User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
/ˈlɛkʃən/Noun
- The act of reading.
- A reading of a religious text; a lesson to be read in church
etc.
- 1885: This man [...] came to dwell in our city, and here founded this holy house, and he hath edified us by his litanies and his lections of the Koran — Sir Richard Burton, The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Night 13
Extensive Definition
A lection is a reading, in this context, from
Scripture.
The custom of reading the books of Moses in the
synagogues on the Sabbath day was a very ancient one in the Jewish
Church. The addition of lections (i.e. readings) from the prophetic
books had been made afterwards and was in existence in our Lord's
time, as may be gathered from such passages as St Luke
4:16-20, 16:29. This element in synagogue worship was taken over
with others into the Christian divine service, additions being made
to it from the writings of the apostles and evangelists. We find
traces of such additions within the New Testament itself in such
directions as are contained in Colossians 4:16;
First Thessalonians 5:27.
From the 2nd century onwards references multiply,
though the earlier references do not prove the existence, of a
fixed lectionary or order of lessons, but rather point the other
way. Justin
Martyr, describing divine worship in the middle of the 2nd
century says: On the day called Sunday all who live in cities or in
the country gather together to one place, and the memoirs of the
Apostles, or the writings of the Prophets are read as long as time
permits (Apol. i. cap. 67). Tertullian about
half a century later makes frequent reference to the reading of
Holy Scripture in public worship (Apol. ~9; Dc praescript. 36; De
amina, 9).
In the canons of Hippolytus
in the first half of the 3rd century we find this direction: ''Let
presbyters, subdeacons and readers, and all the people assemble
daily in the church at time of cockcrow, and betake themselves to
prayers, to psalms and to the reading of tha Scriptures, according
to the command of the Apostles, until I come attend to reading''
(canon xxi.).
But there are traces of fixed lessons coming into
existence in the course of this century; Origen refers to the
book of Job being
read in Holy Week
(Commentaries on Job, lib. i.). Allusions of a similar kind in the
4th century are frequent. John Cassian
(c. 380) tells us that throughout Egypt the Psalms were divided
into groups of twelve, and that after each group there followed two
lessons, one from the Old, one from the New Testament (Dc caenob.
inst. ii. 4), implying but not absolutely stating that there was a
fixed order of such lessons just as there was of the Psalms.
St Basil
the Great mentions fixed lessons on certain occasions taken
from Isaiah,
Proverbs,
St Matthew
and Acts
(Hom. xiii. De bapt.). From Chrysostom
(Horn. lxiii. in Act. &c.), and Augustine
(Tract. vi. in Joann. &c.) we learn that Genesis was read in
Lent, Job and
Jonah in Passion Week, the Acts of the Apostles in Eastertide,
lessons on the Passion
on Good
Friday and on the Resurrection
on Easter
Day. In the Apostolical Constitutions (ii. 57) the following
service is described and enjoined. First come two lessons from the
Old Testament by a reader, the whole of the Old Testament being
made use of except the books of the Apocrypha. The
Psalms of David are then to be
sung. Next the Acts of the Apostles and the Epistles of Paul are
to be read, and finally the four Gospels by a deacon or a priest.
Whether the selections were ad libitum or according to a fixed
table of lessons we are not informed. Nothing in the shape of a
lectionary is extant
older than the 8th century, though there is evidence that Claudianus
Marnercus made one for the church at Vienne in 450, and that Musaeus made one
for the church at Marseilles ca.
458. The Liber
comitis formerly attributed to St Jerome must be
three, or nearly three, centuries later than that saint, and the
Luxeuil lectionary, or Lectionarium Gallicanum, which Mabillon
attributed to the 7th, cannot be earlier than the 8th century; yet
the oldest MSS. of the Gospels have marginal marks, and sometimes
actual interpolations, which can only be accounted for as
indicating the beginnings and endings of liturgical lessons. The
third Council
of Carthage in 397 forbade anything
but Holy Scripture to be read in church; this rule has been adhered
to so far as the liturgical epistle and gospel, and occasional
additional lessons in the Roman missal are concerned, but in the
divine office, on feasts when nine lessons are read at matins, only
the first three lessons are taken from Holy Scripture, the next
three being taken from the sermons of ecclesiastical writers and
the last three from expositions of the day's gospel; but sometimes
the lives or Passions of the saints, or of some particular saints,
were substituted for any or all of these breviary lessons. (F. E.
W.)
Source
1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article "Lection, Lectionary".lection in German:
Schriftlesung