Referring to a parish as an "Eastern Rite parish"

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I’d assume you mean a Western Rite Orthodox Church, or the “Holy Catholic Church, Western Rite” of the Continuing Anglican movement church.
No. What I mean is a situation in which an Eastern Catholic might say that, for example. I was providing a hypothetical complement to a Westerner saying, “I’m going to attend a parish that uses an Eastern Rite.” Which itself would also logically imply that one would be attending a parish of an Eastern Church.
 
No. What I mean is a situation in which an Eastern Catholic might say that, for example. I was providing a hypothetical complement to a Westerner saying, “I’m going to attend a parish that uses an Eastern Rite.” Which itself would also logically imply that one would be attending a parish of an Eastern Church.
Technically, Russian Greek Catholic parishes are part of the Roman Church as well as part of the RGCC - they are part of the local Roman dioceses, under the local Roman hierarch, and the priests are incardinated into the local diocese. The parishioners are part of the Russian Greek Catholic Church, but are also parishioners of the local Roman diocese.

Likewise, a Roman parish in Ethiopia is under an Ethiopian Church bishop, and the parish is part of both churches.

Ritually, one church; administratively, the other.
 
No. What I mean is a situation in which an Eastern Catholic might say that, for example. I was providing a hypothetical complement to a Westerner saying, “I’m going to attend a parish that uses an Eastern Rite.” Which itself would also logically imply that one would be attending a parish of an Eastern Church.
As they say “It’s a free country”… 🤷
 
Technically, Russian Greek Catholic parishes are part of the Roman Church as well as part of the RGCC - they are part of the local Roman dioceses, under the local Roman hierarch, and the priests are incardinated into the local diocese. The parishioners are part of the Russian Greek Catholic Church, but are also parishioners of the local Roman diocese.

Likewise, a Roman parish in Ethiopia is under an Ethiopian Church bishop, and the parish is part of both churches.

Ritually, one church; administratively, the other.
That is good information that I did not know. However, there is no Roman Church, only a Roman Rite; the Western Church is called Latin. More terminological difficulties…
 
That is good information that I did not know. However, there is no Roman Church, only a Roman Rite; the Western Church is called Latin. More terminological difficulties…
Yeah, people always seem to be confusing *church *and rite.

As another example, the Melkite Church uses the Byzantine Rite, but some will mix the words up and say “the Melkite Rite”.
 
That is good information that I did not know. However, there is no Roman Church, only a Roman Rite; the Western Church is called Latin. More terminological difficulties…
It’s the other way around. The Roman Church uses the Latin Rite, Ambrosian Rite, Dominican Rite and others. The Latin Rite has ordinary and extraordinary forms and an Anglican use among it’s liturgies.
 
YoungTradCath;10981929:
That is good information that I did not know. However, there is no Roman Church, only a Roman Rite; the Western Church is called Latin. More terminological difficulties…
It’s the other way around. The Roman Church uses the Latin Rite, Ambrosian Rite, Dominican Rite and others. The Latin Rite has ordinary and extraordinary forms and an Anglican use among it’s liturgies.
Well … uh … actually, I think YoungTradCath is basically correct. The Latin Church includes the Roman Rite, Ambrosian Rite, etc. See here under Western Rites and Churches for example. 🙂
 
Well … uh … actually, I think YoungTradCath is basically correct. The Latin Church includes the Roman Rite, Ambrosian Rite, etc.
You beat me to it; I was just going to make that correction. :cool:
 
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