A
a_pilgrim
Guest
This thread is prompted by a recent conversation I had with a Byzantine Catholic priest/friend of mine…
As a cradle Byzantine Catholic, I grew up in a Church environment that is considerably different from today’s. Most notable among these changes is the absence of the use of any Old Church Slavonic within our current worship, the “mother tongue” of our Byzantine Catholic Church’s liturgical praxis (much like Latin is the “mother tongue” of the Roman Catholic Church).
In lamenting the apparent demise of Old Church Slavonic during a conversation with my priest friend, he commented to me that he had enrolled four new families in his parish within the last four weeks. He was confident, he said, that none of these families would have enrolled in his parish had they been exposed to Old Church Slavonic in the liturgical setting, feeling obviously somehow excluded on an ethnic basis.
So, then… to you English-speaking folks from varying ethnic backgrounds who joined (or are considering joining) Eastern Catholic communities, I ask:
Any additional comments or thoughts on this issue would be appreciated. Thanks for your help, folks!
As a cradle Byzantine Catholic, I grew up in a Church environment that is considerably different from today’s. Most notable among these changes is the absence of the use of any Old Church Slavonic within our current worship, the “mother tongue” of our Byzantine Catholic Church’s liturgical praxis (much like Latin is the “mother tongue” of the Roman Catholic Church).
In lamenting the apparent demise of Old Church Slavonic during a conversation with my priest friend, he commented to me that he had enrolled four new families in his parish within the last four weeks. He was confident, he said, that none of these families would have enrolled in his parish had they been exposed to Old Church Slavonic in the liturgical setting, feeling obviously somehow excluded on an ethnic basis.
So, then… to you English-speaking folks from varying ethnic backgrounds who joined (or are considering joining) Eastern Catholic communities, I ask:
- Assuming that the language of worship in your current or anticipated EC parish is English, how important is this to you?
- Were you or are you currently exposed to any liturgical language other than English with regard to your EC parish?
- If you were/are not exposed to a liturgical language other than English, would you have reconsidered joining if you had been?
- If you were/are exposed to a liturgical language other than English, do you feel excluded during those instances in which it is employed?
- Do you have any desire at all to learn some of the “mother tongue” of your (new) EC Church and use it as part of your liturgical participation, or would you rather keep everything in English?
Any additional comments or thoughts on this issue would be appreciated. Thanks for your help, folks!