The Psalter According to the Seventy
Psalm 97
A Psalm of David.
O sing unto the Lord a new song, for the Lord hath wrought wondrous things.
2
His right hand and His holy arm have wrought salvation for Him.
3
The Lord hath made known His salvation, in the sight of the nations hath He revealed His righteousness.
4
He hath remembered His mercy to Jacob, and His truth to the house of Israel.
5
All the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God.
6
Shout with jubilation unto the Lord, all the earth; sing and rejoice and chant psalms.
7
Chant ye unto the Lord with a harp, with the harp and with the voice of a psalm, with trumpets of metal, and with a voice of a trumpet of horn.
8
Shout with jubilation before the Lord our King; let the sea be shaken and the fullness thereof, the world and all they that dwell therein.
9
The rivers shall clap their hands together; the mountains shall rejoice at the presence of the Lord, for He cometh; yea, He is come to judge the earth.
10
He will judge the world with righteousness, and the peoples with uprightness.
Here you can access individual chapters and kathisma of the The Psalter According to the Seventy . Kathismata range from 1 to 20. Chapters range from 1 to 151 (there's an extra Psalm in the Septuagint.)
Psalter According to the Seventy, copyright 1974
Holy Transfiguration Monastery
, Boston, MA
Prayers from the Great Horologion are copyright 1997 Holy Transfiguration Monastery , Boston, MA, and are used with permission.
Translations of troparia and kontakia from the complete Menaion trans. Br. Isaac Lambertsen, published by The St. John of Kronstadt Press are used by permission.
Content from the Octoechos and Menaion are copyright www.st-sergius.org and are used with permission.
Prayers from the Great Horologion are copyright 1997 Holy Transfiguration Monastery , Boston, MA, and are used with permission.
Translations of troparia and kontakia from the complete Menaion trans. Br. Isaac Lambertsen, published by The St. John of Kronstadt Press are used by permission.
Content from the Octoechos and Menaion are copyright www.st-sergius.org and are used with permission.