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frjohnmorris
Guest
Actually if you outline the Roman Catholic Mass and compare it to the outline of the Byzantine Divine Liturgy, you will find that they are identical in structure. They also express the same basic theology. What creates the experience is not so much the wording or the structure, but how the service is conducted. The Byzantine Liturgy is much more like the old Tridentine High Mass than the Noro Ordo Mass which uses less ceremony than the old High Mass. Roman Catholics also use contemporary music, while Orthodox use traditional Russian or Byzantine chant. The music makes a great difference in how one experiences the Eucharist. I would feel more at home in a Roman Catholic Mass chanted using Gregorian Chant than I do with contemporary music and instruments. However, I would be the last person to question the validity or orthodoxy of the contemporary Catholic Mass. It is a matter of taste rather than theology.I was referring more to the “experience” of the Mass and the Divine Liturgy rather than what is contained in both services. The structure of the Mass leaning more to Christ’s Sacrifice is more evident when one participates regularly while the emphasis in the East is more the gathering of the community. However you are right that both Churches have both and that is what I said as well but experiencing both Liturgies can give you this leaning if you can call it to experience more what Christ is doing for us in the West while the experience is more to what the Holy Spirit is giving to you without taking away the other. It is to this “experience” that a Catholic and an Orthodox will have complimentary yet distinct behaviors from following their own discipline as covered by the Mass and the Divine Liturgy. I have experienced both and from observing the two Churches and experiencing the two Churches there is a distinct way which grows from the peoples that is clearly seen in how they “experience” the Holy Communion.