Orthodox
worship is different! Some of these differences are apparent, if
perplexing, from the first moment you walk in a church. Others become
noticeable only over time. Here is some information that may help you
feel more at home in Orthodox worship-- Twelve things I wish I'd known
before my first visit to an Orthodox church.
1. What's all this commotion?
During the early part of the service the church may seem to be in a
hubbub, with people walking up to the front of the church, praying in
front of the iconostasis (the standing icons in front of the altar),
kissing things and lighting candles, even though the service is already
going on. In fact, when you came in the service was already going on,
although the sign outside clearly said "Divine Liturgy, 9:30." You felt
embarrassed to apparently be late, but these people are even later, and
they're walking all around inside the church. What's going on here?
In an Orthodox
church there is only one Eucharistic service (Divine Liturgy) per
Sunday, and it is preceded by an hour-long service of Matins (or
Orthros) and several short preparatory services before that. There is no
break between these services--one begins as soon as the previous ends,
and posted starting times are just educated guesses. Altogether, the
priest will be at the altar on Sunday morning for over three hours,
"standing in the flame," as one Orthodox priest put it.
As a result of
this state of continuous flow, there is no point at which everyone is
sitting quietly in a pew waiting for the entrance hymn to start,
glancing at their watches approaching 9:30. Orthodox worshippers arrive
at any point from the beginning of Matins through the early part of the
Liturgy, a span of well over an hour. No matter when they arrive,
something is sure to be already going on, so Orthodox don't let this
hamper them from going through the private prayers appropriate to just
entering a church. This is distracting to newcomers, and may even seem
disrespectful, but soon you begin to recognize it as an expression of a
faith that is not merely formal but very personal. Of course, there is
still no good excuse for showing up after
9:30, but
punctuality is unfortunately one of the few virtues many Orthodox lack.
2. Stand up,
stand up for Jesus.
In the Orthodox
tradition, the faithful stand up for nearly the entire service. Really.
In some Orthodox churches, there won't even be any chairs, except a few
scattered at the edges of the room for those who need them. Expect
variation in practice: some churches, especially those that bought
already-existing church buildings, will have well-used pews. In any
case, if you find the amount of standing too challenging you're welcome
to take a seat. No one minds or probably even notices. Long-term
standing gets easier with practice.
3. In this sign.
To say that we
make the sign of the cross frequently would be an understatement. We
sign ourselves whenever the Trinity is invoked, whenever we venerate the
cross or an icon, and on many other occasions in the course of the
Liturgy. But people aren't expected to do everything the same way. Some
people cross themselves three times in a row, and some finish by
sweeping their right hand to the floor. On first entering a church
people may come up to an icon, make a "metania"--crossing themselves and
bowing with right hand to the floor--twice, then kiss the icon, then
make one more metania. This becomes familiar with time, but at first it
can seem like secret-handshake stuff that you are sure to get wrong.
Don't worry, you don't have to follow suit.
We cross with
our right hands from right to left (push, not pull), the opposite of
Roman Catholics and high-church Protestants. We hold our hands in a
prescribed way: thumb and first two fingertips pressed together, last
two fingers pressed down to the palm. Here as elsewhere, the Orthodox
impulse is to make everything we do reinforce the Faith. Can you figure
out the symbolism? (Three fingers together for the Trinity; two fingers
brought down to the palm for the two natures of Christ, and his coming
down to earth.) This, too, takes practice. A beginner's imprecise
arrangement of fingers won't get you denounced as a heretic.
4. What, no
kneelers?
Generally, we
don't kneel. We do sometimes prostrate. This is not like prostration in
the Roman Catholic tradition, lying out flat on the floor. To make a
prostration we kneel, place our hands on the floor and touch our
foreheads down between our hands. It's just like those photos of
middle-eastern worship, which look to Westerners like a sea of behinds.
At first prostration feels embarrassing, but no one else is embarrassed,
so after awhile it feels OK. Ladies will learn that full skirts are best
for prostrations, as flat shoes are best for standing.
Sometimes we do
this and get right back up again, as during the prayer of St. Ephraim
the Syrian, which is used frequently during Lent. Other times we get
down and stay there awhile, as some congregations do during part of the
Eucharistic prayer.
Not everyone
prostrates. Some kneel, some stand with head bowed; in a pew they might
slide forward and sit crouched over. Standing there feeling awkward is
all right too. No one will notice if you don't prostrate. In Orthodoxy
there is a wider acceptance of individualized expressions of piety,
rather than a sense that people are watching you and getting offended if
you do it wrong.
One former
Episcopal priest said that seeing people prostrate themselves was one of
the things that made him most eager to become Orthodox. He thought,
"That's how we should be before God."
5. With Love and
Kisses
We kiss stuff.
When we first come into the church, we kiss the icons (Jesus on the feet
and other saints on the hands, ideally). You'll also notice that some
kiss the chalice, some kiss the edge of the priest's vestment as he
passes by, the acolytes kiss his hand when they give him the censer, and
we all line up to kiss the cross at the end of the service. When we talk
about "venerating" something we usually mean crossing ourselves and
kissing it.
We kiss each
other before we take communion ("Greet one another with a kiss of love,"
1 Peter 5:14). When Roman Catholics or high-church Protestants "pass the
peace," they give a hug, handshake, or peck on the cheek; that's how
Westerners greet each other. In Orthodoxy different cultures are at
play: Greeks and Arabs kiss on two cheeks, and Slavs come back again for
a third. Follow the lead of those around you and try not to bump your
nose.
The usual
greeting is "Christ is in our midst" and response, "He is and shall be."
Don't worry if you forget what to say. The greeting is not the one
familiar to Episcopalians, "The peace of the Lord be with you." Nor is
it "Hi, nice church you have here." Exchanging the kiss of peace is a
liturgical act, a sign of mystical unity. Chatting and fellowship is for
later.
6. Blessed bread
and consecrated bread.
Only Orthodox
may take communion, but anyone may have some of the blessed bread.
Here's how it works: the round communion loaf, baked by a parishioner,
is imprinted with a seal. In the preparation service before the Liturgy,
the priest cuts out a section of the seal and sets it aside; it is
called the "Lamb". The rest of the bread is cut up and placed in a large
basket, and blessed by the priest.
During the
eucharistic prayer, the Lamb is consecrated to be the Body of Christ,
and the chalice of wine is consecrated as His Blood. Here's the
surprising part: the priest places the "Lamb" in the chalice with the
wine. When we receive communion, we file up to the priest, standing and
opening our mouths wide while he gives us a fragment of the wine-soaked
bread from a golden spoon. He also prays over us, calling us by our
first name or the saint-name which we chose when we were baptized or
chrismated (received into the church by anointing with blessed oil).
As we file past
the priest, we come to an altar boy holding the basket of blessed bread.
People will take portions for themselves and for visitors and
non-Orthodox friends around them. If someone hands you a piece of
blessed bread, do not panic; it is not the eucharistic Body. It is a
sign of fellowship.
Visitors are
sometimes offended that they are not allowed to receive communion.
Orthodox believe that receiving communion is broader than me-and-Jesus;
it acknowledges faith in historic Orthodox doctrine, obedience to a
particular Orthodox bishop, and a commitment to a particular Orthodox
worshipping community. There's nothing exclusive about this; everyone is
invited to make this commitment to the Orthodox Church. But the
Eucharist is the Church's treasure, and it is reserved for those who
have united themselves with the Church. An analogy could be to reserving
marital relations until after the wedding.
We also handle
the Eucharist with more gravity than many denominations do, further
explaining why we guard it from common access. We believe it is truly
the Body and Blood of Christ. We ourselves do not receive communion
unless we are making regular confession of our sins to a priest and are
at peace with other communicants. We fast from all food and drink--yes,
even a morning cup of coffee--from midnight the night before communion.
This leads to
the general topic of fasting. When newcomers learn of the Orthodox
practice, their usual reaction is, "You must be kidding." We fast from
meat, fish, dairy products, wine and olive oil nearly every Wednesday
and Friday, and during four other periods during the year, the longest
being Great Lent before Pascha (Easter). Altogether this adds up to
nearly half the year. Here, as elsewhere, expect great variation. With
the counsel of their priest, people decide to what extent they can keep
these fasts, both physically and spiritually--attempting too much rigor
too soon breeds frustration and defeat. Nobody's fast is anyone else's
business. As St. John Chrysostom says in his beloved Paschal sermon,
everyone is welcomed to the feast whether they fasted or not: "You sober
and you heedless, honor the day...Rejoice today, both you who have
fasted and you who have disregarded the fast."
The important
point is that the fast is not rigid rules that you break at grave risk,
nor is it a punishment for sin. Fasting is exercise to stretch and
strengthen us, medicine for our souls' health. In consultation with your
priest as your spiritual doctor, you can arrive at a fasting schedule
that will stretch but not break you. Next year you may be ready for
more. In fact, as time goes by, and as they experience the camaraderieof
fasting together with a loving community, most people discover they
start relishing the challenge.
7. Where's the
General Confession?
In our
experience, we don't have any general sins; they're all quite specific.
There is no complete confession-prayer in the Liturgy. Orthodox are
expected to be making regular, private confession to their priest.
The role of the
pastor is much more that of a spiritual father than it is in other
denominations. He is not called by his first name alone, but referred to
as "Father Firstname." His wife also holds a special role as parish
mother, and she gets a title too, though it varies from one culture to
another: either "Khouria" (Arabic), or "Presbytera" (Greek), both of
which mean "priest's wife;" or "Matushka" (Russian), which means "Mama."
Another
difference you may notice is in the Nicene Creed, which may be said or
sung, depending on the parish. If we are saying that the Holy Spirit
proceeds from the Father, and you from force of habit add, "and the
Son," you will be alone. The "filioque" was added to the Creed some six
hundred years after it was written, and we adhere to the original.
High-church visitors will also notice that we don't bow or genuflect
during the "and was incarnate." Nor do we restrict our use of "Alleluia"
during Lent (when the sisters at one Episcopal convent are referring to
it as "the 'A' word"); in fact, during Matins in Lent, the Alleluias are
more plentiful than ever.
8. Music, music,
music.
About
seventy-five percent of the service is congregational singing.
Traditionally, Orthodox use no instruments, although some churches will
have organs. Usually a small choir leads the people in a capella
harmony, with the level of congregational response varying from parish
to parish. The style of music varies as well, from very
Oriental-sounding solo chant in an Arabic church to more
Western-sounding four-part harmony in a Russian church, with lots of
variation in between.
This constant
singing is a little overwhelming at first; it feels like getting on the
first step of an escalator and being carried along in a rush until you
step off ninety minutes later. It has been fairly said that the liturgy
is one continuous song.
What keeps this
from being exhausting is that it's pretty much the *same* song every
week. Relatively little changes from Sunday to Sunday; the same prayers
and hymns appear in the same places, and before long you know it by
heart. Then you fall into the presence of God in a way you never can
when flipping from prayer book to bulletin to hymnal.
9. Making
editors squirm.
Is there a
concise way to say something? Can extra adjectives be deleted? Can the
briskest, most pointed prose be boiled down one more time to a more
refined level? Then it's not Orthodox worship. If there's a longer way
to say something, the Orthodox will find it. In Orthodox worship, more
is always more, in every area including prayer. When the priest or
deacon intones, "Let us complete our prayer to the Lord," expect to
still be standing there fifteen minutes later.
The original
liturgy lasted something over five hours; those people must have been on
fire for God. The Liturgy of St. Basil edited this down to about two and
a half, and later (around 400 A.D.) the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom
further reduced it to about one and a half. Most Sundays we use the St.
John Chrysostom liturgy, although for some services (e.g., Sundays in
Lent, Christmas Eve) we use the longer Liturgy of St. Basil.
10. Our Champion
Leader
A constant
feature of Orthodox worship is veneration of the Virgin Mary, the
"champion leader" of all Christians. We often address her as
"Theotokos," which means "Mother of God." In providing the physical
means for God to become man, she made possible our salvation.
But though we
honor her, as Scripture foretold ("All generations will call me
blessed," Luke 1:48), this doesn't mean that we think she or any of the
other saints have magical powers or are demi-gods. When we sing "Holy
Theotokos, save us," we don't mean that she grants us eternal salvation,
but that we seek her prayers for our protection and growth in faith.
Just as we ask for each other's prayers, we ask for the prayers of Mary
and other saints as well. They're not dead, after all, just departed to
the other side. Icons surround us to remind us of all the saints who are
joining us invisibly in worship.
11. The three
doors.
Every Orthodox
church will have an iconostasis before its altar. "Iconostasis" means
"icon-stand", and it can be as simple as a large image of Christ on the
right and a corresponding image of the Virgin and Child on the left. In
a more established church, the iconostasis may be a literal wall,
adorned with icons. Some of versions shield the altar from view, except
when the central doors stand open.
The basic set-up
of two large icons creates, if you use your imagination, three doors.
The central one, in front of the altar itself, is called the "Holy
Doors" or "Royal Doors," because there the King of Glory comes out to
the congregation in the Eucharist. Only the priest and deacons, who bear
the Eucharist, use the Holy Doors.
The openings on
the other sides of the icons, if there is a complete iconostasis, have
doors with icons of angels; they are termed the "Deacon's Doors." Altar
boys and others with business behind the altar use these, although no
one is to go through any of the doors without an appropriate reason.
Altar service--priests, deacons, altar boys--is restricted to males.
Females are invited to participate in every other area of church life.
Their contribution has been honored equally with men's since the days of
the martyrs; you can't look at an Orthodox altar without seeing Mary and
other holy women. In most Orthodox churches, women do everything else
men do: lead congregational singing, paint icons, teach classes, read
the epistle, and serve on the parish council.
12. Where does
an American fit in?
Flipping through
the Yellow Pages in a large city you might see a multiplicity of
Orthodox churches: Greek, Romanian, Carpatho-Russian, Antiochian,
Serbian, and on and on. Is Orthodoxy really so tribal? Do these
divisions represent theological squabbles and schisms?
Not at all. All
these Orthodox churches are one church. The ethnic designation refers to
what is called the parish's "jurisdiction" and identifies which bishops
hold authority there. There are about 6 million Orthodox in North
America and 250 million in the world, making Orthodoxy the
second-largest Christian communion.
The astonishing
thing about this ethnic multiplicity is its theological and moral unity.
Orthodox throughout the world hold unanimously to the fundamental
Christian doctrines taught by the Apostles and handed down by their
successors, the bishops, throughout the centuries. They also hold to the
moral standards of the Apostles; abortion, and sex outside heterosexual
marriage, remain sins in Orthodox eyes.
One could
attribute this unity to historical accident. We would attribute it to
the Holy Spirit.
Why then the
multiplicity of ethnic churches? These national designations obviously
represent geographic realities. Since North America is also a geographic
unity, one day we will likewise have a unified national church--an
American Orthodox Church. This was the original plan, but due to a
number of complicated historical factors, it didn't happen that way.
Instead, each ethnic group of Orthodox immigrating to this country
developed its own church structure. This multiplication of Orthodox
jurisdictions is a temporary aberration and much prayer and planning is
going into breaking through those unnecessary walls.
Currently the
largest American jurisdictions are the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, The
Orthodox Church in America (Russian roots), and the Antiochian
Archdiocese (Arabic roots). The liturgy is substantially the same in
all, though there may be variation in language used and type of music.
I wish it could
be said that every local parish eagerly welcomes newcomers, but some are
still so close to their immigrant experience that they are mystified as
to why outsiders would be interested. Visiting several Orthodox parishes
will help you learn where you're most comfortable. You will probably be
looking for one that uses plenty of English in its services. Many
parishes with high proportions of converts will have services entirely
in English.
Orthodoxy seems
startlingly different at first, but as the weeks go by it gets to be
less so. It will begin to feel more and more like home, and will
gradually draw you into your true home, the Kingdom of God. I hope that
your first visit to an Orthodox church will be enjoyable, and that it
won't be your last.
© Frederica
Mathewes-Green