Welcome to the Maronite Podcast: A Place to Pray.

This is a daily reading of the Prayers of the Faithful or Divine Office for the Antiochene Syriac Maronite Church.  

The Universal Catholic Church is a communion of autonomous ritual Churches. Each Church is unique and contributes in her way to the richness and diversity of the Universal Catholic Church. Although united in the Holy Spirit by the same faith and the same seven mysteries, each Church witnesses to Christ throughout history according to her theology and spirituality using her own culture, language, music, philosophy etc.

The Universal Catholic Church recognizes that the mystery of God is so vast that it cannot be contained in one individual Church's culture. In fact, Pope John Paul II referred to Eastern Churches as the other lung of the Universal Catholic Church.

The Maronite Church is rich in her theology, spirituality, culture and traditions. We hope that by providing this forum for you to both listen and participate in the Maronite Church's unique daily prayer life that you may find yourself closer to God and through his blessings may experience a better understanding of and foster a stronger love for the Maronite Church.

The prayer books we are using can be obtained from the Eparchy of St. Maron of Brooklyn: 

SAINT MARON PUBLICATIONS
4611 Sadler Road 
Glen Allen, Virginia 23060 

Phone: (804) 762-4301 
Fax: (804) 273-9914 

This podcast is brought to you by Fr. Armando Elkhoury and Chris Pond, OCDS.

To Listen to the Latest Podcast

The Rite of Crowning (marriage) is introduced by an hour of the Divine Office, which forms the Service of the Word. Then the rite itself follows in three stages:

1. The Rite of Covenant, including the verbal consent of the groom and bride, the joining of their right hands and the priest's blessing;
2. The Blessing and the Giving of the Rings (which are placed on the left ring finger);
3. The Rite of Crowning and the Removal of the Crowns.

The first two stages, covenant and giving of the rings, are but a duplication of those performed in the betrothal rite. Originally, they did not belong to the Rite of Crowning itself...

Elements of special meaning and importance for Eastern liturgies abound in the texts of the Maronite rite: the invocation of the "name" of God, which is a precise cultural act of the Temple; the reference of the Trinitarian expression in which the Father "rules all", the Son "redeems all", the Holy Spirit "instructs all"; the extensive use of the "right hand" of God, which manifests the protective power of God; the many references to the marriage of the Fathers of Old, especially Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, who are considered as the pioneers of the first covenant and whose marriage represented the prototype of the actual one; the use of terms such as, "shooro" (wall, tower of protection), "gzoro" (flock), "mashcan zabno" (tabernacle, dwelling place of the Lord)...

On the other hand, the themes expressed in the Maronite rite are all familiar to the Eastern liturgies. They stem from a basic theological vision, stressed briefly and soberly in the two tradional readings: marital love is at the image of Christ and his Church (Ephesians 5:22-33), and marital union is final as God's covenants are always final (Matthew 19:3-6).

The theme of Christ and Church is dominant. As a matter of fact, the liturgical text seems to be more concerned with the betrohtal of Christ and his Church than with the actual marriage of the couple in presence...

As far as God's Covenants are concerned, the permeate the whole liturgical celebration in the various aspects of their revelationqs: the "cosmic" covenant by which "heaven and earth were created"; the "scriptural" covenant contracted with the "fathers, kings, priests, prophets, apostles and holy women..."; the "mysterious" covenant in which Christ "sealed his nuptial pact with the Church" and "wrote it with his blood"; the "eschatalogical" covenant which was from the beginning and is the end and perfection of all others, and by which the crowning ceremony prepares, lives in the present times and leads the way to the second coming and the Kingdom.

Underlining these themes, there is at the center of the liturgy the idea of joy. The Rite of Crowning is, in fact, a celebration of joy. Joy is intended in the reference to "pardon of faults and forgiveness of sins", for joy is a fruit of purification and liberation; it is expressed in the call for happiness, prosperity and fecundity; it is mainly told in the many blessings that keep "showering" upon the couple during the celebration; it is finally brought by the "mysterious" presence of Christ, similar to this "physical" presence at the wedding of Cana of Galilee...

The Mystery of Crowning
According to the Antiochene Syriac Maronite Church
Eparchy of Saint Maron
Office of Liturgy
Brooklyn, NY

Direct download: crowning.mp3
Category: The Mystery of Crowning -- posted at: 5:29 PM
Comments[0]

This is the Rite of Betrhothal (engagement) according to the traditions of the Maronite Church. It takes place before the celebration of the Rite of Crowning (marriage).

Though Canonically independent of each other, betrothal and crowning from a liturgical unity. The Rite of Crowning liturgically is a continuation (in reality a definitive step, a climax) of the Rite of Betrothal, when blessed by the Church. Both take place in the presence of the Church, through the assistance of the minister, both rites represent a holy and definitive commitment, each in its own way.

The Rite of Betrothal includes three acts without introduction:
1. The Rite of Covenant (consent of the couple, joining of the hands and blessing by the priest);
2. The Blessing and giving of the Rings (on the right finger);
3. The Blessing of the Ornaments (cincture, clothing and jewelry) and Binding of the Couple.

In the current discipline, the Rite of Betrothal is ingnored. However, originally it reproduces the same meaning and effect of the betrothal as practiced in the Old Testament. The covenant and the giving of the rings in the betrothal represented then the definitive engagement of the couple. They were not simply considered as the sign of a promise the couple made to each other, nor as the pledge they were called to honor at a later time. On the contrary, they indicated the true beginnning of marriage itself - with only one exception, that is: the right to live together under one roof.

The Mystery of Crowning
According to the Antiochene Syriac Maronite Church
Eparchy of Saint Maron
Office of Liturgy
Brooklyn, NY
Direct download: betrothal.mp3
Category: The Mystery of Crowning -- posted at: 5:15 PM
Comments[0]


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