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CDB1718
Guest
Have you read this recent article that likens East and West to the rods and cones in the eye?One thing I appreciate about the East is their general constancy in insisting that architecture, iconography, music, liturgy, etc., are part of an integrated whole in a real and practical sense, not just hidden away in documents somewhere.
Whereas in the West we severely suffer from a certain choppiness, an un-integrated-ness, an inorganic-ness, not only in practice, but in the minds of people as well: “No, the way a liturgy is celebrated couldn’t possibly have anything whatsoever to do with what and how people believe, how absurd!” seems to be a favorite idea among many–strictly-speaking–orthodox Latins. I really do run into this.
Of course, I don’t think the East is some utopia, but at least in this topic, the East has preserved much of that pristine liturgical ethos, if only in their approach to it, as Pope Francis alluded to.
In the West we do get some of this, but it seems to be because of the sort of pastor you have, or the bishop you have who takes a fancy for liturgy; Latin culture, at least in the geographical West itself, does not inculcate that integrated-ness that I observe in the East between liturgy and the faith itself. It is there, but a different kind, and to a lesser degree, imo. It is more, “Yes, of course we believe that about the liturgy, see, it’s right here in this document!” never mind that “it” is rarely if ever seen in practice. Yet if we applied this principle–“lookey there it’s in that document so ;p”–to any other aspect of our religion it would be repudiated immediately.
The Theology of the Body Broken in Practice: The Great Schism (part 2 of 2)
How does this mirror the schism among Catholics and Orthodox more clearly than the lung? This is because the genius and converse weaknesses of the East and West are so often different. Many have commented that the West is strong in maintaining unity, but tragically at the expense of maintaining the beauty of the ancient faith. ‘The West’ is strong in differentiating matters of faith and morals, in that She has continued to hold councils that allow Her faithful to have clear answers to modern problems such as the technology which facilitates in vitro fertilization. But at the same time, many would say that She has suffered from a unity and clarity of message that does not have the ‘color’ of a beautiful liturgy, at least not commonly so in the United States. In that sense, the West is like a person who has defective cones but functioning rods. She can see clearly, but without color. It is as though the strength of scholastic, rational thinking is maintained, while a mystical and intuitive appreciation of the beauty of the world is lacking.
At the opposite end of the spectrum, one could posit that the East in our day and age has lost nothing of Her liturgical beauty and traditional richness. Her prayer services and traditional ascetic practices are still fervently upheld, even if not well followed. However, She often comes to different conclusions about matters of faith and morals. Do non-Orthodox have a valid Eucharist? What are we to think of contraception? The fuzzy areas where clarity is needed are not so uniformly upheld. In that sense, the East without the West is like a person who is able to differentiate colors because the cones are fully functional, but the rods appear wounded, as making sense of what is happening in the ‘dark’ of this world is somewhat defective.