How You Can be WESTERN and Truly Orthodox: Intro to Western Rite Orthodoxy (w/ Fr. Patrick Cardine)

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Gospel Simplicity

Gospel Simplicity

Күн бұрын

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@arthurcolpanidasilva9693
@arthurcolpanidasilva9693 2 жыл бұрын
It would be fun to bring an Eastern Catholic priest and a Western Orthodox priest to talk to each other
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
Great idea!
@serbskijhristijanin
@serbskijhristijanin 2 жыл бұрын
Western Orthodoxy works differently than Eastern Catholicism. EC have their own dogmas, contrary to the Latin church. Western Orthodoxy retains the same dogmas as their mother Church jurisdiction.
@themorbidmole9247
@themorbidmole9247 2 жыл бұрын
@@serbskijhristijanin As a Byzantine Catholic seminarian I can tell you that is not true.
@brotheraugustine
@brotheraugustine 2 жыл бұрын
@@themorbidmole9247 Is it not true that “Byzantine Rite Catholics” often venerate St. Gregory Palamas, a man anathematized as a “heretic” by the Roman Rite crowd?
@themorbidmole9247
@themorbidmole9247 2 жыл бұрын
@@brotheraugustine Palamas was not anathematized by the Roman church. Barlaam's criticism of him hardly qualifies as an official anathema from the Romans. Palamas is a regional Saint to our church. He hasn't been canonized officially by the Roman church but, just like the various orthodox churches, there are numerous saints exclusive to local churches. I'm not trying to argue, just telling the guy above that we are doctrinally Catholic, not Orthodox and we don't pretend to be otherwise.
@CatieD
@CatieD 2 жыл бұрын
I was blessed to grow up in an "eastern rite" orthodox parish with a priest who was very sympathetic towards the Christian West. He incorporated practices like: chanting the O Antiphons during Advent; reading the traditional proclamation of the Birth of Christ from the Roman Martyrology on Christmas Eve; singing many beloved carols of Western origin around Christmas; teaching us about many pre-schism Western saints; and including information about Western liturgical practices at different points during the liturgical year so we could compare and contrast with what we did. Wherever there was common ground to be found, he brought it to light. I dont remember him ever denigrating the West. I'm very thankful to have been formed by someone humble enough to call out the goodness in what he saw, no matter its origin. As a last thought I'd like to say that this approach is truly Orthodox. As St. Paisios taught, we should be like bees who seek out nectar, and not like flies who are attracted to trash. Austin, thanks for another great interview!
@xvolumesx5146
@xvolumesx5146 2 жыл бұрын
Western Rite is VALID! I love my western rite ORTHODOX brothers. St. John Maximovich fully blessed them, so I love them. God be with you.
@michaelmchugh3987
@michaelmchugh3987 2 жыл бұрын
Can you tell me what St. John Maximovitch said or did for the statement “he fully blessed them”.
@distracted900
@distracted900 2 жыл бұрын
@@michaelmchugh3987 He consecrated Jean-Nectaire of Saint-Denis as the Hierarch of the Orthodox Church of France and supported their endeavor for an autocephalous church in France that used Western liturgics. The OCF had and still has many problems but Saint John fully supported the Western Rite in concept
@mynameisjeff6516
@mynameisjeff6516 2 жыл бұрын
@@distracted900 And then those WR churches in France all apostatized and left the Church, just as St John warned them before leaving France. What should we make of that?
@distracted900
@distracted900 2 жыл бұрын
@@mynameisjeff6516 I don't think you're aware of the history of the OCF, because if you did you wouldn't say they left the church. They were kicked out of the Church of Romania with no warning
@distracted900
@distracted900 2 жыл бұрын
@@mynameisjeff6516 They didn't leave the church. They were under the Church of Romania for over 20 years, until the Patriarch of Romania kicked them out due to political disputes with the EP. They were never accused of wrongdoing
@no_more_anymore
@no_more_anymore 2 жыл бұрын
I can't wait for this!!! I've attended Fr. Patrick's parish for a good number of months. It's amazing. It helped me learn and accept the Western Rite completely.
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
Hope you enjoy it!
@DouglasHorch
@DouglasHorch 2 жыл бұрын
love it!
@nyagolnyagolov7130
@nyagolnyagolov7130 2 жыл бұрын
Being a member of a club cannot save you, nor any fake rite or tradition!
@no_more_anymore
@no_more_anymore 2 жыл бұрын
@@nyagolnyagolov7130 Thank God we're not part of any club but of His Church.
@nyagolnyagolov7130
@nyagolnyagolov7130 2 жыл бұрын
@@no_more_anymore You are a part of the Apostate church - the club of the duped and you have nothing to thank GOD Almighty - (Yehovah Tzveot) for that! The sooner you realize it, the sooner you will turn to the Saviour - Lord Jesus Christ, not to fake manmade rites and traditions accumulated since the 4th century! Even the bible you are reading if you do so, is falsely translated on purpose, to justify fake doctrines of men, not GOD's ones!
@Jayce_Alexander
@Jayce_Alexander 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for another interesting video, Austin. I've recently been reading up on Western Rite Orthodoxy after a Western Rite Orthodox parish was founded in my area, which really piqued my interest. As always your video showed up exactly when I needed it. You're a great soldier for Christ, helping us Christians to better understand one another. Much love to you and all our Christian brothers and sisters out there. God bless.
@ZZZELCH
@ZZZELCH Жыл бұрын
What a phenomenally knowledgeable and open priest! I’ve now gone to “western rite” twice and absolutely loved it.
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@joer9156
@joer9156 2 жыл бұрын
Hey, you should get Brother Augustine on. He's not clergy but he is an Orthodox Benedictine Oblate, and his journey from Judaism through Freemasonry and occultism then Protestantism and finally to Orthodoxy. He also has experience attending both Eastern Rite and Western Rite parishes. His book 'The Masons and their Lies' is amazing too.
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
That sounds like a fascinating conversion story
@kostas3031
@kostas3031 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting! I'm Eastern orthodox from Greece and I had no idea that there were Eastern orthodox churches that have the western rite. Nice to know that westerners that want to follow the orthodox dogma but find the eastern orthodox rite a bit ''exotic'' no have an alternative choice.
@spartanastas5560
@spartanastas5560 10 ай бұрын
It's a Catholic Church still... almost like a trans church... it's pretending to be Orthodox even though it's catholic. There is, nor is there a need for a replacement for the Eastern Orthodox Church. It is the Original Church of Christ.
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 ай бұрын
​@@spartanastas5560it's not a Catholic church as it is formally part of a canonical Orthodox church.
@spartanastas5560
@spartanastas5560 8 ай бұрын
@@roytofilovski9530 No, it isn't. It's still Catholic. The Catholic Church can not be a part of the Orthodox Church unless it becomes an Orthodox Church... and it's not.
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 8 ай бұрын
@@spartanastas5560 It's under the jurisdiction of a canonical Orthodox Bishop of a canonical Orthodox Church. It follows the basic Orthodox theology. That makes it Orthodox. The form of the liturgy itself is not relevant so long as it is approved by their Bishop.
@kristgalitsina
@kristgalitsina 2 жыл бұрын
The interview is simply breathtaking. Austin, thank you so much for it!
@spartanastas5560
@spartanastas5560 10 ай бұрын
Why not just go to the Eastern Orthodox Church? Then you'll have the full benefit of the Original Church of Christ.
@carolinecaruso2880
@carolinecaruso2880 2 жыл бұрын
This was such a wonderful interview. Father Patrick has a very humble and loving approach, while still holding to his convictions. He touched on a lot of questions I've had, and mentioned multiple things that I myself have noticed but not been able to make sense of in the Western versus Eastern dichotomy, as a new convert to Orthodoxy. Also, blessed feast day to Father Patrick!
@adityaheriawanputra4803
@adityaheriawanputra4803 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for interviewing Fr. Patrick and about Western Rite Orthodoxy in general. God bless. 🙏🙏
@karenduncan3806
@karenduncan3806 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely wonderful interview. Thank you Fr. Patrick.
@maxonmendel5757
@maxonmendel5757 2 жыл бұрын
Its so wild hearing BEALETON Virginia on youtube. I went to high school a mile from this church
@tonyrandall8703
@tonyrandall8703 2 жыл бұрын
Me too
@maxonmendel5757
@maxonmendel5757 2 жыл бұрын
@@tonyrandall8703 what year? I graduated 2016
@tonyrandall8703
@tonyrandall8703 2 жыл бұрын
@@maxonmendel5757 oh boy. 13 years before you. We never crossed paths but still cool
@ahwhite2022
@ahwhite2022 2 жыл бұрын
I had forgotten where I saw this a bit ago, had been listening to it while painting my front door that day. Finally came across a new video of yours and realized it must have been you... yup. This has got to be one of the best interviews I have heard in years. I'm fascinated to hear an Orthodox take on Western Christianity, as I've long believed the anti-Augustinian and western in general spin in the Orthodox world was one of its biggest flaws, even as the Catholic Church has actively tried to better acknowledge Eastern traditions and rites. It was a perceived and observed bias that effectively halted my own personal dabbling in the EO worlds some time ago. 1054 may be an official mark in the wall. But the issues started long before and really continue to this day. Very, very happy to see at least one leader in the Orthodox Church acknowledge the flaws in the aspects of it that aren't the least bit based on true theological differences. Sadly, I don't see much to suggests these views are widespread. It seems clear to me that many in the EO world don't have a counterpart ideology to Vatican II's "breathe with two lungs" metaphor.
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words!
@ariellealgerapenner2207
@ariellealgerapenner2207 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for doing this interview! I struggled with this concept as I am Jamaican and Dutch culturally. So neither of my ethnic roots are very 'eastern'. I also grew up evangelical so every part of my spiritual background felt a little attacked while learning about Orthodoxy. Eventually, through reading St. Herman of Alaska's story my heart was softened towards the Orthodox church (Holy Spirit orchestrated all of that). Listening to this interview has enlightened my journey even more! Especially as I come closer to my baptismal date :)
@auset828
@auset828 2 жыл бұрын
God bless you! ☦
@Yallquietendown
@Yallquietendown 2 жыл бұрын
Why does someone need a western rite ? To me as a western person (former baptist), the Roman Catholic “western” style of worship is way stranger to me than Russian or Byzantine. If Byzantine chant sounds too middle eastern for you, go to a Russian or OCA church the music doesn’t sound that much different than Medieval western church music
@Kdriggs15
@Kdriggs15 2 жыл бұрын
Because the West was Orthodox for 1000+ years and deserves to be recognized
@orthobroslovemyplaylists6254
@orthobroslovemyplaylists6254 2 жыл бұрын
I think it’s a good thing that western liturgies are in the canonical Orthodox Church again. They have their own unique appeal.
@Leo-uq6jp
@Leo-uq6jp 2 жыл бұрын
Tell me you know nothing about the Western rite without telling me you know nothing about the Western Rite. Hopefully this video will open you up a bit.
@diegobarragan4904
@diegobarragan4904 2 жыл бұрын
St John of Shanghai and San Francisco did so much for the western rite. He’s the one that said don’t let anyone tell you that you need to be eastern in order to be Orthodox, that the west was Orthodox for 1000 years.
@autisticheadscarf
@autisticheadscarf 2 жыл бұрын
As a former western rite parishioner, I definitely agree that a westerner would feel very comfortable at an OCA parish.
@jeandoten1510
@jeandoten1510 2 жыл бұрын
I would love to hear you talk to a priest or Bishop from the Anglican Rite of the Catholic Church--Officially referred to as the Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter. I believe that there are 23 parishes in America. I was raised in the Protestant Episcopal church but have been a Roman Catholic since 1978---and I am seriously considering retiring to an area that has an Ordinariate parish. The words of the liturgy are largely based in the English of the mid 16th century--moving and beautiful!
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
That would be great fun for me
@King-uj1lh
@King-uj1lh 2 жыл бұрын
I second this Ordinariate is very beautiful, reverent and traditional while being in English. Austin if you can attend mass or morning and evening prayer.
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 2 жыл бұрын
@@GospelSimplicity And I would recommend you try to get in contact with Archpriest Emeritus Lester Bundy of Saint Columba Orthodox, Lafayette Colorado. He represents the Orthodox equivalent of the Ordinate that Jean Dotan is talking about, Anglican Rite Orthodoxy, a subset of Western Orthodoxy a bit different from Father Cardine’s direct and plain translation of Saint Gregory The Great’s Divine Liturgy. Instead, Saint Tikhon of Moscow rehabilitated Cranmer’s Anglican mass (itself a simplified version of the venerable Divine Liturgy of Saint Osmond, the “Salisbury/Sarum Rite”), for use by former Anglican priests converted to Orthodoxy who were unable to learn Osmond’s Mass in its original form, for whatever reason. This rehabilitation was much easier to learn. Father Bundy is an expert on the Anglican Rite and a fantastic Iconographer in the Anglo-Saxon/Celtic style of Britannia. Here’s most of a lecture series he did two years ago (I missed part 2) kzbin.info/www/bejne/hX7bamuKmrl-qbc kzbin.info/www/bejne/hJLTfqGKZ7ena80 kzbin.info/www/bejne/o6LIc6Smmc5_iM0 kzbin.info/www/bejne/fXKQg2uqZcqbftE
@frlillie
@frlillie 2 жыл бұрын
Austin, thank you for doing this interview. I do not agree with many statements made in this interview but I am happy to hear them nonetheless. The Western Rite Orthodoxy in theory makes much sense and I believe it was started with the best of intentions BUT in practice it has led to small congregations that convert to Orthodoxy without having to actually accept Orthodoxy. If you can walk from one parish and go into another and nothing changes except the name you commemorate, is that a true inner conversion? I would find it hard to say so. Certainly that is a broad stroke on my part but it is my anecdotal experience as a priest but the fact that many of the Western Rite believers have little or nothing to do with the greater Orthodoxy is proof of this. Further, the Orthodox Church has developed hymnography, menology, spirituality, and an ethos that goes well beyond the liturgy of St. Gregory the Great. Accepting that inheritance has little to do with becoming Russian Or Greek... it is just Orthodox.
@tonyrandall8703
@tonyrandall8703 2 жыл бұрын
I’d have to say this is not the experience I’ve had becoming Orthodox in a Western Rite parish. I suppose it happens somewhere. We go to Eastern Rite parishes when on vacation. We have many many Eastern Orthodox books in our parish. We really look to all this for the fullness of the faith.
@Leo-uq6jp
@Leo-uq6jp 2 жыл бұрын
Father bless, I understand where you are coming from but it's hard to agree when my own personal experience has been opposite of what you described. What I have seen however, is Eastern Rite brothers and sisters in Christ judge those in the Western Rite for having a deficient Orthodoxy just because they have looked at it from the surface and completely diminish the fruits of the Western patrimony in our own lives. It seems like it would be hard to arrive at a certain level of communion and comradery when a lot of the times those on the Western Rite are, from the ourset, treated as second class citizens just because of their liturgical expression of Orthodoxy. I think there is always a conflation between the idea that to be Orthodox, you must have the eastern ethos and therefore anything that deviates from that cannot be Orthodox, but that is clearly not true or else we would have to concede saints such as St. Ambrose, St. Patrick, St. Jerome and Pope St. Leo and Gregory, St. Augustine as less than Orthodox, and I am not ready to do that. I believe that to doubt the genuine Orthodoxy of those in the Western Rite and assume they are disguised Roman Catholics and assume there was never a conversion to begin with every time the topic is brought up does a diservice to the church as a whole, and that is exactly why I don't go around saying that Cradle Greek parishes are not genuinely Orthodox just because I have personally experienced that they tend to have a higher degree of luke-warm Christians.
@tonyrandall8703
@tonyrandall8703 2 жыл бұрын
@@Leo-uq6jp couldn’t have said it better
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
Fr. Michael, it's my pleasure! I must say, the second sentence of this comment is exemplary of the kind of interaction I hope to see with the content on this channel.
@tonguemybumb
@tonguemybumb 2 жыл бұрын
practices after the great schism are very problematic.
@parkermize
@parkermize 2 жыл бұрын
I wish I could like this a few more times.
@jherforth
@jherforth Жыл бұрын
As a Roman Catholic, I fast and I will not be burned. If that's the top of the list then we're basically roommates. I think the look of the Roman Catholic Church is rough only because of the post conciliar chaos. I think both of those "top" issues are going to sort themselves out. Fasting is already on a comeback, and cremation is strongly discouraged (at least traditionally), which is a move in a positive direction. The schism won't be mended in my or my child's life time, but the it will eventually will be "mended." The union comes when the world is so brutalizing that we will have to unite to support one another. RCC has open arms, we don't expect the OC to open it's arms, but we're looking forward to the day that their back isn't turned to us. This video is highly encouraging and I hope the OC finds more Fr Patricks!
@AveChristusRex
@AveChristusRex 2 жыл бұрын
Orthodox when Orthodox attend Eastern Liturgies in the West: 🦗🦗🦗 Orthodox when Orthodox attend Western Liturgy in the West: 👀👀👀
@marcuswilliams7448
@marcuswilliams7448 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the critique of his own people. Reminds me of Seraphim Rose and his book on Augustine.
@jajohnson7809
@jajohnson7809 2 жыл бұрын
One example of anti-Westernism in Orthodoxy... When I was preparing for chrismation, I initially chose a cross that was a Celtic crucifix. Some Orthodox online told me the cross wasn't appropriate because the feet of Christ were depicted one over the other, pierced by a single nail, which is common in western crucifixes. (Some Orthodox even consider such a depiction of Christ's feet heretical. The "triclavian" heresy.) Feeling a bit dejected, I chose another cross. During Holy Week some time later, when the crucifix behind the altar was brought out, processed around the congregation, and placed up front for our veneration, I noticed the feet were depicted as in that Celtic crucifix-rather than the more common Byzantine style of feet side-by-side, punctured by separate nails.
@GrandCelestialKnight
@GrandCelestialKnight 2 жыл бұрын
Trust me dude, I'm sick of the anti Western bias in Orthodoxy.
@gregpavlik6474
@gregpavlik6474 Жыл бұрын
Rule one for Orthodoxy (or any other religion): everyone should avoid online religious "advisors" as the highest priority.
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 ай бұрын
Ask your priest. Forget about what people online think.
@traceyedson9652
@traceyedson9652 2 жыл бұрын
Just sang the service for St. Patrick yesterday at my Orthodox parish. But he’s right; “western” is a dirty word. Thus conversation has to be had theologically, though, and in dialogue. There’s reasons for this beyond chauvinism or ignorance. The Dr. Jeannie Constantinou’s are going to have to be convinced about Western vs. Eastern “thinking.”
@baoduong2203
@baoduong2203 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I hope that you can bring in Fr. Thomas Loya, a Byzantine Catholic priest who talks about the “genus” of the West and the East. It is within the genus of the East, to draw people in her liturgy. While it is in the genus of the West to be more sharp when the Church needs to clarify things, etc.
@chickapeas5646
@chickapeas5646 Жыл бұрын
This helps me so much with the question of my idenity. I am a Scottish American, I'm far from Eastern or Russian. Wish I could, go American Orthodox. I'm am blessed with the 3 choices near me. Thank you!
@OrthodoxInquirer
@OrthodoxInquirer 2 жыл бұрын
He's so right about losing 1,000 converts. I love Orthodoxy but my family got turned against it when some of the anti-Protestant things were mentioned. If someone is seeking, it's best to not insult how they came to Christ. Only a miracle will get them into Orthodoxy at this point. I feel "home" and love the Liturgy but the Slavic traditions are too much for them. On another topic, Protestants are so seeker-sensitive that they try not to offend, and this is very different within Orthodoxy. Just his "burn their dead" comment, while true, could drive away many. What about all the Christians who have been cremated not knowing it was not a Christian tradition, but a pagan one? Every truth needs to be expressed with the knowledge that listeners may have done that exact thing. My dad was cremated, but Jesus actually came to him when he was dying and my dad believed in Christ, and came back and told me about his vision. He died about a month later. I don't think cremation is right, it definitely wasn't good for me as a child for my dad to have made that choice, but I don't think it kept my dad out of heaven. I'm not offended, btw, but my mother might have been. I would love to visit his church if we're ever in the area. I can tell his heart is to bring people the full truth. We've lost so much in the West.
@davidvartanian
@davidvartanian 2 жыл бұрын
It’s always interesting to hear what someone emphasizes, because that reveals their priorities.
@OrthodoxInquirer
@OrthodoxInquirer 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge Greek tradition has one icon to venerate in the vestibule, at least the one I visited. At our Serbian church, you venerate the central icon, Christ and the Theotokos icons on the iconostasis, then again go up to kiss the central icon at the end of the service, and the cross, and the priest's hand. I know Greeks kiss the cross, too, but there is a lot more of it for a Protestant to adapt to in the Slavic style. My family was really overwhelmed with all the extra bows and kissing things. In our town, the Greek church didn't have as many converts and there were people saying unkind things about their own priest (who is a convert). They did this in the vestibule, complaining he mispronounced something. They also were hard on him on Facebook about an article he sent out about Halloween from a former Satan worshippers perspective. I could just tell many were worldly and didn't want to try, just keep their Greek traditions. It was sad. The Serbian church was full of converts who really wanted to be there, and love our priest. The priest is wonderful at the other congregation, but the parishioners were not very kind. I will shop around if I have two choices. There should only be one church in America-all English, technically, if we were to be like all other Orthodox countries. If the Western Rite was offered, it would be as legitimate as Eastern Rite. St. John Maximovich vouched for it and wanted to convert people using it, right? With Serbian being my choice because I love the people and the singing, and my family thouroughly turned off by various things, I may have to be baptized and chrismated alone. I'm not sure why Orthodox people don't want people to come. Why make it as off putting as possible, and insult Protestants to their faces? It's really strange, but we all know the enemy is working overtime.
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge It varies. My brother in law is DEFINITELY more comfortable in the Western Rite, particularly regarding how the Eucharist is distributed. We converted from Trad Catholicism, however, so we’re not bringing all the potential Protestant baggage with us. This was how Orthodox Rome did it from at least the Dialogist’s time as Pope, and it’s in our bones to do it this way for most of us. Your argument’s applicability really depends on what someone wants to be comfortable ABOUT. Believe me, they couldn’t comprehend the spoon at a Uniate liturgy, either, when we were still struggling to believe in the papal dogmas. We considered pulling a “Matt Fradd” but, the spoon was always too strange for them. I don’t mind, but that’s just how some are built. It doesn’t necessarily have to be a lack of faith, per se. They have no doubt in the Eucharist, or at least I have no reason to doubt them. They are just culturally shy of the spoon, is all.
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 2 жыл бұрын
@@OrthodoxInquirer sigh. Many are so anti-ecumenical that they confuse apologetic diplomacy as synonymous with ecumenism.
@OrthodoxInquirer
@OrthodoxInquirer 2 жыл бұрын
@@eldermillennial8330 How do they distribute the Eucharist?
@E.D.B
@E.D.B Жыл бұрын
Anyone watching this exactly a year later?
@CLFmoto87
@CLFmoto87 2 жыл бұрын
Although I am fascinated by WR and have attended a nearby one a few times and admire their priest, it would be nice to hear Fr. Patrick in a discussion with someone who perhaps is “guilty” of some of these eastern polemics he talks about. I’ve listened to several of his interviews and he never gets any push back against some of his claims and I’d like to see what Fr. Trenham or Fr. Strickland might have to say about some of his remarks in a venue where there could be direct back and forth.
@KevinTheMetalhead
@KevinTheMetalhead 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge Adoration does happen at St. Patrick's. I think it's fine.
@KevinTheMetalhead
@KevinTheMetalhead 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge There's an article written by Fr. Patrick himself on the Orthodox West website (link in the description of the video) called "Benediction-Adoration: A Beautiful vision" where he defends Adoration. I would post the direct link but KZbin keeps deleting my comment even if I try to work around it.
@maxonmendel5757
@maxonmendel5757 2 жыл бұрын
I would also like to see this, but perhaps between fr. Patrick and an lcms or Episcopalian priest about why Orthodoxy is necessary
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge To be fair, they don’t usually Consecrate the Eucharist specifically for this, the way modern Romans do, but encourage veneration of surplus. We have a lot of people who have to make long commutes to church and sometimes can’t make it, (SO many are converted from online study and aren’t necessarily close to a parish when they do) so our priests take a lot of pre sanctified Eucharist to people all over throughout the week who couldn’t make it to mass that Sunday. Is the Surplus kept for such circuit preaching and shut-ins not worthy of veneration in the meantime? It is how Rome started Eucharistic veneration to begin with, but they took it a step too far in standardizing it whether or not there was a surplus waiting (or even needed) for travel, instead of letting it happen mostly organically. Also, using a sample of a Meal to advertise a meal is an age old and effective way to promote It.
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 2 жыл бұрын
@@maxonmendel5757 Father Bundy could be both in that debate: kzbin.info/www/bejne/hX7bamuKmrl-qbc
@ourusalife
@ourusalife 2 жыл бұрын
Yes!! So excited for this!
@shibainu121
@shibainu121 5 ай бұрын
Awesome interview. I love Father Patrick.
@AveChristusRex
@AveChristusRex 2 жыл бұрын
Western Rite = Latin Mass = Roman Rite = Mass of the West = Mass of Pope St. Gregory the Great = Catholic Mass able to be said by Orthodox because the theology of the Liturgy is the same when you remove accreted hostility and diatribical convinctions.
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 2 жыл бұрын
And remove “Filioque”, the first false accretion. Saint Tikhon also rehabilitated Cranmer’s Anglican mass, a far bigger challenge, but it was easier than having former Anglican priests try to Learn St Osmond’s Divine Liturgy in its pristine form. Some do, but it is the most massive form of High Mass after the Ambrosian.
@truckdriver8416
@truckdriver8416 2 жыл бұрын
Does this Western Rite Orthodox Church have the Hail Mary, Stations of the Cross add the Rosary? Does the priest drink the wine only or does he allow everyone else to drink it also? Does he use leaven or unleavened bread? Or those priests allowed to be married?
@AveChristusRex
@AveChristusRex 2 жыл бұрын
​@@truckdriver8416 Western Orthodox is literally just 'hey, no pope pls.' But you don't get to therefore import the East into perennial Western customs, rites, liturgies, etc therefore. It doesn't follow. St. Paul wished all could be celibate. The West made this a requirement if you wish to be a presbyter/elder/bishop. Like it or not. If the East differs, good. But don't pretend the West just didn't exist and didn't have its own customs or rules. Did Christ hold the Passover with leavened or unleavened bread? It was literally the fest of unleavened bread on which He instituted the Eucharist. So I wouldn't exactly make that a make or break. Not that I wouldn't be against the Apsostles having instituted leavened bread for the Eucharist.. just that it's not exactly a strong argument, is it.
@truckdriver8416
@truckdriver8416 2 жыл бұрын
@@AveChristusRex well you really didn't answer my questions about Mary in the Rosary. The Russian Church wants did a sermon on the Hail Mary that I'll listen to that was really nice. The no marriage thing for the clergy was actually to keep all property and money in the coffers of the church instead of going to the children's inheritance. That's a matter of coveting quite frankly and we all see the sins of homosexuality that came out of that don't we. As for the Upper Room there were two ceremonies that took place not one. The first ceremony was a traditional Passover meal with unleavened bread. The second ceremony was the New Covenant with leavened bread. So does the Western right do the Hail Mary the Rosary and the Stations of the Cross? I figured since you claim to have gone there you would know this much appreciated a response
@AveChristusRex
@AveChristusRex 2 жыл бұрын
@@truckdriver8416 "The no marriage thing for the clergy was actually to keep all property and money in the coffers of the church instead of going to the children's inheritance. That's a matter of coveting quite frankly and we all see the sins of homosexuality that came out of that don't we." That. Or, celibacy and virginity was praised by the Fathers in general, but by St. Paul specifically, who wished "all men were as I am, [celibate]." And who taught that those who are not married can better dedicate themselves to the service of God. Think to yourself, who first comes to mind among those who ought to devote their life to the service of God? Hmmm. Who could that be? "As for the Upper Room there were two ceremonies that took place not one. The first ceremony was a traditional Passover meal with unleavened bread. The second ceremony was the New Covenant with leavened bread." This is nowhere in either Scripture or Tradition. "So does the Western right do the Hail Mary" The Hail Mary is DIRECTLY from Scripture, and the "Holy Mary, mother of God, pray for us sinners, now, and at the hour of our death" is, of course, obviously, Orthodox. Both East and West, we object to what is 'foreign' or 'not customaryin our tradition' without a good reason. You'll find a lot of things you're comfortable with come from the Fathers and we in the West are uncomfortable with. But the same applies to us: we're uncomfortable with some of the things in the Fathers that are familiar to you. If you can sing the Agni Parthene, we can sing the Memorare.
@cultofmodernism8477
@cultofmodernism8477 2 жыл бұрын
This priest is a true gem. The meme, mostly online, Orthodox apologetic that is antagonistic to anything western really attracts a particular type of convert. And it does so at the expense of many open minded individuals that are interested in the truth. And he's also right that this anti-western, meme theology is rooted in the slavophile, Parisian movement, with its emphasis on eastern "distinctives."
@helpIthinkmylegsaregone
@helpIthinkmylegsaregone 2 жыл бұрын
I think it's also rooted in the fact that the main export of the West for the past 30 years has been satanic nonsense. I mean yeah, there's western rite orthodoxy, but almost only in America and really not in meaningful numbers, so it doesn't really change the picture, other than that maybe it provides a vision of something that could be revived.
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 2 жыл бұрын
It began when Doctor Joseph J Overbeck and Father Stephen Hatherly came to cross purposes in the London newspapers during the latter part of the Tractarian debates, wasting time in pitting Orthodox against Orthodox instead of uniting to focus against both Romanism and Protestantism.
@E.D.B
@E.D.B Жыл бұрын
I’ve met him; I can confirm he is most certainly a gem…
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 2 жыл бұрын
I was right! Love from Saint Columba Orthodox!
@hilltribelinguist
@hilltribelinguist 2 жыл бұрын
If you are in Northern California check out All Saints Orthodox Mission. It’s a ROCOR Western Rite mission.
@joshuavalencia5515
@joshuavalencia5515 2 жыл бұрын
This seems super interesting at first I thought it was a typo very interesting brother
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
That's how I felt when I first heard about it!
@ervinromero8152
@ervinromero8152 2 жыл бұрын
From OCA website: Question How does the Orthodox Church view cremation? Answer The Church does not condemn cremation outright, provided that there is a valid reason for it. In Japan, for example, the state requires cremation, and this extends to Orthodox Christians. There have also been exceptions made in cases of epidemics or fear of disease, for various reasons. There can also be reasonable cause for permitting cremation, but in general the image of the body being buried as it awaits the resurrection is more in keeping with the image given to us by Christ, Who likens burial with the planting of seed which later blossoms into a living plant.
@amg2598
@amg2598 2 жыл бұрын
Yep. the Roman Catholics actually take a bit stronger stance than this even. I do not think that part of the video was fair.
@cyprian2587
@cyprian2587 2 жыл бұрын
The Orthodox Church is more supportive of traditional western liturgy than the Roman church! Lol!
@AveChristusRex
@AveChristusRex 2 жыл бұрын
SSPX, FSSP, ICKSP: 👀
@joshuagilmore7522
@joshuagilmore7522 2 жыл бұрын
@@AveChristusRex yes but didn’t the pope come out and basically “outlaw” those liturgies?
@maciellopez8670
@maciellopez8670 8 ай бұрын
53:49 I would to want a second video so good as this about these topics!!!
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 8 ай бұрын
I'm hoping to visit his church sometime, so maybe we could dive into it then
@scottlloyd
@scottlloyd 4 ай бұрын
I read this from The website of my friend's church where they practice the Western Rite, and thought it was good to share... "We believe papal heresy, theological and liturgical innovation, has removed the Latin Church from the center of uninterrupted Apostolic Deposit, So we do not consider ourselves in communion with the Roman Catholicism or seek recognition from the Roman Catholic Church. While Western in our liturgical expression, culture and language, We are fully orthodox in our theology, rejecting the Filioque, Papal Supremacy, Universal Jurisdiction, Infallibility, The Roman definition of the Immaculate Conception, And all the Protestant heresies that resulted from the West's departure from the Ancient, Apostolic, Catholic Faith"
@godfreym3550
@godfreym3550 3 ай бұрын
Imagine identifying yourself by what you are not.
@scottlloyd
@scottlloyd 3 ай бұрын
@@godfreym3550 It was the last paragraph of multiple paragraphs. I shared it for context sake for people like myself who left the Catholic Church
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 күн бұрын
​@@godfreym3550They have no choice, since many people falsely label them as Catholics or psuedo-Catholics
@order_truth_involvement6135
@order_truth_involvement6135 2 жыл бұрын
I admire the intentions of the Western Rite movement, and I respect Fr. Patrick. Though I enjoy and support the basic ideals of this movement, I want to kindly point out its flaws, and later the solutions to those errors. -The Western rite use of statues is a Roman Catholic tradition, with no real pre-great schism origins. The style starts to be seen in its basic forms in the 11th century, a very sad century, since it marked the Great Schism. -Pre-great schism Catholicism overwhelmingly used its unique style of mosaics, mozarabic and italo-byzantine iconography, and regional variants of two-dimensional Christian artwork. Solution: Revive these old forms of two-dimensional iconography, particularly italo-byzantine, Mozarabic, and mosaics. Causes of this error: most western-rite orthodox are roman Catholic converts, and so mistake the roman catholic art for pre-great Schism Catholic art.
@MrSofuskroghlarsen
@MrSofuskroghlarsen 2 жыл бұрын
I read somewhere that some byzantine churches (and present day Greek ones) also had statues. Honestly, why does Orthodoxy have to adhere solely to the byzantine aesthetic? Ethiopian churches have their own iconography that differs from the byzantine style.
@order_truth_involvement6135
@order_truth_involvement6135 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrSofuskroghlarsen We do have statues, I never made any claim against that. The intention and rule of the western rite is to look like a pre-great schism parish. Therefore, they need far more icons than statues. Ethiopian iconography is acceptable and accurate.
@order_truth_involvement6135
@order_truth_involvement6135 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrSofuskroghlarsen We do not use only byzantine style iconography. I don't know why you got that impression. Russian iconography is different, and so is arabic/Antiochian iconography.
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 ай бұрын
​@@MrSofuskroghlarsenBaroque iconography is permissible in Orthodoxy so long as it does not stray from church teaching. There are lots of Ortho churches in Serbia for example with Baroque icons.
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 ай бұрын
Pretty sure that statues existed in the West prior to the schism.
@terrytzaneros8007
@terrytzaneros8007 Жыл бұрын
The Liturgy of St. James Brother of the Lord is the Great Bridge and the overlapping of the spheres East & West.
@bonniejohnstone
@bonniejohnstone Жыл бұрын
9/11 today is my 29th anniversary as a convert… but the Protestant Church game me everything I needed to get here for 46 years! Glory to God! In the beginning… some converts act like X-smokers or people who just lost 40 lbs and tell you where YOUR diet is wrong and why you are FAT! Eeewwwww! Humans especially now have a bad habit of bragging. Just wait a year after 6 months of prayer and fasting kicks that ego to the ground! It takes time but that’s the point of putting Christ in the center of everything instead of ourselves.
@enochrockwell7202
@enochrockwell7202 2 жыл бұрын
I love the western rite and am for it existing but I grow tired of the apologists for it insisting that following the traditional Constantinopolitan ("Byzantine") rite somehow means you are pretending to be a Greek or a Russian. It's misguided at best, and disingenuous at worst. The ritual is not ethnic and the case for it being ethnic cannot be made as the "Byzantine" rite has been practiced by a plurality of ethnicities for many centuries and unlike Americans today none of these people were confused about their ethnicity or identity, and most modern western converts to orthodoxy do not share this strange confusion of identity. If you go to a Russian parish and it feels foreign it may be because most of the people there are foreign immigrants and just different than you, sure. But what about when they're all American converts including the priest? What's the cope then? If the ritual feels foreign it's because of historical development and that Roman Catholic history is removed from this tradition after the schism, and Protestant history and tradition is even further removed and many Protestants today do not even have the concept of liturgy.
@brendanbeaulieu4750
@brendanbeaulieu4750 2 жыл бұрын
I go to a Greek parish that is probably 70-80% converts and I have never felt out of place participating in the services. Most if it is done in English and certain prayers are done in multiple languages like the Lord's Prayer. I don't necessarily see an issue with Western Rite but in my experience don't fully understand the need for it either.
@hairunoyrt6683
@hairunoyrt6683 2 жыл бұрын
Incredible interview. I would like to have a priest/spiritual father like him!
@crystaldushkin8909
@crystaldushkin8909 2 жыл бұрын
Austin, I was checking out your merch, nice selection. I have heard the saying, a Theologian is one who prays; one who prays is a Theologian. I wondered if you would consider sharing with your audience about your own practice of prayer. Alternatively, maybe an interview/episode on prayer, perhaps from different Christian practices, such as from Orthodox perspective, Catholic, Protestant, etc. Just a thought triggered by the Theologian merch. Keep up the good work spreading rhe good news. 👍
@GabrielWithoutWings
@GabrielWithoutWings 10 ай бұрын
I got kicked out of Dyercord for defending Western devotional practices against Easterns. I think a lot of Easterns in the US are former Protestants. They get the benefit of an ancient apostolic communion while still being able to hate Rome and the West.
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 10 ай бұрын
I've definitely come across people that fit that description
@justinamilal3616
@justinamilal3616 2 жыл бұрын
Good job Austin! 👍
@daniel8728
@daniel8728 3 ай бұрын
As a Former RC who lived through the “reforms” of Vat2, I cringe around the Roman rite of Liturgy. Sad
@SaltShack
@SaltShack Жыл бұрын
Fr. Patrick, What a lovely gentleman. May God Grant you and Austin Many Years. There is no “Eastern” in Orthodoxy, period. It is the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church that simply survived the “sin of Schism” in the East and that accident of History shouldn’t be held against it today because there is no Culture in the Liturgy unless you make it so regardless of what language it is offered in. But!, unfortunately what you have is a lingering but diminishing flavor of sometimes vehement ethnic defenders. “This is a Greek Church why is there a Russian cross here?” But I have never found a priest from any tradition to be one. I’m a Mormon raised Catholic educated convert to Orthodoxy and have found a home for 35 years in the Orthodox Church. Our current church serves, Greeks, Romanians, Arabs, Eritrean, Hispanic, Ukrainians and me along with numerous other converts nearly seamlessly. The Serbian Bishop of Western America comes frequently and we welcomed the entire neighboring Russian Church when the Icon of the Theotokos from St. Tikhons Monastery visited. I see no difference in Latin traditions than any of the other cultures, languages of any other Orthodox Tradition. Orthodox has never so narrowly defined itself, but make no mistake the boundaries are firm and well defined and every tradition acknowledged by the Patriarchs as honoring those boundaries should be accepted without reservation or any asterisks whatsoever but as complete, equal and fully Orthodox. But likewise as any guest in anyone’s home we should be respectful of our hosts. That’s to say if you are welcomed as you are to say a Greek Church built by Greeks and attended by Greeks for decades or longer don’t enter it with intent to remove the ethnic components to it. That’s simple politeness and after all none of it is directed at you even though some may be more welcoming than others but isn’t that just life. However none of that slack should be extended to Clergy. If Clergy aren’t welcoming openly based on ethnicity they are neither serving Christ or his Church.
@dexteradomini7103
@dexteradomini7103 2 жыл бұрын
The Longer Catechism of the Orthodox, Catholic, Eastern Church AKA the Catechism of St. Philaret of Moscow literally, explicitly teaches that there is “a fund [i.e. treasury] of infinite merit”. By the way, did you know that the distribution of indulgences is an Eastern Orthodox practice, being legalized at the Great Council of Constantinople of 1727, which taught: “The power of the abandonment of sins, which, if filed in writing, which the Eastern Church of Christ calls ‘permissive letters’, and the Latin people "indulgences" is given by Christ in the holy Church. These ‘permissive letters’ are issued throughout the catholic Church by the four holiest patriarchs: Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem." It is not forbidden nor condemned, the only thing forbidden about them is selling for profit, besides that is completely normal, legal and traditional. Moreover, they were taught by Dositheos of Jerusalem who wrote "It is an established custom and ancient tradition, known to all, that the Most Holy Patriarchs give the absolution certificate to the faithful people they have granted them from the beginning and still do." Your St. Nicodemus the Hagiorite who, being the author of "The Rudder" knew Orthodox practices as well as probably almost anyone at the time he lived, wrote a letter to Paisius, Bishop of Stagonas, asking him to obtain an absolution certificate (which the 1727 Council identifies as an indulgence) for a monk in his monastery. Decree 18 of the Confession of Dositheos speaks of something very similar to Purgatory, the people who repented from Mortal sins, but have not had any fruit of repentence, can be delivered from punishment by things that include "the good works which the relatives of each do for their Departed". How would you distinguish between what is mentioned in the Confession to what was taught by the Catholic Church at 2nd Lyons, Florence and Trent?
@dexteradomini7103
@dexteradomini7103 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge I. The Constantinople Council of 1727 says the 4 Eastern Patriarchs, not just the Patriarch of Jerusalem, have approved and authorized Indulgences, which they call Certificates of Absolution, “The power of the forgiveness of sins, which is termed by the Eastern Church of Christ Absolution Certificates when given in writing, but by the Latins Indulgences, is given to the Holy Church by Christ. These Absolution Certificates are issued in the whole Catholic Church by the four most holy Patriarchs: Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem." This was cited in the OP. Two things are clear from the Eastern Orthodox Synod… (a) the Synod considers absolution certificates to be the same as what Latin Catholics call Indulgences, as shown by the words, "The power of the forgiveness of sins, which is termed by the Eastern Church of Christ Absolution Certificates when given in writing, but by the Latins Indulgences, is given to the Holy Church by Christ." (b) These absolution certificates are considered universal within the Eastern Orthodox Church: “These Absolution Certificates are issued in the whole Catholic Church by the four most holy Patriarchs: Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem" note the words "the whole Catholic Church" i.e. whole Orthodox Eastern Church. II. Patriarch Dositheus confessed this doctrine in an Eastern Orthodox Council in the 17th Century, "And the souls of those involved in mortal sins, who have not departed in despair but while still living in the body, though without bringing forth any fruits of repentance, have repented - by pouring forth tears, by kneeling while watching in prayers, by afflicting themselves, by relieving the poor, and finally by showing forth by their works their love towards God and their neighbor, and which the Catholic Church has from the beginning rightly called satisfaction - [their souls] depart into Hades, and there endure the punishment due to the sins they have committed. But they are aware of their future release from there, and are delivered by the Supreme Goodness, through the prayers of the Priests, and the good works which the relatives of each do for their Departed; especially the unbloody Sacrifice benefiting the most; which each offers particularly for his relatives that have fallen asleep, and which the Catholic and Apostolic Church offers daily for all alike. Of course, it is understood that we do not know the time of their release. We know and believe that there is deliverance for such from their direful condition, and that before the common resurrection and judgment, but when we know not." From: www.crivoice.org/creeddositheus.html III. If there is a distinction in Hades between those (1) who can be saved, and those (2) who cannot be saved, well what else is (1) but Hell proper, and what else is (2) but a kind of purgatorial purification state? For if they can be released, it is obvious they are capable of being sanctified, and we call such sanctification Purgatorial. When this was discussed between Latin and Greek Theologians at the Council of Florence, the Catholic Church assured the Orthodox that nothing else had been dogmatically defined but that (1) a Purgatorial state exists and that (2) the souls detained there can be assisted by the suffrage gained by the Faithful. In most of the early Church, there were two views, based on St. Paul's teaching that some would be saved through fire in 1 Cor 3. Either (1) all would be saved through fire, and then we have universalism, as apparently in St. Gregory of Nyssa, or (2) only some, for lesser sins, would be saved through fire, as appears in another St. Gregory, the great Pope of Rome. So if Purgatory is not true, Universalism would be.
@dexteradomini7103
@dexteradomini7103 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge The modern Eastern Orthodox deny purgatory, but are rather inconsistent in their way of putting forth its belief. Because in church history, you’ll see different articulations of purgatory. Sometimes different names to describe it even, in the east and the west. Here’s how Eastern Orthodox metropolitan, Kallistos Ware, describes the current state of orthodoxy on the question of purgatory. He writes: “Orthodox are convinced that Christians here on earth have a duty to pray for the departed. And, they are confident that the dead are helped by such prayers. But, precisely in what way do our prayers help the dead? What exactly is the condition of souls in the period between death and the resurrection of the body at the last day. Here, Orthodox teaching is not in entirely clear and has varied somewhat at different times. In the 17th century, a number of Orthodox writers, most notably Peter of Mogila and Dositheos in his confession upheld the Roman Catholic doctrine of purgatory, or something very close to it.” This is evident in the 1672 Orthodox Synod of Jerusalem. And, it said the following about purgatory, very close to the Catholic view. “The souls of the departed are either at rest or in torment, according to their conduct in life. But, their condition will not be perfect till the resurrection of the body. The souls of those who die in a state of penitence without having brought forth fruits of repentance or satisfactions, depart into Hades. And, there, they must suffer the punishment for their sins. But, they may be delivered by the prayers of the priests and the alms, or giving to the poor, of their kindred. Especially, by the unbloody sacrifice of the mass, which individuals offer for their departed relatives, and which the Catholic and apostolic church daily offers for all alike. The liberation from this intervening state of purification will take place before the resurrection and the general judgment. But, the time is unknown.” In another word, Kallistos Ware says this. “It is true that Orthodox theologians usually express reservations about the doctrine of purgatory as developed in medieval and post medieval Roman Catholic teaching. But, at the same time, most of them allow for some sort of purging or purification after death. Catholic and Orthodox views on the middle state after death are less sharply opposed than appears at first.” P.S. Are you a Protestant convert?
@dexteradomini7103
@dexteradomini7103 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge So does Fr. Josiah Trentham have more authority than an council of Eastern Orthodox patriarchs of 4 of the most ancient sees? Who gave him the authority to speak on behalf of all of Orthodoxy?
@dexteradomini7103
@dexteradomini7103 2 жыл бұрын
@John Coolidge They changed their doctrine?
@jp-eg6md
@jp-eg6md 2 жыл бұрын
@@dexteradomini7103 amen brother ! I was EO and saw how modern orthodoxy is not really how orthodoxy was back then and after finding out Council of Florence I could not deny Rome
@DaFooling
@DaFooling 2 жыл бұрын
1:14:10 he completely denies enculturation. This is an ASTRONOMICALLY huge issue. The westerners may have the western rite, Indians the saint Thomas, what are you offering to Nigerians, Congolese, Fijians, Maasai, Chinese or Malays? And that is putting aside the multicultural and ethnic nature of America for one second. This is myopic Anglo self importance, takes one to know one. He complains about the liturgy changing the “cult” culture… THATS THE POINT. And no, that won’t make you a nebulous “eastern” (dramatically different cultures for the record) it will make the culture Orthodox.
@BruvaLucius
@BruvaLucius 2 жыл бұрын
I don't think you heard him correctly. He's not talking about cultus as in the culture of a country. He refers to the environment people are spiritually nourished - the western rites are equal to the eastern ones in that regard, Pope St Leo, Pope St Gregory, St Ambrose, St Hilary, St Augustine, St Oswald, St Alban, St Dunstan - all these saints of the church and many many many more were raised and spiritually nourished by solely the western rite. That alone means that East and West are both equal in that regard, so why not want to bring that theological equality to the fore by endorsing the Western Rite, its the liturgy of the Latin Patristic patronage, which again, produced countless Saints of the Church so naturally its something we should desire more of. Its nothing about enculturation if anything he probably (though ill not speak as if I know what he wants!) WANTS enculturation, the significant amount of Orthodox Churches in the US are ran by GOARCH who, while I know many I deeply admire and respect in GOARCH, has a strong 'hellenistic' attitude with very little evangelism going on. The view of Orthodoxy being based along national lines and being cultural club isn't something people hear about for absolutely zero reasoning. If people historically grew up around a Western Liturgical life then suddenly are thrust into an Eastern Liturgical life, which differs quite a bit in their emphasis, its only natural that many people can be and indeed are put off by these foreign practices. They're foreign and people genuinely, whether it's right or wrong, don't like to stick their necks into something foreign to them all of a sudden.
@jamesbancroft2467
@jamesbancroft2467 2 жыл бұрын
how long until the Church offers a rehabilitation of the Oriental Rites (Coptic, Ge’ez, West Syriac, East Syriac, etc.)?
@Melvin_Thoma
@Melvin_Thoma 2 жыл бұрын
I read abt a bunch of Assyrians (maybe early 20th century?)... Who were East Syriac rite Christians (Church of the East).... Who when converted to Eastern Orthodoxy, had to fully become Byzantine Rite to be "Orthodox ". Sadly. And they became Eastern Orthodox.
@jamesbancroft2467
@jamesbancroft2467 2 жыл бұрын
@@Melvin_Thoma :/. I know some aspects of the Nestorian services wouldn’t fly (“The Hallowing of Nestorius” for example), but the overall rite predates the Nestorian schism I think
@maxcarvalho9071
@maxcarvalho9071 2 жыл бұрын
Very difficult. I know a bit of the Coptic liturgy, and they have very heavy christological content at times that would need to be scrapped or changed.
@reeferfranklin
@reeferfranklin Жыл бұрын
I feel like I vacillate between Western Rite Orthodoxy & Byzantine Rite Catholicism in my heart, and then there's my occasional affinity to the Continuing Anglican Movement, the SSPX & the Personal Ordinariate...man, it's hard to find a theological home, but oh so easy to know which versions of Christianity you wouldn't touch with a 10-foot pole, these days.
@jasonmed2119
@jasonmed2119 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you both. Very informative
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@allsaintsmonastery
@allsaintsmonastery 3 ай бұрын
As long as the Western right liturgy has a clear theology to it, it is just fine. The liturgy is often too long and too heavy for a younger generation. Western right might be a partial solution to that so long as the theology sound..
@StuartKoehl
@StuartKoehl 3 ай бұрын
Western rite Orthodoxy conforms more closely to the classic definition of uniatism as a ritual adjunct of a particular Church, than do the Eastern Catholic Churches today, which not only possess true autonomy and ecclesial status, but also have been enjoined to recover the fullness of their authentic Tradition--in contrast to the Western rite communities, which have been subjected to a process of "byzantinization" in the form of additions to their liturgy such as a consecratory epiclesis and a Byzantine-style pre-communion prayer. In light of this, it's hard to take Orthodox criticism of uniatism with a straight face.
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 күн бұрын
These are usually modified Western Rites. They are not 100% Western. That actually makes sense because the Orthodox churches are mostly based in the East.
@StuartKoehl
@StuartKoehl 9 күн бұрын
@@roytofilovski9530 And that is precisely the argument that the Orthodoxy made against the heavily latinized Greek Catholics of the pre-Vatican II period---that we were only superficially Orthodox, but internally Roman Catholics. And, at the time, that may have been the case, though even before Vatican II, that mindset was changing. Since Vatican II--and especially in the past two decades, Greek Catholics have more fully embraced their authentic Tradition, the same Tradition maintained by the Eastern Orthodox. The Second Vatican Council recognized the identity of the Greek Catholics (and all the other Eastern Catholic Churches) as true Churches, with their own autonomous hierarchy, liturgy, spirituality, theology, doctrine and discipline. This makes them fundamentally different from "Western rite Orthodoxy", which is NOT organized as true particularly Churches, but as mere ritual adjuncts or "rites" of an Eastern Orthodox Church. The do not have an independent hierarchy, nor are they free to theologize in its own (Western) Tradition, and its liturgies have been bowdlerized to accommodate Eastern Orthodox sensibilities (e.g., with the inclusion of an explicit consecratory epiclesis, and the addition or Orthodox-style pre-communion prayers). They are, in shore, the Orthodox equivalent of "Uniates", although we "Uniates" are far more independent and authentic than Western rite Orthodoxy. Which, of course, puts lie to all the calumnies that too frequently are directed against Greek Catholics by ill-informed members of Eastern Orthodox Churches.
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 күн бұрын
@@StuartKoehl WR Orthodox do not want to be independent, so frankly I don't get your point tbh. And Greek Catholics are not Orthodox, they are Catholic......
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 күн бұрын
@@StuartKoehl There are also not enough WR Orthodox for them to have their own autocephalus church. At least not in the medium term.
@StuartKoehl
@StuartKoehl 8 күн бұрын
@@roytofilovski9530 There are only about 2500 Russian Greek Catholics, and an equal number of Hellenic Catholics. Numbers are not important, but ecclesial status is. That was the whole argument against "uniatism"--that they weren't true Churches, merely rites whose liturgy, theology, spirituality, doctrine and discipline were all deeply influenced by their mother Church. Now, we Greek Catholics look to the Orthodox as our Mother Churches, and back to them, one day, we hope to return.
@jerrypawlak2396
@jerrypawlak2396 2 жыл бұрын
To be honest, Western orhodox rite liturgy is one of the greatest liturgical and theological messes i have ever witnesses, blindly removed traditions and prayers of latin liturgy, sprinkled in eastern prayer practises, but what killed me was the tribule (censer) with the bells, For someone brought with both eastern and western rites (having dominicans, latin rite, copts, greek and russian orthodox) it was out of place as a monstrance on a football match
@jerrypawlak2396
@jerrypawlak2396 2 жыл бұрын
Treat this as opinion not analisis of rite.
@tonyrandall8703
@tonyrandall8703 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve never seen a censor with bells in a Western Rite Liturgy.
@jerrypawlak2396
@jerrypawlak2396 2 жыл бұрын
@@tonyrandall8703 I did. And it was awful. Worst thing is that they had normal western style censor
@tonyrandall8703
@tonyrandall8703 2 жыл бұрын
@@jerrypawlak2396 kzbin.infoUgkxEhO7pK36akaDHPwZQArfa9VIMQnLuMQa
@tonyrandall8703
@tonyrandall8703 2 жыл бұрын
@@jerrypawlak2396 I attend Fr. Patrick’s parish.
@garrettboyum4070
@garrettboyum4070 2 жыл бұрын
Austin you should look into using zencastr at least for your audio. With zencastr the audio is recorded locally so if you or your guest has a connection issue the audio quality for the finished production isn't degrated or lost. Love your work hope this helps keep the quality of your content high
@maxonmendel5757
@maxonmendel5757 2 жыл бұрын
14:09 it feels like stepping into a 13th century Canterbury garden
@brandorev
@brandorev 2 жыл бұрын
For me I do like orthodoxy, but really love many of the western pre-schism saints, especially on the British isles (Cuthbert, David of Wales, Thaney, Nonnita, Bede, Ita, etc…).Even some after 1095(St Francis). Love God, Love others. Change the world.😉
@brandorev
@brandorev 2 жыл бұрын
Bought Augustine’s City of God, confessions (per Fr Seraphim Rose’s praise for the books), and the consolation of philosophy by Boethuis. Look forward to reading them.
@brandorev
@brandorev 2 жыл бұрын
St Patrick! There is an icon of him next to door to the Nave.
@JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese
@JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese 2 жыл бұрын
Saint Tiberieus
@maxonmendel5757
@maxonmendel5757 2 жыл бұрын
what about the charismatics? is there room for expression of the Holy spirit in the orthodox church?
@handel1111
@handel1111 4 ай бұрын
Charismatic movement is heresy
@petrosdorizas6814
@petrosdorizas6814 2 жыл бұрын
Since I learned about Western Rite, I have to say that on the one hand I think it makes sense to have a rite which is indigenous to the West and which reflects the West's lost Orthodoxy. On the other hand though, the reintroduction of the Sarum Rite in Orthodox circles is a modern development as far as I know, and I'm afraid that it might be aimed too much at poaching Catholics who may have a temporary disagreement with their church or at introducing Latin Christianity to the Orthodox. This is why I can't wait for this video and to see what I might learn from it!
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
I hope it proves to be a helpful video for you!
@baoduong2203
@baoduong2203 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah that is my critique of the WR. Since it seems that the WR doesn’t have a organic concrete history that is from a western heritage that Latin Rite Catholics can claim. It can seem from someone from the outside that the WR came from the hierarchy with just eastern heritage only. An analogy would be: suppose that the Catholic Church was only composed of the Latin Church and no Eastern Catholic Churches. One day Rome decides to allow/support Catholics by adopting and modifying an Eastern Liturgy that was once Catholic, but were corrupted by the Orthodox. So we have This Eastern Catholic Church that doesn’t have a eastern heritage.
@kellyanna94
@kellyanna94 2 жыл бұрын
@ScottishSlav(formerly Ed of the Dead) This ^
@baoduong2203
@baoduong2203 2 жыл бұрын
@ScottishSlav(formerly Ed of the Dead) I think the distinction between WR and the Uniates that can be made is: The Uniates were former Orthodox that entered into Communion with Rome, thus they came from an eastern heritage and continued that eastern heritage. Not Catholics that came from a western heritage. The Uniates would be like if the entire patriarchate of Constantinople entered back into union with Rome, or a Bishop and his diocese. Rome didn’t have Catholics establish an Eastern Rite Catholic Church that came from an Western heritage. The eastern Catholics came from an eastern heritage, and not from a western heritage. Hence why they are not under Latin bishops, but their own eastern bishops and canon laws. While the WR came from Eastern hierarchy, and who are still under eastern bishops. Which can seem that we have eastern bishops just claiming another heritage that is different than their own for those orthodox who prefer the western liturgy. It seems odd from a historical standpoint.
@masterchief8179
@masterchief8179 2 жыл бұрын
@@baoduong2203The Maronites were never Eastern Orthodox. They are 2000 years in unbroken communion with Rome. Besides, there are “uniates” that came to the Church not only from the (Greek/Byzantine) Eastern Orthodox world in schism, but also came from the Assyrian Church of the East (like Syro-Malabar Catholics and Chaldean Catholics) or Oriental Orthodoxy (like Malankara Indian Catholics and Ethiopian Catholics).
@crbgo9854
@crbgo9854 Жыл бұрын
I've felt that the existence of western rite you can see the diffrence between little t and big T traditions enough to know the diffrence between the theological truth of the orthodox faith and the theologically influenced practices of the orthodox church
@amg2598
@amg2598 2 жыл бұрын
I wanted to point out that almost every Roman church in my region for the last 100+ years has had an icon of Our Mother of Perpetual Help in it. I live in the USA. If I remember correctly, Romans are not allowed to cremate either except by a form of dispensation for grave reasons and they also cannot hold a funeral with the ashes. Sorry, but Father is mistaken. They'll have to do a memorial Mass only. I would go with the obsession with apparitions as not keeping with the faith over cremation if we're picking a point, personally. OCA takes the same stance as the RCs, as someone in the comments pointed out!
@camp408962
@camp408962 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic!!
@joachimjustinmorgan4851
@joachimjustinmorgan4851 2 жыл бұрын
Ah, Kentucky. The Holy land.
@evereststevens7034
@evereststevens7034 2 жыл бұрын
I have a question, and this is just based off my limited experience. I go to church on Easter, and people prostrate before an icon of Jesus in the tomb. My friend prostrates before Baba's icon before leaving the temple. How is the veneration of iconography different between what I've seen at church, and what I've seen at temple?
@etcwhatever
@etcwhatever Жыл бұрын
The process is the same. The difference is the One being venerated. Jesus is God. The others in pagan religions are idols and false teachers. It is always about who is being venerated.
@Melvin_Thoma
@Melvin_Thoma 2 жыл бұрын
Fr Patrick said he had to be Russian or Greek due to the sin of the schism. I would say it's the same answer for a Catholic as well. Although there are Eastern Catholic churches in the US, I know many eastern Catholics who attend Latin Catholic parishes just because they are more widely available and close by. The eastern chruches are smaller and a nearest parish could be far way. And 98-99% of Catholics are Latin. So even many Catholics have to be Western/Latin for the most part even tho they are eastern. Plus altho Byzantine Catholic churches are traditional ("eastern"), many of the other eastern rite churches are heavily latinized.
@aisforamerica2185
@aisforamerica2185 6 ай бұрын
Being one who is currently in a "year of considering the East", Fr. Cardine had me near convinced until he started using an illustration that seems to imply that the Eastern Church is without flaw. I cannot abide a tradition that teaches it's tradition and structure is inerrant.
@americapires3742
@americapires3742 2 жыл бұрын
Im not sure if I understood correctly but the father saying that the Catholics don’t fast is just not true. In fact we are currently in the period of fasting for 40 days.
@gareth3566
@gareth3566 Жыл бұрын
“What I believe is pure and clear. What I don’t believe is icky” sounds reasonable 🙄🙄
@MrTzarBomb
@MrTzarBomb 2 жыл бұрын
I myself became RC after 8 years of trying to deal with EO peculiarities. Eventually, the anti-west attitude was too much (and frankly anti-Christian). I later saw that this hatred resulted in denying the faith to-own-the-Latins; I am now much more comfortable in RC theology, so I owe them that.
@БондарьВСеволод
@БондарьВСеволод 2 жыл бұрын
What is this attitude in Orthodoxy that you can call anti-Christian?at least I can imagine what you mean by talking about anti-Western relations, but I also can't understand how you didn't see it as a fight against sin, sinful politics, etc. I live in Russia, and all that can be heard in the Orthodox Church are words like that Western Christian civilization has lost its Christianity, with references to today's agenda, culture, and ideology. And I would like to ask you how you reconciled with the infallibility of the pope and the changed symbol of faith. Sorry in advance if there are errors here (used a translator)
@bradenrice8460
@bradenrice8460 2 жыл бұрын
Dude, you've been peddling this lie for over a year now. No Orthodox Parish community speaks this way. No Orthodox Priest or Bishop would tell you our faith is inherently anti-western. If you really did convert for a time your story would indicate you spent more time learning the faith from internet edgelords and not a Parish Priest. Which is a spiritual delusion in of itself.
@MrTzarBomb
@MrTzarBomb 2 жыл бұрын
@@bradenrice8460 You don’t know me, but you’re quick to call a liar.
@MrTzarBomb
@MrTzarBomb 2 жыл бұрын
@@БондарьВСеволод Not everything in the west is orthodox Catholic (Roman or otherwise) practice. The condemnation of the Roman church isn’t merely sin. It’s about fighting a strawman to inflate the EO ego.
@ahwhite2022
@ahwhite2022 2 жыл бұрын
I greatly respect and appreciate this interview. As a man who has had a few misgivings over the years about the papacy, but always found myself coming came back due to the anti-Western absurdity of mainstream Orthodoxy, this man really made me think, and really made me pause for the first time in literally decades. I remain convinced that history has shown the fallacy of the logic of Eastern Orthodoxy and it's rejection of Rome, but... wow, I am only reinforced in my concerns for how the Catholic Church has gone astray of late. And, I am particularly persuaded by his repeated comments about the fast. I suppose all of this sounds absurd to Calvinists and other "reformers," but faith, without works, is dead, as a wise man once said.
@snowps1
@snowps1 2 ай бұрын
Is this the opposite of Byzantine Catholic? This is an Orthodox priest who serves the Latin Mass instead of a Catholic priest who serves the Divine Liturgy?
@frmyt1135
@frmyt1135 Ай бұрын
No because the Byzantine Catholics have doctrinal differences with Roman Catholicism despite being in union with them. The Western Rite doesn’t compromise on doctrines in being in communion with the church
@redquoter
@redquoter 2 жыл бұрын
Prayin' ya come to the Orthodox Church, perhaps in the Western Rite, dude. ☦️
@hinglemccringleberry9494
@hinglemccringleberry9494 2 жыл бұрын
Is this church in communion with the historic patriarchates?
@tonyrandall8703
@tonyrandall8703 2 жыл бұрын
Yes
@AveChristusRex
@AveChristusRex 2 жыл бұрын
Why would observing the historic Rite of the West in the Western Orthodox church constitute a problem for the Orthodox church?!
@Joshua-ch2ij
@Joshua-ch2ij Жыл бұрын
Yes
@airone50
@airone50 2 жыл бұрын
I did not perceive an anti western flavor in my path to orthodoxy. I will say that my priest is a convert from Roman Catholicism and perhaps that is why that idea was never conveyed to me in my journey. What I have discovered is that the online orthodox is very anti west so I get his idea. Augustine has been terribly used by the Apologists to malign his ideas always reserve any judgments and study.
@fallenstudent1103
@fallenstudent1103 2 жыл бұрын
Forgive me but this conversation has only made me more averse to the WR. I'm all for a revival of preschism western liturgical practices, but when he started talking about how Aquinas and Anselm are misunderstood makes me skeptical of this priests motives. Have also seen a lot of WR people bringing in these practices like Sacred heart worship.
@Joshua-ch2ij
@Joshua-ch2ij Жыл бұрын
I can tell you as a orthodox Christian baptized into the western rite that we absolutely do not do sacred heart worship. That’s one of the false claims that is made about the western rite by people who have never been apart of it.
@StuartKoehl
@StuartKoehl 9 күн бұрын
If only Archimandrite Robert Taft were alive, he would pick Father Patrick's whole argument to pieces, especially the notion that Gregory the Great would recognize the Tridentine Mass as being the Mass he celebrated in the 7th century. In fact, Father Patrick shows a lamentable ignorance of liturgical development in the Eastern Churches, let alone the West.
@maxonmendel5757
@maxonmendel5757 2 жыл бұрын
do we need to be charitable to evangelicals? are they within the bounds of orthodoxy in their expression of faith?
@tryingnottobeasmartass757
@tryingnottobeasmartass757 2 жыл бұрын
"Honor all men." I Peter 2:17
@americapires3742
@americapires3742 2 жыл бұрын
Also the idea of prohibiting cremating bodies what happens then to godly people who dies in fire like car, house airplane, different type of accidents involving fire where their bodies are burnt to the ashes. Would those people not be resurrected? Of course they will if died in Gods grace. After all we all will be given a perfect and immoral bodies. So no matter how we die, in the resurrection day we will be given a perfect and immortal body. The power of our Lord is more than how our bodies die. Thanks be to God🙏
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 ай бұрын
You think cremation and dying in a fire are the same thing? Really?
@WhiteBraveheart1
@WhiteBraveheart1 2 жыл бұрын
I need a little bit of the bubbly.....
@oleksiysaiko5859
@oleksiysaiko5859 Жыл бұрын
So I don’t understand , if Western Orthodoxy is basically Traditional Catholicism , what’s it different from SSPX? Which are traditionalists and do not accept Vatican-II.
@Joshua-ch2ij
@Joshua-ch2ij Жыл бұрын
Western Rite is how the church was before the split
@roytofilovski9530
@roytofilovski9530 9 ай бұрын
The theology is Orthodox, not RC. That is the difference.
@arthurhallett-west5145
@arthurhallett-west5145 2 жыл бұрын
That which we call a Uniate by any other name....
@gregpavlik6474
@gregpavlik6474 Жыл бұрын
I don't think you understand the Unia - what occurred, why and what it meant for the people impacted.
@Peter-jo6yu
@Peter-jo6yu 2 жыл бұрын
The first Ecumenical Council of Constantinople (AD 381) (which the orthodox claim is infallible) clearly states, in canon 3 : "The Bishop of Constantinople, however, shall have the prerogative of honour after the Bishop of Rome because Constantinople is New Rome." So there is a clear church hierarchy here: the Roman Church is given the highest authority, then only the Eastern bishop, and that too secondary to Rome. So, if orthodox churches claim that the ecumenical councils are infallible, then why do they disobey this early ecumenical council, in which the patriarch of Constantinople, St Gregory Nazianzus gave his assent? No wonder, having rejected the papacy, but having set up a pseudo- papacy in the Patriarch of Istanbul (Constantinople in olden times), the eastern church has splintered into multiple schismatic factions. There are multiple schismatic groups of the eastern orthodox, like the "True Orthodox Church", and they excommunicate each other with no common arbiter. Who's to say which one is right and wrong and on what basis, when two autonomous / autocephalous eastern orthodox bishops excommunicate each other?
@Peter-jo6yu
@Peter-jo6yu 2 жыл бұрын
@@oroma4025 the council in 381 instructed other bishops than the Bishop of Rome not to cross their jurisdictons, since it was already assumed that the Bishop of Rome had jurisdiction over the universal church. Specially, it was aimed at the Bishopric of Alexandria. As to the Roman bishop having authority over other churches, nearly Two hundred years before the council of Constantinople, St Irenaeus says about the Church of Rome, in refuting heresies "it is a matter of necessity that every Church should agree with this Church (of Rome), on account of its preeminent authority”. Cyprian, a north African bishop and martyr, talks of Rome as the Chair of Peter, the holder of the Keys, and that he united himself with Rome. Just imagine, this was acknowledged two hundred years before the ecumenical council of Constantinople, which gave the first honor in the hierarchy to the Roman bishop and the 2nd to the Constantinople bishop. So the "don't cross your jurisdictions" was aimed at the Alexandrian and other eastern bishops, since the Roman bishop was acknowledged as having universal authority much before that.
@JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese
@JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese 2 жыл бұрын
Canon 28 of Chalcedon makes New Rome equal in honor to Old Rome. Canon 28 Following in all things the decisions of the holy Fathers, and acknowledging the canon, which has been just read, of the One Hundred and Fifty Bishops beloved-of-God (who assembled in the imperial city of Constantinople, which is New Rome, in the time of the Emperor Theodosius of happy memory), we also do enact and decree the same things concerning the privileges of the most holy Church of Constantinople, which is New Rome. For the Fathers rightly granted privileges to the throne of old Rome, because it was the royal city. And the One Hundred and Fifty most religious Bishops, actuated by the same consideration, gave equal privileges to the most holy throne of New Rome, justly judging that the city which is honoured with the Sovereignty and the Senate, and enjoys equal privileges with the old imperial Rome, should in ecclesiastical matters also be magnified as she is, and rank next after her; so that, in the Pontic, the Asian, and the Thracian dioceses, the metropolitans only and such bishops also of the Dioceses aforesaid as are among the barbarians, should be ordained by the aforesaid most holy throne of the most holy Church of Constantinople; every metropolitan of the aforesaid dioceses, together with the bishops of his province, ordaining his own provincial bishops, as has been declared by the divine canons; but that, as has been above said, the metropolitans of the aforesaid Dioceses should be ordained by the archbishop of Constantinople, after the proper elections have been held according to custom and have been reported to him. ("τῶν ἴσων ἀπολαύουσαν" in Greek, "aequalibus privilegiis" in Latin) ------------------------------------------------------ Trullo, which is accepted east and west, demonstrates the canons of Chalcedon are in fact ECUMENICAL. You're gerrymandering the tradition which is a sign of heresy.
@benjaminblakley7474
@benjaminblakley7474 Жыл бұрын
So in his opinion is 1054 only a misunderstanding? Or was the west in error?
@mitrahispana4119
@mitrahispana4119 7 ай бұрын
Perhaps, but not in a way that would invalidate the liturgy of the West. The differences were mostly political; the Bishop of Rome asserted jurisdiction over the entire world.
@xmc7189
@xmc7189 2 жыл бұрын
It gets really confusing, eastern catholic and western orthodox. Whats the difference?
@Leo-uq6jp
@Leo-uq6jp 2 жыл бұрын
It's not that confusing unless you make it confusing, there are parishes under Eastern Orthodox bishops that use the Western Liturgical rite. It's really that simple, they are completely Orthodox and in communion with the Orthodox Church, but their liturgy is the ancient Western Liturgy. Eastern Catholics are a whole different thing.
@AveChristusRex
@AveChristusRex 2 жыл бұрын
Basically, East and West once belonged to the one Catholic Church, and have always used different Liturgies, East and West, with Apostolic similarities built in, all coming from the Apostles ultimately. Since the Schism, the West has not really been Orthodox, and the East not really been Catholic. But we both know we were once one, only a thousand years ago. As such, Orthodox are rediscovering the Liturgy of the West/Rome, as they are to be praised for doing, and the Eastern Catholics who rejoined Rome have retained their Eastern Liturgies.
@CatieD
@CatieD 2 жыл бұрын
Also, I'd like to request an interview with David Bentley Hart. Fr. Patrick's general tack in this interview reminded me of him (the pro-West, pro-Orthodoxy apologetic).
@petergala2147
@petergala2147 2 жыл бұрын
God bless
@chad14533
@chad14533 2 жыл бұрын
good vid
@jimschroeder1176
@jimschroeder1176 2 жыл бұрын
OCA also offers Western Rite.
@Yallquietendown
@Yallquietendown 2 жыл бұрын
Wow I hadn’t heard of that! Where do they have this in OCA ?
@catholicguy2224
@catholicguy2224 2 жыл бұрын
I don't believe they do.
@jimschroeder1176
@jimschroeder1176 2 жыл бұрын
@@catholicguy2224 I know for a fact they do. I know a priest in the OCA that does Western Rite with the blessing of the bishop.
@KevinTheMetalhead
@KevinTheMetalhead 2 жыл бұрын
Are you talking about Christ the King in Canada?
@jimschroeder1176
@jimschroeder1176 2 жыл бұрын
@@KevinTheMetalhead i see the link I sent was removed. I don't know why.
@david_porthouse
@david_porthouse 2 жыл бұрын
The Filioque was introduced to England by St Theodore, of happy memory, at the Council of Hatfield in the year 680, and it is retained today by Roman Catholics in England such as myself. I am a bit baffled as to what "Western Rite Orthodoxy" is supposed to consist of here in England. Are you going against the authority of St Theodore? If you are not, then what is the difference between you and the Church currently presided over by Cardinal Vincent Nichols? Do you recognise the sainthood of John Fisher and Thomas More? If not, then why not?
@joshuagilmore7522
@joshuagilmore7522 2 жыл бұрын
Does anyone know which western liturgy (mass) does the orthodox western rite perform? I would think it would be a pre-schism liturgy (mass), and specifically not a post 1570 Tridentine mass approved by Pope Pius V?
@GospelSimplicity
@GospelSimplicity 2 жыл бұрын
Liturgy of Gregory the Great I believe
@OCZ300M
@OCZ300M 2 жыл бұрын
Some use the Sarum Rite.
@Gamolmann
@Gamolmann 2 жыл бұрын
Also the Liturgy of St Tikhon is used, which is a modified English usage.
@dylanarmour6727
@dylanarmour6727 11 ай бұрын
My parish is Gregorian rite
@ALLHEART_
@ALLHEART_ 2 жыл бұрын
38:47
@themorbidmole9247
@themorbidmole9247 2 жыл бұрын
Now it's time to interview a Byzantine Catholic Priest! 😁
@lizledbitter6711
@lizledbitter6711 2 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/n5qTm32bmLh8fNk
@protestanttoorthodox3625
@protestanttoorthodox3625 Жыл бұрын
@Ben_G_Biegler
@Ben_G_Biegler 2 жыл бұрын
I thought Anglo-Catholics were western orthodox😂
@jeandoten1510
@jeandoten1510 2 жыл бұрын
See my comment above re the Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter. Not exactly "Western Orthodox" but an example of probably the smallest and most recent accepted non-Roman rite in Catholicism.
@DaveK548
@DaveK548 2 жыл бұрын
Yep! I was an Anglo-Catholic before becoming Eastern Orthodox, and the Anglo-Catholic Mass (minus the filioque) is what I experience when I visit a Western Rite Orthodox parish.
@Ben_G_Biegler
@Ben_G_Biegler 2 жыл бұрын
@@DaveK548 interesting, I visited an Anglo-Catholic mass and they didnt say the Filioque. They also had alot of Icons.
@Dlee-eo5vv
@Dlee-eo5vv 2 жыл бұрын
Stuck between a Rock and hard place, not Roman Catholic nor Orthodox.
@makita3680
@makita3680 2 жыл бұрын
"Why do I have to be Russian to be Orthodox" You don't. You can be Greek :o) Seriously though, didn't Christianity start in the Hellenic world?
@monacook4476
@monacook4476 2 жыл бұрын
It started in Israel…Jersusalem - under Roman occupation.
@Yallquietendown
@Yallquietendown 2 жыл бұрын
This is the best comment 🤣
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