Preparatory weeks for Lent. What are the preparatory weeks before Lent and what is their meaning?

22.08.2019 Animals

Lent in 2018 lasts from February 19 to April 7 (new time). Easter - April 8.

Lent is preceded by three preparatory weeks -

  • Week of the Last Judgment (last day of eating meat) February 11, 201 8

The first preparatory week for Great Lent - The Week of the Publican and the Pharisee

During the first preparatory week, which is called « Week of the Publican and the Pharisee », there is no fasting on Wednesday and Friday, which is why it is called “continuous week” (February 24, 2013). During the Liturgy this Sunday, the Gospel “About the Publican and the Pharisee” is read (Luke 18:10-14).

Parable of the Publican and the Pharisee

“Two men entered the temple to pray: one was a Pharisee, and the other was a tax collector. The Pharisee stood and prayed to himself like this: God! I thank You that I am not like other people, robbers, offenders, adulterers, or like this publican: I fast twice a week, I give a tenth of everything I acquire. The publican, standing in the distance, did not even dare to raise his eyes to heaven; but, striking himself on the chest, he said: God! be merciful to me, a sinner! I tell you that this one went to his house justified more than the other: for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but he who humbles himself will be exalted.”

This parable sets the tone for the entire fast and shows that only tearful prayer and humility, like the tax collector, and not listing one’s virtues, like the Pharisee, can win us God’s mercy, only then can we see our mistakes and change for the better. She teaches us that we must approach fasting with repentance and without pride.

In the evening, after Vespers, the priest sets an example and is the first to ask everyone for forgiveness. After this, all the parishioners come up and ask for his forgiveness, as well as each other. On this day, everyone does everything possible to make peace with everyone. In some churches, Lenten Vespers is served immediately after the liturgy.

“Open the doors of repentance, O Life-Giver! . ."

The Church begins preparations for Lent three weeks in advance. Four Sundays before the beginning of the Holy Pentecost, they are devoted to preparing for the feats of fasting, repentance and fervent prayer. And before earthly battles, warriors begin to prepare in advance. So the holy fathers, before a special feat of spiritual warfare, before Great Lent, established preparatory days.

“Open the doors of repentance, O Life-Giver! . ." - this is the main motive of all this extremely wise and deep psychological preparation of complete internal harmony with this cry of a repentant soul. This is sung on our behalf, on behalf of all believing Orthodox Christians, in church during the all-night vigil, every Saturday during all these preparatory weeks and throughout the entire post that follows. Are we in the church at this time, are we merging our own inner cry about God granting us a sincere feeling of repentance with this common cry of the entire Church? Are we afraid of missing something else from all this rich edification, are we catching, are we absorbing every word from everything that is heard these days in our churches. Are we preparing ourselves internally for the upcoming Great Lent? This is a question of paramount importance in our lives, to which each of us must be answered by our conscience.

Cheese week is the last day before Lent, the eve of a long abstinence not only from animal food, but also from evil thoughts and deeds. What does it take to be ready for spiritual cleansing?

What is cheese week

Cheese week ends cheese week, which is called Maslenitsa in the world. Believers Orthodox people already during these seven days they do not eat meat, preparing themselves for Lent. The word “week” in this phrase is not modern, but more ancient meaning, meaning the day of the week is Sunday. The word “cheese empty” can be divided into two completely understandable parts: “cheese” and “empty”. This is the day when for the last time before Lent you can eat eggs, dairy products and fish; they are, as it were, “released”, they are said goodbye to for the period of abstinence. In this way, you can gradually, and to a certain extent reduce the health risks, switch to lean foods.

A believer needs to remember that despite the influence of Christianity, Maslenitsa remains a pagan holiday. This means that it is necessary not to succumb to the temptations of gluttony and even refrain from participating in traditional rituals, such as burning an effigy. IN church calendar this week is not a holiday; moreover, the services are already being compared to the services during Great Lent. The prayer of Ephraim the Syrian is read, and the Divine Liturgy is not held on Wednesday and Friday this week. In their prayers on Saturday, on the eve of cheese week, they remember all the sacred men and wives who shone in the feat of fasting, that is, the memory of all holy saints is celebrated. Using their example, the Church shows that people like each of us were able to achieve incredible spiritual heights, which means they are accessible to everyone. From an Orthodox point of view, cheese week is intended to strengthen relationships in the family.

IN cheese week, popularly known as Forgiveness Sunday, recalls the expulsion of Adam from Paradise due to the Fall. The liturgy on cheese week speaks of the collection of virtues, forgiveness of sins and fasting. The Church calls for repentance for our sins. At the end of Vespers on this day, the rite of forgiveness occurs. After reading the prayer, the abbot asks for forgiveness from all Christians. The parishioners do the same. In general, on this day it is customary to ask for forgiveness from each other not only in church, but also at home, from all your relatives and friends.

On the last day before Lent, it is advisable to visit church. But if this is not possible, read the appropriate prayers and the Gospel of Matthew at home. All the best, and don't forget to press the buttons and

13.03.2016 00:50

Forgiveness Sunday is the last day before Lent. All believers will ask each other...

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Great Lent is preceded by preparatory weeks (Sundays) and weeks. The order of the services of the preparatory weeks and Great Lent itself is set out in the Lenten Triodion. It begins with the week about the publican and the Pharisee and ends in Holy Saturday, covering a 70-day period.

The Great Lent is preceded by the Holy Pentecost - the week about the publican and the Pharisee, the week and week about the Prodigal Son, the week and week of the meat-free season (meat-holiday), the week and week of the raw-holiday (raw-holiday, cheese, Shrovetide).

During the preparatory weeks, the Church prepares believers for fasting by gradually introducing abstinence: after the continuous week, the fasts of Wednesday and Friday are restored; then follows highest degree preparatory abstinence - prohibition from eating meat foods. In the preparatory services, the Church, recalling the first days of the world and man, the blissful state of the first parents and their fall, the coming of the Son of God to earth for the salvation of man, encourages believers to fast, repentance and spiritual achievement.

The synaxarion of Cheese Saturday says that just as “leaders, before a militia army already standing in the ranks, talk about the exploits of ancient men and thereby encourage the soldiers, so the holy fathers who enter into fasting point to the holy men who have shone in fasting and teach “that fasting consists not only in the abstinence of food, but also in curbing the tongue, heart and eyes.”

Such preparation for the fast of Pentecost is an ancient institution of the Church. Thus, already famous preachers of the 4th century, Saints Basil the Great, John Chrysostom, Cyril of Alexandria, in their conversations and words, spoke about abstinence in the Weeks preceding Lent. In the 8th century, the Monks Theodore and Joseph the Studites compiled services for the Week of the Prodigal Son, meat and cheese services; in the 9th century, George, Metropolitan of Nicomedia, compiled a canon for the Week about the publican and the Pharisee.

Preparing for fasting and repentance, the Church in the first Week, through the example of the publican and the Pharisee, reminds of humility as the true beginning and foundation of repentance and all virtue, and of pride as the main source of sins, which defiles a person, alienates him from people, makes him an apostate, imprisoning yourself into a sinful selfish shell.

Humility as a path to spiritual exaltation was shown by God the Word Himself, who humbled himself to the point of weakness human nature- “until the sight of a servant” (Phil. 2:7).

In the hymns of the Week about the publican and the Pharisee, the Church calls to reject - to “reject” highly praised pride, fierce, destructive exaltation, “highly praised arrogance” and “vile arrogance.”

To awaken feelings of repentance and contrition for sins, the Church sings at Sunday matins during the preparatory Weeks, starting with the Week of the Publican and the Pharisee and ending with the fifth Sunday of Lent, after the Gospel, singing “Having seen the Resurrection of Christ” and reading the 50th Psalm, before the canon, touching stichera (troparia) “Open the doors of repentance, O Life-Giver,” “Instruct me in the path of salvation. Mother of God”, “Thinking about the many cruel things I have done, O wretched one, I tremble.” Bringing together the 70-day period of the Triodion with the 70-year stay of Israel in Babylonian captivity, the Church in some preparatory Weeks mourns the spiritual captivity of the new Israel by singing Psalm 136 “On the rivers of Babylon.”

The first stichera - “Open the doors of repentance” - is based on the parable of the publican: comparisons are taken from it to depict the feeling of repentance. The second song, “On the Path to Salvation,” is based on the parable of the prodigal son. At the heart of the third – “Many evil things I have done” – is the Savior’s prediction of the Last Judgment.

On the Sunday of the Prodigal Son gospel parable(Luke 15, 11 – 32), from which the Week itself received its name, the Church shows an example of God’s inexhaustible mercy towards all sinners who turn to God with sincere repentance. No sin can shake God’s love for mankind. A soul that has repented and turned from sin, imbued with hope in God, God's grace comes to the meeting, kisses her, adorns her and triumphs in reconciliation with her, no matter how sinful she was before, until her repentance.

The Church instructs that the fullness and joy of life lie in a grace-filled union with God and in constant communion with Him, and removal from this communion is a source of spiritual disasters.

Having shown the true beginning of repentance on the Sunday of the Publican and the Pharisee, the Church reveals its full power: with true humility and repentance, forgiveness of sins is possible. Therefore, no sinner should despair of the gracious help of the Heavenly Father.

The Meat Week is also called the Week of the Last Judgment, since the Gospel is read about it at the liturgy (Matthew 25. 31 - 46).

On Meat Saturday, which is also called Ecumenical parent's Saturday, the Church commemorates “from the ages of the dead all those who lived by faith in piety and died piously, either in the desert, or in cities, or in the sea, or on earth, or in any place... from Adam even to this day, who served God purely, the fathers and our brethren, friends together and relatives, every person who has served faithfully in life, and who has come to God in many ways and in many ways.” The Church diligently asks “to give (them) in the hour of judgment a good answer to God and to receive His presence in joy, among the righteous, and among the saints, a bright lot, and worthy of being His Kingdom.”

According to an inscrutable Providence, people have different demise. “It is appropriate to know,” says the synaxarion, “that not all who fall into the abyss, and into fire, and into the sea, and the verbal destruction, and cold (cold) and famine, suffer this according to the direct command of God: this is the essence of God’s fate , some of them happen by (God’s) good will (to some), while others (to others) happen by permission, while others happen for the sake of knowledge and rebuke (warning), and the chastity of others.”

On Meat Saturday, the Church, out of its love for mankind, especially prays for those dead who did not receive a church funeral service or at all church prayer: “I have not received legalized psalms and hymns of memory.” The Church prays “for some of the righteous to do”, “even though the water was covered, the battle was reaped, the coward (earthquake) was embraced, and the murderers were killed, and the fire fell.” Prayers are offered for those who, in ignorance and not in their own minds, ended their lives, for those whom the Lord, knowing everything useful, allowed to die by sudden death - “from the sadness and joy that preceded it unreliably (unexpectedly)” and for those who died in sea ​​or on land, on rivers, springs, lakes, which became the prey of animals and birds, killed with a sword, burned by lightning, frozen in the cold and snow, buried under an earthen collapse or walls, killed by poisoning, strangulation and hanging from neighbors, died from any other type of unexpected and violent death.

The thought of the end of our life while remembering those who have already passed into eternity has a sobering effect on everyone who forgets about eternity and clings with all his soul to the corruptible and fleeting.

Meat Eating Week (Sunday) is dedicated to a reminder of the general final and Last Judgment of the living and the dead (Matthew 25, 31 - 46). This reminder is necessary so that people who sin do not indulge in carelessness and carelessness about their salvation in the hope of God’s ineffable mercy. The Church, in the stichera and troparions of the service of this Week, depicts the consequences of a lawless life, when the sinner will appear before the impartial Court of God.

Recalling the last Judgment of Christ, the Church at the same time points out the true meaning of the very hope in God’s mercy. God is merciful, but He is also a righteous Judge. In liturgical hymns, the Lord Jesus Christ is called just, and His Judgment is called a righteous and incorruptible test (unwashed torture, unwashed judgment). Both inveterate sinners and those carelessly relying on God’s mercy must therefore remember the spiritual responsibility for their moral state, and the Church, with all its services of this Week, strives to bring them to the awareness of their sinfulness.

What works of repentance and correction of life are especially emphasized? First of all and mainly, on acts of love and mercy, for the Lord will pronounce His Judgment primarily on works of mercy, and, moreover, possible for everyone, without mentioning other virtues that are not equally accessible to everyone. No one has the right to say that he could not help the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, or visit the sick. Material works of mercy have their value when they are a manifestation of love that rules the heart and are connected with spiritual works of mercy, which include the body. and the souls of our neighbors are relieved.

The last week of preparation for the Holy Pentecost is called cheese week, cheese week, Maslenitsa, Maslenitsa. During this week, cheese foods are consumed: milk, cheese, butter, eggs.

The Church, forbearing to our weakness and gradually leading us into the feat of fasting, established the consumption of cheese food in the last week before Pentecost, “so that we, from meat and overeating, would be led to strict abstinence... little by little we would take the reins from pleasant foods, that is, the feat of fasting " On raw Wednesday and Friday, a stricter fast is required (until the evening).

Through the chants of Cheese Week, the Church inspires us that this week is already the threshold of repentance, the forefeast of abstinence, the week of pre-purification. In these hymns, the Holy Church invites us to deep abstinence, recalling the fall of our ancestors, which resulted from intemperance.

On Cheese Saturday, the remembrance of holy men and women is celebrated, who shone in the feat of fasting. By the example of holy ascetics, the Church strengthens us for spiritual feats, “as if we look at their original, kindly lives, we do manifold and varied virtues, just as there is strength for everyone,” remembering that the holy ascetics and ascetics glorified by the Church were people clothed with infirmities flesh like us.

The last Sunday before Great Lent has the inscription (name) in the Triodion: “On the Week of Cheese, the expulsion of Adam.” On this day, the event of the expulsion of our first parents from paradise is remembered.

Tags: Religion, Orthodoxy


Lent in 2018 begins on February 19, but it is preceded by several preparatory weeks*. What is the meaning of their names? What are the features of divine services and fasting regulations** these days?

January 28 - Sunday of the Publican and the Pharisee

Meaning of the name

At the Liturgy, the passage Luke 18:10-14 is read, in which the tax collector personifies a sincerely repentant sinner, and the Pharisee is an outwardly pious man, but does not see his sins and considers himself righteous.

Liturgical features

Chants from the Lenten Triodion, a collection of Lenten hymns and prayers, are gradually woven into the usual order of services. For example, at Sunday morning the stichera “Open the doors of repentance” are sung.

All types of fasting are cancelled.

February 4 - Sunday of the Prodigal Son

Meaning of the name

The Liturgy reads the passage Luke 15:11-32 about the prodigal son who left his father’s house, but then repented and returned. The parable reminds us of our own weakness and the great mercy of God, as it allegorically describes God’s attitude towards fallen man.

Liturgical features

The Lenten Triodion is used more actively; on Sunday morning the 136th Psalm “On the Rivers of Babylon” is sung for the first time, which reminds a person that he is a captive of sin and that liberation from this slavery lies only through a decisive struggle with it.

The Church prays for Christians who have passed into Eternity, and especially for people who died a violent death and did not receive the usual funeral service.

Liturgical features

Funeral services are held only a few times a year. There is an abundance of funeral texts, but they are not sad, but joyful, filled with hope for a general resurrection.

February 11 - Week of the Last Judgment, Meat Eating

Meaning of the name

At the Liturgy the passage Matthew 25:31-46 is read. Believers are reminded of the second coming of Christ and the upcoming Last Judgment.

Liturgical features

At Matins, purely Lenten texts from the Penitential Canon of Andrew of Crete are sung - “Helper and Patron...”. Preparations for fasting are coming to an end. Worship is permeated with the idea of ​​universal accountability for all one’s actions before God.

Post orders

Meat plot. The last day before Easter when meat is allowed at meals.

Prayers from the Lenten Triodion are used every day. On Wednesday and Friday the Liturgy is not celebrated; on these days the prayer of Ephraim the Syrian “Lord and Master of my life” is read for the first time, which is one of the most important prayers of Lent.

Post orders

There are no food restrictions on eating eggs, fish, as well as dairy products - cheese, butter, sour cream, and fish. Hence the name.

February 18 - Cheese Week, Forgiveness Sunday. Memory of Adam's exile

Meaning of the name

At the Liturgy, the passage Matthew 6:14-21 is read, in which Christ speaks of the need to forgive everyone. The key idea is the longing for paradise, which was lost by people after the fall of Adam.

Liturgical features

After Vespers (in parish practice, this rite is sometimes performed after the Liturgy), the rite of forgiveness is performed: like the ancient monks, people ask each other for forgiveness for all offenses in order to enter into fasting with a peaceful soul. The 136th Psalm is sung for the last time. The texts of the service clearly remind us of the purpose of the upcoming Lent—the celebration of Easter. At Vespers, priests dress in black robes.

Post orders

Prescription for any food of animal origin.

* The word “week” in liturgical language means Sunday, while the week in our today’s understanding is called “week” (ed.).

** All postal orders apply primarily to monastic life; in parish practice they are not always applicable and require the blessing of the confessor.