Western-Rite Orthodox Churches

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Western-Rite Orthodox Churches are communities of Eastern Orthodox Christians whose form of worship is not that of the Byzantine Rite. Almost by definition, they exist in countries that are predominantly Catholic or Protestant.

There is no single type of Western Rite Parish, but four major lineages of rituals and practices, according to the historical backgrounds of their parishioners:

By far the largest group of these parishes in the United States and Canada is the Western Rite Vicariate, a department of the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America. The Antiochian Orthodox Church also has a few Western-Rite Orthodox missions in New Zealand. The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia (ROCOR) also has a small number of Western-Rite parishes and monasteries in the United States, Brazil, and Australia. A few French Orthodox parishes in France and the United States are in talks with the Serbian Orthodox Church with the goal of regularizing their canonical status.

One can with difficulty compare the situation of these Western Orthodox parishes with the status of the autonomous ("sui iuris") Eastern Catholic Churches. For centuries, these Churches in full communion with the Holy See not only have their own liturgies (e.g. they confer chrismation on infants immediately after baptizing them), canonical disciplines (e.g. married men may be ordained as priests), and theological and devotional traditions, but furthermore are under their own bishops and, if the Church is large enough, their own holy synods. The situation of Western Rite Orthodox differs, in that their communities are all under the local Eastern Orthodox bishops, and they share Eastern Orthodox theology, though they retain the rituals, culture, language, ethos and ornaments of Western civilization.

"Western Orthodox" is a description taken by several Church bodies that follow claim to be Orthodox or have the word "Orthodox" in their names, but are unconnected to the worldwide Eastern Orthodox Church. Many have not arisen out of contacts with Eastern Orthodoxy and are likened to those bodies known as Independent Catholic Churches or to Continuing Anglicanism. Some have had relationships with bodies that broke away from Eastern Orthodoxy, or were cut off by Eastern Orthodox hierarchs for irregularities. Their praxis and ecclesiology is not acceptable to the Eastern Orthodox Churches in that often they have a married episcopate, ordain women to the priesthood or diaconate, and have a divergent theology.

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Wikisource has original text related to this article:
  • Saint Tikhon - approved the commissioning of a liturgy based on the American 1928 Book of Common Prayer, named after him as the Liturgy of Saint Tikhon of Moscow. It is hoped that the work may prove to be in the future the basis of ecclesiastical union between the Eastern Orthodox Church and Westerners who use it, as it incorporates Biblical doctrine and theology acceptable to both. The worship of icons is a disobeient act to the bible and to God himself it is putting an object in between you and God.

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