Saturday, May 24, 2008

Feast of the Divine Body of Christ

On the Thursday after the Feast of All Saints (Sunday after Pentecost) many Byzantine Churches celebrate the Feast of the Divine Body and Blood of our Lord. While this Feast has its origin in the West, where it is known as Corpus Christi, devotion to our Lord in the Reserved Sacrament also grew in importance in the East. By the eighteenth century, the Melkite and Ukrainian Greek Catholic traditions had firmly fixed the celebration as a joyous time of adoration and devotion to our Lord's Incarnation and the great Mystery of His Body and Blood which we receive at every Divine Liturgy. In current practice, it is celebrated on the aforementioned Thursday or the Sunday after All Saints.

Since the Second Vatican Council, some in the Byzantine Churches have downplayed the importance of the Feast, even going so far as claiming that it should be suppressed as a "Roman innovation". This reflects and unfortunate misunderstanding of the Eastern mind and history. While it is wholly appropriate to embrace the fullness of our Eastern Tradition, we must be careful to distinguish between Western-influenced accretions and organic Byzantine developments that are coherent with our faith and customs, even if we find no counterpart to them in the practices of our Separated Brethren. The historic lateness of the development of a particular devotion or celebration is no argument against its orthodoxy. If it were, we would have to reconsider cherished customs such as the Iconistasion, administering Holy Communion via the spoon, Tabernacles on the Altar, etc..

The Church is One in confessing the real Sacramental presence of our Lord Jesus Christ in the sacrifice of the Divine Liturgy. The prayers, ritual actions, and devotions of the Divine Liturgy clearly indicate that the Bread and Wine become no less than the Body and Blood of our Lord. Iconography depicts the reality of this Mystical Gift in many ways, including our Lord situated in the Communion Chalice. St John of Damascus, as one example among many, discusses the reality of our Lord's Sacramental presence in his masterful refutation of the iconoclasts. It is meet to cherish this beautiful celebration.

Here are the Aposticha in Tone Six (Plagal of the Second) of the Great Vespers and the Troparion and Kontakion for the Feast.
Heavenly Bread who so generously satisfy with the wealth of Your goods those who hunger for justice: bestow Your grace upon us who now adore You, and save our souls!

Verse: Taste and see how good the Lord is; blessed are those who trust in Him.

Divine Food, Wheat of the Elect who feed with heavenly Grace the souls of those who receive You: inflame our hearts and spirits with the Fire of Your Divine Love for the salvation of our souls.

Verse: I will take the chalice of Salvation and call upon the Name of the Lord.

Most Holy Wine who nurture virgins by pouring the grace of sanctification upon the souls of those who partake of You: cleanse our hearts of every sin, make them holy, and save our souls.

Verse: Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit.

Lamb of God who take away the sins of the world, You move the hearts of all the faithful: they adore You deeply and reverently as they look upon You lifted up in the hands of Your holy priests. Together with the angels, they offer a hymn of praise to Your glory, crying out: O Lord, Life Itself, eternally living with Your Father and Your Holy Spirit: glory to You!

Verse: Now and ever and unto ages of ages. Amen.

All the virgins come to you, Holy City of undisturbed purity, whose holy womb contained the King of Kings, from whose blood the Holy Spirit wove the porphyry robe of Christ Emmanuel, the One we now adore hidden in the Mystic Bread. O you who gave birth to the Incarnate God, intercede with Him for the salvation of our souls!

Troparion of the Divine Body in Tone One

Christ, having loved His own and loved them until the end, gave them His Body and His Blood as food and drink. Therefore, let us offer them adoration and say with fear: Glory to Your Presence, O Christ! Glory to Your Compassion! Glory to Your Condescension, for You alone are the Lover of Mankind!

Kontakion of the Divine Body in Tone Two

O Christ, do not turn Your Face away from me when I partake of the Bread which is Your Body and the Wine which is Your Blood. O Lord, let my sharing in these august Mysteries be not for my judgment or condemnation, but for my eternal and everlasting life.
May the Mystical Presence of our Lord in His Body and Blood lead us all in humility to repentance, forgiveness, and the Unity to which He calls us. Amen.

1 comments:

A Simple Sinner said...

Well said!

Sadly, among some Eastern Catholic Circles, the notion that their is a stream of pristine, "golden age" period of perfect liturgy and perfect theology has gained currencty. The thinking in that circle goes something to the effect that any "too western" is problematic and inappropriate.

The biggest problem I have with that party's school of thought is that it is forever limiting the theology and expression of Eastern Catholics to a sort of ghetto. From there we can only be allowed to follow the lead of non-Catholic Easterners. What slowly they approve or allow, we can consider possibly doing ourselves. Problematic to this "one step behind" situation is the 1.3B pound gorilla in the papal tiarra - we are in full and unimpeded communion with a huge church (with vast armies of saints and saintly theologians) that we seem to be expected to ignore.

Worth noting, the services of Eucharistic adoration adopted by the Melkites and the Ukrainians/Rusyns are two different services from two different eras and movements. They were developped, adapated and adopted independently of each other.

 
.......