Hi Constantine,
Thankfully the Pope is not of this thinking. Our bishop is already finding ways back to our own authentic tradition.
I don’t get it. Latins insist on returning to their tradition, yet deny the Eastern Church from returning to theirs. Double standards. But again, thankfully the Pope doesn’t think this way. Since Vatican II, the mandate of the Eastern Churches is to return to its authentic traditions, free from Latinizations. The exact words is “must”. It is a mandate, not a suggestion.
There is no mistaking that even today Eastern Catholic churches are seriously conflicted over this, most notably in India but this is true to some extent all over. Clearly, Eastern Catholics are not of one mind on this idea of returning to authentic traditions.
It is sad to see that it required a Vatican mandate. Actually, it is much like an admission that the movement toward self-determination is not genuine.
How far from the bold days so long ago when the synod of Ruthenian bishops once demanded terms from the Papacy, including:
…That the divine worship and all prayers and services of Orthros, Vespers, and the night services shall remain intact (without any change at all) for us according to the ancient custom of the Eastern Church
…That the Mystery of Holy Baptism and its form should remain among us unchanged as we have served it until now,
…that we should not have to make such processions with our Mysteries inasmuch as our use of the Mysteries is different
…That the marriages of priests remain intact
…That our Bishops should not send to Rome for the permission to consecrate
…If in the future someone of our Religion should want to join the Roman Church, denying his own Religion and Ceremonies, let him not be accepted
…That Archimandrates, Hegumenoi, monks and their monasteries, according to the old custom shall be under the obedience of the bishops of their dioceses
…That our Rus’ monasteries and churches should not be changed into Roman Catholic churches
Concluding thus … that in our name and in their own name they should ask the Most Holy Father the Pope, and also the King’s Grace, our merciful lord,
to confirm and guarantee beforehand all the articles which we have here given in writing, so that assured as to the faith, the Mysteries, and our ceremonies, we might come to this holy accord with the Roman Church without any violation of our conscience and the flock of Christ committed unto us and likewise that others who are still hesitating, seeing that we retain everything inviolate, might more quickly come after us to this holy union.
These were bold men. Not afraid of the Papacy, although they very much respected it. They insisted on their rights before they themselves would act, they demanded and received promises. They acted upon their own initiative and did not wait for Rome to offer up some little concessions.
That spirit left the church ages ago. The later bishops of that same church, long since appointed by kings and Popes embraced latinizations with vigor, resulting in the notorious Synod of Zamosc, and eventually the suppression of the hours in favor of Latin devotions, the removal of the monasteries from the control of the bishops and gathering them into a Latin-like religious order, the routine poaching of Ruthenian faithful, etc. The original Orthodox bishop-signatories, who placed so much hope in this new beginning, were betrayed.
All this resulting in a church that did not know how to restore itself or why it should, and had to be ordered to do so from outside for the Vatican’s reasons, not it’s own reasons.