D
Denho
Guest
In the Syriac tradition the Qurbono is not to be offered unless there is a tablitho to offer it upon. It is a wooden board consecrated by a bishop when the altar itself is consecrated. In a pinch I believe the Gospel book can be used as well. The Maronites used to adhere to this and the Seminary in DC has one at least but most parishes in the US follow the Latin practice of using the inlaid altar stone.I can’t imagine DL celebrated in any normal circumstance without an antimension for Eastern Orthodox, or Eastern Catholic. I don’t know about Oriental Orthodox and Oriental Catholic rubrics. Among other things it represents the permission of the bishop for the priest to celebrate. Folded, unfolded, where it’s placed, are of course all spelled out. What would prompt such an innovation as to not use one under any normal circumstance? We do know of the stories of our heroic priests in the Gulags who celebrated flat on their backs using their chests as a Holy tablewhich may well have not included any antimension. The last thing I’d have been thinking about in that Gulag would have been “Is this Eucharist valid?” Christ I know took care of that for them Himself.
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