E
erinmitbaren
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My Chaldean friends have invited me to go to one sometime and I want to know how it differs from a Latin rite Mass. 
me tooI canāt help you, but Iām subscribing to this thread to learn more.
I think theyāre not that common in the U.S. Iāve never heard of one around here (Houston) and itās a pretty big and diverse city.Yaāll should check one out.
See this thread.My Chaldean friends have invited me to go to one sometime and I want to know how it differs from a Latin rite Mass.![]()
what would i expect in a Chaldean Rite mass/Divine Liturgy?
Youāre welcome.Thanks everyone! Lyrikal, it would be a Mass in Chaldean.
Both languages are used depending on which part of the liturgy youāre talking about. The hymns are mostly in Syriac which is the language that is closest to the one Jesus spoke. The Our Father is in Chaldean Neo-Aramaic. It all just depends on which part of the liturgy it is.Iām not sure when weāre going, but i want to be preparedThe 2nd link you posted appears to be in Syriac. Is the Mass in Syriac or Chaldean Neo-Aramaic?
This is all accurate.A couple other comments from only one experience at a Chaldean-Assyrian Mass and one at their Vespers.
I was at the āEnglishā Mass, which turned out to mean the Gospel was proclaimed a second time in English. There was no other English. They did have bi-lingual service books but I didnāt have one, which was fine with me. Iād rather watch than be looking at a book and missing the actions.
The passing of the peace has been described some other places. It began at the altar and was then passed from the deacon to the person at the end of the pew, yes they had pews, and that person passed it to the person next to them by means of covering the other personās hand in a flad pray postion with their own hands.
About half the women had on head coverings the whole time. When it was time to go up to receive Eucharist voila, head coverings were on the head of every woman. Once they received and returned to their pew those other women took off the headcovering again.
Itās been a couple years so I cannot be certain but Iām thinking the Eucharist was in the form of wafers similar to a Latin Church, intincted by the priest somewhat like the Melkite style of communing.
There was a curtain where a Byzantine church would have an iconostasis in the Cathedral where I attended the Vespers. The church where I went to Mass didnāt have a curtain and the altar was flat against the wall.
I would go again but the time conflicts with our Divine Liturgy and is about 1 1/2 drive. Everyone was very friendly.
Yes, all of the phrases/prayers had a translation in English on that page, like this:Youāre welcome.
And with regards to the 2nd link, did you mean that the title heading is in Syriac? Because the rest of it is in English, right? I want to make sure weāre talking about the same link.
Shlama ammakh (peace be with you).
Hello,Yes, all of the phrases/prayers had a translation in English on that page, like this:
People: Abun dba-shmayya nithqaddash shmakh, tethe malkuthakh, qaddysh, qaddysh, qaddysh-at, Abun dba-shmayya. Damlen shmayya w-arāa rabbuth shuhakh, āyre w-nasha qaāen lakh: qaddysh, qaddysh, qaddysh-at.
[Our Father who art in Heaven, hallowed be your Name. Your kingdom come. Holy, holy, you are holy. Our Father in Heaven: heaven and earth are full of the greatness of your glory; angels and men cry out to you: holy, holy, you are holy.]
However, the phrase in Aramaic looks like itās in Syriac. Iāve seen it spelled in Neo-Aramaic like this: Baban dāile bishmayya, etc. My friends and boyfriend have attempted to teach me phrases in Chaldean, so i would probably be a little confused if they were in Syriac instead![]()
I attended one that was very, very long.This is all accurate.
Only exception is, some āEnglishā masses have more than just the Gospels in English. Most of what the priest is saying is in English, the readings are in Chaldean and in English, the homily is in English and the hymns are in Syriac. I think it just depends on which church you go to.
Other than that, great post!![]()