Yeh I get a sense of heaven on earth when I see and hear guitar players and laity running up to the altar to do their eucharistic minister duties. Never seen any of that in an Orthodox DL.
I’ve seen lay Eucharistic ministers in a Divine Liturgy. The Ruthenians allow it. Few Eastern Churches have any instruments, so organ and guitar are equally forbidden. Those with instruments are latinized, but some are long since ingrained.
And in the DL you hear the beautiful Byzantine or Plain Chant and in the TLM, the Gregorian Chant. Never heard any form of chant in any NO (Pauline) Masses that I have ever attended in my lifetime. All contemporary religious music, or choirs that are completely out of sync.
I’ve heard spoken Liturgy and chanted Novus Ordo.
the divine liturgy is way closer to the extraordinary form–high mass.
I’ve seen Eastern Catholic low liturgies all spoken and over in 30-45 minutes.
for one, both use incense.
I’ve seen liturgies regularly taken without.
they both are celebrated ad orientem. they both are usually celebrated in beautiful churches.
Yes. Though I have seen some pretty stark and plain looking eastern temples, too.
they both only have the priest or deacons administer communion.
Not the Ruthenians at the very least. They allow lay EMHCs.
communion is always on the tounge/mouth.
Yes. Many are put off by the Byzantine use of the golden spoon to dispense both the Body and Blood at once.
ordinary and propers are sung in chant.
A lot of Eastern churches aren’t keeping the full liturgical cycle and it is a latinization but not uncommon to find bare minimums and spoken.
the language in both is more traditional or frequently/exclusively use a liturgical language.
The east places great emphasis on the vernacular and the liturgical languages (Arabic, Slavonic, etc) are predominantly used in ethnic parishes where they are understood.
they both have a calander that is based on a year cycle. they both have fasting outside of lent.
Yes.
they both only have male altar servers… etc.
I’ve seen female altar servers in Orthodox and Eastern Catholic parishes.
I’m not pointing all these out to be contrary. Many of them go against the eastern tradition and some against current rubrics. I’m doing so because there is a tendency in traditionalist Roman Catholic circles to hear how reverent and beautiful the Divine Liturgy is, and I’ve seen schismatic websites say only their Masses or Eastern Catholic Liturgies are valid. I had the pleasure of talking to a pair of young sedevacantists who were directed to my Eastern Catholic parish by sedevacantist websites. All of these people are shocked when they experience the Divine Liturgy because it is totally unlike what they are expecting. They were told repeatedly of its similarity to the TLM because of male altar servers, an ad orientam priest, incense, and communion on the tongue. They all hightail it out of there, some even before Liturgy ends, and never come back.
They say it is noisy, the children are distracting, the lack of uniformity of movement is disconcerting, they think it is casual because of the amount of lay participation, they are troubled by Eastern theology present in the liturgy like the Great Procession being before the Epiklesis, they do not like that there is no kneeling, no Stations, that children of all ages are receiving the Eucharist, the homily on Mary’s physical death, the filioque not being in the Creed, the list goes on and on.
So I don’t want any traditionalists on this board to think that the Divine Liturgy is very close to their idea of the TLM or to glamorize it into this abuse-free wonderland and to be one of the overwhelmed people who are scared to receive the Eucharist when they visit an Eastern Catholic church.
The east is beautiful. It has a rich liturgy and tradition. When celebrated in its fullness, it is magnificent. A lot of traditionalist Catholics respect it and enjoy visiting. I just want people to accept the Liturgy on its own terms.