What I do not understand here is if there are differences between the Catholic rites in how truths are taught, why is this not taught to people in RCIA? Even better would be to have a simple test people could take and then they could find which one fits them the best. I understand if you are born into something, you are born into it. However for those of us who are not, who want to convert, it is a mess that seems to make no sense. It is almost like the Latin rite is hiding this information from us.
Something about this whole thing seems to smell very badly to me…
Pax
I’m a catechist in a Latin parish. I have worked now for a number of years with Christians wanting to come into full communion with the Catholic Church and with the unbaptized. During that time I made my own change from the Latin Church to an Eastern Catholic Church.
As a reasonably well catechized Catholic of the Latin Church when I began learning more about the ECCs and having been somewhat active in this Eastern Catholicism section of the CAF for several years I think RCIA is not the place to expose someone who is new to Catholicism to ECCs in any depth.
You can’t teach what you don’t really know about and generally speaking most catechists in the Latin Church know very little about the ECs. The process needs to be us encouraging Latin Catholics to come to know our traditions, just as JPII strongly encouraged.
I think the best way to learn about us is to go to Diving Liturgy and other services such as Vespers. What has happened thankfully in our RCIA is that because of my involvement with ECCs our DRE has the past two years gone to Divine Liturgy during the LA Congress and spent a fair amount of time talking to the EC folks who had a table in the books etc. area. Two of our catechists have gone with me to a festal Vespers/Vigil at the Russian Orthodox Church I go to for such things. I believe that these experiences the other team members have had makes our team richer and helps keep it from being me as the only one familiar with at least some aspects of the ECCs. Sometimes one of them may be the one to mention that something is done differently in the East.

I don’t mean we get into any serious teaching about ECs, but that we do note
when it’s appropriate that there is more to the Church that what is seen in this parish.
I think with the implementation of new translation of the Roman Missal in the English speaking countries now is a great opportunity for the Latin Church to really be reminded of this diversity and universality.

I am often the one to bring up that something is done differently in the Extraordinary form of the Roman Rite, when something is said about a universal practice in the Church which is actually only in the Ordinary form of the Roman Rite.

I do think candidates and catechumens need to know that what they have been drawn to and chosen in this parish in this part of the Catholic Church is perhaps the most common form they will find here but not the only form.
It’s usually the seminarians, we have two from fall semester until Pascha, who are assigned to us who are the most interested in the ECCs when they discover I’m an EC and maybe the larger influence I have as an EC comes in encouraging their interest to learn more, and for them to see a catechist who happens to be an EC functioning well in a Latin parish.
I also went through a three year non degree program the Latin Diocese offers here. In those three years together my classmates were exposed to my more assertive presence as Eastern, since we were all training for leadership in the Latin Church, and they definitely came away with a basic awareness of Eastern Catholics and a good appreciation of the treasures we do bring to the universal Church. They are now involved in teaching and other ministries in their parishes all over the Diocese. Hopefully they do from time to time speak up about the other lung of the Church.

After I finished the program the Diocese brought on board an EC (Ruthenian) priest to teach the required class on Holy Mysteries/Sacraments!

I’m sure he has had a serious impact there.
I put announcements in our parish bulletin when there is something of interest on EWTN (Light of the East broadcasts on 12/18, 12/20 & 26) and when my EC parish celebrated the panikhida at the National Shrine of St. Francis, for example. Our catecheumens as well as the rest of the parish see these notices.