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I have attended a Greek Orthodox mass and it is a learning experience.
Have you ? And what do you think?
Have you ? And what do you think?
Except that the Byzantine Divine Liturgy is ALWAYS chanted… always. A spoken Liturgy would almost be an abomination to the Orthodox.Yes, very similar and almost undistinguable in some aspects to the Catholic mass.
Agreed, I forgot about that.Except that the Byzantine Divine Liturgy is ALWAYS chanted… always. A spoken Liturgy would almost be an abomination to the Orthodox.
The word Mass is a latin term, eastern Catholics and Eastern Orthodox would not use that word for their Divine Liturgy. It would be a major faux pas to ask a Greek Orthodox about his Mass.I have attended a Greek Orthodox mass…
Yes they are. Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church in Dallas is IMO one of the most beautiful in the world. If only all the Catholic parishes in my area were this beautifulyes, i have
i prefer the roman catholic mass
the icons in the GOC are very beautiful
*Divine LiturgyI have attended a Greek Orthodox mass and it is a learning experience.
Have you ? And what do you think?
Just from my experience, and I have a lot of Greek Orthodox friends, they never refer toit as "mass. It’s always “Divine Liturgy”. Just like we Byzantine Catholics.ok; if you say so
i could’ve sworn the attendees at the GOC “ceremony” were calling it “mass”
Ukrainian Catholic Divine Liturgy is same, with Slavic influence:I have attended a Greek Orthodox mass and it is a learning experience.
Have you ? And what do you think?
Yes, ^^^ThisJust from my experience, and I have a lot of Greek Orthodox friends, they never refer toit as "mass. It’s always “Divine Liturgy”. Just like we Byzantine Catholics.
its not a “dismissal” in that sense. Its the sense of a military commander giving his troops orders, and at the end the troops are commanded to act on those orders. The troops are given strength for their Mission with the Eucharist, then ordered to do the MissionI do not understand how Catholics have come to name their liturgy, “dismissal”, as it comes from the Latin expression “Ite missa est” (Go, the dismissal is made).
For Orthodox, the Divine Liturgy is the meeting of heaven and earth, where the Church is lifted up out of time, uniting with the eternal heavenly worship of our creator and savior. It seriously pains me to hear it referred to simply as “dismissal”
That is a pious fiction.its not a “dismissal” in that sense. Its the sense of a military commander giving his troops orders, and at the end the troops are commanded to act on those orders. The troops are given strength for their Mission with the Eucharist, then ordered to do the Mission
It might be a generational or regional thing. I had a couple of Greek friends growing up and they often referred to it as Mass. Maybe they were just trying to come up with a cultural equivalent that I could understand without them having to make an explanation.Just from my experience, and I have a lot of Greek Orthodox friends, they never refer toit as "mass. It’s always “Divine Liturgy”. Just like we Byzantine Catholics.
Its practically irrelevant whether its pious fiction or the original meaning, as the “pious fiction” had taken root very early on:That is a pious fiction.
I doubt there are many Catholics who have any such understanding. To them it is simply “mass”.Its practically irrelevant whether its pious fiction or the original meaning, as the “pious fiction” had taken root very early on:
The connection between the meaning “dismissal” and the “deeper” meaning of “mission” was also discussed by Benedict XVI (without making an etymological claim) in Sacramentum caritatis (2007): “In antiquity, missa simply meant ‘dismissal’. In Christian usage, however, it gradually took on a deeper meaning. The word ‘dismissal’ has come to imply a ‘mission’. These few words succinctly express the missionary nature of the Church”.[4]