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  • Ottawa: Drawn to the East's beauty

    Ottawa Citizen
    March 5, 2005 Saturday
    EARLY Edition

    Drawn to the East's beauty: The 1,500-year-old liturgy of Eastern
    Christianity embraces symbolism and song

    by Bob Harvey, The Ottawa Citizen


    The golden domes of Ottawa's only Ukrainian Catholic church speak
    loudly to those in the know as they drive south beside the Rideau
    Canal. Their message: Beauty matters.

    On any Sunday within Saint John the Baptist Shrine, there is the
    smell of incense and a haunting musical harmony. In his golden
    vestments, the Very Rev. Cyril Mykytiuk leads in prayer, and the
    faithful sing the responses in practised synergy throughout the
    entire liturgy. Some say the singing and the almost non-stop
    participation would attract even charismatics and progressive
    Christians, if they only knew.

    The traditionalists might respond to the liturgy. This prescription
    for worship was written 1,500 years ago by Saint John, a patriarch of
    Constantinople who became known after his death as Chrysostrom, Greek
    for "golden-mouthed."

    Wherever you look in the church, there are treats for the eye: icons
    and other images of apostles, prophets, saints, and the church's 12
    major feast days. They are painted in glowing reds, blues and golds
    on the walls, the ceiling, and the stained glass windows.

    A huge image of Christ Pantocrator, the Universal Ruler, dominates
    over all else as he eyes the faithful from the dome overhead.

    Among the worshippers is Brian Butcher, the son of Baptist
    missionaries to India, his Korean wife, Jean, and their five small
    children. While studying at McGill University in Montreal, Mr.
    Butcher enrolled in religious studies, and was introduced to Eastern
    Christianity. "I fell in love with the beauty of the icon, in both
    the Catholic and Orthodox churches," he says. Before long, he and
    Mrs. Butcher were received into the Orthodox church. And now Mr.
    Butcher is in his second year of a doctoral program in Eastern
    Christian theology.

    He is not the only convert to Ukrainian Catholicism studying at the
    Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Institute of Eastern Christian Studies
    at Ottawa's Saint Paul University.

    Andrew Bennet, a Roman Catholic, has been working in the privy
    council office since obtaining his doctorate in political science and
    constitutional law. A colleague invited him to come with him to Saint
    John the Baptist Shrine at a time when he was suffering

    what he calls a spiritual "malaise." The number of non-Ukrainians in
    the church surprised him, his malaise disappeared, and he has now
    been going there for a year. "I was drawn by the beauty of the
    liturgy, and I love to sing," he says.

    Adam deVille grew up Anglican, but was at loose ends in the summer of
    2002, when he was invited to a memorial service in a Ukrainian
    Catholic church for a Dutch friend's grandfather. He was surprised
    that the Brampton church was not just for Ukrainians. "The singing
    was lovely. I went back, and I kept on going back. This experience
    was confirmed later that year when I was in Ukraine itself,
    especially at St. Vladimir's Cathedral in Kiev on its patronal feast
    day. I saw before my eyes people who lived Dostoevsky's dictum: 'The
    world will be saved by beauty.' "

    By the time Mr. deVille returned home to Brantford, he had decided.
    "This was something, however mysterious, that I could not bear to be
    separated from." He petitioned for a transfer from the Anglican
    church, and was accepted into the Ukrainian Catholic church.

    Mr. DeVille is interested in the priesthood, but is concentrating on
    his dissertation for Saint Paul University, an attempt to break
    through the main obstacle to unity of the Orthodox and Catholic
    churches: the papacy.

    The Orthodox consider every bishop a successor of St. Peter, as
    opposed to the Catholic teaching that the bishop of Rome is the one
    and only successor. In 1995, Pope John Paul II asked for help
    overcoming the stumbling block.

    "There have been almost no Orthodox responses," says Mr. DeVille.
    "The field is wide open. I am endeavouring to put something together
    that would meet the concerns of both sides."

    Rev. Maxym Lysack, pastor of Christ Our Saviour Orthodox Church, one
    of several Orthodox churches in Ottawa, says that "what irks the
    Orthodox churches in dialogue with Catholic churches is that Rome has
    never perceived Orthodox churches as equal."

    Eastern Catholics, he says, are living the Orthodox liturgy, but
    there are differences. As well, Ukrainian Catholics acknowledge the
    Immaculate Conception, the Catholic doctrine that Mary was without
    sin from the moment she was conceived. "That is totally unknown in
    the East," says Father Lysack, the dean of the Canadian branch of the
    Carpatho-Russian Diocese of U.S.A, and has taught

    at the Sheptytsky Institute, which he gives credit for renewing the
    eastern side of Ukrainian Catholicism.

    Many Eastern Catholic churches have also adopted Roman Catholic
    practices, like prayers for people in purgatory and novenas, a
    nine-day series of prayers. But unlike the West's Roman Catholic and
    Protestant churches, Eastern Christianity considers beauty an
    essential part of the mystical search for the divine.

    Rev. Peter Galadza, a professor at the Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky
    Institute of Eastern Christian Studies at Ottawa's Saint Paul
    University, says the legend is that, in 988, Saint Vladimir the
    Great, the ruler of Kiev in what is now Ukraine, sent emissaries to
    Constantinople to investigate different religions.

    When the emissaries came back, they told of the Eastern Christians'
    worship and said "We knew not whether we were in heaven or earth
    because on earth there is no such beauty."

    Father Galadza explains that "this has been taken as the ethos for
    the Eastern church. The Greek word for good, kalos, is also the word
    for beauty. You can't be good without being 'beautiful' in the old
    sense."

    The Ukrainian Catholic church entered into communion with Rome in
    1596, and is the largest of 24 Eastern Catholic churches, including
    Armenian, Melkite, Romanian and Chaldean Catholics. They are all in
    communion with the Pope, and accept his authority. But, aside from
    that link with Rome, the Eastern Catholic churches are little
    different from the 16 Eastern Orthodox churches, with their 300
    million followers.

    The Eastern churches are "far more open to evocative symbolism and a
    non-cerebral approach," says Father Galadza. They were also the model
    for many of the changes brought into the Roman Catholic church by the
    Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.

    Among the innovations borrowed from the East were permanent deacons,
    services in the vernacular, instead of Latin, increased participation
    by laity, and the celebration of communion in wine as well as bread.
    One custom that was not adopted is married priests.

    The Eastern Catholic and Orthodox churches are still little known in
    Canada, but their numbers are growing, primarily because of
    immigration. The Serbian Orthodox doubled their numbers between 1991
    and 2001.

    The Ukrainian Catholic Church is an exception. Its numbers dropped
    from 128,000 in the 1991 census to 126,000 in 2001.

    Father Galadza says one reason for the decline is the shift to Roman
    Catholicism by those of Ukrainian heritage who want to spend less
    time in church than the 80 to 90 minutes sometimes demanded by the
    Eastern liturgy, or live too far away from any of the Ukrainian
    Catholic churches scattered across Canada. Others prefer to worship
    in English, which, unlike Saint John the Baptist, some Ukrainian
    parishes still do not offer.

    However, Ukrainian Catholics now have a one-volume source for singing
    their liturgy in English. For the first time, Ukrainian Catholics
    have a book in English and Ukrainian that contains everything needed
    for the church's liturgy throughout the year. The Divine Liturgy: An
    Anthology for Worship also comes with a two-CD set for those who have
    trouble reading musical notes. It was released this month, and Father
    Galadza, the chief editor of the volume, said orders are already
    coming in to the Sheptytsky Institute from the United States,
    Australia, and the United Kingdom.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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