for his own passion. - the abbot must correct this and bless his brother, so he can start another matter. Do this in order to use your brother, if not by cruelty, but by mercy.
If a monk, without guilt and blessing, reproaches his abbot without guilt, he will be excommunicated from the monastery. Even if the great one is intelligent, we will drive him away from him.
If a monk attacks his abbot and annoys him, let one summer be forbidden, decrees. Let him create 1000 every day.
If a monk takes a tree into his hand, he wounds his abbot, and his hand is cut off. there is a parricide.
If a monk reproaches his abbot in any words spoken for his salvation, then a rival of God has been found. And may he remain chaste from the general prohibition.
If a monk goes on a certain journey without the command of his abbot, let him leave his brotherhood for one week, making 1000 prostrations.
If anyone eats secretly from a monk, except for the brotherhood, he makes 1,500 bows and is absent for 2 weeks.
A monk who ate from the new fruit without the blessing of the abbot, let him be absent for 8 days.
If anyone speaks loudly from a monk and slanders an elder, the wrath of God is far from overcoming. Let Sitsevy go away for 6 months, performing 2000 prostrations.
For it is not worthy for a simple person to reproach a priest, or forbid, or slander, or slander, or denounce in person, if there is no truth anywhere. If a commoner, that is, a simple person, should do this, it is anathema. And let him be expelled from the church, excommunicated from the Holy Trinity and sent to the place of Judaism. It is written: Do not speak evil to the prince of your people and dishonor the abbot.

About foreign workshop.
If a monk denounces and challenges his abbot before the laity, even if the truth is spoken from him, both he and those who believe him will inherit destruction with him. Repent, let one summer be forbidden, and bow down 1800. Before the council, the brethren, if they have anything, must eat and say.
If a monk strikes any animal with rage or breaks it, he will be excommunicated for 3 months and counting. 300.
If a monk accuses another monk of any kind of superiority or slander, he will utter ridicule and be prohibited for 8 days and incl. 100 per day.
If you have hatred against anyone in the house of prayer, let him not enter until he creates reconciliation, and let both bow down 50 times.
If a monk plays the harp and often communicates with the laity, and not with others like himself, let him leave for 2 months, bowing 150 times.
And he treasures, and gives in interest, or let him cease, or excommunicate. Repentance and let the summer be prohibited, 150 bows.
If a novice has a thing other than the will of his abbot, let him leave for one summer and worship. 2000.
If a monk has pieces of silver and does not confess it, at the time of my death I must have the abbot squander it on him, saying to his wife: “Let your silver go with you to destruction.” And so they will bury him without singing, and let the abbot pray for him with the brethren for 40 days, making 40 bows every day. And on the last forty days, the funeral and burial arranged over him will begin to sing. And what is hidden from him, let all those who demand and those who are poor be divided.
Even if a monk loves to have things, he will reject them from himself, for they spoil his soul.
Even if a brother receives reproach from his brother and prays from his squad, he will not forgive the sinner, but he will be excommunicated for one week.
If a brother speaks rudely and dishonors the brethren and disgraces the laity, cl. 100. He must also eat slander and slander before him, give glory and good honor, saying that he told this slander and lie, but that brother is honest, righteous and holy according to St. Chrysostom and the Fatherland.
If a monk says that he will give birth, let him go away for 8 days or so. 40. From now on, he cut his hair and promised to God that he would have no family.
If the monk is a sodomite, he will be 16 years old, always making 600 bows.
If a monk drinks wine by force, he should rather eat meat, and not get drunk with wine, for there is fornication in him.
Whoever steals from the service entrusted to him, let him return it and give it back under anathema. If he steals or appropriates it, or gives it to someone, he is subject to greater prohibition.
Honor the canon of the 10th Second First Council and the Apostle. 25 ave.: If a monk kisses a Jacob’s wife or a sleeping child, let him do the veneration. 500. Or say that during Holy Week a monk deserves to kiss his mother, and those who have done this are honored. 300.
If the monk falls asleep without the abbot’s prayer, let him bow 500 times.
A monk does not communicate his actions and thoughts to his spirit. to the father every week, so that 15 days may be forbidden.
The monk goes to the bathhouse and is anointed with unction, or washes himself every day, except for weakness, if there is a priest, so that he does not celebrate the liturgy of one summer, cl. 500, if there is a novice - half of these.
Let the monks keep Monday throughout the summer, just as they keep Wednesday and Friday, since the father has received it, which is forgiveness for the monk, if his fast does not exceed the worldly ones. Most of all, they always keep this in reverence from the laity. The verb of St. Simeon the Wonderworker: “In all his life, let the monk fast every day, except for general fasts, no less than the ninth hour.”
A monk who secretly eats meat, except for illness and the blessing of his father, should not eat fish, eggs and cheese for 40 days. For it is written: Do not please the flesh through lust. Manuscript. Zonar: It is not appropriate for a monk to go to the bathhouse in any way, except for weakness, for the sake of a certain great ide. Ancient monks Charter, page 116. Baths, he says, are more often for the sick, and less often for the healthy.

How should a monk dress?
Scroll i.e. shirt. - Take it, unturned, in front of you and say the Jesus Prayer and kiss the button and loop. And then put it on with prayers. this: I thank you, Lord my God, for you have vouchsafed me to be clothed in this robe to cover my body. And grant me, Lord my God, on this day to be preserved without sin, and to do Thy will, for blessed art thou forever, amen. And pokl. in the belt
To the cassock: Take it with the right side towards you and sign with the Jesus Prayer once and then take the button in right hand, and the loop to the left and kiss the button, then the loop, put it on with right side and say the same prayer as for the scroll: I thank you, Lord...
To the mantle: All my hope...
To the kamilavka: Take the top to yourself and mark yourself with the Jesus Prayer. And kiss the edge of the front evangelist on the down of his right and left hand. And put it on with prayer: God is marvelous in His saints, the God of Israel.
To the doll: Take the top of it by the porch, with the top towards you. And mark yourself with the Jesus Prayer and kiss the porch at the right and left hand and put it on with the prayer: Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts, fill heaven and earth with Your glory.
To the paramant: Change the paramant only when the gaitan wears out. Then you need to take the new paramant with the corners facing up towards you and say the Jesus Prayer, and then kiss the corners to which the gaitan is sewn. Then put the old gaitan with the new one in one place on the right shoulder and turn both over the head onto the left shoulder.
The paramant is never removed.
If due to some mistake it comes off, then take it with the corners to which the gaitan is sewn, with the right side towards you and sign with the Jesus Prayer once, and kiss the corners to which the gaitan is sewn, then put it on yourself.
And to take off the monastic rank, no matter what happens: kokol, mantle, cassock and kamilavka - signify with the Jesus Prayer, and after taking it off, kiss it, just like putting it on.
And take off the rest: Do not kiss the Apostle, the half cassock, the scroll and the belt, but simply take off with the Jesus Prayer.

It is appropriate for vedati to remove the doll during prayer.
At Vespers: Do not remove the doll during prayer. If he himself prays, then take it off.
Take it off - when you cense yourself, take it off to the “Quiet Light”, and when the prokeimenon ends - then put it on. And be sure to take pictures on all holidays.
At Vespers and Midnight Office: - take off for “I Believe”, and after “Holy God” - put on.
Note: The three hymns are always sung on the feast of Christ and the Epiphany, and during Passion Week on the 9th hymn, and on holiday at Vespers, and all days during “It is Worthy to Eat.”
At Matins: - Take off for the “exa-psalms”, and when they sing “God is the Lord”, then put it on. Before the Gospel, take it off for the prokinna, and after the Gospel, when they sing “Glory to Thee, Lord,” put it on. Take it off during the chaos of the 8th song and put it on at the end of the 9th song after “Worthy”. Take it off during the doxology, and put it on at the end of the doxology.
On the clock: - Take off for the Gospel, and then put on “I Believe”. Do not go to the apostle; If the apostle himself honors it, then remove it. And shoot with “Worthy” marks.
At the prayer service: - Take off “God is the Lord” and sing, then put it on. Take off the prokene for the Gospel, and when they sing “Glory to Thee, Lord,” put it on. Take it off for the 9th song, and put it on after the tribute.
On the rule: - In the rank of the correct canons during the reading of kontakia and ikos, and on “It is worthy” and when it happens “He rejoices in you.”

Interpretation of the monastic image.
Great indeed is the rite of monasticism, and blessed is the monk who lives according to the image, accepts it, and keeps his vow blameless. Everything that is a monastic image is mysterious and sacred.
To be tonsured is to remove all the thoughts and sorrows of life. Just as he puts off his hair, so it is fitting to put off the old man with his passions and lusts.
If you have put off all your worldly clothing and put on a sackcloth, which is the tunic of joy and joy, instead of your nakedness and cold and following through obedience into the imperishable life of monks, the image of the saint appears, transforming it from the middle life to the perfect.
Paramant is the following of the godfather to the Lord Christ; it signifies the shield of salvation.
The belt is worn (leather) - a sign of the mortification of wordless lust, since there is a belt from a dead body, and let us kill lust in us.
The sandal signifies that you have put on your shoes in preparation for the gospel of the world, so that not because of the mental serpents your thoughts will gnaw at the heel, but above these, let the lion and the serpent, the secret malice and envy of the beasts, come and trample, and let the unchangeable path of the Gospel flow.
The mantle is a garment of incorruptibility and purity: it forms the shroud of burial and the signs of death, there are from some mophoris, and in another image and likeness angelic krills. For this reason, we put 18 folds on it on the right and left sides (because the angel on the ancient icon has a bit of feathers in his right and left wings). Without a sleeve, for the sake of it, if he wants to do something like the old man, he will remember that he doesn’t have a sleeve, that is, he doesn’t have hands to do an inappropriate thing.
Kamilavka shows the image of the helmet of salvation, the sign of the Divine cover, and the hedgehog of the spiritual veil.
Kukol is a sign of kindness and infancy, and again the image is the grace of our Savior God, covering us with the Master of Mind, and warming the hedgehog of infancy in Christ, against being constantly killed by a novice demon.

Inoku should not work without a robe.
Whoever does any work without a robe or a cape must undergo penance as a contempt. Helmsman Ch. 62, pr. 59; Solovetsk. petition, l. 83 rev.

A story about the purity and danger in which one should wear a robe.
A monk must put on every thing, first in vain diligently on St. icons and sign of the cross. banner with diligence and kiss in two places, with great love, like an angelic and royal robe, and put it on with reverence, lifting the sun onto your right shoulder, and wearing it with joy, as if the Lord clothed you in a robe of salvation, and took it away from you all your sins, for this reason show off in it, more than the royal scarlet.
If a monk happens to take off his robe or cape, or cassock, he must take it off with the fear of God before the Holy One. icon, but turns towards the sun on his left shoulder, and kisses twice according to custom with sign of the cross, in vain on St. icons with pier Jesus. no bows. And fold it skillfully on a clove or in another place. It is honorable to honor the saint, for when she takes off and puts down her mantle, she gives it to an angel in the hand; and when she puts it on, then she receives it from the hands of angels, and kissing the evangelists and other places - the buttons and loops of all things - shows love for the angelic image.
If you happen to take off your mantle on the way, when you go to a necessary need, where there is no icon, then turn your face to the east and signify yourself, take it off and put it in a clean place, as it should be. And when he has finished, having washed his hands, then take it and dress it according to custom.
It is fitting for a monk to wear a robe while working and in his cell and on the way.
It is appropriate for a newly tonsured monk to cover himself with a doll on the way and at meals. Taco St. The angel of the Lord commanded Pachomius to cover the heads with poison, so that brother does not see brother eating poison.
Rev. First of all, the great image of the angels, who is the schemamonk, was revealed to Pachomius, and before that time there were monks in a small image.
Whenever there is a thunderstorm or thunder and lightning, then it is appropriate for a monk to stand in prayer at all times.
It is never appropriate for a monk to take off his kamilavka. If, during the night’s rest, it falls off his head, when he awakens, he will put it back on with the usual prayer: “Wonderful is God...”.
Whenever you need to wash your hair for some reason, lower the scroll to your waist, and keep the paramant dangerously, so as not to take it off, but to wash in it. Even though the paramant with the cross is not removed from the monk Nikiya for the sake of needs.
If a monk happens to wash his robe, he must wash it without soap, in a special clean vessel or running water, and also wash his cassock in a vessel with soap separate from the mantle, and do not pour water from the vessels into a dirty place.
Hair after being tonsured and renewed, or a mantle or cassock, or anything else from a monastic image, should be burned on fire, then the ashes should be thrown into the water.

About external purity.
It is fitting for you, brother, to maintain external purity with all fear, so that you do not handle with unclean hands and have not washed yourself for any shrine, not for the cross, not for the book, not for anything else that is sanctified by God. Shrouds, censers, incense and candles, and service vessels, and vestments as well, and for all kinds of vessels and clothing. And for everything you need to have care and storage. Place the boots or onuchi on a bench or other clean place, and wash that place. But do not wash your face and body and feet with any water. Thus, the holy elders command the life of a monk. Angels never sleep, nor doze, nor wash themselves with water, but continually, day and night, they always serve God and glorify Him. Those who have taken on the image of an angelic likeness must live like angels. I tell you that by doing this devoutly you yourself have left us the image of salvation, so that all who want to live according to Christ may know the path of salvation.
Chet-Minea, Maya 3, l. 120, life of Rev. Feodosia Pechersk:
You never saw him pouring water on his body, for the sake of pleasure: but only washing your hand and face.

About tonsure and renewal of the gum.
Be aware of this, as after a monk is tonsured, the Evangelical Father, that is, tonsures the newly tonsured man, renews the tonsure within forty days. The newly tonsured squat, removes the kukol and kamilavka from the head and secretly says Psalm 50. The father takes up the scissors and prays. Isusova, tonsures the man standing, only as soon as he has been tonsured into monastic vows, but this happens alone in his cell, but no one exists, for which his head cannot be seen. Therefore, he reads forgiveness before his father and goes to his cell. Sitsa always performs every fast every year, even until his death. If his father passes away, he chooses a certain old man, and he does this without fail. And when a woman renews her tonsure, she also renews her life.