**What if however, that parish wants the stations in their Church? The stations are a wonderful spiritual exercise, why get rid of them because they are simply Latin, and especially if those in the parish want to keep it.
I believe that’s how I understand the SSJK - they simply don’t want to get rid of the devotions that they have come to love. In fact, isn’t that a blessing that the Easterners have for being in communion with Rome - they have access to both Western and Eastern spiritual practices.**
The thing is, frequently these Latinism push out the true Eastern practices.
There is nothing wrong with Stations of the Cross. But should they be done INSTEAD OF the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts, the Akathist, the Great Canon, and Great Compline during Lent? This too often has happened in the past.
How about May devotions to the Theotokos? Why them and NOT the Paraklisis to the Theotokos during the first two weeks of August?
Why a multiplicity of Liturgies–but no Vespers or Matins?
Should the recited Liturgy with no incense (a clear imitation of the Latin missa privata) take root in Eastern Churches? (I know of one church where the early English liturgy was recited, and the later one was sung in another language. They never learned to sing the Liturgy in English.)
One Eastern church paper had a letter to the editor that asked, “Why are we using incense so much? That makes us look like Orthodox, not like Catholics”–apparently assuming that the Latin penchant for omitting incense was the norm of Christian worship.
I hope you see what I’m getting at.
I believe this post has pretty much hit the nail on the head.
However, I believe that in the short run, SSJK will continue to grow. The best way to create a schism is to tamper with Liturgy or devotional life. Even when reforms are well founded, or are motivated by the desire to restore sound tradition, their implementation can be a delicate matter. Anyone remember the hapless patriarch Nicon?
The prudent thing to do would be to encourage authentic Byzantine practices in a positive way, as bpbasil noted, without appearing to “go after” popular devotion.
By all means, let’s have more Orthros and Vespers and other traditional offices in the churches. Let’s have more monasticism. Then the people will see the beauty of the Byzantine tradition, and will want more of it. It won’t work if the bishop just comes in like a bull in a china shop, suppressing western devotions with heavy handed tactics.
There’s another “elephant in the room” here that nobody has mentioned-- the highly equivocal position of Cardinal Husar. He condemns Fr Kovpak for associating with bishops consecrated
sine mandato. In fact the Cardinal himself was consecrated without papal mandate by Cardinal Slipyj, in 1977! This puts him in a rather awkward position when it comes to uncanonical bishops.
Not that I condemn the great Cardinal Slipyj; he should have had the patriarchate, but that would have run afoul of Cardinal Casaroli’s
Ostpolitik.
The picture is quite a bit more complex than we’re being allowed to see.
SAVIOR OF THE WORLD, SAVE RUSSIA.