Byzantine Rite Missal?

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Bballer32

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Hey Everyone!

So, in the Catholic Church, anyone can buy the Roman Missal and take it with them to Mass to follow along and read the prayers that the Priest is saying.

My question is: Is there anything like the Roman Missal for the Byzantine Rite Mass? Or any Eastern Catholic Church for that matter?

Thanks,

Bballer32:D
 
Ah, you will need to make a distinction here. In the Roman rite, the Missal itself has now been physically separated from the Lectionary. The altar Missal only has the Propers of the day, not the Lectionary readings. Lay people typically buy Daily or Sunday Missals which also contain the readings, or they get a monthly prescription “missalette” like Give Us This Day which arranges all of the Propers and Readings for the month.

Every EC and EO rite has their own altar book (the Syriac/Maronite book is called Qurbono, the Byzantine book is called Euchologion; couldn’t tell you about the Melkite, Ruthenian, Syro-Malabar, Coptic, etc. altar books). But that’s typically only used by the priest or bishop. Do the EC/EO have handbooks that have all of the readings and Propers?
 
Lay people typically buy Daily or Sunday Missals which also contain the readings, or they get a **monthly prescription **“missalette” like Give Us This Day which arranges all of the Propers and Readings for the
To be taken once weekly on Sundays. Be sure to fast one hour before use. Take with Bread and wine.

I could NOT resist!!!

God bless you 🙂
 
Hey Everyone!

So, in the Catholic Church, anyone can buy the Roman Missal and take it with them to Mass to follow along and read the prayers that the Priest is saying.

My question is: Is there anything like the Roman Missal for the Byzantine Rite Mass? Or any Eastern Catholic Church for that matter?

Thanks,

Bballer32:D
We have the Byzantine Divine Liturgy available as a book with the ordinary. However, the changeable parts cannot really be compiled into a sort of Daily Missal because:
  1. We celebrate the Divine Liturgy using a system of 8 tones (which have different hymns for each week) with each tone being rotated each Sunday. The 14th Sunday of Luke this year used the Sunday hymns from Tone 3. The 14th Sunday of Luke next year might use a different tone and, therefore, different Sunday hymns.
  2. We celebrate the feasts of the saints even on Sundays which falls on a different day each year. On the 14th Sunday of Luke (December 1st) this year, we celebrated the Holy Prophet Nahum. On next year’s 14th Sunday of Luke we will commemorate a different saint since it falls on a different day.
You can check out an online Melkite Divine Liturgy book here: melkite.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/LITURGY2009.pdf
 
We have the Byzantine Divine Liturgy available as a book with the ordinary. However, the changeable parts cannot really be compiled into a sort of Daily Missal because:
in the late 90’s, the Ruthenian Metropolia promulgated a series of seasonal booklets with the propers (and their specific dates and tones), as well as seasonal paraliturgical hymns; they weren’t really all that thick, but did presume that one knew the melodies. Adding the readings would have made them much thicker, but still managable. There was one for St Phillips Fast, another from Nativity to the start of Great Lent, another fro great lent, another for easter to ascension, another for summer…

It’s not impractical to have a single volume with ALL the menaion’s troparia, kontakia, prokeimenia, Alleluiaria, and reading citations, as well as the ordinary. It’s cumbersome to use, but it’s quite doable, provided one doesn’t try for all the melodies being annotated.

A typical Roman “Daily Missal” is one of two things:
1 - the ordinary and then an appendix with all the daily propers and possibly readings, intended for perpetual use (eg: St Joseph Daily Missal)
2 - The ordinary broken into chunks by sections with a month or two of propers interspersed. (eg: OCP’s missalettes with the daily propers appendix)

And, given that either has to account for at least 4 of the 12+ Roman Rite Anaphorae, and most include 6+… (There are 4 standard Eucharistic prayers, plus at least 8 special use ones.)
 
Our clergy use the service book from St Tikhon’s Press. The readings. troparian and kontakian etc for Sundays and feast are on line. Special services such as Bridegroom Services, Pascha, Forgiveness Sunday Vespers we use these from the Department of Religious Education of the OCA. We also have copies of these little booklets of the DL which were meant for children available if a visitor wants to follow the regular DL. They do include the priest’s parts which are normally audible but not the private prayers which the St Tikhon’s service books of course does include. As mentioned a service book doesn’t have the changeable parts unique to the day ,found in other sources.

I have a copy of the St Tikhon’s Press service book which I don’t bring to Liturgy but do sometimes refer to it at home.

A parish would not typically celebrate daily Divine Liturgy. Usually those are celebrated daily only at a monastery, or maybe a cathedral where there are multiple priests or monks. Fasting from marital relations before celebrating the Liturgy would interfere with a married parish priest’s normal marital life. 🙂
 
So does the Copy from St Tikhon’s Press include the changeable parts or do none of the books available to the layfaithful contain changeable parts? Or does one have to buy a whole new book.
 
So does the Copy from St Tikhon’s Press include the changeable parts or do none of the books available to the layfaithful contain changeable parts? Or does one have to buy a whole new book.
Well, there’s really nothing preventing laymen from buying books with all of the variables for liturgy and the hours, but a set of menaia is typically prohibitively expensive.
 
Well, there’s really nothing preventing laymen from buying books with all of the variables for liturgy and the hours, but a set of menaia is typically prohibitively expensive.
Ok that makes sense. Thank you.
 
I’ll also add that there are several Orthodox websites which have the services for the next several Sundays (usually updated monthly) fully composed, with all of the fixed and variable parts included.
 
The Maronites have these big red missals with pseudo-Rabbula crosses on them and contain the new liturgical texts. If you go to a Maronite Church pick one up… in fact, feel free to take all of them.
 
The Maronites have these big red missals with pseudo-Rabbula crosses on them and contain the new liturgical texts. If you go to a Maronite Church pick one up… in fact, feel free to take all of them.
Blease … 😃
 
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