The problem of understanding liturgical texts and its solution on the example of Gregory of Corinth’s exegesis
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The orthodox liturgy was finally established during the 8th and 9th centuries. The
two stepbrothers and eminent Byzantine poets St. Cosmas of Maiuma and St. John
of Damascus greatly contributed to its development. They composed the majority of
the irmi and troparia that are still performed during the liturgy today. During their
lives, however, worshippers were facing certain difficulties in understanding the
meaning of church odes. This is also true today when orthodox liturgy occasionally
becomes an obstacle on the path to God for the worshippers. Greater efforts are also
required in order to understand the liturgy and this is not always easy. One of the
reasons for this is an incorrect translation of many odes into Russian and Slavonic.
Comments from 12th century Byzantine writers and poets can help us clarify their
meaning. Gregory of Corinth and his 23 commentaries on the liturgical canons are
particularly noteworthy. In the current article, a philological analysis is conducted
of two complex, “obscure” and unclear passages from the Canon of Pentecost. At
the same time, Metropolitan Gregory’s exegeses of these extracts, which can help
us better understand the meaning not only of these passages but also of the whole
celebration, are cited.
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Antishkin A. V. The problem of understanding liturgical texts and its solution on the example of Gregory of Corinth’s exegesis. Issues of Theology, 2021, vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 322–332.