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UnityofTrinity
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Have Eastern Catholics or Orthodox ever gone through changes in the divine liturgy. Like having different postures, different prayers, as is the Roman Church after Vatican II.
One can easily compare both the Nikonian Reforms and the NO changes, including that the Old Believers are similar to the SSPX and other “rad trads” if you will.The exception would be the famous Nikonian reforms, which attempted to reconcile Russian-Byzantine liturgical practice with earlier Greek-Byzantine liturgical practice. Such reforms led to the formation of the “Old Believers.”
The Old believers are not in communion with the ROC.I’ve often thought of the Old Believers as the Orthodox equivalent of the SSPX. The difference now, however, is that I believe the Old Believers are now in full communion with the rest of Russian Orthodoxy (I could be wrong). The SSPX are still on questionable grounds, tending more and more toward schism I believe.
As to whether or not Met. Skurla will undo or reform the Ruthenian reformations (or rather deformations) in the U.S., any thought on it is purely conjecture. My opinion, based on discussions I’ve had with people who know the Metropolitan, is that it is highly unlikely that he will challenge the status quo. I’ve been told that while he is a good man, he is not really one to rock the boat. But all things are possible with God.![]()
In which case the Old Believers would be more akin to the FSSP - retain the former liturgy, practices, traditions, and worldview, but in full communion with the mother church.I’ve often thought of the Old Believers as the Orthodox equivalent of the SSPX. The difference now, however, is that I believe the Old Believers are now in full communion with the rest of Russian Orthodoxy (I could be wrong). The SSPX are still on questionable grounds, tending more and more toward schism I believe.
As to whether or not Met. Skurla will undo or reform the Ruthenian reformations (or rather deformations) in the U.S., any thought on it is purely conjecture. My opinion, based on discussions I’ve had with people who know the Metropolitan, is that it is highly unlikely that he will challenge the status quo. I’ve been told that while he is a good man, he is not really one to rock the boat. But all things are possible with God.![]()
There was a request made to Rome (era 1940) to provide recensions to the eastern liturgies. These were published, with different rubrics and languages for the various Oriental Churches. The Ukrainian-Ruthenian recension is distinct from the Russian-Serbian-Bulgarian. The Ukrainian-Ruthenian removes latinizations that were added from the time of Metropolitan Isidore (Council of Florence). The full recension has not yet been implemented. The following recensions were published:Have Eastern Catholics or Orthodox ever gone through changes in the divine liturgy. Like having different postures, different prayers, as is the Roman Church after Vatican II.
Many Old Believers have been reconciled with Orthodoxy and allowed to retain their own “use” or “rite” - to use Latin ecclesial terms - and that has been sufficient for them. However, many Old Believers have deemed this kind of accomodation to be insufficient and so they condemn the rest of Russian Orthodoxy for accepting the changes.
I don’t think it’s exactly a parallel because the Old Believers schismed over such ridiculous things like a word-change in translation or the position of one’s fingers when making the sign of the cross. The SSPX are tending towards schism over a worldview that has important implications and that is at variance with that of Rome. The SSPX don’t care whether I cross myself with the full open hand or with three fingers or with two. They may kind of be similar but they’re at totally different levels of conservatism.
I agree with the general attitude of these two posts. The Old Believers are maybe not a very good comparison for the anti-Vatican II crowd.The analogy between SSPX and Old Believers is valid with respect to the overall feeling - that is, that liturgy reflects truth, truth does not change, therefore changes to liturgy should not occur frequently, and when they occur, should be minor.
It is not a valid comparison in terms of scale. The changes of Nikon’s reforms were minor compared with the changes after V2.
A closer analogy in that regard, as well as the motivation for the changes and the explicit anti modernist stances of the dissidents would be with the Old Calendarists.