B
ByzCathCantor
Guest
It is absolutely the case in the Byzantine-Ruthenian Church that a priest will not celebrate the Divine Liturgy alone. The work of the people cannot be conducted by a single person. Any priest in the Metropolia would confirm that fact. The sacrifice is offered on behalf of the people (plural) present, and it would not be proper for a priest to offer the Holy Oblation on behalf of himself. Of course, in the case of a married priest, the presence of his wife alone in the congregation would be sufficient. Who would “approach with the fear of God and with faith” if it were the priest alone?Where is this codified? There is no such requirement within the Byzantine Ruthenian recension to my knowledge.
There aren’t many married priests within Metro Pittsburgh anyway.
If I show up in Church to serve as Cantor in my current parish for a weekday DL, my priest will routinely joke that “we now have a quorum”, meaning that even if the family requesting the privately intended Liturgy does not show up, we can proceed as he has a congregation of at least one besides himself.
As for rules applicable to married priests, when we start ordaining them again, they’ll write them down, but there is long-standing tradition in this regard. The few married priests we do have would all confirm the veracity and applicability of the norms of Eucharistic abstinence followed by married priests in anticipation of celebration of the Divine Liturgy. I am a rarity for my generation in that I grew up in a parish with a married priest (with children), in the Eparchy of Passaic. As I considered a priestly vocation as a young man, this priest did advise me fully and honestly about the challenges and sacrifices of the married priesthood, which of course was closed at that point, but I was instructed nonetheless.