The Banned said:
one MEEN Ag said:
There are some liturgical rites within the catholic church that are just as old if not a bit older than the tried and true St. John Chrysosdom's Liturgy used every sunday in the Eastern Orthodox Church. The conversation here is actually about everything but that. Like how the Pope has the power to change the liturgies and that the power of the pope has neither resulted in uniformity nor constancy. And the extension of that power to change via the pope is the power to continually try to drill down further and further defining canon and how christianity lines up against philosophy. That is why most catholic liturgies aren't very old at all, because someone does have the power to change them.
Zobel is underplaying the point that there are differences between east and west that shape priors and what even is asked as a question within theological contexts.
Are you suggesting that your councils, or even your patriarch, are incapable of changing the liturgy? If every bishop acts as pope in his region, then every bishop reserves that power, no? Clearly the liturgy has had changes since 34 AD, so someone or some groups have the power to change it, right?
That said, if we want to say the conversation is about everything but the liturgy, I'm ok with that. I was questioning the reasoning behind using the changes in liturgy as a barrier to unity. Do you view the separate liturgies as reason not to commune? Or is the main reason just papal supremacy/infallibility with the liturgy as an aside?
I think there is a misunderstanding of the early church here. Liturgies are not made up from nothing in 34AD. They are fulfilled (as in filled full) practices of the second temple period. Prayers, incense, readings, etc were done before Christ. The addition of gospel readings and the partaking of communion came immediately after. There's a whole generation where the temple still stood and the early church is finding its footing about daily, weekly, and seasonal services and fasts. So the early church period has a bunch of church fathers putting forth their ideas of how to arrange a liturgical service. So yes, the apostles, earliest bishops/priests/deacons had a hand in creating the liturgical services. St. John Chrysosdom's liturgy has become the bread and butter liturgy. That doesn't make other liturgies within the Church less so. Like St. Basil's is used as a longer form liturgy. And there is a huge upwelling of the fullness with other services like matins and othros and hour prayers. And then early church started to calendarize which readings take place which days, what days to fast, what the church feasts will look like and when.
Again, this is all the product of the early united orthodox catholic church. What became the common practice is what was seen as good, righteous, and most fitting by the early church.
But we do not live in the early church period. Nor do we live in the 'late church father period'. We have inherited all of these things and our role is to dutifully continue with them. The early church spent time fine tuning, writing this down and teaching it.
So my point about how its 'not about the liturgies' is because the united orthodox and catholic church have a shared first 1000 years. For example, an orthodox person is not going to point to a liturgy of St. James that the united orthocatholic church preserved, and then the catholics have continued to preserve and place into their rotation of liturgies and say its bad.
But here is the catch, liturgies are the culmination of theological beliefs. If we see a divergence in beliefs were going to see a divergence in liturgies over time. The orthodox church has no interest to change anything about what they've inherited. What would a bishop in todays age even want to change about the liturgies? It wont be a theological change. And if its not a theological change- what needs to change anyway?
So there isn't really much of a formal power structure to be able to enact sweeping changes to the liturgy anyway because that power structure is a vestige of a previous time. If the EP got up and said, I demand St. John Chrsysdom's Liturgy add X lines at the end. You all shall add it. Not as prayers, not as announcements, but a whole stanza of what I like. The immediate question would be why? Followed up with No. But the EP, in our age, would never ask that.
Because of this, the orthodox church has not had its liturgies swung high and low with the whims of society. No creation of Low Mass where its just the catholic priest saying things quietly to himself while the laity can't even hear anything (because this defeats the purpose of gathering and participating together to create a liturgy). No solo masses (for the same reason). No Contemporary Mass (Novus Ordo) because the needs of humanity haven't changed, the idea of 'progress' across history culminating in newer things being better is a lie, and there is nothing to cut from the liturgies nor the idea that anyone has the authority to.
So its never and only 'just the pope'. The office of the bishop of Rome rising into infallibility has caused a huge amount of problems that the orthodox church never had to deal with. And from the outside looking in, I have yet to see a solution that the office of the pope has solved that needed an infallible office to solve it.