I have read through most of these posts, and I am confused as to how a conversation regarding Byzantine and Latin Catholicism becaming a rant regarding love of God vs. love of neighbor. We love God first by attending the celebration of the Eucharist (however your church styles its name) which He himself commanded for our edification, lest we have no share in everlasting life. Then, having been nourished thus, we fulfill our responsibilities in the world, to love our neighbors as ourselves. And yes, I believe that we have to give God our best as best as we are able to, both during Mass as well as in our every day lives. The Church has already defined for us Latins, in both the Mass OF & that of the EF, what the standard is. And yes, the external form must be combined with the interior disposition, no doubt about this. Why, then, are you putting them in opposition? It is our role as obedient Catholics, to strive for it, that is, the standard of external form the Church sets. But even better, we should strive for the best because of our love of God, not merely because we are grudgingly following Church decrees, important as they are. Remember that Jesus said that in regards to charity vs. following the Law (the charity vs. liturgy/liturgical rubrics problem of the day), the Pharisess (and the rest of us) should do the one WITHOUT neglecting the other (emphasis my own). Now, for the record, while we are using anecdotal websites to back up our claims, I read on one eastern Catholic website that many a parishioner from an eastern parish, after visiting a Latin church while on vacation, business, etc., will tell their priest, “Why, yes, Father, we went to Mass of course, but we miss the Divine Liturgy.”
Huhh…??
Is that the Church, breathing with both lungs, that you want? (Remember, I’m not talking about Latin traditionalists here. I’m talking here about first time visitors—mind you, our fellow Catholics who allegedly should feel at home at any Catholic church----to a Roman church, or if not first time, those who do not come regularly.) It sounds like one of the lungs has pneumonia if this is the kind of commentary one hears regarding a parishioners first visit to a Roman Mass.
Me, I am looking very much forward to my first visit to a Byzantine Catholic parish. I am wondering whether or not many of my fellow Catholics (of the Byzantine church) are looking forward to their first visit to a Roman church. I suspect that while many are, many may not be, due to the same kind of stuff people read about not only on CAF but elsewhere.
Finally, while somebody mentioned the persecutions, we must remember those are extraordinary times. When they ended, artists, musicians, etc., strove to provide the best for divine worship, something to help us to convey, as best as possible, the ineffable majesty of our God and King, something to bring us beyond the here and now into eternity—and in the medieval age, due to people’s love of God, not in spite of it, artistic creativity flourished here in the West.
Now, can we please get back to the OP’s query, now, regarding differences (and similarities) between Byzantine & Latin expressions of Catholic Christianity?
(My sincere apologies for the length of this post—I really and truly wanted it to be brief, but when somebody starts pitting love of God through worship against love of neighbor, this is the kind of stuff which will cause me to rant.)