R
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Does anyone know of a website where I can read and follow along all the steps and prayers that take place in a Maronite Catholic Divine Liturgy? Sorta like an online “missal” if you will, of the Divine Liturgy? 
I suppose it’s ok as a primer, but there are several things that are a bit, shall I say, “iffy.”
Very helpful. Thanks!syriac=aramaic. Syriac is the greek name given to the aramean language. I imagine that the entire liturgy is not online. There are several anaphoras used by the maronites today. I have only seen the anaphora of St. John on the internet
I’m not 100% sure, but I don’t think you’re going to find it on line. I suggest you contact the nearest Maronite parish and ask if they can send you a copy of one of the spiral-bound seasonal books.I’m actually looking for a website that has the exact words that are said during the entire Divine Liturgy, like the prayers and responses. I’m wanting to study a bit on the Maronite Rite since my grandparents are from Lebanon. Figured I gotta study up on my Lebanese roots. Maybe someday I’ll be able to attend a Maronite Divine Liturgy, but for now that may be out of the question.
I didn’t notice that one before, but yes, it has the basic text from the so-called “pew books” although I have no idea why they used the Anaphora of St John, which is one of the longer anaphorae. The standard is the Anaphora of the Twelve Apostles, but of course the structure is the same.The answer is that there is no such site as the Maronite liturgy changes during the year (there are several different missals/pew books that are used). One site that contains an entire Qorbono (the Maronite Litiurgy) may be found at: faswebdesign.com/ECPA/ then follow the link to Tradition then Worship and from there to the Qorbono. The text is the English version only (there is a little Syriac, but not much).
Deacon Ed
The word ‘suryaya’ is the Syriac word for ‘Syriac’ so it seems that it originates from the syriac itself.syriac=aramaic. Syriac is the greek name given to the aramean language. I imagine that the entire liturgy is not online. There are several anaphoras used by the maronites today. I have only seen the anaphora of St. John on the internet
Exactly what I was looking for. Thanks and God BlessThe answer is that there is no such site as the Maronite liturgy changes during the year (there are several different missals/pew books that are used). One site that contains an entire Qorbono (the Maronite Litiurgy) may be found at: faswebdesign.com/ECPA/ then follow the link to Tradition then Worship and from there to the Qorbono. The text is the English version only (there is a little Syriac, but not much).
Deacon Ed
Interesting : ) . Thanks I never knew that before.The word ‘suryaya’ is the Syriac word for ‘Syriac’ so it seems that it originates from the syriac itself.
The Anaphora of the Twelve Apostles is somewhere online. I remember seeing it.
FYI, the clip quoted is the Magnificat in Arabic, not Aramaic. I’ve seen some clips on youtube are in Aramaic, but this isn’t one of them.I saw parts of the Divine liturgy on www.youtube.com/maronites sung in Aramaic and subtitled in English with views from Lebanon’s shrines. Try it