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Isa_Almisry
Guest
- THE EUCHARISTIA.
During the Eucharistia, the faithful, while following step by step the process indicated by the Eucharistic Prayer, should make an intense spiritual effort to feel and realize his unity with Christ and as such the fact that he is a child of God, and being in God.
B. THE ANAMNESES.
In the Anamnesis are recounted all the gifts and blessings of God and all the fruits of His infinite mercy; the mercies shown in the old dispensation, and especially those in the new by the Incarnation of the son. Then the mandate of the Lord at the Last Supper is remembered and recounted. This mandate is then linked in the same sentence to the crucifixion, indicating that the âdoingâ bidden at the Last Supper was a âmysteryâ sacramentally pre-enacting the sacrifice on Calvary, and thus showing the way in which the faithful could benefit by the passion and death and the resurrection of the Lord.
**During the Anamnesis the faithful **should recapitulate in their minds and meditate upon the events of the life and passion and death of Christ. Then they should endeavor to realize the fact that they are âin Christâ and as such they try to re-live Christâs life on earth with Him. And they should make an inward, spiritual offering of themselves to God, together with Christ being offered on the Altar.
E. THE EPICLESIS
The Epiclesis corresponds to the moment when Christâs body in the tomb was changed into living, glorified body. The Gifts up to now represented the figures or symbols, âthe mysteries,â of the earthly body of Christ. At the Epiclesis, when the Holy Spirit descends and infuses the Gifts, they become the âmysteriesâ the âsymbolsâ of the living, glorified Body of Christ. In the same manner did the Lordâs body in the tomb become living through the Holy Spirit and rose from the dead.
During the Epiclesis the faithful, while praying with the priest so that God may send the Holy Spirit upon the Gifts, would also pray their heavenly Father to send the same Holy Spirit into their soul, so that they may be one with Christ and His church, and may thus be transfigured and raised together with Christ, after the remission of their sins.
D. THE DIPTYCHS.
The Diptychs signify and emphasize the fact that the sould of the dead are part of the living body of Christ and that they also rise with Christ.
The congregation may be seated
When the General Intercessions are made during the Diptychs, the faithful should remember and pray for the faithful of the past ages, who lived and died in Christ and who carried forward and handed down the faith to the succeeding generations. the members of the conngregations whould recall and realize the fact that they belong to the same spiritual family under the fatherhood of God, and that the souls of the dead in Christ speak and work in and through them.
During the Special Intercessions the faithful should remember and pray for their own dead, belonging to the immediate circle of their family, relatives, friends and acquaintances. They should also especially remember and pray for them for whom the prayers of the congregation have been requested.
E. THE DOMINICAL PRAYER
The congregation stands
After the acceptance of the Sacrifice by God, when the union of the faithful in the Church with Christ is once more assured, when the faithful have âreceived the spirit of adoption whereby we cry: Abba, Father,â when the Spirit bears witness âthat we are the children of GodâŚand joint heirs with Christ,â then the congregation exultantly bursts into singing the Lordâs Prayer. Thus the singing of the Lordâs Prayer is the climax of what went before in the divine Liturgy.
While the Litany is being recited and the Lordâs Prayer is being sung, the faithful should follow their meaning with earnest attention, and they should rejoice and be exceedingly glad for their privilege of being the children of the heavenly Father. They should further resove that they will be worthy of such an infinitely great and wonderful status.
- THE INTINCTION AND FRACTION
Fraction is symbolic of the unity of the body of Christ in the multiplicity of the individual members of the Church. Thus one loaf is broken and distributed among the people. Fraction following the Eucharistia corresponds with the action by the Lord when He âbroke the breadâ after âgiving thanks,â and said it should be distributed among many.
During the Intinction and Fraction, **the faithful **should recall their baptism of the water and of the spirit, by which they were cleansed of their sins and received spiritual power from God. They should renew their realization that they are saved by Christâs Blood, and that they share this salvation with their fellow Christians, with whom they are one.
Here is sung the âLord Have Mercyâ the congregation kneeling or standing.
- THE COMMUNION
Communion is the act by which the believer âmysticallyâ or sacramentally receives Christ through the Holy Spirit. For this reason it brings to mind the day of Pentecost when the Church and her members received the Holy Spirit sent by the Father through Christ. As Pentecost concluded the cycle of events connected with the work of Christ Incarnate, so also communion concludes the âmysticalâ theosis of the believer through the Sacrament of the Eucharist.
The faithful should approach communion with full consciousness of the importance of their act for the health and salvation of their souls. They should receive communion feeling âhungry and thirstyâ for it, feeling the necessity for the cleansing of their souls, when they are repentant and humble, and when they are alright in their faith.
Communion is the exclusive and great privilege for an Orthodox Christian, and he should be fully conscious of it.
F. THE INCLINATION AND ELEVATION
The congregation kneels or stands.
The Christian, after realizing his lofty status of being the Son of God and joint heir with Christ, can only be âkept wholeâ by virtue of his humility, as the Prayer of Inclination suggests. The Inclination, signifies the profound truth of the paradox that we can only have the right to be proud by being humble, just as Christ went through the uttermost degree of humility before He rose and ascended into heaven. Humility, the greatest of virtues, is the condition of the possession of our patrimony. The Prayer of Inclination is addressed to the Holy Spirit because He is the source of all virtues.
The Elevation brings to mind the Ascension of Christ, whereby He went up to heaven, up to His holiness, and âsat with the Father,â as the wording of the Prayer of Elevation indicates. It shows the highest point of the upward progress of the life of the soul.
During the Inclination and Elevation the faithful should first bow down and pray for the virtue of humility, for the health and wholeness of their souls. Then, rising, they should raise their inward eyes up to heaven and to the throne of God, and should pray the Lord for holiness and for the life of the Spirit from on high.