"Ecce quomodo moritur justus", in the pre-
Vatican II Catholic Church the 24th of 27
Tenebrae responsories, or the sixth
responsory for Holy Saturday, is based on . In the
Tenebrae service of the
Holy Week this
responsory is preceded by a reading taken from
Saint Augustine's Commentary on
Psalm 64 (63) § 13, interpreting (
Vulgate Ps. 63:9 – "Their own tongues shall ruin them") in the light of (the soldiers at Jesus' grave bribed to lie about the whereabouts of the corpse). The Versus of the responsory derives from . Settings of the responsory are included in
Tomás Luis de Victoria's
Officium Hebdomadae Sanctae,
Carlo Gesualdo's
Responsoria et alia ad Officium Hebdomadae Sanctae spectantia,
Jan Dismas Zelenka's
Responsoria pro hebdomada sancta (
ZWV 55) and
Franz Liszt's
Responsorien und Antiphonen (
S.30). A 16th century
motet by
Marc'Antonio Ingegneri on the Latin text was published around 1967 in an arrangement by Maynard Klein and with "Behold how the righteous perish" as English translation.
Palestrina set the responsory for two sopranos, alto and choir. Jacob Handl (
Jacobus Gallus) published his
setting of Ecce quomodo moritur justus as No. VIII under the heading "De Passione Domini Nostri Iesv Christi" (On the Passion of Jesus Christ our Lord) in his
Opus Musicum II. The subtitle of the 1587 publication reads "Qvae Ex Sancto Catholicae Ecclesiae Vsv Ita Svnt Dispositae, vt omni tempore inseruire queant" (Which are herewith offered for use in the Catholic Church, in such fashion that they can be adopted throughout the liturgical year). As in 17th century France the Tenebrae services, including the
Répons de ténèbres, were held at the
vespers of the preceding evening, for example
Marc-Antoine Charpentier's
Ecce quomodo,
H 131 is part of his
Répons de ténèbres du Vendredi saint (Tenebrae responsories of Good Friday). In the 18th century
Georg Reutter produced a
SATB setting of the responsory for the ceremonies of the Holy Week in the
Wiener Hofburgkapelle (Vienna court chapel). Another SATB setting was composed by
Franz Joseph Aumann, to which an accompaniment by three trombones was added by
Bruckner in 1879. In the 20th century
Francis Poulenc included "Ecce quomodo moritur justus" as the last in his
Sept répons des ténèbres,
FP 181, composed 1961.
The Episcopal Church provides a single Tenebrae service on Wednesday evening, the day before
Maundy Thursday. That service reduces the total number of Tenebrae lessons, each followed by a responsory, to nine. Ecce quomodo moritur is the sixth responsory, and it follows after a reading from Augustine's commentary on
Psalm 55 (54). ==In Lutheranism==