E
Elzee
Guest
Has anyone attended a Mass celebrated with the * Divine Liturgy of John Chrysostom*? What is it like? Is it very different from our regular NO liturgy?
That would be the Byzantine Churches, not all Eastern Churches us the Divine Liturgy of St John Chrysostom.The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom is the Divine Liturgy used by the Eastern Churches during most of the Liturgical year.
This is true but the laity really will not notice much of a difference as the only real differences between the two is the priest’s prayers.The Divine Liturgy of St. Basil the Great is used on Sundays during Great and Holy Lent.
This is true for the Slavic Byzantine Churches, the Byzantine Churches from the Middle East pray the Akathist to the Mother of God on Fridays.The Liturgy of Presanctified Gifts is used on Wednesdays and Fridays during Great Lent. During Great Lent, the regular Divine Liturgy is not celebrated on weekdays except for Great Feasts such as the Feast of the Annunciation.
It most certainly is!Wow - it sounds beautiful!
Last month I had the opportunity to attend a Chaldean liturgy, a Maronite liturgy, a Byzantine Catholic liturgy as well as the Akathist to the Mother of God at 1pm. Also a Romanian Byzantine liturgy, and a Coptic Orthodox liturgy.Has anyone attended a Mass celebrated with the Divine Liturgy of John Chrysostom? What is it like? Is it very different from our regular NO liturgy?
Thanks David!Patchunky,
I hope you don’t mind if I add a bit for clairification.
That would be the Byzantine Churches, not all Eastern Churches us the Divine Liturgy of St John Chrysostom.
This is true but the laity really will not notice much of a difference as the only real differences between the two is the priest’s prayers.
This is true for the Slavic Byzantine Churches, the Byzantine Churches from the Middle East pray the Akathist to the Mother of God on Fridays.
Depends.Has anyone answered this part of ELZEE’s question:
Is it very different from our regular NO liturgy?
THANKS!Depends.
The general format of Reading, Gospel, Eucharist are in the same order.
But other than that, your average ‘Joe in the pew’ Roman Catholic would find it very different.
Here is a missal of the Liturgy
esoptron.umd.edu/ugc/liturgy1.html
And here is a video of the Divine Liturgy being celebrated
byzantines.net/realaudio/index.htm
Not really. Just many of our parishes in the Byzantine (Ruthenian) Catholic Church use less of the litanies. The litanies are the same they just don’t use them all. Again, that is only in some of the praishes.It would be fair to note that this is a version the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church uses. The Ruthenian Byzantine Church has shorter litanies.
We do not genuflect. We bow to the tabernacle.THANKS!
Watching it…so far no genuflection into the pew. Is there no active tabernacle?
The English wording depends on which translation you’re using.Dave,
There are differences between the wording. The local Ukie church says in the Creed , “For us,” while the Ruysns say, “For us me.” The wording is different in many places throughout the liturgy (at least here and at the 71st otpusty @Uniontown). The Ruthenians can use the litanies the Ukies use, none around here do however that I have seen, and they didn’t use them at the liturgies at Uniontown’sky that I attended.