Eastern Catholic spirituality: more Orthodox or Catholic?
EIF5A,
Spirituality is not an exclusive attribute of one Communion vs. another. In other words, spirituality is not Catholic vs. Eastern Orthodox vs. Oriental Orthodox vs. Assyrian Church of the East.
Spirituality is an attribute of one ritual tradition vs. another: Latin vs. Constantinopolitan vs. Alexandrian vs. Antiochene vs. Armenian vs. Assyrian-Chaldean. The Catholic Communion has inherited all six of these ritual traditions, and so a Catholic may embrace any one of these, and may not consider the others to be heretical.
Because spirituality is an attribute of a ritual tradition, rather than a Communion, then spirituality can be shared across Communions. This goes also for the three other attributes of a ritual tradition: liturgy, theology, and disciplines. For example, both the Byzantine Catholics and the Eastern Orthodox have inherited the basics of the Constantinopolitan ritual tradition, even though they are in two separate Communions.
I think the question you were intending to ask was probably something like this: Byzantine Catholic spirituality: more Eastern Orthodox or Roman Catholic? If that’s the underlying question you were meaning to ask, then the answer is: More Eastern Orthodox. It is more like Eastern Orthodox, because as I said, the Byzantine Catholics have inherited the same basic Constantinopolitan spirituality as the Eastern Orthodox, and not the Latin spirituality of the Roman Catholics. Granted, that such historical factors as Latinizations have influenced Byzantine Catholic spirituality, nevertheless, the spiritually is not Latin.
The question can be rephrased to include the other ritual traditions as well, such as my own Eastern tradition called the Assyrian-Chaldean tradition. My Chaldean Catholic Church of the East is currently not in full communion with our sister Assyrian Church of the East, but despite this separation, we continue to share the basics of the Assyrian-Chaldean ritual tradition that we both inherited from our common Fathers of the Church of the East. There are minor differences in how we express this tradition vs. how they express it, due to various historical “izations”, but the basics of the tradition is found among the both of us.
Hope this helps.
God bless,
Rony