From the time of the Apostles to the present day, the Orthodox Church
has celebrated the Divine Liturgy and will continue to do so until the
consummation of the world.
Private Prayer
Private prayer is a form of communication between God and humankind. It is a
conversation, a dialogue between you and your Creator. You reveal your inner most
secrets, requests, needs and problems to God. And God reveals His will to your
mind. You acknowledge your faults and shortcomings with the assurance that He is a
merciful God. In return, you experience the satisfaction of forgiveness. At times,
your prayers are words of gratitude and glorification to God for His benevolence
to you. Regardless what type of prayer you offer, when it pertains to you
personally it is a private prayer. This is a worthwhile and beneficial effort,
and it must be pursued.
Public Prayer
However, a private prayer cannot satisfy our spiritual needs unless it is
intimately connected with our public prayers. Public prayer or worship is offered
by the Church, a group of people that proclaims the same beliefs and makes the
same requests to God.
"In God we live and move and have our existence," St. Paul preached to the
Athenians. Since we share "every good and perfect gift that comes from above,"
we render a common thanks and glory to the Giver God. Our common needs,
aspirations and realizations of God's benevolence are united with our prayer,
and as one family we acknowledge God as our Father.
The culmination of the public prayer is the Divine Liturgy. In fact, the Divine
Liturgy is the chief act of Greek Orthodox public worship. It is a public service
of approximately two hours that is a worshiping testimony of the Revelation of
God. It unfolds before the worshipers the essence of the theology, the mystical
existential character, and the devotional traditions of Greek Orthodoxy.
Dionysios the Areopagite writes:
How else can we imitate God if we do not repeat
His divine life through the mystagogy of the Liturgy? The Lord ordained that the
mystery of the Divine Liturgy should be constantly performed in order that we
humans, however imperfect, should unite with a perfect God. As cells are united
and make up the human body so the faithful are united as cells upon the body of
God and partake of His holy life otherwise, we become dead organisms,
foreign to a healthy and living God.
In the Divine Liturgy the divine and the human, time and eternity, the now and
the remote, spiritual longings and earthly desires, cries of distress and
exclamations of joy, and several other contrasts and antinomies are united
into an organism of harmony and real life.
The Meaning of the word Liturgy
Before the early days of the Church, the word Liturgy implied a service for
the people which pertained to philanthropy. In the Old Testament it means prayer
or worship offered by the priests of the Mosaic Law. During the Christian era
the word Liturgy came to signify the performance of Holy Communion.
In the Orthodox Church, the Eucharist is also known as the Divine Liturgy.
The word liturgy means people's work; this description serves to emphasize the
corporate character of the Eucharist. When an Orthodox attends the Divine
Liturgy, it is not as an isolated person who comes simply to hear a sermon.
Rather, he comes as a member of the Community of Faith who participates in
the very purpose of the Church, which is the Worship of the Holy Trinity.
Therefore, the Eucharist is truly the center of the life of the Church and
the principal means of spiritual development, both for the individual Christian
and the Church as a whole. Not only does the Eucharist embody and express the
Christian faith in a unique way, but it also enhances and deepens our faith in
the Trinity. This sacrament-mystery is the experience toward which all the other
activities of the Church are directed and from which they receive their direction.
The Divine Liturgy is the most perfect form of worship. It is a reenactment
of the Birth, Life, Death, Resurrection and Ascension of Christ interwoven
with common prayer, the study of scriptures and public communication with God.
It is also a sacred mystical action between God and man.
Origin and Development of The Divine Liturgy
As it is celebrated today, the Divine Liturgy is a product of historical
development.
The fundamental core of the Divine Liturgy dates from the time of Christ
and the Apostles. In fact, the Divine Liturgy originated with the Last Supper
at which Christ instructed His disciples to offer bread and wine in His memory.
The Apostles, obedient to the Lord's command, "Do this in remembrance of Me,"
observed it very regularly.
Saint Paul gives a description of this service in his first Epistle to the
Corinthians, chapter 11, verses 23 and 24. Before the Gospels were written,
Sacred Tradition provided the basis, the authority and the method for the
observance of the Liturgy.
To this, words, phrases, prayers, hymns and gestures have been added throughout
the centuries. Some came from the Old Testament, some from the New, and still
others from Sacred Tradition. More prayers and supplications were added to the
original Liturgy as time went on.
However, since the beginning of the fourth century, when St. John Chrysostom
compiled the present form of the Liturgy, we have had no substantial variations.
Throughout the centuries the Divine Liturgy has preserved its original features:
1. It is a Remembrance of the Life, the Crucifixtion, the Resurrection and the Ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ.
2. It is a Sacrifice: "This is my body which is broken for you... This is my blood, which is shed for you and for many others... for the remission of sins." Unlike the primitive forms of sacrifice, this service is the perfect sacrifice offered by the Only Begotten Son of God.
3. It is a Communion: "Take, eat, this is my body... Drink of it all ye, this is my blood..." Worthily approaching the Holy Cup we receive Christ in our hearts. Rather, we should say, we are received by Christ. We receive forgiveness of our sins and we recon-cile ourselves with God.
4. It is a Eucharist: Because the Divine Master offered an Eucharistia, a thanksgiving, to God the Father, before He instituded the Sacrament. Whenever we receive the Holy Communion, gratefully we recall the love of Him Who died for us. "Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." John 15, 13.
There are three forms of the Divine Liturgy, presently in use in the Orthodox Church.
1. The Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, which is the most frequently celebrated.
2. The Liturgy of St. Basil the Great, which is celebrated only ten times a year.
3. The Liturgy of St. James (Celebrated on Oct. 23, the feastday of the Saint).
While they did not compose the entire liturgy which bears their names,
it is probable that they did author many of the prayers. The structure and basic
elements of the three liturgies are similar, although there are differences in
some hymns and prayers.
The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrystostom is the normal Sunday worship of the Orthodox Church.
St. John Chrystostom (349-407) was Archbishop of Constantinople and a renowned
preacher and spiritual father. This liturgy was adapted from the Liturgy of St.
Basil the Great
In addition to these Liturgies, there is also the Liturgy of the Pre-Sanctified
Gifts. This is not truly a eucharistic liturgy but rather an evening Vesper
Service followed by the distribution of Holy Communion reserved from the
previous Sunday. This liturgy is celebrated only on weekday mornings or evenings
during Lent, and on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of Holy Week, when the full
Eucharist is not permitted because of its Resurrection spirit. The Eucharist
expresses the deep joy which is so central to the Gospel.
The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrystostom
The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrystostom is a reenactment of the complete
life of our Lord and focuses on His Sacrifice for our personal salvation.
It is a live and vivid Drama except that there are no spectators. Everyone is
a participant, with the Priest as the representative of the Lord and the chief
Celebrant. Therefore, we should never come to Church solely to view, but rather
to actively participate in every movement and expression of the Divine Liturgy.
The Liturgy is our communal Act of Worship. Each Christian has the unique
privilege and opportunity to bring the offering of the bread and wine, which in
the Liturgy is transubstantiated into the Body and Blood of our Saviour.
This religous Drama is divided into three acts:
1. The Offertory, or "Proskomidi"
2. The "Liturgy of the Catechumens"
3. The "Liturgy of the Faithful"
The Offertory
The meaning of the Offertory prayers is the redeeming plan of God which became
manifest through the prophets and reached its climax in the person of Christ.
The priest prepares himself with prayer and then precedes to vest himself.
The vestments express his priestly ministry as well as his office.
Next, the priest goes to the Proskomide Table which is on the left side of the
Altar Table in the Sanctuary. There, he prepares the offering of bread and wine
for the Liturgy. Ideally, the leavened loaves of bread, and the wine from which
the offering is taken, are prepared by members of the congregation. The elements
are presented to the priest before the service, together with the names of those
persons, living and dead, who are to be remembered during the Divine Liturgy. The
offering symbolically represents the entire Church gathered about Christ, the
Lamb of God. The priest recites several prayers and verses from the Psalms and the Book of
Isaiah, which describe Christ as the lamb who was led to the slaughter for the
redemption of the world (Isaiah 53:6-8).
One of the significant scenes of this First Act is the commemoration of the
saints of both the Old and the New Testaments. All the elect of God are gathered
together into the bosom of the Church. The Church in heaven, or Church triumphant,
and the Church on earth, or Church militant, are united into a living and
inseparable organism of God. The angelic powers, the Old Testament prophets and
patriarchs, the Mother of Jesus, the Apostles, martyrs, Fathers, and saints of
the Christian Church are invoked for their brethren on earth. The commemoration
of the believers, dead or alive, constitutes another section of the Offertory.
The "Liturgy of the Catechumens"
The Second Act is rather instructive for members and future members of the
Church. The petitions and doxologies culminate in the reading of the Scriptures,
the sermon, and several prayers for the catechumens.
The "Liturgy of the Catechumens" begins with the solemn declaration: "Blessed
be the Kingdom of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit now and for
ever more." With these words we are reminded that in the Divine Liturgy the Church
becomes a real manifestation of God's Kingdom on earth.
Since this part of the Divine Liturgy was designed originally for the Catechumens,
those being schooled in the faith, it had a very instructive quality. The
Eucharist also has elements which are in common with other Services. We gather as
Christians who share a common faith in the Holy Trinity. We sing and pray as a
people united in Christ, who are not bound by time, space, or social barriers.
The Little Entrance is the central action of this part of the Divine Liturgy.
A procession takes place in which the priest carries the Book of Gospels from the
sanctuary into the nave. The procession directs our attention to the Scripture and
to the presence of Christ in the Gospel. The entrance leads to the Epistle lesson,
the Gospel, and the Sermon.
The "Liturgy of the Faithful"
The Third Act, however, is the most important of the Divine Liturgy. In the
early Church, only those who were baptized and not in a state of sin were
permitted to remain for this most solemn part of the Liturgy.
With the Great Entrance marking the beginning of this part of the Liturgy,
the offering of bread and wine is brought by the priest from the Preparation
Table, through the nave, and to the Altar Table. These are moving moments while
the choir sings, "We who mystically represent the Cherubim, sing the thrice-holy
Hymn to the lifegiving Trinity. Therefore, let us put away all worldly care, so
that we may welcome the King of all." The faithful are urged to intensify their
participation in the Divine play. Before the offering can proceed, however, we are
called upon to love one another so that we may perfectly confess our faith.
As the centurion confessed the deity of Christ, likewise the faithful confess
their faith by reciting the Creed. They proclaim their faith in God, the Father
Almighty, in the one Lord Jesus Christ and in the Holy Spirit, in the Church of
God and her holy Mysteries. While much of the Liturgy is mystical and sacramental,
the recitation of the creed is the doctrinal confession of the faithful.
The Creed is an essential part of Greek Orthodox worship as are important
other symbols and movements in the Church.
The symbolic acts in general fulfill the vacuum which is created because of the
lack of words and movements or because terms and expressions are inadequate in
some stages and developments of the evolution of the Liturgy. The Creed as a
symbol and confessional narration bridges two important stages of the liturgical
drama. It is therefore both a symbol properly so called and a confession of the
essentials of the historic faith.
Only now can we properly offer our gifts of bread and wine to the Father as our
Lord directed us to do in His memory. This offering is one of great joy, for
through it we remember the mighty actions of God through which we have received
the gift of salvation, and especially the Life, Death, and Resurrection of Christ.
We invoke the Holy Spirit upon ourselves and upon our offering, asking the Father
that they become for us the Body and Blood of Christ. Through our thanking and
remembering the Holy Spirit reveals the presence of the Risen Christ in our midst.
The priest comes from the altar with the Holy Gifts, inviting the congregation
to draw near with reverence of God, with faith, and with love." Our sharing in
the Eucharist Gifts not only expresses our fellowship with one another, but also
our unity with the Father in His Kingdom. Individuals approach the Holy Gifts and
receive the Eucharistic bread and wine from the common chalice. The priest
distributes the Holy Gifts by means of a communion spoon. Since the Holy
Communion is an expression of our Faith, reception of the Holy Gifts is open only
to those who are baptized, chrismated, and practicing members of the
Orthodox Church.
The bloodless sacrifice, the invocation, and the descent of the Holy Spirit
upon the gifts of the Last Supper is an act in which one must participate if he
is to understand its impact and effect. The heavens descend and the earth is
elevated for a mystical union. The earthly and material are transubstantiated
into Godly elements, the body and blood of Christ. Christ was crucified,
thus giving Himself for the redemption of everyone; He takes the place of each
condemned individual to release him and set him free from bondage and make him
an adopted son of God. Christ gives Himself, and man partakes of His offer,
in the form of bread and wine, already transubstantiated into the living Christ.
It is through this participation, through Holy Communion, that man is lifted to
heaven, or that heaven and earth, the supernatural and the natural, the spiritual
and the material, are unified into a real communion and consummation.
The epilogue of the Divine Liturgy depicts the ascension of the Lord and
proclaims the eschatological expectations of the Church. Christ will come once
again to consummate the invisible and the visible, the divine and the human into
an eternal cosmos of beauty, happiness, and life. Indeed, the ultimate purpose
of the Divine Liturgy is to accomplish an intimate communion of man with God
in Jesus Christ, to enrich man with God's Grace, to regenerate and make the
human a new creation.
The Divine Liturgy comes to an end with a prayer of Thanksgiving and the Benediction.
At the conclusion of the Eucharist, the congregation comes forward to receive
a portion of the liturgical bread which was not used for the offering.
Easter Sunday Resurrection Service
If one is to appreciate the Divine Liturgy from the beginning to the end, one is
advised to attend the Resurrection Service of Easter Sunday. This service is both darkness
and light, defeat and victory, lamentation and triumph. It is, however, darkness,
defeat, and lamentation for a few minutes only. The Church is draped in black.
Everything is reminiscent of death, the death of Christ. The Lord is laid in His
tomb and His followers are plunged into fear and despair. At midnight, amid total
darkness in the Church, while the cantors sing a lamentation describing a
fruitless search for the body of Christ by Mary Magdalene and the other women,
the priest comes forward with a lighted candle, singing, "0 ye faithful, come
forward and receive light from the light that never wanes." He proceeds singing
the melodic hymn, "Christ is Risen" (Christos Anasti), in which the congregation joins in the joyful
announcement of the triumph of Christ over death. The Church assumes a new color.
Joy, hope, love, and eternity are the panegyric message of Easter Sunday and of
every Sunday.
Conclusion
Throughout the centuries, Christians have seen many dimensions in the Eucharist.
The various titles which have come to describe the rite bear witness to the
richness of its meaning. The Eucharist has been known as the Holy offering,
the Holy Mysteries, the Mystic Supper, and the Holy Communion. The Orthodox
Church recognizes the many facets of the Eucharist and wisely refuses to
over-emphasize one element to the detriment of the others. In so doing,
Orthodoxy has clearly avoided reducing the Eucharist to a simple memorial
of the Last Supper which is only occasionally observed. Following the teachings
of both Scripture and Tradition, the Orthodox Church believes that Christ is
truly present with His people in the celebration of the Holy Eucharist.
The Eucharistic gifts of bread and wine become for us His Body and His Blood.
We affirm that these Holy Gifts are transfigured into the first fruits of the
New Creation in which ultimately God will be "all in all".