N
Nine_Two
Guest
While you make valid points for why chairs might be superior (and I’ll agree they might be easier for the reasons mentioned, though pews certainly aren’t impossible - though I’ve only ever attended Hierarchical Divine Liturgies at churches that either used chairs or only had a half compliment of pews so it wasn’t an issue), the kind of person who is declaring that pews are heretical isn’t going to make that sort of distinction, and that was what I was aiming my responses at.You’d be wrong on that score. I object to pews, but not chairs, as a simple matter of practicality for byzantine worship and general cleanliness.
Chairs are readily movable, but pews are affixed to the structure. You can’t readily remove pews to make room for prostrations, nor for cleaning the floors. Pews are inherently less suitable for public worship space than freestanding chairs, or even chairs that bind to each other.
Further, pews that are suitable for when the bishop is celebrating the HDL leave a very wide aisle in the center the rest of the time; meanwhile, with individual chairs, the aisle can be widened when the bishop is celebrating the HDL, but narrowed down again when celebrating only the normal liturgies (without the clergy stainding and sitting in the middle of the aisle).