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Big "T" versus Little "t"
Essentials versus Non-essentials
A lesson from history:
Please listen to the first few minutes of this ancient recording:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6AOvStZS64
Notice how Bishop Fulton Sheen says in 1941 that the Church does not change ancient customs but holds onto them. What happened about twenty years later with Vatican II? Why were so many ancient customs tossed out all in the name of the so-called Big T versus the little unessential t?
Look at some of the changes in the Catholic Church:
(1) A new Mass with prayers being added and others discarded
(2) A new Nicene Creed
(3) Women Eucharistic Ministers
(4) Female Altar Servers
(5) A complete revision of all the seven Sacraments
(6) A complete revision of the prayers of exorcism
(7) Dropping of the prayers to St. Michael to protect us from Satan said at the end of the Mass before 1962
(8) A dramatic increase in the number of exorcisms performed in Rome within the last ten years
Have we Orthodox made changes and concessions? Yes. I will name at least three:
(1) The New Calendar was adopted around 1921. Is the Old Calendar one of those non-essentials? And doesn't the new calendar lessen the days of fasting since the Apostles Fast is affected?
(2) A few Orthodox Theologians have been discussing changing the date of Pascha as they do in the Finnish Orthodox Church so that it coincides with Western Easter. Is this another non-essential then? What will happen with the Holy Fire in Jerusalem that is calculated on the Old Calendar?
(3) The Divine Liturgy according the Greek Typica was shortened around 1920 by the removal of the Beatitudes and some of the post-communion litanies, especially the prayers for the faithful departed and the catechumens. Are these prayers then non-essential?
But the Divine Liturgy itself underwent changes and revisions and additions and deletions and changing the order of things, etc., for its first 14 centuries or so, as Dom Gregory Dix documents in his massive book, THE SHAPE OF THE LITURGY (of which I'm about 1/5 of the way through) - right? Per Dix, some of those changes may not have been the right thing to do, as they obscured some formerly clear actions and associations and things, and some of the prayers that were said by the congregants which enabled them rightfully (as they had in the past) to participate more fully in the eucharist became sotto voce prayers of the priest, making a further laity-clergy distinction during the liturgy that apparently wasn't so distinct in the early centuries. Even the Divine Liturgy of John Chrysostom is not today as he wrote/adapted it in his lifetime, from what I've read.
I understand that much of the impetus of Vatican II was to bring back the ancient practices which had become distorted and encrusted with centuries of medieval additions, and to bring the mass back to the people. Whether everything that has been done has been wise or wisely done is of course a matter of great contention among Roman Catholics.
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