27. Such
occurrences - and many could be recalled - are invoked by those who favor
transference from the Oriental and Greek rite to the Latin rite. They think
they act rightly in their eager attempts to bring Oriental converts to
abandon, without Our prior consent, the rite they used to observe, even
though this has been firmly maintained from ancient times by all other
Orientals and Greeks.
But the events mentioned above
and those which could be mentioned do not in the least support their opinion.
For in the first place, transferring from an Oriental rite to the Latin rite
removes all the prescriptions of the Oriental rite which are at variance with
Our rite. But this is not what happened in the events We have mentioned;
although a specific Greek ritual was abolished, the Greek rite itself and all
its other prescriptions were preserved unchanged. In addition, to remove even
a part of the rite is not within the power of any individual, but requires
the intervention of the public authority of the supreme head of the universal
Church, the Roman Pontiff.
For the Apostolic See
possesses the preeminent right to decide what rituals are to be taken over
from the Oriental church by the Latin church. As often as this Apostolic See
has noticed that a dangerous or unfitting rite has made its way into the
Oriental Church, it has condemned, criticized, and forbidden its use in the
Latin Church. Lastly, whenever the Apostolic See sees Orientals or Greeks
eager to take up a Latin ritual, particularly when this ritual is ancient,
widely established, and either expressly or implicitly approved by the
bishops, it has confirmed this practice by toleration and approval.
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