You know, on a certain level I sort of understand this… However for some reason or another your particular Rite choose to abandon the Orthodox “communion” in favor of being in communion with Rome. There certainly must have been some reason for this, and it certainly must have been a good one.
Listen I’m not trying to say Eastern Catholics should pretend there is no difference at all from being a Roman Rite Catholic certainly there are many. But as a Catholic (and I would feel this way regardless or Rite) I find the attitude here bordering on unhealthy. It’s border line “well see we’re really actually not Catholic at all, we just call our selves that”.
Please understand, I’m not trying to disparage or trying to start an argument for the sake of starting one. But ultimately if your rite did decide upon communion, there needs to be more commonality than your posting, at least on the surface, would put forth.
Hi Crazzeto

I appreciate your honesty. These are concerns that I’ve been struggling to reconcile as well. What I’ve posted in the past have been the “fruits” of my research and discussions with various Eastern Catholics (laity, scholars, priests, and even bishops).
The first thing I would say is that Eastern Catholics do NOT belong to a Rite within the (Roman) Catholic Church. I know this has been repeated over and over on these fora, but the distinction is extremely important, if subtle. To say that Eastern Catholics belong to a Rite within the (Roman) Catholic Church is equivalent to saying that Eastern Catholics are simply Roman Catholics who celebrate a different Mass; much the same way as the Ambrosian Rite or the Mozarabic Rite. This, however, is not true. Eastern Catholics belong to various particular (sui juris) Churches that in turn are in communion with the Church of Rome. Here we’re getting into the idea of the Catholic Church being a communion of particular Churches, the largest of which happens to be the Church of Rome; whereas in the past the Catholic Church was equated to the Roman Catholic Church with various ritual appendages. The various Eastern Rites are celebrated by, and belong to, the various particular Churches. So the distinction becomes, the Rite belongs to us, as members of a particular (sui juris) Church, not us to it. It is our heritage which we have the responsibility to defend and uphold “to the point of schism,” as a Russian Catholic priest friend of mine has said.
Rite, here, embraces more than just our Liturgical tradition. If we apply the principle of “lex orandi est lex credendi” to this situation, then Rite refers to the entire historical, spiritual, theological, and disciplinary heritage, not just the ritual heritage, that belongs to the various Eastern sui juris Churches. Tinkering with the Rite, in this fuller sense, therefore, is to tinker with the entire tradition of a particular Church, and to attempt to supplant it with the tradition of another particular Church. A prime example of this would be the issue of the Immaculate Conception of the Theotokos. Fr. John Myendorff best summed up the issue when he said, “the Mariological piety of the Byzantines would probably have led them to accept the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary as it was defined in 1854 if only they had shared the Western doctrine of original sin.” If Eastern (in this case “Byzantine”) Catholics follow their full Eastern heritage, they cannot accept the dogma of the Immaculate Conception as it is defined simply because the definition is completely steeped in the Latin understanding of Original Sin, and is, therefore, totally foreign to the Byzantine tradition (yes, I’m aware of Gregory Palamas; but he lived in a time which Fr. Alexander Schmemann has termed the "Western Captivity of Orthodoxy.).
Now, the hierarchs of the various Eastern Churches in union with Rome had various reasons for entering that communion. Often the reasons were simply political. In the case of the Melkites there was never a real sense of separation from Rome, even in the centuries after the 1054 Schism. The problem came when union was declared on the official level. Parts of the Patriarchate of Antioch were in favor, and other parts weren’t. This caused a split in that Patriarchate in 1724. On the Catholic side of that split, very little changed. And the Melkite hierarchy has been more-or-less adamant about maintaining the purity of the Byzantine tradition, to the point that they walked out of Vatican I, and nearly controlled Vatican II in the hopes of keeping it from being another purely “Roman” council.
These are just a few examples. Send me an e-mail some time if you want to talk about this further.
