Search Keyword

find Search our site:


Translate Page


Choose a language and our website will be translated for you.
(This site is written in English)

Orthodox Terminology


MIDNIGHT OFFICE PDF Print E-mail
MIDNIGHT OFFICE -  (Greek, Mesonyktikon; Slavonic, PolĂșnoschnitsa) is part of the Daily Cycle of services in the Orthodox Church. The office originated as a purely monastic devotion inspired by Psalm 118:62 (119:62 KJV), "At midnight I arose to give thanks unto Thee for the judgments of Thy righteousness," and also by the Gospel parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins (Matthew 25:1-13).

The name of the Midnight Office is sometimes translated as "Nocturns," a term borrowed from the Western liturgical tradition; but it should be noted that in the West "Nocturn" refers to a division within the completely different office of Matins.

Originally, monks would rise in the middle of the night to sing praises to God. St. Symeon the New Theologian mentions Psalm 118, a significant component of the Midnight Office on weekdays, being said privately in the cells before Matins.. In most places where the Daily Cycle is observed at the present time, the Midnight Office is combined with Matins and the First Hour into one of the three daily aggregates called for in the Typikon.

 

The Sayings of the Fathers


It was said of Abba John the Dwarf that he withdrew and lived in the desert at Scetis with an old man of Thebes. His Abba, taking a piece of dry wood, planted it and said to him, 'Water it every day with a bottle of water, until it bears fruit.' Now the water was so far away that he had to leave in the evening and return the following morning. At the end of three years the wood came to life and bore fruit. Then the old man took some of the fruit and carried it to the church saying to the brethren, 'Take and eat the fruit of obedience.'

(Try us on your mobile device)
Mobile Version | Standard Version | Smartphone Version | iPhone Version | WAP Version | iMode Version