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The word
liturgy
means common
work or
common action.
The Divine
Liturgy is
the common work
of the Orthodox
Church. It is
the official
action of the
Church formally
gathered
together as the
chosen People of
God. The word
church, as
we remember
means a
gathering or
assembly of
people
specifically
chosen and
called apart to
perform a
particular task.
The Divine
Liturgy is the
common action of
Orthodox
Christians
officially
gathered to
constitute the
Orthodox Church.
It is the action
of the Church
assembled by God
in order to be
together in one
community to
worship, to
sing, to hear
God's Word, to
be instructed in
God's
commandments, to
offer itself
with
thanksgiving in
Christ to God
the Father, and
to have the
living
experience of
God's eternal
kingdom through
communion with
the same Christ
Who is present
in his people by
the Holy Spirit.
The Divine
Liturgy is also
celebrated by
the church on
special feast
days. It is
usually
celebrated daily
in monasteries,
and in some
large cathedrals
and parish
churches, with
the exception of
the week days of
Great Lent when
it is not served
because of its
paschal
character.
As the common
action of the
People of God,
the Divine
Liturgy may be
celebrated only
once on any
given day in an
Orthodox
Christian
community. All
members of the
Church must be
gathered
together with
their pastor in
one place at one
time. This
includes even
small children
and infants from
the day of their
entrance into
the Church
through baptism
and chrismation.
Almost every
one, always
together.
This is the
traditional
expression of
the Orthodox
Church about the
Divine Liturgy.
Because of its
common
character, the
Divine Liturgy
may never be
celebrated
privately by the
clergy alone. It
may never be
served just for
some and not for
others, but for
all. It may
never be served
merely for some
private purposes
or some specific
or exclusive
intentions. Thus
there may be,
and usually are,
special
petitions for
the sick or the
departed, or for
some very
particular
purposes or
projects, but
there is never a
Divine Liturgy
which is done
exclusively for
private
individuals or
specific
isolated
purposes or
intentions. The
Divine Liturgy
is always "in
behalf of all
and for all."
Because the
Divine Liturgy
exists for no
other reason
than to be the
official
all-inclusive
act of prayer,
worship,
teaching and
communion of the
entire Church in
heaven and on
earth, it may
not be
considered
merely as one
devotion among
many, not even
the highest or
the greatest.
The Divine
Liturgy is not
an act of
personal piety.
It is not merely
one of the
sacraments. The
Divine Liturgy
is the one
common sacrament
of the very
being of the
Church itself.
It is the one
sacramental
manifestation of
the essence of
the Church as
the Community of
God and on
earth. It is the
one unique
sacramental
revelation of
the Church as
the mystical
Body and Bride
of Christ.
As the central
mystical action
of the whole
church, the
Divine Liturgy
is always
resurrectional
in spirit. It is
always the
manifestation to
his people of
the Risen
Christ. It is
always an
outpouring of
the
life-creating
Spirit. It is
always communion
with God the
Father. The
Divine Liturgy,
therefore, is
never mournful
or penitential.
It is never the
expression of
the darkness and
death of this
world. It is
always the
expression and
experience of
the eternal life
of the Kingdom
of the Blessed
Trinity.
The Divine
Liturgy
celebrated by
the Orthodox
Church is called
the Liturgy
of St. John
Chrysostom.
It is a shorter
liturgy then the
so-called
Liturgy of St.
Basil the Great
which is used
only ten times
during the
Church Year.
These two
liturgies
probably
received their
present form
after the ninth
century. It is
not the case
that they were
written exactly
as they not
stand by the
saints whose
names they
carry. It is
quite certain,
however, that
the eucharistic
prayers of each
of these
liturgies were
formulated as
early as the
fourth and fifth
centuries when
these saints
lived and worked
in the Church.
The Divine
Liturgy has two
main parts. The
first part is
the gathering,
called the
synaxis. It
has its origin
in the synagogue
gatherings of
the Old
Testament ,and
is centered in
the proclamation
and meditation
of the Word of
God. The second
part of the
Divine Liturgy
is the
eucharistic
sacrifice.
It has its
origins in the
Old Testament
temple worship,
the priestly
sacrifices of
the People of
God: and in the
central saving
event of the Old
Testament, the
Passover
(Pascha).
In the New
Testament Church
Jesus Christ is
the Living Word
of God, and it
is the Christian
gospels and
apostolic
writings which
are proclaimed
and meditated at
the first part
of the Divine
Liturgy. And in
the New
Testament
church, the
central saving
event is the one
perfect, eternal
and
all-sufficient
sacrifice of
Jesus Christ,
the one great
High Priest
who is also the
Lamb of God
slain for the
salvation of the
world, the
New Passover.
At the Divine
Liturgy the
faithful
Christians
participate in
the voluntary
self-offering of
Christ to the
Father,
accomplished
once and for all
upon the Cross
by the power of
the Holy Spirit.
In and through
the unique
sacrifice of
Christ, the
faithful
Christians
receive Holy
Communion with
God.
For centuries it
was the practice
of the Church to
admit all
persons to the
first part of
the Divine
Liturgy, while
reserving the
second part
strictly for
those who were
formally
committed to
Christ through
baptism and
chrismation in
the Church.
Non-baptized
persons were not
permitted even
to witness the
offering and
receiving of
Holy Communion
by the faithful
Christians. Thus
the first part
of the Divine
Liturgy came to
be called the
Liturgy of the
Catechumens,
that is, the
liturgy of those
who were
receiving
instructions in
the Christian
Faith through
baptism and
chrismation. It
also came to be
called, for
obvious reasons,
the Liturgy
of the Word.
The second part
of the Divine
Liturgy came to
be called the
Liturgy of the
Faithful.
Although it is
generally the
practice in the
Orthodox Church
today to allow
non-Orthodox
Christians and
even
non-Christians,
to witness the
Liturgy of the
Faithful, it is
still the
practice to
reserve actual
participation in
the sacrament of
Holy Communion
only to members
of the Orthodox
Church who are
fully committed
to the life and
teachings of the
Orthodox Faith
as preserved,
proclaimed and
practiced by the
Church
throughout its
history.
Excerpt from
Father Thomas
Hopko,
Worship: An
Elementary
Handbook on
the Orthodox
Church, v. 2,
The Department
of Religious
Education, The
Orthodox Church
in America, New
York, 1976.
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