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I was wondering about the Divine Liturgy. I presume the Western Church used to do the Divine Liturgies similar to Byzantine Rites. Is that correct?
No. The various particular Churches that make up the Catholic Church have all had their own liturgical traditions depending on the region and the customs of the region. That is why even in the Latin West there are a number of Liturgical Rites: Roman, Mozarabic, Ambrosian, etc. In the various Eastern Churches there have likewise been a number of Rites of the Mass/Divine Liturgy: Chrysostom, Basil, the Ethiopian Liturgies, the Coptic Liturgy of St. Mark, the Maronite Mass, etc. The history of the various liturgies is very complex. In patristic times there was no one set form of the Liturgy/Mass that eventually evolved into the various expressions that we have today. Rather each culture pretty much developed it’s own liturgical expressions/celebrations of the Mysteries of our Faith. The different Rites, however, did inspire one another and there was a good amount of borrow, which continues to this day. The Constantinopolitan Liturgy (of St. John Chrysostom) borrowed heavily from the Antiochian tradition and is thus very Antichian at heart, for example.I was wondering about the Divine Liturgy. I presume the Western Church used to do the Divine Liturgies similar to Byzantine Rites. Is that correct?
The last time the liturgy was the same was in the late 2nd century… we know St Clement made some minor changes, and so did St. Linus… but not exactly what they were. The next time we see a recording of the Roman Liturgy, it’s fairly distinct (6th C, IIRC)… but still not quite what we’d recognize, even as the EF. In point of fact, if one were to attend a mass under the missal approved by the council of Trent, one would find several things absent that one finds in the “modern” EF.I was wondering about the Divine Liturgy. I presume the Western Church used to do the Divine Liturgies similar to Byzantine Rites. Is that correct?
It was never present in the Roman. The Rood Screen isn’t an iconostas, nor is the altar rail; both serve jointly to define the altar’s chancel (the area reserved to clerics and servers), but are not intended to be iconostasi.So why has the western liturgy changed so much? Is it because of fashion? When did the iconostasion get removed?