From This Rock: “The Rite Not to Be Roman”:
Today there are more than twenty Eastern Catholic churches in union with the Pope; they include the Ukrainian, Maronite, Romanian, Melkite, Chaldean, Ruthenian, Coptic, Armenian, and others. Each has its own bishops and each is considered a “particular church,” but their parishes are just as Catholic as the local St. Thomas Aquinas or St. Ignatius of Loyola parish.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church explains that there is one universal Church, the “unique Catholic Church,” and many particular churches, each a community of Catholics who are joined by faith and the sacraments and their bishop (CCC 833). The Second Vatican Council teaches that from these individual churches comes the fullness of the one and only Catholic Church (Lumen Gentium 23).
The term “Roman Catholic Church” can be misleading (it was originally created by Anglicans, not Catholics) because in English-speaking countries it is commonly used to denote the entire Catholic Church—which ignores all the other particular churches that have their own rites and traditions.
Ultimately, true Catholicism is not found in uniform worship or liturgy—the Catholic Church has not, since its earliest days in Jerusalem, been uniform in those areas. Rather, it has been united in its common faith, doctrine, and sacraments, concretely demonstrated by communion with the pope, the bishop of Rome. While there is a proper diversity in the realm of liturgical practice, devotions, and even disciplines, there is an
essential unity in doctrine and dogma.
John Paul II explained in Orientale Lumen that the Catholic Church is made up of Christians who are united in the Holy Spirit by the same faith, the same sacraments, and the same government, formed into various groups held together by a hierarchy and forming distinct churches or rites (OL 2). He also wrote that the authentic variety within the Church does not harm its unity but “manifests it,” and each particular church “should retain its traditions whole and entire” (OL 2).
The Second Vatican Council’s Decree on Eastern Catholic Churches (Orientalium Ecclesiarum) emphasized that “the Catholic Church values highly the institutions of the Eastern Churches, their liturgical rites, their ecclesiastical traditions, and their ordering of Christian life.” It further stated that the tradition found in the Eastern Catholic Churches are of “venerable antiquity” and “has come from the apostles through the Fathers and is part of the divinely revealed, undivided heritage of the Universal Church” (OE 1).
What Can They Teach Us
The Eastern Catholic Churches’ rich treasury of spirituality, practice, and culture demonstrates the true catholicity of the faith and can bring a deeper appreciation for the wonderful gift of the Church, the mystical body of Christ.
This appreciation is evident in the words of John Paul II, who wrote:
Code:
The members of the Catholic Church of the Latin tradition must also be fully acquainted with this treasure and thus feel, with the pope, a passionate longing that the full manifestation of the Church’s catholicity be restored to the Church and to the world, expressed not by a single tradition, and still less by one community in opposition to the other; and that we too may be granted a full taste of the divinely revealed and undivided heritage of the universal Church, which is preserved and grows in the life of the churches of the East as in those of the West (OL 1).
All Catholics are united by common doctrines and beliefs, but they often express them in different ways. In Eastern Christianity, theology is not viewed in the scholastic manner that it has often been in the West. Theology cannot be separated from spirituality; they are intimately joined and related. For example, because of the theological emphasis on the participation of the baptized in God’s divine life, even infants are chrismated (confirmed) and receive the Holy Eucharist from baptism onward."
catholic.com/thisrock/2006/0601fea4.asp