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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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