37. The
following fact is also important. Learned men are divided as to whether the
ancient practice of the western church was to have one or more altars in
basilicas. Schelestratus declares that there was only one altar (Actor. Ecclesiae
Orientalis, pt. 1, chap. 2 de Missa Privata in Ecclesia
Latina). On the other
hand Cardinal Bona, on the authority of Walfrid, chap. 4, shows that there
were many altars in the Roman basilica of St. Peter (Rerum Lyturgicar,
bk. I, chap. 14, no. 3). But if one considers the Oriental and Greek churches
and basilicas, it seems evident that there was only one altar in them, and
even today this is generally the case. This can be seen from the drawings of
these churches in Du Cange, Constantinopoli Christiana; Beveregius, ad
Pandectas Canonum; and Goarius in Euchologium Graecorum. Since
in the Greek Church of St. Athanasius in Rome there are many altars, Leo
Allatius in his letter to Joannes Marinus de Templis Graecorum
recentiorum, no. 2 states with certainty that this church has no Greek
form except the Bema or enclosure which separates the main altar from the
rest of the church.
At this altar, only one Mass
may be celebrated each day. This practice of the Greeks is mentioned by
Dionysius Barsalibaeus, the Jacobite bishop of Amida, in Explanatione
Missae, and by Cyriacus, Patriarch of the Jacobites, as the Jacobite
Gregorius Barhebraeus says in his Directorio. Assemanus quotes these
writers in his Biblioth. Oriental., vol. 2, p. 184, and vol. 3, part
1, p. 248. Cardinal Bona writes on this practice as follows: "They have
a single altar in their churches, and they consider it wrong to repeat the
Sacrifice in the sanctuary on the same day" (op. cit. chap. 14,
no. 3).
Euthymius, Archbishop of Tyre
and Sidon, and Cyril, Greek Patriarch of Antioch, several times during the
pontificates of Clement XI, Benedict XIII, and Clement XII inquired whether
they should allow this practice to continue which forbade the offering of a
second Mass at the same altar on the same day. They always received the
response that no changes were to be made and the ancient rite was to be
preserved entire. The people came to believe mistakenly that the reason for
not offering a second Mass at the same altar on the same day was that the
second priest to celebrate Mass in the same vestments as the first was
infringing a period of fasting. So in Our encyclical letter to the Greek
Melchite Patriarch of Antioch and the Catholic bishops subject to him, We
commanded them to inform the people that this was an error. They were to do
this, however, without changing the practice of one priest only offering Mass
on the same day at the same altar (constitution 87, Demandatam, Bullarii
Nostri, vol. 1).
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