Ruthenian Liturgy: An Historical-Theological Explanation
Author: | Tkacz, Catherine |
Year: | 2012 |
Pages: | 172 |
ISBN: | 0-7734-2555-1 978-0-7734-2555-2 |
Price: | $159.95 + shipping |
| (Click the PayPal button to buy) |
The Ruthenian Rite is the Slavonic version of Greek Catholicism brought to the Slavs in the ninth century by SS Cyril and Methodius. In America the Ruthenian Catholic Church is the Byzantine Metropolitan Church Sui Juris of Pittsburg U.S.A. In 2007, the English Liturgy then in use since 1970 was replaced by a revision much changed in language and music. While it contains a few excellent changes, such as substituting “Covenant” for “Testament” in the anaphora, overall the revision is deeply flawed.
For Ruthenians, the authoritative Slavonic liturgy is to be respected. Slavonic bohol’ubiv’im and Bohoródista ought to be normative, for instance, not Greek thesphilestatou and Theotokos. The trite and secularizing language imposed on the Divine Liturgy give it limited shelf life. Idiosyncratic new translations such as “Holy Gifts For Holy People” needlessly distance Ruthenian worship from the Orthodox. The music of authentic Slavonic chant was subjected to countless distracting musical changes. Centuries ago the Slavonic liturgy developed a vibrant tradition of paraliturgical hymnody, but it was inauthentic in 2007 to set liturgical texts to modern, non-liturgical melodies.
Reviews
“… knowledgeable, precise, thorough, calm and authoritative book … Its importance goes far beyond whats its title modestly indicates.” – Prof. Jeffrey Burton Russell, University of California, Santa Barbara
Table of Contents
Foreword by Professor Jeffrey Burton Russell
Prologue
Introduction
Chapter 1: Restorations and Authentic Developments
Background, Greek and Slavonic
Restoration and Authentic Developments
Chapter 2: Principles for Liturgical Translation and Revision
Our Context
Nature of the Byzantine Liturgy
Affirmative of Women
Principles of Change
Chapter 3: Analysis of the Liturgical Materials of March 25, 2005
Layout
Translations
Shrunken Lexicon and Simplified Syntax
Literalism
Inconsistency
Several Specific Passages
Music
Conclusion
Epilogue
Indices
Scriptural Indices
Other Russia & Russian (+ Soviet Union): All Subjects Books