Encyclopedia > Eastern Rites

  Article Content

Eastern Rites

The Eastern Rites are the churches of Eastern Europe and the Middle East that are in communion with the Roman Catholic Church. They are also called "Eastern Catholic" or "Uniate[?]" churches. Western (or "Latin-Rite") Catholic bishops are subject directly to the pope, but each Eastern-rite Catholic bishop is subject indirectly to the pope via one of six Catholic "patriarchs of the east", who sit in Alexandria, Antioch, Antelias[?], Baghdad, Beirut, and Damascus. (There is a seventh patriarch of the east in Jerusalem, but his church follows the Latin Rite.)

These churches accept Catholic dogma, but retain their own hierarchies and liturgies, and follow some laws and customs that differ from those of Western "Latin-Rite" Catholic churches. For example, their priests need not be celibate, and their parish priests rather than diocesan bishops normally confirm parishoners, using the chrismation rite rather than the rite used in the West.

The Eastern-Rite Churches:

Greek liturgy

West Syriac liturgy East Syriac liturgy Armenian liturgy Coptic liturgy



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Bullying

...   Contents TyrantRedirected from Bullying Tyrant is a term for someone with absolute governmental power, from the Greek language turannos. In Classical Antiquity[?] ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 31.1 ms