
The Mystery of Healing: Oil, Anointing, and the Unity of the Local Church

The Holy Sacraments of Baptism, Chrismation and Holy Communion

The Seven Sacraments of the Greek Orthodox Church
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The
vast majority of Orthodox Christians identify with a specifically Orthodox
way of worshipping. Though different languages are used throughout the Orthodox
world, Orthodox Christians who are traveling - or simply visiting a different
"jurisdiction" in America - can count on the church architecture
looking familiar, the outline of the Liturgy being the same and the means
of approaching and receiving the sacrament of Communion being the same as
they are used to. Or at least they could until recently. In America an increasing
number of converts to Orthodoxy are using a liturgical ritual that looks
far more like services done in Roman Catholicism and Anglicanism some thirty
years ago. This is being enthusiastically promoted in some quarters of the
Church as "western rite" Orthodoxy.
The idea of using a "western
rite" in the Orthodox Church first surfaced in England during the
19th century. A former Roman Catholic, Dr. Joseph Overbeck, joined the
Orthodox Church in that country and apparently decided that Orthodoxy
would never be able to evangelize the West unless it used western forms
of worship. Otherwise, he reasoned, the Church would not have a "western
memory." Overbeck suggested that a version of the Roman Mass - purified
of any medieval errors - be used. His proposal, though received with interest
in parts of the Orthodox Church, was never implemented.
Earlier in this century, a
small "western rite" group - the Eglise Catholique-Orthodoxe
- began functioning in France. And still later, in the late 1950s, another
small group (the Basilian Fathers) were received into the Antiochian Orthodox
Archdiocese in the United States by then Metropolitan Anthony Bashir.
These Basilian Fathers became the start of a canonical "western rite"
presence in this country. Although the "western rite" of the
Antiochian Archdiocese continued for years as a mere handful of parishes,
it has recently received a "shot in the arm" with the reception
into Orthodoxy of a number of disaffected Episcopalians - sometimes including
entire parishes. It is argued that the existence of a "western rite"
within Orthodoxy offers these Anglo-Catholics a virtually perfect solution,
since they can enter the Church without substantially changing their way
of worship. After all, why should "unnecessary barriers" be
placed in their way? Furthermore - so we are told - these "western
rite" communities represent a return to the Orthodox Church of the
authentic, pre-schismatic Orthodox worship of the ancient Christian west
and therefore enhances her catholicity and appeal to all people.
Compelling as these arguments
may seem, the presence of a "western rite" within Orthodoxy
represents a change from the way things have been since the Western Schism
of the 11th century (or at least since the Fourth Crusade). As such, this
innovation needs to be examined very carefully. For the sake of brevity,
we will confine ourselves here to "western rite" Orthodoxy as
practiced in America and examine it with regards to four fundamental questions:
1.) Does the reconstituted
"western rite" actually represent an authentic return to the
pre-schismatic Orthodox worship of the ancient Christian west?
2.) If there were a mass return
of western Christians to Orthodoxy (say, union with Rome or Canterbury),
would this "western rite" provide a workable precedent?
3.) Does the Orthodox Church
need a "western rite" in order to evangelize Americans?
4.) Does the "western
rite" serve the internal needs of the Orthodox Church in this country
today?
Does the reconstituted "western
rite" actually represent an authentic return to the pre-schismatic
Orthodox worship of the ancient Christian west?
The "western rite"
as currently practiced in the Antiochian Archdiocese consists of two Eucharistic
liturgies. As they are quite different from one another, let's consider
them separately.
First, the "Liturgy of
St. Gregory": this liturgy gets its name because it supposedly represents
the Roman rite as practiced in the time of St. Gregory the Great, the
bishop of Rome from 590 to 604 AD. There is no question that St. Gregory
the Great left his mark on the history of worship - not only in the west,
but also in the east. (Indeed, it may be argued that the Orthodox Church
already has a Liturgy of St. Gregory - namely, the Presanctified Liturgy
where this saint is always commemorated in the dismissal.) If the situation
of having two Liturgies of St. Gregory isn't confusing enough, the question
remains whether or not the Liturgy of St. Gregory as currently practiced
in the "western rite" parishes of the Antiochian Archdiocese
deserves this title at all. In fact, what we are actually presented with
is the Tridentine Latin Mass (i.e., the Missal of Pius the V, printed
in 1570), translated from Latin into King James English, with - among
other things - references to the "merits of the saints" left
out and the epiklesis of the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom stuck in.
In this regard, there are a couple of things to keep in mind. First, the
Tridentine Mass was the Liturgy of the Roman Church as revised at the
Counter Reformation. Second, the Gregorian Sacramentary (which, so far
as the MSS tradition is concerned, is primarily Frankish and not Roman
in origin) had already been revised in the 11th century (near the time
of the Western Schism). So the present "Liturgy of St. Gregory"
as used in American "western rite" parishes is at least two
revisions away from the saint whose name it bears - and both revisions
were made at times of severe crises of faith in the west.
The inadequacies of this rite
become obvious on close examination. The anaphora, for example - far from
being a single unified prayer as one would expect - seems more like a
loosely joined collection of prayers. Stranger yet, the first of these
prayers begins with the word "Therefore" (referring to what?
Apparently, some transition has gone missing!). As if the disjointed nature
of this anaphora weren't bad enough, tinkering with it by well meaning
Orthodox has only made matters worse. According to the great Orthodox
liturgical scholar and saint, Nicholas Cabasilas, the prayer in the Roman
rite "Supplices te rogamus" ("Most humbly we implore Thee")
is an "ascending epiklesis." Even so, the epiklesis from the
Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom has been added, thereby giving this rite
both an ascending and descending epiklesis, in which the celebrant asks
for the consecration of the gifts to be completed after it has already
happened! Furthermore, such improbable features as the "last Gospel"
are retained. (This was the reading of the prologue to the Gospel of John
at the end of the service, a practice that had begun as a private devotion
of the celebrating clergy sometime curing the 11th or 12th centuries and
which, by the 16th century, had become a prescribed appendage to the Mass.)
Second, the "Liturgy of
St. Tikhon": However inappropriate the "Liturgy of St. Gregory"
may seem for Orthodox worship, it can't hold a candle in this regard to
the other "western rite" liturgy now in use, which has somehow
gotten itself named after a 20th century Russian saint. St. Tikhon served
as the head of the Russian Orthodox Church in North America before being
elected Patriarch of Moscow in 1917. During his tenure in America, he
apparently received a petition for the use of a "western rite"
from a group of American Anglo-Catholic Episcopalians. St. Tikhon then
forwarded their request to the Holy Synod in Moscow, which examined this
proposal carefully and granted the possibility of a "western rite",
provided far reaching changes in the Book of Common Prayer were made.
The Holy Synod left the final decision to St. Tikhon, who - for whatever
reason - never formally authorized the establishment of a "western
rite" during his pastorate in America. It therefore seems farfetched
in the extreme to name th is liturgy after St. Tikhon. He is not the "father"
of this "western rite" in even remotely the same way that St.
John Chrysostom or St. Basil the Great are the fathers of the Liturgies
which bear their names. Furthermore, even if St. Tikhon had authorized
the use of a "western rite", every administrative decision made
by a saint should not be considered infallible.
What, then, is the "Liturgy
of St. Tikhon"? First of all, it is not the Eucharistic rite of the
Book of Common Prayer as ever approved by the Episcopal Church. Rather,
it is based on a strange amalgam commonly known as the "Anglican
Missal." This missal was developed by Anglo-Catholics to make up
for deficiencies they perceived in the Book of Common Prayer . The Anglican
Missal contains the anaphora and other prayers from the BCP, folded together
with parts of the anaphora and other prayers from the Tridentine Mass
translated from Latin into King James English. As now used in the "western
rite" of the Antiochian Archdiocese, it contains still further additions
and corrections made by the Orthodox. A more confusing liturgical hodgepodge
could hardly be imagined! The "Liturgy of St. Tikhon" is the
Reformation rite of Thomas Cranmer, with additions from the Counter Reformation
rite of the Council of Trent, with still further superficial tinkering
in order to make it "more Orthodox."
In defense of this rite, some
Orthodox are saying that we should accept it because it contains "nothing
heretical." Unfortunately, that itself is an Anglican argument. An
Orthodox rite must do far more than avoid heresy - it must clearly proclaim
and teach the Orthodox faith. In Communist Russia as in Ottoman Greece,
the Orthodox Liturgy alone maintained the faith through long years of
persecution. Bearing in mind that Cranmer was probably a Zwinglian who
designed his rite to express "the real absence" of Christ in
the Eucharist, it is easy to see that the "Liturgy of St. Tikhon"
could never meet the basic criterion of being an Orthodox Liturgy.
In summary, the "Liturgy
of St. Tikhon" has no historical validity whatsoever. The "Liturgy
of St. Gregory" can be traced back to that great saint only in a
very attenuated way. The simple fact is, neither of these liturgies represents
an authentic return to the pre-schismatic Orthodox worship of the ancient
Christian west.
Does the "western rite"
provide a path for the eventual reunion of Christians?
With the reception of "western
rite" parishes into Orthodoxy, there were some who felt that the
Uniate ideal had now found its proper home. Comparison of Western Rite
Orthodox to Eastern Rite Catholics is, of course, inevitable. And, we
should keep in mind that historically, Rome has often held up its Eastern
Rite Catholics as a bridge to union with the Orthodox. How successful
has that bridge been?
The truth is, Uniatism has
been a continuous obstacle to unity between Orthodoxy and Rome. And this
recurring difficulty reared its head again only recently, with the breakdown
of Communism in eastern Europe. We would be naive in the extreme to suppose
that "western rite" Orthodoxy will have a more beneficial result.
If they grow in numbers, the "western rite" Orthodox will increasingly
appear to western Christians as a kind of pseudo-Orthodox whose purpose
is not to evangelize but to proselytize.
Some might still argue that
the "western rite" would at least demonstrate to "western"
Christians what Orthodoxy would expect liturgically if a reunion of Christians
should occur. Yet this too is groundless. The simple fact is, those parishes
using the " western rite" within the Antiochian Archdiocese
are not following the "western rite" as now practiced by the
overwhelming majority of "western" Christians. Indeed, one must
ask why the Orthodox Church should have made herself into a safe haven
for a tiny minority of western Christians who have rejected the reforms
of the liturgical movement. Regarding the "Liturgy of St. Gregory"
- it would be ludicrous for the Orthodox to tell the Roman Catholics that
they should go back to doing the "last Gospel" at the end of
their Liturgy. Or that revisions made by Vatican II to the Roman anaphora
to make it read more like a single prayer were somehow misguided. The
"Liturgy of St. Tikhon" would be even more indefensible in the
case of Anglicans. Many of the recent revisions to the Book of Common
Prayer (as with the Roman Missal ) have been based on sound liturgical
scholarship - and many are clearly borrowings from the ancient Christian
east! Furthermore, since both of these "western-rite" liturgies
are being celebrated in "King James" English, are we telling
the Christians of t he various western confessions that modern English
is unacceptable as a liturgical language? This, in spite of the fact that
modern English is now used in many translations of the Liturgy of St.
John Chrysostom?
In summary, a "western
rite" Orthodoxy, at least as it is currently being practiced, seems
fated to have an increasingly negative effect on our already troubled
position in ecumenical relations.
Does the Orthodox Church need
a "western rite" in order to evangelize Americans?
If we can picture Overbeck
in 19th century England we might realize why he felt an Orthodoxy using
a "western rite" was absolutely essential if the Church was
to have a viable mission in the West. Overbeck would have only been able
to experience the worship of Orthodoxy as done among recent immigrants,
using not English, but the languages of their mother countries. No wonder
he might reach the conclusion that only an Orthodoxy with a different
rite, that had a western memory, could ever again be the church of the
venerable Bede.
St. Bede, of course, was a
great Anglo-Saxon historian who lived long before the Western Schism.
As such, he is perfectly acceptable to us Orthodox today as a saint to
be venerated. So are many of the other saints of northwestern Europe -
such as Patrick , Aidan, Alban and others, who are now being included
in the liturgical calendars of Orthodox Churches. It is obviously a great
advantage for converts to be able to venerate saints of their own ethnic
background - and it speaks to the catholicity of the Church. Clearly,
Orthodoxy doesn't have to have a "western rite" to have a western
memory. With this in mind, let us suppose Overbeck's experience of the
Church had been quite different. Suppose he had attended the celebration
of the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom on the feast of the venerable Bede
and there in the narthex was a beautiful icon of this saint for veneration
by the faithful. Suppose, too that the Liturgy had been conducted entirely
in English. What could he find missing to celebrate the feast of this
great saint of the early Christian west? True, the Liturgy would not be
served in exactly the same way as Bede himself would have done. (But then,
neither - by a long shot - would the "western rite" liturgies
of St. Tikhon or St. Gregory be t he same as done by the venerable Bede.)
What matters most is that the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom and the ancient,
pre-schismatic liturgical life of the west were the same in all essentials.
Without question, Byzantine
worship has demonstrated its suitability for all people. It became the
dominant liturgical expression for the Russians as truly as it had been
for the Greeks. It also rooted itself deeply in the culture of those Orthodox
"Latins", the Romanians. And in Alaska it expressed the religious
aspirations of native cultures - Aleuts, Tlingets and others. The Liturgy
of St. John Chrysostom is now being celebrated in Japanese, Korean and
a half dozen tribal languages in Africa. Recent ly, it provided the scriptural
worship sought after by the Evangelical Orthodox Church, who were, until
recently, the Antiochian Evangelical Orthodox Mission. The use of the
Byzantine liturgical tradition by the AEOM is one of the strongest arguments,
against the need of a "western rite" for purposes of evangelization
in America.
But doesn't the use of the
"western rite" make it easier to bring people into the Church
when they already have "their own" liturgical tradition? Perhaps,
but the drawbacks are enormous. Shortly after her former Episcopal parish
was received into the "we stern rite" of the Antiochian Archdiocese
in Spokane, WA a woman commented, "We were kind of underdogs in the
Episcopal Church by worshipping in the old way. Now we feel we're in step
with our Church." Sadly, it can only be a matter of time before she
discovers that she is now far more out of step liturgically with her new
Church than she ever was with the old. In summary, the use of the "western
rite" as a tool for evangelism seems unnecessary at best and misleading
at worst.
Does the "western rite"
serve the internal needs of the Orthodox Church in this country today?
A knowledgeable Orthodox Christian,
if asked about the Church's greatest need in western Europe and the Americas
today, would probably respond with a single word: unity. In this regard,
the Byzantine liturgical tradition has been of inestimable value in holding
the Church together. On the other hand, ethnicity has probably been the
greatest force for disunity. Ethnic heritage, of course, does not have
to be a divisive factor. One can be proud of one's heritage while celebrating
the fact that one is part of a Church that is truly multiethnic (as opposed
to "non-ethnic", as the alternative is sometimes wrongly presented.)
How does the "western
rite" fit into this need to bring the Church together as a truly
multi-ethnic community, united by faith and worship? Unfortunately, the
"western rite" can be viewed as a kind of "super-ethnicity"
which is just the opposite of what t he Church needs today. Narrow as
their ethnic view might have been, and as much as they may have insisted
unwaveringly on the use of their own language, Orthodox Christians have
always shown a willingness to use a common form of worship - until now.
For all intents and purposes, the use of the "western rite"
takes ethnicity one step further. Not only do these converts insist on
using (an archaic) form of their own language, but they also insist on
using an exclusive liturgical rite that is common to no one but themselves.
Orthodox Christians who visit
a "western rite" parish will find themselves in an alien environment.
Not only will the structure of the worship in a "western rite"
parish be unfamiliar, but the very method of receiving the sacrament of
communion will be different, so that even though technically in communion,
visitors from established Orthodox traditions will be discouraged from
receiving the holy mysteries. ("Western rite" visitors to other
Orthodox parishes will be similarly discomfited.) Contrary to the ancient
practices of the Church, "Byzantine" clergy visiting "western
rite" parishes are not allowed - in current Antiochian practice -
to concelebrate (and would hardly know how to, even if permitted). Pan-Orthodox
services like the vespers for the Sunday of Orthodoxy are now rendered
complex if not downright confusing by the possible presence of "western
rite" clergy. Pilgrimage is a vital part of the Orthodox tradition
and the current situation is bound to affect "western rite"
pilgrims to traditionally Orthodox countries like Greece or Russia. Instead
of finding themselves "at home" in the liturgical traditions
of these foreign lands, they will be strangers in their own Church, unable
to fully benefit from experiencing the liturgical life served in those
holy places that mark the heartlands of what is supposed to be their faith.
Furthermore, it is doubtful that the majority of Orthodox faithful and
clergy in these countries would accept "western rite" visitors
as "their own." Instead, they will probably be looked upon with
a certain amount of suspicion, as a kind of "sheep in wolves clothing."
Perhaps the plight of "western
rite" Orthodox Christians is best understood by looking at the actual
structure of an Orthodox Church, where the western part of the building
is called the narthex. Though they are canonically within the body of
Christ, the Church, Orthodox Christians using the "western rite"
are still, in a sense, "only in the narthex." They will not
be fully integrated into the Church's life until they can come forward
and fully participate in the Church's liturgical worship with their brothers
and sisters in Christ.
There are some, of course,
who will point out that there was considerable liturgical diversity in
the early Church - and therefore, why is such diversity not possible and
even desirable today? There was indeed considerable liturgical variation
from one pl ace to another in ancient times. The reason for this was the
simple fact that the average person never got more than 25 miles from
his place of birth and communications from one place to another were slow
and difficult. Under such circumstances, liturgical diversity was a natural
development and hardly a problem. Today, by contrast, we live in what
has been called a "global village" where communications are
instant and American families often move several times, from one state
to another, while their children are growing up. Everything in our environment
argues for greater uniformity in liturgical practice. For example: what
are potential converts to do when they happen to see coverage of an Orthodox
service on television, become intrigued, and then are completely confused
when they discover that Orthodoxy in their area has an entirely different
look? Or, on the other hand, what is a "western rite" Orthodox
family to do when they move to another town where the only Orthodox parish
is "Byzantine" and possibly ethnic? What will they do when they
feel far more at home in a "continuing" Anglican parish that
meets down the road? In summary, the "western rite" can only
impede the progress of the Orthodox Church towards reaching a goal of
unity within ethnic diversity. Furthermore, a multiplicity of rites is
simply inappropriate in a highly mobile society linked by global communications.
There is no reason to question
the motives of those who support a "western rite" within Orthodoxy.
They are apparently doing so for what they consider to be the very best
of reasons. In fact, we might all agree on the ends - yet with all due
respect, we simply cannot agree on the means. The "western rite"
is inherently divisive. Even so, we must not allow it to divide the Church.
At the same time, Orthodox who do not accept the "western rite"
are not simply "impeding progress." Rather, they are trying
to safeguard the Church from a policy that is neither in the best interests
of her established members, nor of her converts. We rejoice whenever and
wherever converts are received into the Church. But we also take heart
from the fact that many "western rite" parishes eventually see
the wisdom of "converting" to the Byzantine liturgical tradition.
We can only hope that others will continue to follow that good example.
From The Priest
A Newsletter for the Clergy of the
Diocese of San Francisco
Issue No. 5, May 1996
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