Hi there,
I am currently in the process of discerning weather God wants me to be an Byzantine Rite Roman Catholic or an Eastern Orthodox.
Last Sunday I decided to attend Divine Liturgy at a local Byzantine Rite Catholic church in my area. I was greatly perplexed by several things that I saw.
… the
laity would be welcome to proceed to the table of oblation
behind the Iconostasis …
During this priests Sermon, I noticed that he made a sharp point to define the liturgy as
not** having a sacrificial nature, and he made it clear that the thing behind the Iconostasis was a Table for a meal, not a Sacrificial Altar…
Welcome to CAF Eastern Catholicism section.
I want to be charitable since we can’t know exactly what was going on that day. But what you have described here and in
your later “tour” description, is deeply disturbing to me.
I’ve asked our clergy several times if they could do the Proskomedia one Sunday in the nave for us to reverently observe. There are many aspects of what goes on before Divine Liturgy which the faithful in general are unaware of since they generally arrive much later than the clergy does, and after the clergy have already said their prayers before the altar and prayers at vesting, and begun the Proskomedia. If anyone arrives while the Hours are still being chanted they might have a clue something is going on behind the iconostasis because of the occasional interaction between the cantor chanting the Hours and the priest at Proskomedia. (We have a classic Russian iconostatis which is solid except for the Royal Doors which can be seen through partly at times but are covered by a solid curtain at many times including Proskomedia.) The laity would be much benefited knowing more about this action as well as what takes place during Divine Liturgy.
It’s very sad to hear about what you have described as far as the laity going into the Holy Place, and the described touching of the Holy Table. That seems to have been unique to this day which sounds like it was intended for a special “teaching”, including this “tour”.
I hope you’re assured here that this is not what one expects to see in an Eastern Catholic Church. I’ve never seen anything in my parish that would be other than what I see here when I am worshiping in one of the Russian Orthodox Churches here.