1st time exposure to Maronite rite

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Eric_Prine

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I’d like to visit a local Maronite parish in Cincinnati. What should I know or expect? I was going to watch and imitate everyone else to the best of my ability but I’m hoping not to get too confused or lost.
Thanks!
 
visit their website (if they have one) and search for their mass on youtube. You may be able to watch one.
 
I’d like to visit a local Maronite parish in Cincinnati. What should I know or expect? I was going to watch and imitate everyone else to the best of my ability but I’m hoping not to get too confused or lost.
Thanks!
Eric,

I’m presuming you’re referring to St. Anthony of Padua Maronite parish. THAT’S MY PARISH!!! Let me know when you plan on going. I’d love to meet you there.

The provide a service book (The Book of Offering) that makes it very easy to follow along. You won’t absorb everything by going just once. I’ve been going for nearly a year now (was going to a Melkite Greek Catholic parish in VA. before moving back to the Cincinnati area), and still feel like I’m absorbing a lot. Just come. Don’t worry about being confused or lost. Every visitor is the first few times they come. Then you start to pick up the different chants and you start to grasp the “flow” of the Liturgy.

Again, let me know when you plan on going. 😃
 
Eric,

I’m presuming you’re referring to St. Anthony of Padua Maronite parish. THAT’S MY PARISH!!! Let me know when you plan on going. I’d love to meet you there.
I was seriously thinking about checking it out this Sunday. Does your mass start at 10AM?
 
I was seriously thinking about checking it out this Sunday. Does your mass start at 10AM?
Mass/Qurbono starts at 10:30AM. I’ll be there with at least one of my two children and possibly my wife as well (depending on how the morning sickness is treating her that day). Let me know if you decide to come. 😃
 
Phillip,
I will be there and I’ll make sure I get there 15 minutes early too. I look forward to it.
 
Mass/Qurbono starts at 10:30AM. I’ll be there with at least one of my two children and possibly my wife as well (depending on how the morning sickness is treating her that day). Let me know if you decide to come. 😃
Phillip,

I am just curious: of which Catholic church sui iuris are you? Are you Maronite? Melkite-Greek?
 
Phillip,

I am just curious: of which Catholic church sui iuris are you? Are you Maronite? Melkite-Greek?
Currently my wife and I are canonically Roman - although both of our children were baptized, chismated, and received Holy Communion in the Melkite tradition. We had planned on officially becoming Melkite because we both fell in love with, and felt at home in the Melkite tradition. But we knew we’d be moving back to the Greater Cincinnati area. Since the closest Melkite parish to where we are now is at least two hours away, we decided that it would not be wise to officially change our canonical status only to not have our church sui iuris within a reasonable distance to us. So we’ve held off.

It’s also been a good learning experience for us as well. Most Roman Catholics, when they think of the “Eastern Lung” of the Church, think only of the Byzantine tradition. It’s been good to experience an Eastern tradition that is not Byzantine but Syriac. I do miss the Byzantine Melkites,though. Had there been a Melkite parish here in Cincinnati we would’ve gone there in a heartbeat.
 
Currently my wife and I are canonically Roman - although both of our children were baptized, chismated, and received Holy Communion in the Melkite tradition. We had planned on officially becoming Melkite because we both fell in love with, and felt at home in the Melkite tradition. But we knew we’d be moving back to the Greater Cincinnati area. Since the closest Melkite parish to where we are now is at least two hours away, we decided that it would not be wise to officially change our canonical status only to not have our church sui iuris within a reasonable distance to us. So we’ve held off.

It’s also been a good learning experience for us as well. Most Roman Catholics, when they think of the “Eastern Lung” of the Church, think only of the Byzantine tradition. It’s been good to experience an Eastern tradition that is not Byzantine but Syriac. I do miss the Byzantine Melkites,though. Had there been a Melkite parish here in Cincinnati we would’ve gone there in a heartbeat.
There are no Byzantine parishes of any Church in the area? Ukrainians for example?
 
There are no Byzantine parishes of any Church in the area? Ukrainians for example?
The closest one would be a Ruthenian Byzantine mission about 1.5 hours away from my home (if the mission is not yet defunked). With two children (the eldest of whom is special-needs), and a third on the way, a three-hour round-trip plus another 45 minutes to an hour for Liturgy and any after-Liturgy socializing is simply not feasible for us.

Our Maronite parish is only about 10 - 15 minutes away. My children behave relatively well (depending on the day and how “sensitive” my daughter is that day) during the 45 min. - 1hr. Qurbono, and the folks there are very supportive of young families. It’s been great thus far. 👍
 
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