M
meltoine
Guest
Let me preface this by saying that my husband and I first took this question to our priest when we were preparing for our wedding, and he could not find an answer for us at the time. Now that we are due to have our first child the question has taken on a particular new relevance and I am still at a loss for an adequate answer.
What Rite of the Church does my husband belong to? And as a follow-on, which Rite will our child belong to? I know our child will be whichever Eastern Rite my husband is since I am Latin Rite.
His mother belongs to the Maronite right, which I believe falls under the category of the Antiochian or Syriac traditions. His father belongs to the Melkite Rite, which falls under the Byzantine Liturgical tradition.
The one thing our priest was able to tell us is that at Vatican II it was decided that children of at least one Eastern Rite parent would automatically be Eastern Rite, to preserve the numbers, culture, and tradition of the Eastern Churches. I read Orientalium Ecclesiarum and found in sections 4 and 6 where it refers to members born into the Eastern Rites and requires them to practice their own Rite to the best of their ability, but I cannot find (in this document or others) the reference he quoted.
Also, in my priest’s explanation of the situation, he said that the document he was referring to made no mention of which Eastern Rite a child belongs to if both parents are of differing Eastern Rites.
The bottom line questions are:
To which Rite does a child of parents from two different Eastern Rites belong?
Can you point me in the direction of the document our priest may have been referring to?
What Rite of the Church does my husband belong to? And as a follow-on, which Rite will our child belong to? I know our child will be whichever Eastern Rite my husband is since I am Latin Rite.
His mother belongs to the Maronite right, which I believe falls under the category of the Antiochian or Syriac traditions. His father belongs to the Melkite Rite, which falls under the Byzantine Liturgical tradition.
The one thing our priest was able to tell us is that at Vatican II it was decided that children of at least one Eastern Rite parent would automatically be Eastern Rite, to preserve the numbers, culture, and tradition of the Eastern Churches. I read Orientalium Ecclesiarum and found in sections 4 and 6 where it refers to members born into the Eastern Rites and requires them to practice their own Rite to the best of their ability, but I cannot find (in this document or others) the reference he quoted.
Also, in my priest’s explanation of the situation, he said that the document he was referring to made no mention of which Eastern Rite a child belongs to if both parents are of differing Eastern Rites.
The bottom line questions are:
To which Rite does a child of parents from two different Eastern Rites belong?
Can you point me in the direction of the document our priest may have been referring to?