How Do I BECOME Eastern Rite Catholic from Eastern Orthodoxy?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Magdalenazdreem
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
M

Magdalenazdreem

Guest
So, that’s my question. What is the procedure? Through whom does it occur? I am NOT near an Eastern Rite Catholic Church at all. I have no car. I am dealing with a great deal of negativity from family members concerning having communion with Rome.

Anybody else go through this?

Sincerely,
Magdalene
 
So, that’s my question. What is the procedure? Through whom does it occur? I am NOT near an Eastern Rite Catholic Church at all. I have no car. I am dealing with a great deal of negativity from family members concerning having communion with Rome.

Anybody else go through this?

Sincerely,
Magdalene
Orthodox are received via simple profession of faith. You will be canonically ascribed into the corresponding Eastern Catholic Church even if you will be worshipping and registered at a Latin Parish.
 
Denho is correct, for now on worship with the Roman Catholics 🙂
 
Orthodox are received via simple profession of faith. You will be canonically ascribed into the corresponding Eastern Catholic Church even if you will be worshipping and registered at a Latin Parish.
Thank you very much, Denho! That was short, sweet and to the point. So, you’re saying I don’t have to go through RCIA?
 
Thank you very much, Denho! That was short, sweet and to the point. So, you’re saying I don’t have to go through RCIA?
RCIA is not intended for Orthodox who are being received into the Catholic Church. As an Orthodox Christian, you have been fully initiated into the Body of Christ, having received baptism, chrismation, and Holy Communion. So, as the previous poster noted, you are to be received by profession of faith. The amount of instruction in the Catholic faith you are to receive prior to your reception into full communion is the discretion of the pastor of the parish in which you are received. When I was received into the Catholic Church (I was raised Protestant, but had been chrismated in the Orthodox Church, the pastor of my parish just announced one Sunday following Divine Liturg after I had been attending there a few months that I was a member of the parish.
 
RCIA is not intended for Orthodox who are being received into the Catholic Church. As an Orthodox Christian, you have been fully initiated into the Body of Christ, having received baptism, chrismation, and Holy Communion. So, as the previous poster noted, you are to be received by profession of faith. The amount of instruction in the Catholic faith you are to receive prior to your reception into full communion is the discretion of the pastor of the parish in which you are received. When I was received into the Catholic Church (I was raised Protestant, but had been chrismated in the Orthodox Church, the pastor of my parish just announced one Sunday following Divine Liturg after I had been attending there a few months that I was a member of the parish.
Wow. I was all ready for a year or 3year long ordeal with books and classes and people who scare me (I am terrified of groups). Wow.

So I basically just begin corresponding witht he priest in the church I will be going to? SO he know sthe situation and stuff?

Thanks!

Magdalene
 
I’m glad I could be of assistance with the stuff from ByzCath.org.

And, yes, I assume you’ll get to skip RCIA. It stands for “Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults”, and since you’ve already received the three sacraments of initiation (Baptism, Chrismation, and Holy Eucharist), you’re already fully initiated. The pastor at the local Roman Rite parish will have to make a judgment call on whether you need further catechesis in Catholic teaching, but if you’ve been practicing in the Orthodox Church, I don’t think you’ll need to learn all that much, if anything at all (you’re probably a lot better catechized than most cradle Catholics).
 
You may be asked to attend RCIA, not for your benefit, but because it is a teaching moment for the other Catechumens.
 
You may be asked to attend RCIA, not for your benefit, but because it is a teaching moment for the other Catechumens.
I would not have a problem with that, only I do have a problem with others’ reactions. I’ve had Latin Rite folk have entire snits based upon the idea that there should be NO other rite but theirs. It therefore frightens me a little, but I’d do it. Teachable moments happen!

Thanks, SyroMalankara.

P.S. My registration somehow got messed up, so now I’m re-registered as Walosi. But I’m still Magdalene.
 
I would not have a problem with that, only I do have a problem with others’ reactions. I’ve had Latin Rite folk have entire snits based upon the idea that there should be NO other rite but theirs. It therefore frightens me a little, but I’d do it. Teachable moments happen!
Yes, unfortunately, many Latin Rite Catholics are completely unaware that there are Eastern Churches in full communion with Rome. They assume that Eastern Catholics are the same as Eastern Orthodox (ie: not in communion). Or, even if they know about Eastern Catholicism, they assume that Roman Rite practices are somehow “better” and “more Catholic” than what’s done in the Eastern Catholic Churches (which is ironic, since the way things are done in the Eastern Churches developed centuries before the schism, and in many cases are far older than the equivalent Roman Rite practices). Again, MANY Catholics are very poorly catechized.

On the other hand, whenever I discuss the Eastern Catholic Churches with a Roman Rite priest (and I know several of them), they have shown nothing but respect and admiration for Eastern Catholicism.
 
When I decided to become Catholic and leave the Orthodox Church, I was immediately allowed to partake in the Sacraments. That said, my priest put me in RCIA class immediately January 2012. I was “formally” received into the Catholic Church by profession of faith Easter/Pascha 2012.

The priest had never had someone come from the Orthodox faith before (I think he was unsure about the process).
 
When I decided to become Catholic and leave the Orthodox Church, I was immediately allowed to partake in the Sacraments. That said, my priest put me in RCIA class immediately January 2012. I was “formally” received into the Catholic Church by profession of faith Easter/Pascha 2012.

The priest had never had someone come from the Orthodox faith before (I think he was unsure about the process).
The Melkites have RCIA?! I thought that was a Roman Catholic practice 🙂
 
Thank you very much, Denho! That was short, sweet and to the point. So, you’re saying I don’t have to go through RCIA?
When an Orthodox Christian was received into my (Latin) Parish, he was simply greeted at the door immediately prior to Mass on Holy Thurday.
 
When I decided to become Catholic and leave the Orthodox Church, I was immediately allowed to partake in the Sacraments.
I was thinking that too. Well, not that exactly of course, but I was thinking that the Catholic Church permits Orthodox to “intercommune” in the Catholic Church, providing they request it spontaneously.
 
Wow. I was all ready for a year or 3year long ordeal with books and classes and people who scare me (I am terrified of groups). Wow.

So I basically just begin corresponding witht he priest in the church I will be going to? SO he know sthe situation and stuff?

Thanks!

Magdalene
I think you should also get in touch with the EC priest (even if you aren’t going to be going to that parish regularly) or someone else from the eparchy that you will belong to.
 
Yes, unfortunately, many Latin Rite Catholics are completely unaware that there are Eastern Churches in full communion with Rome. They assume that Eastern Catholics are the same as Eastern Orthodox (ie: not in communion). Or, even if they know about Eastern Catholicism, they assume that Roman Rite practices are somehow “better” and “more Catholic” than what’s done in the Eastern Catholic Churches (which is ironic, since the way things are done in the Eastern Churches developed centuries before the schism, and in many cases are far older than the equivalent Roman Rite practices). Again, MANY Catholics are very poorly catechized.

On the other hand, whenever I discuss the Eastern Catholic Churches with a Roman Rite priest (and I know several of them), they have shown nothing but respect and admiration for Eastern Catholicism.
I am a Latin rite Catholic and I think what you said is the actual truth. Many of us in this part of the world are virtually unaware of our Eastern catholic brethren, we only know faintly of the Orthodox church which isn’t in communion with Rome. From my “spontaneous research” I came to understand the existence of the Eastern churches in union with Rome and equally found that many of them are actually deeper in catechism than their Latin counterpart…All the same, we are all the same body of Christ’s church----Catholic and Apostolic! ! ! !
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top