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nschmitz10
Guest
I attend Ukrainian Greek Catholic Divine Liturgy when possible.
It used to be about 75 minutes when I first started attending around 2000. For the last few years it has been a little under an hour.Wow. Ours usually lasts at least 75 minutes, usually a bit longer, and the Ruthenians have abbreviated quite a bit. Even on a weekday morning, with fairly fast chanting and little or no homily, it lasts a full hour.
Since Fr. Michailo arrived, we’ve run 75-90 min for sunday liturgies. Not counting Mirovania, which has been frequent.It used to be about 75 minutes when I first started attending around 2000. For the last few years it has been a little under an hour.
I got to a ,local Maronite Church for Sunday and Daily Mass, it is turning into our home parish now. Eastern Catholics have wonderful liturgies, so reverent!Latin rite Catholics
How many of you have been to a Eastern Catholic service?
If you have which one did you go to?
I was actually going to write something similar before I saw your post. I do not currently discern a call to sacred ordination, but if I do, I will transfer into the Ruthenian Byzantine Catholic church.I view myself more as an Ruthenian Catholic in praxis, ascetic, and theology than as a Latin Catholic, despite my canonical status. I don’t have any intention of switching unless I feel called to a vocation. If I am called to a vocation, I can’t imagine that I would be a Latin cleric.
I haven’t been to a Syro-Malabar church, but now that you mentioned it, there is one here in San Antonio. I have been saying to myself at least since January that I will visit it, but have not done so as of yet. Too many choices in this cityI am a Byzantine Catholic, but I’ve attended Chladean, Maronite, and Syro-Malabar liturgies. And Latin, of course.![]()
I’ve recently attended St George Byzantine Catholic in Bay City, Michigan. A small church but nice & people were welcoming to me.
Breathing With Both Lungs
In this issue of Parable we are very happy to introduce you to some of our immediate family: four of our sister Eastern Catholic Churches represented right here in the Diocese of Manchester. These Eastern Catholic Churches are Catholic and in full union with the pope. Attending Mass at one of their beautiful liturgies indeed fulfills your Sunday obligation!
The Melkite, Maronite, and Ukrainian bishops in the United States are members of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and each has a parish here in New Hampshire. There is a fourth Eastern Catholic Church represented by me – I have been granted the bi-ritual faculty, which means I am deputed to preside at liturgies for both the Roman and Ruthenian Church. I even have both of them represented in my coat of arms (to the right).
I invite you to bring the “stethoscope” of your Faith and listen carefully to the sounds of the Holy Breath of the Holy Spirit. I invite you to approach the Divine Liturgy (what we Romans call the Mass) in person and breathe in the cultural sights, sounds, movements, and fragrances of our other lung. As Pope Saint John Paul II said: one lung thrives on the mystical, the other thrives on reasoned practicality. When you breathe through one lung there is life; but the vigor of both, together, enriches the blood of the believer and the health of the Body of Christ – the Church!