PaulS
posted on Sep 26, 2008 - 07:02 PM
Hello,
This is a fascinating question. I can say that, in my experience, Vesper Praises always follow the tone and feast of the Vespers themselves.
Not doing it that way would lead to some strange results. For example, take the Feast of the Lord's Entry into Jerusalem (Palm Sunday.) In that feast, we have Aricalpizin, a Psali specifically for the event. If we say that Vesper Praises on the Saturday night before Palm Sunday should NOT follow the Vespers of Palm Sunday, then we would not chant this Psali ever. Why? Because the feast is only on Sunday. There is no Vesper Praise on Sunday night due to the Holy Pascha. The only time it could be chanted, therefore, is Saturday night.
I can understand why there is confusion here, though, because of the Jewish hours of the day, which our Church still retains. Thus, the first hour is 6:00a, the third is 9:00a, the sixth is 12:00p, and so forth. In this scheme, the new day begins after the twelfth hour, which is 6:00p. Vespers in this scheme is the eleventh hour, which is 5:00p. Technically, then, Vesper Praises would fall before the new day, so if there were a feast on the next day, we would technically not be celebrating that feast until after 6:00 p.m.
However, our Church in her wisdom has united the Raising of Incense services to the Holy Liturgy--and by extension, whichever feast is celebrated on the day of the Holy Liturgy. For this reason, the Vesper Praise is tied to the Vesper Raising of Incense, which, in turn, is tied to the Holy Liturgy on the next morning.
GBU,
ps
Joined: Sep 09, 2002 | Posts: 2441
Location: St. Abanoub and St. Antony Coptic Orthodox Church in Norco, CA