J
Joseph_L_Varga
Guest
I just did a little search and found that the Liturgy of St. Tikhon is used by the Antiochian Orthodox Church. I have never attended St. Tikhon’s liturgy, but I will try to make some projections based on my experience with other EO Divine Liturgies (I’m familiar with the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom and the Liturgy of St. James in the Russian EOC, and a Western Rite Liturgy used by the Clerks of St. Basil Secular, who are also of Russian origin).Thanks Joseph. That’s quite a list.
Nine hours from now, I will be in a Roman Catholic chapel assisting my regular Sunday EF/TLM. Twelve hours from now, I will be visiting a Western Rite Orthodox chapel for the Liturgy of St. Tikhon. Would it be too much trouble to shorten your list to maybe 2-3 key Orthodox teachings that I am likely to hear discussed during either of these services?
Those doctrinal differences between Catholic and Orthodox Churches which I already mentioned will not come up during the Divine Liturgy, unless the priest specifically brings them up in his homily.
What you will hear at the Divine Liturgy of St. Tikhon, will be 99.9% compatible with a Catholic Holy Mass. You see, Eastern Orthodox are not like the Protestants, who have done away with the Catholic Mass, including the Eucharist. The only differences you will hear during this Western Rite Orthodox DL, that are not Catholic, will be these:
- They will pray for the Orthodox Patriarchs, however they will not pray for the Pope. By contrast, we at the Catholic Mass pray for the Pope and Bishops everywhere.
- They will pray for Orthodox believers everywhere (but not for those non-Orthodox). By contrast, the Catholic Mass is offered for everybody (for the whole humanity - Catholic and non-Catholic, including those who never even heard of God, and those who reject God).
When an Eastern or Oriental Orthodox attends Holy Mass in a Catholic Church, our Church asks them to follow the discipline of their own Church (e.g. proper disposition and fasting rules according to their own Orthodox Church), and if those discipline requirements have been satisfied, the Catholic priest will admit the Orthodox believer to Holy Communion in our Catholic Church.
Mick, will you find out please - does this Orthodox church you plan to visit, belong to the Antiochian Orthodox Church?