P
Peter_J
Guest
Heh heh.Or perhaps more challenging yet, to attempt to do so in the Ukraine![]()
Heh heh.Or perhaps more challenging yet, to attempt to do so in the Ukraine![]()
Understood, but it did seem interesting to ponder how a Western rite church could be erected in a predominantly Eastern Christian country, where even the UGCC is significantly larger than the Roman Catholic presence.Heh heh.But seriously, I think it would be equally impossible to do so in Ukraine or North America: according to the rules laid down by the Council of Trent, the Ambrosian Rite cannot spread to any new regions.
Oh you!To keep Constantine a Catholic![]()
For sure it is a big concern for me and my family. There could be other people who has issues with it. I know of someone in the past and they are not there anymore. There are some currently that I feel may have this issue as well, although it is mostly guessing for me right now. I do know that it is an issue to some that when we switch to one bilingual Liturgy over the summer, they either go to another parish or I donāt know where else they would go. So for sure a consistent English Liturgy would be appreciated by these small group of people.Do you think their are other people in your parish that feel the same as you?
Is the ethnic issue a factor in this parish with you? From some of your other posts I had the impression it wasnāt an issue with you at this parish and in some others I got the feeling maybe it did have some bearing.
Certainly there is no ethnic bias in the OCA parish I visited. Even the person I spoke with is Ukrainian and he said he wouldnāt go to a Ukrainian parish because its too ethnic. He wants to go to a parish that focuses on Christ, not on ethnicity. And people come from various backgrounds, of ethnicity and faith. Also there are young families. I want a good community because I have seen in my cousin how effective it is to have your kids grow up with other kids in the same faith community. They are Evangelicals and her kids are faithful to their faith despite us living in a very secular society. In a parish where there are barely other people of our and our kids age group and are very ethinicty-centric towards a culture that we are totally foreign to, I have made up my mind in this regard that I am raising my kids to be atheists. They will be so disconnected to everyone else, they will give up at some point.If you went to the Orthodox Church you mention, would it eliminate some or your concerns or do you think they are also present there?
Well, our situations are different. I am basically an island in our parish. I mean, people are nice to me and all but I do not have close relationships with other people. I try but just canāt. People there are close to one another because they are all Ukrainian. I know how that feels, when we Filipinos see each other we gravitate to one another. It is human nature to be around people like you and ethnicity is one of the strongest bonds after family. I teach Catechism at our parish and so I am around the parents of the kids, most of whom are my age. Aside form being, āoh, heās the teacher of my kids,ā we really donāt have much in common.On the other hand, we have a couple of families from Central and Eastern Ukraine who came to us and are not at all ānationalisticā, speak Russian as much as Ukrainian, donāt mind some English, and were baptized Orthodox. The reason they came to us is because they tried the local Antiochian parish which is almost entirely populated by white American ex-Protestant converts, and the immigrant families found the parish to be xenophobic and essentially devoid of any distinct ācultureā.
My kids certainly didnāt grow up to be atheists (my oldest son studied iconography at UCU in Ukraine, and my middle is going there next year) and the cultural and historical millieu of our UGCC parishes we have attended only strengthened their faith when instructed and catechized in the history of our Kyivan Church and people.
Well, I know the music, even from the Anthology. Whether I do it well is another questionIndeed every parish is different.
Our mission in the Phillipines served by the Eparchy in Australia is doing well, and that shows our Church shares the universal Gospel mandate for evangelization. We should be there for everyone while not forgetting where we came from. As I mentioned here, in the Midwest USA, we also have families who travel a long distance to be here, and a number of non-Ukrainians who love our church, respect us for our beautiful spiritual and liturgical tradition, and are happy and content to worship with us. But then again we are very much bi-lingual and have some services like Vespers and Matins with more English than Ukrainian.
If you are going to facilitate some English services, you will need to learn the music, get familiar with the texts, and be ready to do it. And as I said before, donāt be surprised if the Bishop says to first try an English liturgy at an existing parish to see what the response is before moving onward.
But there is nothing holding you back now from organizing people to pray together and even asking to have services when there is not one going on in the parish Church. The Akathist is easy to sing, for example.
I will caution that sometimes people who want to ādo their own thingā are seen by the Bishop as people wanting their own church rather than working with the existing parishes and helping them to grow. So be careful, respectful, and mindful of the voice of the shepherd.
I only mentioned that because I learned from experience of my own zeal in the past.I will caution that sometimes people who want to ādo their own thingā are seen by the Bishop as people wanting their own church rather than working with the existing parishes and helping them to grow. So be careful, respectful, and mindful of the voice of the shepherd.
So your parish does use some English? One would never have guessed that from all of your previous statements.Well, I know the music, even from the Anthology.
Yes, I am in touch with him. I know he wanted to go since last year, but hasnāt received an invitation from the bishop or any group that can make it happen. I know heās been to Hong Kong, but I havenāt heard that heās been to the Philippines. I havenāt heard anything from the local Catholic groups on Facebook. Are you sure heās been to the Philippines?Youād have to ask Fr. Olexander Kenez, the chancellor for the Eparchy in Melbourne, where exactly they have the Liturgy. I know he flies up there every once in a while, and there is also an outreach in Singapore.
I donāt know if my singing is attractive to begin withI only mentioned that because I learned from experience of my own zeal in the past.
But yes, if you are going to organize and possibly lead services you really need to know the services and music. A service not sung or celebrated well will not be as attractive.
There is a regular English Liturgy but not in the summer. Also the Great Feasts (Pascha, Nativity, Holy Week services, etc.) are always bilingual. It is fairly common for us to merge the two services into a bilingual service.So your parish does use some English? One would never have guessed that from all of your previous statements.
I think Iām starting to see whatās on here.It is not just the language of the service.
Sorry, I was indeed thinking of Hong Kong, for which they have had some Liturgies, and not the Phillipines. I do know Fr. Olexander is actively working on getting things going in the Phillipines and I get their Facebook notices.I know heās been to Hong Kong, but I havenāt heard that heās been to the Philippines. I havenāt heard anything from the local Catholic groups on Facebook. Are you sure heās been to the Philippines?
Well put, Diak!We should be there for everyone while not forgetting where we came from.
the CCEO blanket enables legitimate custom for this - which said custom is legitimate. Not much followed in the Metropolia⦠but legitimate.The particular law for the UGCC in the USA allows Vespers, Matins or the Divine Liturgy to satisfy the Sunday or festal āobligationā (Articles 170 and 460). So there is no longer any need for the Saturday evening Divine Liturgy or a āVespergyā. I do not know if the BCCA adopted any of those provisions.
All basically true, but it is questionable as to whether it can be concluded that this remains a pastoral decision. The Metropolia spoke indirectly with the promulgation of the Revised Divine Liturgy, with the peopleās book specifically designed to support celebration of Vespers with Divine Liturgy (so-called āVespergyā) on Saturday evenings. This seems to indicate a trend toward tradition by including evening Vespers, with the celebration of the Divine Liturgy to offer opportunity to complete the Sunday obligation with a Eucharistic celebration.the CCEO blanket enables legitimate custom for this - which said custom is legitimate. Not much followed in the Metropolia⦠but legitimate. No particular law entry for Canon 881 is in the 1999 promulgation of Ruthenian Particular Law for the Metropolia. (Note that RPL is non-consecutively numbered so that each canon is numbered to match to the CCEO canon with the same subject.)
In practice, pastors vary on the subject, and it seems left to the pastors.
The Cantorās Companion is considered an āofficial publicationā of the Council of Hierarchs, so at the least a bias for this form was clearly expressed.In some parishes, the Divine Liturgy is celebrated on Saturday evening. I recommend, that whenever the Divine Liturgy is celebrated in the evening, it be celebrated with the office of Vespers. This precedent is founded in Byzantine liturgical practice, as may be seen at the feasts of Pascha, Christmas, Theophany, and the Annunciation.
Thanks, Jeff, for the additional context. The only āorthodoxā question that remains is whether attendance at Saturday Vespers alone would fufill a Sunday obligation for a practicing Byzantine-Ruthenian Catholic (the real question at hand). Our particular law appears silent on the point. Any wisdom on this?I think itās only fair to note what this ābiasā is.
IF the Divine Liturgy is celebrated on Saturday evening and the eves of the feasts (as has been done since at least the 1960ās), then is it better that it be preceded by Vespers, rather than being celebrated as it would be in the morning.
We have parishes that only have one service, in the evening, generally because the pastor or administrator is serving several parishes or missions. We have other parishes with a long-standing tradition of an evening Divine Liturgy, and pastoral reasons for not changing the practice. Father David has said that his recommendation was made with these situations in might, and with the hope that increased familiarity with the order of vespers (and more vocations) we would be in a position to have a full cycle of services in all our parishes.
Jeff
Thatās a good question, and unfortunately I donāt know the answer.Thanks, Jeff, for the additional context. The only āorthodoxā question that remains is whether attendance at Saturday Vespers alone would fufill a Sunday obligation for a practicing Byzantine-Ruthenian Catholic (the real question at hand). Our particular law appears silent on the point. Any wisdom on this?
Nor do I, despite trying to address it a few times through reliable channels.Thatās a good question, and unfortunately I donāt know the answer.
Another thought: even if it does fulfill the obligation for Byzantine-Ruthenian Catholics, it wouldnāt for parishioners who are canonically Latin, right? (Thatās my impression anyhow.) That might be another reason for having vigil-liturgy.