M
malphono
Guest
I had thought to pipe-up earlier in this thread and then, as is my wont lately, didn’t bother. With that in mind, don’t expect me to get into this very deeply.
In any case, I will say that Benediction is practiced by the Maronites, and has been since sometime in the 16th century. No matter how one slices or deices it, it is, purely and simply, a latinization, and no one is going to tell me differently. That said, though, one has to bear in mind that the service itself is not identical to the Latin practice but is, rather, an adaptation. Beyond the use of the ostensorium (of which I am not a fan but never mind that now), I personally don’t get rabid about it, at least not when it is done as a stand-alone service or otherwise removed from Mass.
Now, the business of “Eucharistic Adoration” is something a bit different. (And this is something that I do get rabic about, but I digress.) In pre-conciliar times, even in the Latin Church, so-called “perpetual adoration” was an extreme rarity. What was more common (among the Latins) was the “Forty Hours” and, though it may have been done, I don’t recall it in the Maronite Church. In post-conciliar times, and particularly in the wake of the late Roman Pontiff, however, it is done. And again, the practice is purely and simply a latinization, in this case a Novus Ordo-inspired neo-latinization (which are far more insidious than the “old” variety but again I digress).
There are those who continually insist that Mar Charbel was engaged in almost constant “Eucharistic Adoration” but it seems to me that the fact that he was a hermit is generally overlooked. Would one really expect a hermit to be sitting alone in his bare little stone chapel staring for hours at a gaudy ostensorium? Highly doubtful. One would, however, expect a hermit to sit for hours in his bare little stone chapel meditating. I suppose one could, because of the presence of the Reserved Sacrament, stretch things and call it “Eucharistic Adoration” but it certainly wasn’t the same type of thing that is done now.
So, there is my :twocents: on the matter, and probably not worth half of that.
In any case, I will say that Benediction is practiced by the Maronites, and has been since sometime in the 16th century. No matter how one slices or deices it, it is, purely and simply, a latinization, and no one is going to tell me differently. That said, though, one has to bear in mind that the service itself is not identical to the Latin practice but is, rather, an adaptation. Beyond the use of the ostensorium (of which I am not a fan but never mind that now), I personally don’t get rabid about it, at least not when it is done as a stand-alone service or otherwise removed from Mass.
Now, the business of “Eucharistic Adoration” is something a bit different. (And this is something that I do get rabic about, but I digress.) In pre-conciliar times, even in the Latin Church, so-called “perpetual adoration” was an extreme rarity. What was more common (among the Latins) was the “Forty Hours” and, though it may have been done, I don’t recall it in the Maronite Church. In post-conciliar times, and particularly in the wake of the late Roman Pontiff, however, it is done. And again, the practice is purely and simply a latinization, in this case a Novus Ordo-inspired neo-latinization (which are far more insidious than the “old” variety but again I digress).
There are those who continually insist that Mar Charbel was engaged in almost constant “Eucharistic Adoration” but it seems to me that the fact that he was a hermit is generally overlooked. Would one really expect a hermit to be sitting alone in his bare little stone chapel staring for hours at a gaudy ostensorium? Highly doubtful. One would, however, expect a hermit to sit for hours in his bare little stone chapel meditating. I suppose one could, because of the presence of the Reserved Sacrament, stretch things and call it “Eucharistic Adoration” but it certainly wasn’t the same type of thing that is done now.
So, there is my :twocents: on the matter, and probably not worth half of that.