The
Creed
28. The Creed is said in both
the Latin and Greek liturgy. The practice of saying the Creed during the
sacrifice of the Mass was first established in the Greek Church and then
introduced in the Latin Church. This is evident from Canon Two of the third
Council of Toledo in 589: "That the creed of the faith be said in all
churches of Spain or Galicia in accordance with the form of the Oriental
churches and of the council of Constantinople at which 150 bishops were
present; that it be sung with clear voice by the people before the Lord's
prayer is said" (Labbe, Collectionis, vol. 5, p. 1009).
Since the fathers at Toledo
appealed to the rite of the Oriental churches in establishing the practice of
saying the Creed during Mass, it is quite evident that this practice was
first established in the east and spread from there to the west. This is the
opinion both of Cardinal Bona, Rerum Lyturgic, bk. 2, chap. 8, no. 2, and of
Georgius, de lyturgia Romani Pontificis, vol. 2, chap. 20, no. 2, p.
176.
Adoration of the Cross
Continuing with Our topic,
Amalarius in his de Divinis Officiis, chap. 14 (relying on the
authority of St. Paulinus' Epistola ad Severum) relates that the
Cross on which Christ hung was exposed for the adoration of the faithful in
the church at Jerusalem on Good Friday of Holy Week only. He declares that
the ceremony of the adoration of the Holy Cross which forms part of the Good
Friday service in every Latin church until the present day derived from this
practice of the Greeks.
Trisagion
The trisagion:
"Holy God, Holy Strong One, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us" is a
pious and oft-repeated prayer in the Greek liturgy; Goarius correctly
observes this in his in notis ad Euchologium, p. 109, in reference
to the Mass of St. John Chrysostom. This prayer originated in a miracle which
occurred in Constantinople in the middle of the fifth century. Emperor
Theodosius, Patriarch Proclus, and all the people were beseeching God on open
ground for deliverance from the destruction which threatened them from
violent earthquakes. They suddenly saw a boy snatched up to heaven; when he
was returned to earth, he reported that he had heard the angels singing the trisagion.
At the bidding of the Patriarch Proclus, the whole people sang it with
devotion and the terrifying earthquakes ceased, as is related by Nicephorus,
bk. 14, chap. 46, and mentioned by Pope Felix III in his third letter to
Peter the Fuller (Labbe, Collectionis, vol. 4). This same trisagion
is sung in the western church in Greek and Latin on Friday of Holy Week, as
Cardinal Bona remarks (Rerum Lyturgicar., bk. 2, chap. 10, no. 5).
Blessing of Water at
Epiphany
The blessing of water on the
eve of the Epiphany derives from the rite of the Greek Church, as Goarius
shows at length in the case of the Euchology or Ritual of the Greeks. At the
present time, on the same day, this ceremony is performed in Rome in the
Church of the Greeks, as We recalled in constitution 57, sect. 5, no. 13, and
the faithful are permitted to be sprinkled with this holy water.
On the transmission of this
rite from the Oriental Church to some western churches two authorities may be
consulted: Martene, vol. 4, de antiqua Ecclesiae disciplina in Dovomos
celebrandis Officiis, chap. 4, no. 2, and Fr. Sebastianus Paulus of the
Congregation of the Mother of God, De ritu Ecclesiae Neritinae
exorcizandi aquam in Epiphania, Naples, 1719. The latter writer (part.
3, pp. 177 ff) gives bishops an appropriate admonition not to give cause for
rioting by attempting to abolish certain ceremonies which have at a great
distance in time made their way into their dioceses from the Greek church. To
attack these ceremonies, he says, would give the appearance of criticizing
the way the Apostolic See has acted in regard to these rites. Although this
See was well aware that these ceremonies had come from the Greek church it
permitted them to be observed and attended. On p. 203 he quotes the letter of
Cardinal Sanctorius of Sancta Severina written in 1580 to Fornarius, Bishop
of Nerita, on this topic of the blessing of water at Epiphany which was
performed in his diocese.
Stripping and Washing
the Altar
The ceremony of stripping and
washing the altar on Holy Thursday is also Greek. A reference to this
ceremony is found in the fifth century. St. Sabas mentions it in his Typico,
the Order of saying the Divine Office throughout the year. According to Leo
Allatius, he died in 451 (de Libris Ecclesiae Graecae, dissert. I,
p. 9). If it could be asserted with certainty that the Roman order published
by Hittorpius was composed at the command of Pope St. Gelasius, the ceremony
of washing the altars on Holy Thursday would be almost as ancient in the
Latin Church as it is in the Greek Church, since Gelasius died in 496. But
the antiquity of this Order is disputed and, apart from it, St. Isidore,
Bishop of Hispala, is the first of the Latins to mention this ceremony. He
died in 646. So probably this ceremony came to the west from the east and is
observed to this day in some Latin churches with papal approval. In
particular it is performed each year on Holy Thursday with great solemnity in
the Vatican Basilica.
Suarez, Bishop of Vasionum and
Vicar of this Basilica, and John Chrysostom Battellus, Archbishop of Amaseno,
who were recently appointed Beneficiates of this Basilica, have each
published a thoughtful treatise elucidating this ceremony. Therefore, it is
evident from these examples that the Apostolic See, for good reasons, has
adopted for the whole Latin Church ceremonies which belong to the Greek
Church and has allowed some Latin churches to observe particular ceremonies.
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