BYZANTINE RITE


The 'Byzantine Rite', sometimes called 'Constantinopolitan', is the liturgical rite used (in various languages) by all the Eastern Orthodox Churches and by several Eastern Catholic Churches. It originated in the city of Constantinople (now Istanbul), which had earlier been called Byzantium.
This tradition has four forms of the Divine Liturgy (liturgy of the Eucharist): that of St. Basil, that of St. John Chrysostom, that of St. James and that of the Presanctified. That of St. John Chrysostom is the one commonly said throughout the year; that of St. Basil is said on all Sundays in Lent except Palm Sunday, on Holy Thursday, on the Vigils of Easter, Christmas and Epiphany, and on the feast of St. Basil. The Liturgy of the Presanctified is said during Lent on the first five weekdays of each week. It is an office with a Communion but no Consecration, the five Holy Loaves necessary for the purpose (one for each day) having been consecrated on the previous Sunday. The Liturgy of St. James is rarely said, and then primarily on December 26, the day the Church commemorates this saint.
==List of Eastern Orthodox Churches of Byzantine liturgical tradition[1]==

Ecumenical Patriarchate

Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria

Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch

Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem

Russian Orthodox Church

Serbian Orthodox Church

Romanian Orthodox Church

Bulgarian Orthodox Church

Georgian Orthodox Church

Cypriot Orthodox Church

Church of Greece

Albanian Orthodox Church

Polish Orthodox Church

Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church

Finnish Orthodox Church

Estonian Orthodox Church

Contents
List of Catholic particular Churches of Byzantine liturgical tradition
Books
See also (Eastern liturgical rites, other than the Byzantine)
Sources and references
External Links

List of Catholic particular Churches of Byzantine liturgical tradition



Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church

Belarusian Byzantine Catholic Church

Bulgarian Greek Catholic Church

Byzantine Church of the Eparchy of Križevci

Greek Byzantine Catholic Church

Melkite Greek Catholic Church

Hungarian Greek Catholic Church

Italo-Albanian Catholic Church

Macedonian Byzantine Catholic Church

Romanian Church United with Rome, Greek-Catholic

Russian Catholic Church

Ruthenian Catholic Church

Slovak Greek Catholic Church

Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church
Note: Georgian Byzantine-Rite Catholics are not recognized as a particular Church (cf. canon 27 of the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches).

Books



★ Robert F. Taft, ''The Byzantine Rite. A Short History.'' Liturgical Press, Collegeville 1992, ISBN 0-8146-2163-5

★ Hugh Wybrew, ''The Orthodox Liturgy. The Development of the Eucharistic Liturgy in the Byzantine Rite'', SPCK, London 1989, ISBN 0-281-04416-3

★ Hans-Joachim Schulz, ''Die byzantinische Liturgie : Glaubenszeugnis und Symbolgestalt'', 3., völlig überarb. und aktualisierte Aufl. Paulinus, Trier 2000, ISBN 3-7902-1405-1

★ Robert A. Taft, ''A History of the Liturgy of St John Chrysostom'', Pontificio Istituto Orientale, Roma 1978-2000 (3 volumes, of the planned 6, have appeared)

See also (Eastern liturgical rites, other than the Byzantine)



Alexandrian Rite

Antiochene Rite

Armenian Rite

East Syrian Rite

Sources and references



Giga-catholic

External Links



The Divine Music Project Thousands of pages of Byzantine music in English for Byzantine rite services

Byzantines.net - Short article explaining details of the Byzantine Rite

★ Fr. Ronald Roberson’s book 'The Eastern Christian Churches – A Brief Survey' is the most up-to-date primer on these churches, available on-line at ''Catholic Near-East Welfare Association'' (CNEWA).



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