39. Some have
used this Greek and Oriental rite of concelebration as an argument for
questioning whether there is any place in their church for private Masses
said by an individual priest, since there is only a single altar in Greek
churches and only one Mass is offered at it and priests concelebrate with the
bishop or a chief celebrant. The Lutherans were careful to send the Augsburg
Confession, which abolished private Masses, to Jeremiah, Patriarch of
Constantinople, for his approval and acceptance. But since the traditional practice
of private Mass in the Oriental Church is derived from Trullan Canon
31, and defended by this canon and the commentary on it written by Theodore
Balsamon, both the rite of frequent concelebration and the practice of
private Masses have remained unharmed in the Oriental Church. So the efforts
of the Lutherans came to nothing. They were told that the East as well as the
West condemned the evil practice of men who approached the altar with a
wicked desire of obtaining offerings, but not the actions of men who with
religious piety celebrated private Masses in order to offer to God an
acceptable sacrifice. This is evident from Schelestratus, ex Actis
Ecclesiae Orientalis contra Lutheranos, chap. 1: on private Masses in
the Greek Church, towards the end. For the convenience of priests who want to
offer a private Mass, while preserving the custom of offering only one Mass
at the one altar in the church, the Greeks began to set up Paracclesias.
These are mentioned by Leo Alla ius in his letter to Joannes Morinus. Paracclesiae
are oratories beside the church in which there is an altar for the
celebration of Masses which cannot be said in the church because Mass has
aleady been said there on that day.
|