| Who
are Byzantine Catholics?
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| Byzantine
Catholics are followers of Jesus Christ |
Jesus
asked his disciples: "Who do people say that the Son of man
is?" They replied, "Some say John the Baptizer, others
Elijah, still others Jeremiah or one of the prophets."
"And you," he said to them, "who do you say that I
am?" "You are the Messiah," Simon Peter answered,
"the Son of the living God!" (Mathew 16:13-16)
Byzantine
Catholics are followers of Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of the
Living God, who in His great mercy came into the world and assumed
our human nature by becoming a man so that He could save us from
our sins by His passion, death, resurrection and glorious
ascension to Heaven. We are the witnesses to God’s saving action
in human history, and the bearers of the Good News of Christ to
the ends of the earth.
The
Byzantine Catholic Church is the New Testament Church led by the
Holy Spirit.
The
Byzantine Catholic Church traces its foundation to the 12 Apostles
of Christ who were the companions of Jesus as he walked on this
earth some 2000 years ago. After the descent of the Holy Spirit at
Pentecost (Acts 2:1-4), the Apostles began to proclaim the Gospel,
first to Jerusalem, then to the Gentiles. The first mission of the
New Testament Church to the Greek-speaking Gentiles of the Levant
was to Antioch, in the Roman province of Syria, where "the
disciples were first called Christians" (Acts 11:26).
Antioch became the staging area for the great missionary journeys
of the Apostle Paul, which resulted in the foundation of a string
of Greek-speaking Christian communities in Asia Minor (present-day
Turkey) and Greece. Similar missionary journeys were undertaken by
other Apostles throughout the Hellenized Eastern Mediterranean, as
well as deep into the heart of the Latin West, to Rome itself, the
capital of the Empire.
As the
Christian Church grew, each nation and culture who received the
Gospel in turn influenced the growth of the Church. Even at a
relatively early stage in the history of the Church, two major
heritages developed and remain with us today: the Eastern or
"Greek" tradition, and the Western or "Latin"
tradition. The Church in the West had its principal center at the
Imperial capital of Rome, and is known in our present-day as the
Roman Catholic Church. The Church in the East grew and developed
from the Churches in Jerusalem, Antioch and Alexandria. These
three Eastern centers shared a common language, Greek, and similar
mode of discourse which formed the basis for the subsequent
development of the Eastern Christian tradition. The Byzantine
Catholic Church shares in the inheritance of the first
Greek-speaking Christian communities of the Eastern Mediterranean
world, founded by the Apostles of Jesus Christ.
The
Byzantine Catholic Church shares in the inheritance of the
Byzantine Religious Culture of the Christian East.
A
landmark event in the history of the Church, and particularly the
Eastern Church, was the decision in 325 by the Roman Emperor
Constantine to move the Imperial capital from Rome to Byzantion, a
small town on the Bosphorus strait which he renamed Constantinople
(and which is presently Istanbul, Turkey). This shift in the
secular political balance had a dramatic impact on the Eastern
Church, for a new secular and religious center – Constantinople
– was created in the heart of the Christian East. The Eastern
Roman, or "Byzantine", Empire centered on Constantinople
was a Christian Empire that flourished for over 1,000 years, and
which engendered a new and unique culture infused with
Christianity. Naturally, the Church based in the capital city of
Constantinople gradually came to have a pre-eminent influence in
the Christian East, spreading a religious culture that was both a
synthesis and dynamic restatement of the existing strands of
Eastern Christian culture that had been cultivated in the
Greek-speaking world – the "Byzantine" religious
culture. Byzantine Catholics in America are the spiritual
descendants of Christians in Central and Eastern Europe and the
Middle East who are the heirs of this Byzantine religious culture,
and who therefore trace their spiritual heritage to the Great
Church of Constantinople, known as Hagia Sophia (The Church of
Holy Wisdom).
The
spiritual heritage of the Byzantine Catholic Church is the same
given to us by the Apostles and which matured in the Christian
East, during the period of the Byzantine Empire. This heritage
includes the doctrines, liturgical practices and underlying
theology and spirituality which came from the Christian Church of
the Byzantine Empire. This heritage is shared among all of the
Christian peoples, regardless of ethnicity or nationality, who
trace their spiritual roots to the Great Church of Constantinople,
and the Byzantine religious culture which grew from that Church.
From the First Millennium, Christians of the Byzantine tradition
have referred to themselves as "Orthodox Christians".
Byzantine Catholics are Orthodox Christians who embrace full
communion with the Church of Rome and its primate, Pope John Paul
II, the successor of St. Peter, the first among the Apostles. |
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| Byzantine
Christian Worship: God With Us |
Byzantine
Catholic worship joyfully celebrates the presence of the Kingdom
of God on Earth in and through its divine services and liturgical
life. Byzantine Catholics are witnesses to the reality of the
Resurrection and Ascension of Christ, and follow Christ, in and
with Him, to His heavenly Kingdom in the Divine Liturgy, the
principal liturgical service of the Byzantine Church. In the
Divine Liturgy, we begin worship by assembling together as the
Body of Christ, and celebrating the presence of Christ among us
with psalms and hymns. Standing attentively in His presence, we
are taught by His Words in the Epistle and Gospel, and learn how
to apply the Gospel to our lives in the sermon. We then respond to
God by freely offering the sacrifice of our own lives to Him in
the form of bread and wine, and, uniting our sacrifice with Christ’s
own eternal sacrifice, we ascend with and in Christ to His table
in His heavenly Kingdom, where He feeds us with the gift of His
Body and Blood, transforming us into His Body, making us bearers
of Christ and partakers in His nature, and uniting us with Him in
His Kingdom. Following the Divine Liturgy, we return to the world
as "witnesses to what we have seen" in the
unfolding of the Kingdom of God before our eyes, and as
missionaries to the world, sanctifying it with the presence of
Christ.
Byzantine
Catholic worship also celebrates the time of salvation in which we
live, sanctifying the time of the world with the presence of
Christ at regular periods each day. For Byzantine Christians,
following the Jewish tradition of reckoning time, the day begins
at Vespers, the ancient service of evening prayer which makes
present the finality of the present world and the dawn of the
eternal new day in Christ, celebrating the birth of the Kingdom of
God which itself begins with the end of this world, with the ‘evening’
of this world. At Vespers, we chant psalms and hymns that
celebrate the creation and fall of this world, and its redemption,
renewal and transfiguration inaugurated by Christ’s Death and
Resurrection. At Dawn, the Byzantine Church runs to greet the
Risen Lord in the prayer service of Matins (Greek: Orthros),
where the dawn of new life made possible through the Resurrection
of Christ is made present in psalms, chants and hymns. At Matins,
we praise the dawn of the ‘day without evening’, and glorify
God who has fulfilled all things in Himself. During the course of
the day, the Byzantine Church remembers the saving presence of
God, and in particular the events of Christ’s suffering passion
for us, in a series of brief services known as the Divine Hours.
Byzantine
Christians, in celebrating the divine presence among them at
worship, recognize this presence in all senses and forms of
expression, realizing that with the advent of His Kingdom, Christ
has filled all things with Himself, and made all things sacred and
beautiful in His sight. Byzantine Christian worship is therefore
holistic in content and expresses and manifests this beauty in
various forms -- ancient sacred religious poetry and hymns, moving
chanting styles, bright, brocaded vestments, the burning of
incense, the use of candles, the veneration of icons. The
Byzantine Christian worships God with his whole person, and
recognizes the presence of God in all of his senses, bearing
witness to the fact that, in Christ, there is no distinction
between ‘sacred’ and ‘profane’, but that in the Kingdom of
God, which is manifested in this world by the Church, all things
are fulfilled in Christ to be what they were created to be –
namely, a means of communion with Him. |
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| Inside
Our Churches: God's Kingdom on Earth |
Byzantine
Catholic churches are designed to manifest, or make present, in
their architecture and arrangement, the presence of the Kingdom of
God on Earth. The sanctuary, located behind an icon screen,
manifests Heaven, the dwelling place of God. The Holy Table makes
present, in a particular way, Heaven, and manifests the Lord’s
banquet table to which all are called. On the Holy Table are
placed the Book of Gospels and the Holy Gifts during the Divine
Liturgy, and in the center of the table stands the tabernacle (artopohorion)
containing the reserved Eucharist.
Shining
forth from heaven, the divine light transfigures and ‘defies’
the figures depicted in the icons placed on the icon screen (Iconostasis),
transforming them by God’s uncreated energies into bearers of
the divine nature. Icons, whether depicted on the icon screen or
elsewhere, are therefore a graphical depiction of the saving
energies of God and their tremendous transformative and
transfigurative power – they are a graphic and tangible
manifestation of salvation in Christ, of what transfigured life
looks like, and where our lives are hopefully leading us. Unlike
other religious art, icons are also a participation, here and now,
in the event or person depicted in the icon – icons make present
these events and persons for us. We therefore show icons the same
respect we would for the event or person represented in them,
because these are, in reality, present before us in the form of
the icon. When we venerate icons, our veneration is therefore
directed at the event or person depicted, and not at the picture
itself or the wood on which the icon is painted. Icons are
venerated, but are never worshipped, for worship belongs to God
alone. In fact, in venerating the persons depicted by icons, we
are in fact rendering glory and praise to God, who by His great
mercy and love has transfigured these persons and made them holy.
The
main body of the church, or nave, is the gathering place of
the assembly, the Body of Christ. Its walls are covered with icons
which make present the reality of the communion of the entire Body
of Christ, in heaven and on earth – and, therefore, of our
communion with the saints of God throughout the ages. When we
celebrate the Divine Liturgy, we are co-celebrating with the
heavenly hosts of angels and saints – and the iconography that
surrounds us in the nave manifests this reality for us in a
graphic way. The nave, then, manifests the fullness of the reality
– in heaven and on earth -- that is the Church, the Body of
Christ. Standing in the nave as the Church, we look forward to the
sanctuary, as we, in our individual lives in this world, and
collectively as the Church, look forward to the ultimate coming of
the Kingdom of God. During the Divine Liturgy, the Kingdom of God
is revealed and made manifest to us, to the Church, and we
approach the sanctuary to receive communion with God, and thereby
to experience here and now the Kingdom of God on Earth. The design
of the church building, therefore, reflects our understanding of
the Church, and the central facets of our Christian faith
regarding the meaning and goal of our lives. The church building
manifests our Christian faith in graphic terms, and allows us to
participate in that faith in a tangible way with all of our
senses, with our entire person. |
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The
entire work of Christ – his birth, death, resurrection, and
ascension – has been undertaken to provide to us the gift of New
Life in Christ. This gift of New Life is given by Christ to the
Church in the Holy Spirit – and, in a special and profound way,
through the Holy Mysteries, or sacraments, of the Church. Every
Holy Mystery is a participation in the New Life that is Christ’s
gift to us in the Church, and is a participation, in this world,
in His Heavenly Kingdom which is to come.
In
the Mystery of Holy Baptism, we are individually
baptized into the death and resurrection of Christ, being
regenerated (or reborn) in Christ. Baptism is nothing less than
our personal participation in the death and resurrection of
Christ, our personal appropriation of His death and resurrection
as my own. Following the command of the Lord to His Apostles, we
are baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit (Mt 28:19), being immersed three times in the
‘laver of regeneration’, and are called by name to join with
the Body of Christ, the Church.
Holy
Chrismation,
in which we are anointed with the Holy Chrism, bestows the gift of
the Holy Spirit upon each of us individually. Chrismation is our
personal participation in the descent of the Holy Spirit at
Pentecost. Sealed with the Holy Chrism, we are anointed as
prophet, priest and king, and are given the means – the Holy
Spirit Himself – needed to grow in holiness and live the
Christian life; we are given individually "the Comforter, the
Spirit of Truth", who will guide us throughout our lives as
Christians.
The
Holy Eucharist, the sacrament of Christ’s Body and
Blood, provides us with the spiritual food we need to sustain us
on our Christian journey. We are told by the Lord Himself that
unless we eat his flesh and drink his blood, we will have no life
in us, and it is therefore in the gift of the Eucharist that we
receive this life, which is Christ Himself, and are united to Him,
becoming His Body. The Byzantine Church, following the command of
the Lord to ‘let the little children come to me’ (Mt 19:14),
administers the Holy Mysteries of Baptism, Chrismation and
Eucharist to infants on the same day, so that they become full
members of the Body of Christ, fully integrated into the Church,
and full participants in the gift of New Life in Christ.
Having
received the New Life in Christ as a gift of the Trinity in the
Church, we, in our human frailty and weakness, fail to live this
New Life, and often revert to the old life – the old life which
is not life at all, but death. Through the Mystery of Holy
Confession, in which we admit and confess our failure to
live the New Life, we are reconciled both to Christ and His Body,
the Church, and are empowered again through God’s grace to live
the New Life in Christ. In Holy Confession, we repent of our sins,
and receive forgiveness and absolution, and the grace to persevere
in this world to live the New Life in Christ, in spite of our
failures and shortcomings.
Although
we have received the gift of New Life, living as we do in this
world, we are not immune to suffering and sickness. When Our Lord
walked among us on Earth, He was not indifferent to human
suffering, but repeatedly reached out to those suffering and in
need, healing them with His divine power. In the Mystery of
Holy Anointing with Oil, we are anointed with blessed oil
for our illnesses, both bodily and spiritual, which sacramentally
makes present to us through prayer, oil and human touch the
healing ministry of Christ. The entire Church celebrates this
Mystery on Holy and Great Wednesday in anticipation of the Holy
Pascha, the Feast of the Resurrection.
God
is revealed to us not as a sole, solitary being, but as a Trinity
of Three Persons, living in an endless and perfect communion of
unselfish, self-emptying love. The New Life in Christ is this life
of the Holy Trinity – a life of unselfish love for others. This
life of self-giving, self-emptying love is most beautifully and
dramatically expressed in this world in the Mystery of Holy
Matrimony, in which a man and a woman are called together
to live as one through mutual self-giving and selfless love,
thereby conquering themselves and growing in holiness through
Christ. In the Mystery of Holy Matrimony, the couple are crowned
with the divine grace and strength to grow together in love and
holiness, and live the New Life of Christ more abundantly.
The
Church, the Body of Christ, is a universal priesthood of
believers. Yet among this universal priesthood, some are called to
serve the Church in a particular way in the sacramental and
liturgical life of the Church. The Mystery of Holy Orders
calls men to serve the Body of Christ as deacons, priests and
bishops through the laying on of hands, in which Christ Himself
gives them the grace and power to perform this service in His name
for the sake of His Body. |
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All
Christians are witnesses to the New Life that Christ has given to
us in His Church. Byzantine Catholics recognize this and know that
there are many good people outside the Catholic and Orthodox
Churches and that these other religions can and do bring their
members close to God. The Byzantine Catholic faith, however, is
not simply a way of life, a set of doctrines and beliefs, ritual
practices and customs. Our Byzantine Catholic faith is Life
itself. It is a Life that is truer, fuller, more abundant and
more authentic than any other life – it is Life which is
everlasting and has no end, and over which even death has no
power. We warmly invite you to join us and share, even now, in
this New Life in Christ. |
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Are
you a Byzantine Catholic who is no longer active in the Faith? Are
you not a member of any Church or maybe find that the Church you
currently belong to is not a home to you? To you we issue a
special invitation to come join us. We both need and want you as a
member of our family. |
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