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As
we join in Thanksgiving
The Divine Liturgy begins where it will one day end-with the kingdom of God:"Blessed
is the kingdom of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit
" These
words begin every Eucharistic celebration in the Byzantine tradition. They proclaim the
goal of every Liturgy-the heavenly banquet (Luke 13:29, Revelation 19:9) where Christ will
be all in all (I Corinthians 15:28).
While our Lord walked the earth, there was no need for sacraments, for he was
physically present. When he returns in glory there will be no need for sacred rites. But
in the meantime, in that period between the "already" and the "not
yet," we share in these mysteries: "we wait for it with patience"
(Romans 8:2 5). With us "
creation waits with eager longing for the revealing
of the sons of God." (Romans 8:19).
This attitude of expectation and longing finds expression in so many aspects of the
Byzantine Eucharist.
The priest and deacon stand facing the East. (It should be noted that due to building
regulations and land availability, it is sometimes impossible to construct a church
edifice with the holy table placed in the east section: therefore, it is customary to
designate as "the East" the location of the holy table.) In their gaze and
orientation they lead the people beyond themselves. The area surrounding the holy table is
separated by an iconostasis, intimating that the mystery celebrated in the
Eucharist transcends even the community that has gathered for the celebration. The Church
is not only the assembly of those living here and now, but also encompasses the "heavenly
Jerusalem" (Hebrews 12:22). It is not to be self-enclosed, self-satisfied
"association," but rather a pilgrim people, continually looking forward,
growing, and being transformed, who await the "life of the age to come."
Preparation for the Liturgy
Before the journey to the kingdom can begin, people must be ready. We cannot schedule
encounters with God: we can only prepare for them. Therefore, the official liturgical
texts of the Byzantine Churches insist:
"He who intends to celebrate the Divine Mystery should be
reconciled first of all with everyone and have no animosity toward anyone. To the best of
his ability, he must keep his heart clean from evil thoughts. He should abstain starting
the night before and maintain a spiritual concentration until the time of the
celebration."
Prayer, fasting and reconciliation - these are the preconditions for a sincere
participation in the Eucharist.
The preparation is ritualized when the priest and deacon join in prayer in front of the
iconostasis before the beginning of the Liturgy. Prior to entering the holy of
holies, they turn to the congregation and bow to them - seeking reconciliation and
acknowledging the presence of Christ in the assembly.
Having entered the sanctuary, they reverence the holy table, symbol of Christ who
unites all, much like a dinner table that unites those who gather for a meal. The priest
and deacon then proceed to vest. The bright sticharion (alb) is the gleaming robe
which all received when they put on Christ in Baptism. The epitrachilion (stole) is
symbolic of God's grace abundantly poured out upon his priests, like a precious ointment
running down to the hem of one's garment (Psalm 133:2). Finally, the phelonion
(chasuble) proclaims the joy and exultation of life in the kingdom (Psalm 132:9).
The deacon with his winged orarion (stole) manifests the sure and speedy diakonia
(service) of God's angelic ministers (Psalm 104). His function at the Liturgy is precisely
to serve, to perform the various manual acts. Thus, in the Liturgy, he continues the work
which he performs in everyday life: serving at tables and looking after the needy (Acts
6:1-7).
Preparation of the Gifts
In its prayers and gestures, the prothesis
(Slavonic: proskomedia) anticipates many of the central themes of the public part
of the Eucharist. Memorial, offering, sacrifice, and intercession: all these are suggested
as the priest prepares the gifts of bread and wine. Cutting the bread, he arranges the
particles in a pattern representative of the Church, with Christ at the head. The Mother
of God, the angels, saints, the living and the deceased all surround the "Lamb",
the term used to designate the main piece of communion bread.
From the first centuries of Christianity, and in some parts of the Eastern Churches to
this very day, Christians have demonstrated the profound link between their everyday lives
and the Church's Liturgy by preparing breads of offering (prosphory) which are
brought to church and given to the priest along with a list of names and intentions to be
commemorated. The bread that will become the very Body of Christ sacrificed "on
behalf of all and for all" is offered by that Body, the Church, as it gathers for the
Liturgy, Coming together, the members of the Church do not turn their backs on the world,
but rather bring that world into Christ's presence. They remember the world's needs and
tribulations.
Having covered the gifts, for we often cover that which we hold in esteem, the priest
prays for their acceptance. After incensing them the clergy proceed to the holy table.
Liturgy of the Word
As the public part of the Liturgy begins, the royal doors are opened. Heaven and earth
are joined as all of us, united in the assembly, are drawn into the mystery of salvation.
The deacon incenses the holy table, the icons, and all of those who have come together
to seek union with the One in the Body of Christ. This act serves as a form of greeting.
The deacon bows to us and we reciprocate. By incensing the church, the deacon also
transforms the very air we breathe.
The re-creation of our world begins as the fragrant smoke hovers over the faces of
those assembled, like the Holy Spirit hovering over the face of the earth (Genesis 1). The
first private prayer of the priest is in fact a prayer to the Holy Spirit. In the
invocation "Heavenly King, Comforter, Spirit of Truth, everywhere present and filling
all things..." the clergy asks for the gift of the Spirit who "helps us in
our weakness: for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit himself
intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words." (Romans 8:26).
Now the deacon turns to the priest and says, "It is time to serve the Lord,
reverend Father, give me your blessing." We must never forget that what distinguishes
Christian Liturgy from pagan ritual is that Christians celebrate God's coming to us. It is
he who has acted in Jesus Christ. It is he who through Christ and in the Spirit, will act
in this Liturgy to draw us into the intimacy of the Trinitarian "dance".
Having responded "Amen" to the initial blessing, "Blessed is the
kingdom
" we are asked to pray for the needs of Church and world. These
exhortations are framed in the Great Synapte or Litany (Slavonic: ektenia). The
deacon begins, "In peace let us pray to the Lord." While historically this
litany followed the gospel and homily (since we should ideally listen to God before asking
him to listen to us), one can nevertheless suggest that this petitionary prayer, much like
the act of offering prosphora before the Liturgy, serves as a "bridge" by which
the whole world is brought before God as we enter his presence. Indeed, this sacrament is
given "for the life of the world" (John 6:51). Thus the deacon continues,
"For the peace of the whole world
For this city
For those who
suffer
" These are but a few of the expressions of concern for the world God
created.
The deacon concludes the exhortations with a formula, which brings forth the only
proper attitude towards petitionary prayer, "Remembering the Mother of God
and
all the saints, let us commend ourselves and one another and our whole life to Christ our
God." In making requests of God, our attitude must be one of total abandon. Like
Mary, we must say "let it be to done according to your word." (Luke
1:38).
The Antiphons
The antiphons are psalm verses, with refrains, which always relate to the
mystery celebrated. Various feasts have special antiphons, which amplify our understanding
and celebration of that particular holy day. It is significant that on every Sunday, some
Eastern Christians employ the same first antiphon as that sung on Easter. Thus every week
they proclaim jubilantly, "Shout out to the Lord, all the earth..." (Psalm
66:1). Indeed, each Lord's Day celebrates the totality of salvation experienced every year
at Pascha.
The hymn, "Only-begotten Son and Word of God," is one of the highpoints of
the Liturgy of the Word. Composed in 535 by the Byzantine Emperor, Justinian, the hymn
serves as a kind of encapsulized profession of faith. Its prominence in the Liturgy of the
Word is certainly appropriate, for in this part of the service we not only contemplate
God's Word as a book or text, but more importantly as a mystical presence acting in our
midst.
The procession with the Book of the Gospels originally marked the entrance into the
church. In fact, the second verse of the third antiphon reads: "Let us come into
his presence with thanksgiving." (Psalm 95:2). However, in contemporary practice,
the procession serves to ritualize the importance of the Word of God. Prominently
displaying the Gospel Book, the deacon and priest are escorted into the nave by
altar-servers bearing candles. In many parishes that follow Ukrainian or Ruthenian
Byzantine practice, members of the congregation, especially children, come forward to
venerate the Gospel. At the conclusion, the deacon raises the Book of the Gospels and
exclaims, "Wisdom! Stand a right!" We respond by inclining our heads as we sing,
"Come, let us worship, and bow down before Christ."
These acts have profound significance. Just as we express our faith in the real
presence of Christ in the Eucharist by prostrating before the sacred gifts, so do we
manifest our belief in Christ's presence in the Word by kissing and venerating the holy
Gospel. This prepares us to listen attentively and reverently when the Word is finally
proclaimed.
The Trisagion
After troparia and kondakia (stanzas) related to the mystery being
celebrated, have been sung by the cantors or choir, the priest intones the conclusion of
the Trisagion prayer, "For you, our God, are holy, and we give glory to
you
" Together with the angelic choirs we respond by singing. "Holy God,
holy mighty One, holy immortal One, have mercy on us." This is one of the oldest
chants of the Byzantine Liturgy and, for a while, served as the original entrance hymn.
(To this day at funeral services we process into church chanting this refrain.)
Entering more fully into the mystery of God's presence in our midst, we are struck by
the special nature of that presence. "Holy" is among the few words that shed a
feeble light on the nature of God. But "holy" does not mean "good" or
"righteous." It means "set apart." In the Anaphora of St. John
Chrysostom, God is "indescribable, inconceivable, invisible, incomprehensible."
As we participate in the Divine Liturgy we become aware that God cannot be manipulated and
that his ways are not ours (Isaiah 55:8). This growing awareness prepares us to listen
attentively to his Word about to be proclaimed.
The
Readings and Homily
Having processed to the "high place" (the bishop's throne), the priest turns
for the first time to the people and exclaims, "Peace be with all of you." It is
the greeting of the living Christ, who, after his resurrection, greeted his apostles with
these same words. At the time of John Chrysostom this greeting actually began the Liturgy.
In order to truly hear someone, we must be at peace. We cannot be distracted either
inwardly or outwardly. True peace, however, can only come from Christ. It is the priest
who represents Christ, the head of the Body called Church, and so it is the priest who
bids us this peace.
After the prokimenon (consisting of a verse or two from the psalms appropriate
for the day) we hear a reading from the Epistles or Acts of the Apostles. The reading is
traditionally referred to as the "apostle" because it is a living text. It is
addressed to us here and now, just as it was addressed by the apostles to the early
Christian gatherings. We listen to it as if we were being spoken to by St. Paul, or St.
Peter, or St. John himself. Having heard the Epistle we know that we will now hear our
Lord himself. A vibrant "Alleluia" is the only logical response. This manner of
greeting the proclamation of the Gospel goes back to the most ancient liturgies. The
deacon again incenses the church in preparation for this solemn event.
From the earliest times, Church Fathers have referred to a double table at the
Liturgy-a table of the Word and a table of the Eucharist. Our attitude to the reading of
the Gospel and homily cannot be simply intellectual. What we hear is not only to intrigue,
stimulate, or worse yet, to entertain us; what we hear must become our food. "Man
shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God"
(Matthew 4:41). God's Word must be internalized. If we are to take on the mind of Christ
(Philippians 2), we must immerse ourselves in the words of Christ.
Often, especially in the past, individual worshippers have been so convinced of the
vibrant presence of Christ in the proclamation of the Good News that they have actually
knelt under the Gospel Book, thereby seeking healing (Luke 7:71 and purification John
15:3), while also expressing adoration. In either case, all of us respond to the reading
of the Gospel with the acclamation, "Glory to you, O Lord. Glory to you." In
many parishes, candles are held by members of the congregation (in addition to the
altar-servers) who thereby witness that Christ is "the light of the world"
(John 8:12).
The Prayers of the Faithful
The Augmented Litany provides the Church with an opportunity to pray for more
particular needs. The text of the Liturgy stipulates that. "Petitions for special
intentions can be added here:" Thus we pray not only for "the peace in the
world," but for peace in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Central America. Here
we ask not only for an "abundance of the fruits of the earth," but that those
starving in Ethiopia, Afghanistan or India might be helped by those more fortunate. Here
we mention not only "captives" in general, but also Ukraine's dissidents, South
Africa's prisoners of conscience and the various groups of hostages regularly reported
upon by the media. As we intercede on their behalf, we fulfill our nature as Church. For
as a priestly people (I Peter 2:9) and the living Body of Christ, we stand before the
throne of the Father, constantly interceding for the needs of the world (Hebrews 7).
Liturgy of the Eucharist
"Mystically we represent
the Cherubim and sing the thrice-holy hymn to the life-creating Trinity, let us note set
aside all earthly cares. So that we may welcome the King of all invisibly borne aloft by
angelic hosts. Allelnia! Alleluia! Allelula!"
This 6th century chant introduces the realities to be experienced in the next part of
the Liturgy.
Soon we will join the Cherubim in singing the "Holy, holy, holy" of the
anaphora. The celebrant will exhort us to lift up our hearts and to lay aside all earthly
cares. And finally, in communion, we will receive the King of all. What else can we then
say, but "Alleluia!" The two alternate chants prescribed for Holy Thursday and
Holy Saturday similarly anticipate the themes and actions of the entire Liturgy of the
Eucharist.
The solemn transfer of gifts from the table of preparation to the holy table (The Great
Entrance) is a characteristic rite of the Byzantine Liturgy. The church is again prepared
by a full incensing. Preceded by candle-bearers. the deacon and priest process to the ambo
while making commemorations of the hierarchy and other members of the Church. As the bread
and wine are brought to the holy table for the supreme sacrifice, we follow the procession
visually and spiritually
ascend with the clergy into the holy of holies. May the Lord God indeed remember us in
his kingdom, "a kingdom of God (about to come) with power." (Mark 9:1).
The Kiss of Peace and the Creed
"So if you are offering your gift at the altar, and
there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before
the altar and go: first be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your
gift." (Matthew 5:23-24)
In accordance with this divine admonition the deacon now turns to the faithful and
says, "Let us love one another so that with one mind we might profess
"
(and the people conclude the exhortation) "
the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Spirit, the Trinity one in being and undivided." The clergy exchanges the kiss of
peace. This is only a remnant from the days when all the faithful embraced each other
thereby creating an icon of Trinitarian love. The practice continued among the laity until
the 11th century.
We now recite the creed. The creed anticipates the solemn profession of faith to be
enunciated shortly in the Eucharistic prayer (anaphora). In the creed, which was
introduced into the Liturgy in the early 6th century during a period of doctrinal
controversy, our faith is expressed in a systematic list of propositions. In our own time
of "dogmatic instability," it is certainly important that we continue to state
these articles with conviction and understanding.
Originally, the creed was only recited as part of the baptismal rite. Its introduction
into the Eucharist serves to buttress our baptismal commitment-a commitment that first
brought us into the Body now being renewed in this Eucharist.
The Anaphora
"Let us stand with dignity, let us stand with reverence..." The
deacon draws our attention to the core of the Liturgy which is about to begin. The Protheoria,
an 11th century commentary on the Byzantine Liturgy remarks:
"...as if seeing the Godman suffering for us now, we stand
soberly and composed so that presenting or offering these gifts in peace, impervious to
earthly thoughts, we may be made worthy to see his divine resurrection and so be filled
with joy."
The priest then turns and quoting II Corinthians 13:14 bids us the grace.
love and fellowship of God. These indeed become ours in this sacred Mystery.
We then lift our hearts to the Lord. Truly "impervious to earthly thoughts"
we "set your minds on things that are above...For (we) have died, and (our) life is
hid with Christ in God." Christ our life is about to appear. We also "...will
appear with him in glory" (Colossians 3:1-41).
The priest then asks us to thank the Lord and we respond, "it is fitting and
right." Here we are at the heart of the Liturgy for Eucharist means precisely
"thanksgiving."
This act of gratitude takes us to the very origins of the Lord's supper. For Jews it
was the Birkat-ha-mazon, the Prayer of Thanksgiving, that climaxed every solemn communal
meal. It was such a prayer that our Lord pronounced as he blessed the final cup on the
night he was betrayed.
It is interesting to note that the two Eucharistic prayers of the Byzantine Churches,
those attributed to John Chrysostom and Basil the Great, both follow a pattern that is
reminiscent of this early Jewish form. In their berakoth, Jews usually thanked God for
creation, praised him for salvation, and petitioned him for redemption. In the anaphora of
St. John Chrysostom we thank God for "bringing us forth from nothing into
existence," praise him for loving us so much "that you gave your only-begotten
Son, so that...whoever believes in him may not perish but have eternal life," and
petition him that he send his Spirit upon us and the gifts lying before us. Unfortunately,
most of this prayer is now said silently. This, in spite of the fact that in the past laws
were actually enacted mandating that the whole anaphora always be said aloud.
However, we do hear our Lord's own words, "Take, eat, this is my Body"
and "Drink of this, all of you. this is my Blood" to which we in turn
respond "Amen." Thus we proclaim our faith in the reality of Christ's presence
in these precious gifts.
To love is to remember, and to remember is to make present. We now call to mind all
that was done for us: the cross, the tomb, the resurrection on the third day, the
ascension into heaven, the sitting at the right hand, and anticipate the second and
glorious coming. We, the Body of Christ, living in the latter half of the 20th century,
offer now the one sacrifice of Christ "on behalf of all and for all:" Jesus
Christ came to us and assumed our life, a life that had strayed from its former glory. He
renewed this life, raising up and restoring our nature. Through him we return our total
selves to the Father as a gift offered in sheer altruism.
Gift begets gift. Love engenders love. And the world - with its cycle of hatred and
revenge - is restored to the paradise God intended. In making this Great Thanksgiving
(eucharistia) our nature is also restored because it is precisely by expressing our total
dependence on God that we vanquish the pride which caused our primordial fall. Alluded to
earlier, the invocation of the Holy Spirit (epiklesis) now takes place. The Father is
asked to send the Sanctifier so that the gifts changed into the Body and Blood of Christ
may bring "...forgiveness of sins, fellowship in your Holy Spirit, the fullness of
the heavenly kingdom." This theme of fullness resounds several times in the Byzantine
Eucharist. At the conclusion of the Liturgy, we also ask God to "preserve the
fullness of the Church." Heresy always involves choosing only a part of the
Tradition. Schism reflects a desire for separatism. And sin always involves disintegration
- within oneself as well as in relation to others.
However, the Eucharist is koinonia ("cum-union"), because the Spirit
of Truth descends upon the Church and the precious gifts. By partaking of these gifts, we
overcome all forms of alienation, both personal and corporate, for Christ's Body becomes
our body, his Blood flows through our veins, and all of us.
"
speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every
way into him who is the head, into Christ, from whom the whole body, joined and knit
together by every joint with which it is supplied, when each part is working properly,
makes bodily growth and upbuilds itself in love" (Ephesians 4:15-16).
In some ways we have anticipated the communion rites of the Liturgy and yet almost
every aspect of the service after the invocation of the Holy Spirit can be viewed from the
point of view of communion. Therefore, the concluding part of the anaphora involves a
general commemoration of saints, hierarchs, priests, deacons, civil authorities, and all
those in need. For indeed, as we are "built up in love" how can we forget
anyone? Thus we exclaim, "Lord, remember all men and women."
The anaphora concludes with this same theme of unity, "And grant that with one
voice and one heart we may glorify and praise your most honored and magnificent name,
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit...."
Holy Communion
After another series of petitions, we
intensify our fellowship again by calling upon God as our Father. However, Tradition also
refers to the importance of the Lord's Prayer at this point because of the words,
"forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us." The
"Our Father" then serves as a means of purification. Tradition also relates the
request for "daily bread" to the Eucharistic gifts.
Next, we hear the words, "Let us be attentive! The holy things for the holy!"
This ancient formula is the original invitation to communion. It does not imply, however,
that only "perfect" people can approach the chalice. The "holy ones"
indicated here are those consecrated by their Baptism to the service of God. Throughout
Acts and the Epistles, "the saints" (that is, "the holy ones") refers
to the whole Church.
Throughout the centuries, various prayers and formulae have been added which emphasize
the proper disposition necessary for sincere participation in the "mystical
supper". We are to approach "with reverence for God and with faith". We
also ask that this communion "not be for our judgment or condemnation." As John
Chrysostom says,
"Let no one approach with negligence, but all burning, all
fervent, all excited. . . Let there be no Judas present, no one avaricious. If anyone is
not a disciple let him go away. The table does not receive such ones, for "I keep the
passover." He says. "with my disciples." (Matthew 26:18). This table is the
same as that, it has nothing less. It is not the case that Christ created that one, and
man this one. He himself creates this one also. This is that upper room where they were
then, whence they went out to the Mount of Olives."
In another homily, however, Chrysostom says:
"I say these things not to keep us from approaching, but to keep
us from approaching without consideration. For as to approach carelessly is perilous, so
also not to share in these mystical suppers is famine and death. For this table is the
sinews of our soul, the bond of our mind, the foundation of our confidence, our hope, our
salvation, our light, our life."
The Liturgy expresses the tension between the sacredness of the mysteries and the
importance of sinners receiving holy communion. The priest communicates each one of us
saying, "The servant of God, (name), partakes of the precious, most holy and all pure
Body and Blood of our Lord, God and Savior Jesus
Christ for the forgiveness of sin and for everlasting life." This is of the essence
of God's saving plan, for his Son came precisely to seek out the lost, to heal the sick
and to save sinners. Having partaken of the divine mysteries, we "worship the
undivided Trinity who has saved us." And exclaim, "Let our mouths be filled with
your praise, O Lord, so that we may sing of your glory
"
The Dismissal
After
an additional prayer of thanksgiving, we are admonished to depart in peace (in Slavonic:
"with peace"). Christ is our peace. In the Eucharist he has "
broken
down the dividing wall of hostility
" (Ephesians 2:14). For "in
Christ Jesus (we) who once were far off have been brought near in the blood of
Christ" (Ephesians 2:13).
We pray for the needs of Church and world and receive a final blessing. Thus we end
where we began - praying with peace for God's creation and partaking of the blessings of
his Son's glorious reign. Finally, just as our coming together was a sacramental moment,
so does our departure involve an encounter with Christ, for on our way home we approach
the cross, receive a portion of unconsecrated prosphora and exclaim "He is and
shall be" to the priest's "Christ is with us". Indeed, in keeping with his
promise he is and shall be with us always until the consummation of the world. Amen.

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