The Portal December 2016 | Page 6

THE P RTAL December 2016 Page 6 Syro-Malabar Church Fr Mark Woodruff is Chairman of the Society of St John Chrysostom W hat can the Syro-Malabar Church offer for the Catholic Church of Britain in the future, of which the Ordinariate is also part? It holds an enrichment to proclaiming and living the Good News no less apostolic than Rome’s. It is the daughter of the Church of the East, which once extended across Iraq and Persia, deep into Tibet and China, arising from the proclamation of St Addai, or Thaddaeus, one of The Seventy (Luke 10). Its core is the faith of the Apostle Thomas formed by physically touching the Risen Lord. For centuries, it was regarded as “Nestorian”, for emphasising Christ’s humanity as well as His divinity, so profound was this impression of His resurrection in the flesh. It was accused of believing there are two separate entities in Christ, rather two natures in one Person. Yet their belief is close to the way the Catholic West expresses it. the Sacrifice. The vestment of priesthood, over the alb and stole, resembles a lighter version of the Latin cope. Vestments are usually white, with red bands of decoration. In 2015, the Catholic patriarch of Babylon proposed the three Churches’ reunification – for surviving Islamism together. Sadly, more historical healing of memories is needed. In India and likewise across the globe, there are four million Syro-Malabar Catholics and a small number of non-Catholics belonging to the Assyrian Church, the Nasrani - Nazarenes. Again, historical memories of forced Latinisation under the Portuguese mean reconciliation lies some way ahead. There are three ancient Eucharistic prayers. The oldest, of Saints Addai (Thaddaeus) and Mari, is older than the Roman canon. In its Syriac form, it rehearses the divine acts of salvation, consecrates the gifts being offered, but does not contain Our Lord’s institution of the Eucharist. For centuries, Rome assumed this made it invalid, and so the Chaldeans and the Syro-Malabar borrowed it from the Roman mass. Here are some other differences from the Latinrite mass. The priestly greeting before each prayer is “Peace be with us”. There are two or three readings Thus, the Assyrians of Iraq and Thomas Christians from the Old Testament: one from the books of of India have mostly aligned the future of their once Moses and another from the prophets. Because of the vast Church, since it was devastated in the fourteenth illumination of Christ, both New Testament readings century by the Golden Horde’s Islamic conquests, with are preceded by Alleluias and accompanied by lights the Catholic Church, in direct communion with the (one for the epistle and two for the gospel). see of Rome. This first part of the Qurbana is offered outside the The Church of the East exists in two families, with sanctuary, on the “bema”, a dais among the people and, Catholic and non-Catholic branches. The Assyrian since Vatican II, facing them. There is no penitential family has its heartland in Iraq’s northern mountains rite, but the priest washes his hands and invites the and plains, having also a worldwide diaspora: the people likewise to purify their hearts, before the gifts Chaldean Catholic Church numbers 640,000; there are transferred to the altar. There is no iconostasis, but are two non-Catholic Assyrian Churches, numbering in some churches there is a sanctuary Veil, as in the Jerusalem Temple, which is drawn aside. 450,000 and 100,000 respectively. The liturgy conserves chants in Syriac descending from the early communities of Aramaic-speaking Jews who followed Christ’s disciples, and elements from a lost second-century Persian rite. From the 1950s to the late 1980s, the Syro-Malabar version was progressively restored at Rome’s insistence: elements imposed by Latin Catholics were removed, and its proper shape and content recovered. The Eucharist is called the Holy Qurbana – the same as Corban (Mark 7.11) – Yet the Roman canon lacks an invocation of the Holy Spirit, which the East considers essential. St John Paul realised that prayers so ancient could not be doubted and now both traditions recognise each other’s integrity sacramentally and ecumenically. Two Latinisations have been embraced as spiritual gifts: the veneration of images and the use of unleavened wafer-bread. The first impression at a Syro-Malabar Qurbana is ... continued at the foot of page 9 Ø