In
an overwhelmingly Muslim Middle East, it is surprising to note that one-tenth
of all Syrians are Christian, and even more shocking to discover that almost
half of the population of Lebanon is also Christian. It is a wonder there are
any Christians left in that part of the world at all. But then, these are no
ordinary Christians. Most Christians in the Middle East are not Roman Catholic
or Protestantthey are Eastern Christians
with a unique heritage distinct from Western forms of worship and practice. Perhaps
their millennium-old customs make them robust enough to stay in countries where
they are surrounded by hostile neighbors.
“It
is their faith,” says George Baho, a native of Damascus, Syria. George told Catholic World Report, “Without a strong
faith, Christians in Syria could not persevere under a Muslim majority.” His
parents moved to Damascus from a small village in northern Syria called
Mardeen. Mardeen is one of many small, isolated, Christian villages in the
Middle East that heroically cling to their Christian culture and identity. The
Baho family is Syriac Catholicone of many Eastern Christian communities in the
Middle East. Syriac Catholics have their own distinct monasteries, churches,
liturgy, and hierarchy within the Catholic Church.
Lebanon
is actually governed by the Christian majority of that state, the Maronite
Catholics. But Syria and Lebanon are home to half a dozen other Eastern
Christian communities as well, including Greek, Armenian, Syriac, Assyrian/Chaldean,
and Coptic Christians. These communities celebrate liturgies that developed
independently of one another more than a thousand years ago. They have preserved
a cultural treasury of liturgical beauty and depth that is waiting to be explored
by Western Catholics.
Blessed
John Paul II called for the Church to breathe with “both lungs,” incorporating
the rich traditions of both the East and West. In 2011, Pope Benedict’s general
intention for the month of November was “that the Eastern Catholic Churches and
their venerable traditions may be known and esteemed as a spiritual treasure
for the whole Church.” Most Roman Catholics, however,
have yet to discover how this can be practically achieved.
The
most obvious difference between East and West is the liturgy. The prayers and
actions of the Mass are not the same in the Christian East. The Catholic East practices five distinct rites, or liturgical traditions,
that mirror the Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox churches (which are not
in union with Rome). To understand the difference in liturgy, it is necessary
to look back to the regrettable schisms in the Church.
During the fifth and sixth
centuries, the Alexandrian and East Syrian bishops broke away from the Greek
and Latin Church, marking the first schism in the Christian Church. These
Churches are called the “Oriental Orthodox” (Iraqi Assyrians, Egyptian Copts,
etc.)
The early part of the second
millennium witnessed another significant rupture between the Latin Church of
the West and the Greek Church of the Eastthe gradual, tragic result of
linguistic, liturgical, disciplinary, theological, and cultural differences.
The Eastern Church took the title “Orthodox,” and the West, “Catholic.”
Over
time, many Eastern Orthodox Christians resumed communion with the bishop of
Rome, and are called Eastern Catholics. These Churches are known as the Alexandrian
(Egypt), the East Syriac (Iraq/Iran/India), the West Syriac
(Syria/Lebanon/India), the Armenian (Armenia), andthe largestthe Byzantine
(Greece, Russia, and the Slavs) Churches.
Most
Roman Catholics who are familiar with the East have knowledge of the Byzantine
tradition. The Byzantine Catholic Church is made up of 13 “autonomous ritual
Churches,” such as the Ukrainian, Ruthenian, Melkite, and Romanian Catholic
churches. These Churches have parishes worldwide and are governed by their own
hierarchy of bishops who are in full communion with the Pope.
When asked, “Why are you Byzantine Catholic?”
Shelepets Baumann, a parishioner of Sts. Cyril and Methodius
Byzantine (Ruthenian) Catholic Church in Fort Pierce, Florida, replied:
I was born into the Byzantine faith and practiced it all of my
life. Like most things [I began] to take it for granted. However, I never
realized until my adult years how precious the Byzantine Catholic faith is and
how beautiful the Divine Liturgy is. As an ex-flight attendant and presently a
traveling nurse, my jobs have taken me to many parts of the states and I have not
always had the opportunity to go to a Byzantine Catholic church, so I [often
attend] the Roman Catholic church…[but] when I go to my Byzantine Catholic
church, I am home.
Blessed
John Paul II, in his effort to bring together the East and West, issued two
distinct challenges. Because Eastern Catholics are a minority, they must
faithfully preserve their tradition and not be tempted to “Latinize” their
practices. Roman Catholics, on the other hand, should seek out some amount of
liturgical and intellectual exposure to the Christian East for spiritual and
cultural enrichment.
As John Paul the Great knew, in
the current war against secularism, both lungs are necessary in order to
provide enough “oxygen” for the spiritual battle raging in today’s world. The
Eastern perspective expands the arsenal of the Western Church’s theology and
prayer life. So, on the one hand, breathing with both lungs reinforces the
Church Militant, but it is also an invitation to broaden one’s horizon through
a beautiful encounter with Christ, who is new every morning.
Eastern perspective
The Eastern lung could analogously
be called the feminine branch of the Catholic Church. This does not mean
saccharine, feel-good Christianity, but rather that the East is notably mystical
and contemplative. The Eastern Church provides a nurturing, liturgical
environment for its members to encounter the Most Holy Trinity.
The East complements the Western
need to act upon the world with missionary zeal by being more singularly
focused on the liturgical and interior spiritual life of Christianity than its
Roman counterpart.
Christians, East and the West, are
all called to holiness and believe the same truths, but the Eastern “feminine” view is different than the analogous masculine
perspective. The Eastern Church offers a different vocabulary, a unique lens on
the Catholic faith through a liturgical encounter with God.
“There’s not just one way to be Catholic,” says Father Thomas Loya, radio
host of “Light
of the East” and pastor of Annunciation Byzantine Catholic Church in Homer
Glenn, Illinois. The different cultural and liturgical practice of Catholics
around the world “is what makes the Church truly Catholic.” Father Loya emphasizes
the complementarity of the traditions: “You can take the same faith and express
it in a variety of ways. This creates unity in diversity.”
The Divine Liturgy (Mass) is the
heart of Eastern Christian theology, mysticism, and culture. The old axiom is,
“If you want to know what the Eastern Christians believe, attend the liturgy.”
One of the first things Roman
Catholics will notice about the liturgy is that there is no quiet meditation.
There are no pausesthe chanting never ceases. Yet, the Byzantine liturgy is an
active meditation with a very rich vocabulary of prayer. Eastern Christian
theology is at the service of prayer, because the entire aim of that theology
is to find words fitting for prayer.
Eastern liturgy exhibits an
enticing beauty and grace: the smell of incense, the unbroken chant, the
striking icons. The senses are transfixed throughout the liturgy, which gives
the feeling of timelessness and ascension into glory. Baumann of Fort Pierce, Florida further notes:
Our Divine Liturgy is so beautiful that certain parts of it always
bring tears to my eyes because of its beauty. There is reverence in our church
for God. People respond with enthusiasm and one can feel that you are in a holy
place, in the presence of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit…. Our other worship
services are filled with words of such beauty that are offered to God…not to
mention our beautiful music…
This modern-day Byzantine Catholic
parishioner is not the first to be awed by the beauty of the Eastern services. A
famous 10th-century Russian, after experiencing the Greek Divine Liturgy for
the first time, exclaimed, “We no longer knew whether we were in heaven or on
earth…such beauty, and we know not how to tell of it!” According to legend, the
relation of this experience sparked the conversion to Christianity of the
entire Russian people.
Roman Catholics often feel like hobbits among
Tolkien’s high elves or travelers in an exotic country upon their first
encounter with this liturgy. The East speaks a different language. And, as John Paul II fittingly stated in his
letter
Orientale
Lumen: “The words of the West need the words of the East, so that God's
word may ever more clearly reveal its unfathomable riches.”