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India’s Syro-Malabar Church to implement ‘uniform’ celebration of liturgy

India’s Syro-Malabar Church has decided to introduce a “uniform” celebration of the liturgy following lengthy discussions during the synod of its bishops this month.

In a pastoral letter issued after the meeting last week, Cardinal George Alencherry, head of the Church, called on the clergy and the faithful to set aside “individual preferences” and to work toward unity.

The pastoral letter is set to be read in all Syro-Malabar churches during Sunday Mass on October 5.



The announcement said the “uniform” or unified system of celebrating the Mass will come into effect starting on November 28, Feast of the Annunciation.

In his pastoral letter, Bishop Alencherry said efforts should be made to avoid any further division on the issue of the way the Mass is celebrated.

He said the synod of bishops, which met between August 16 and 27 online, looked deeply into the issues related to the unified way of celebrating the liturgy.

The pastoral letter cited the call of Pope Francis in July urging Church members to agree on the unified celebration of the Mass to strengthen the unity of the Church.

The Syro-Malabar Catholic Church is the second largest Oriental Catholic Church and a major archiepiscopal Church based in Kerala, India. It is an autonomous Church in full communion with the Vatican, with self-governance under the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches.

Cardinal Alencherry said the synod of bishops last month came up with a “unanimous decision” to implement the new modality of the liturgy that will have the priest facing the faithful during the first part of the celebration, the introductory rituals, the liturgy of the Word and the homily.

Cardinal George Alencherry. / Emmanuel Parekkattu/wikimedia CC BY SA 4.0

For the rest of the time, the celebrant will face the tabernacle “in the direction in which the faithful also look.” The celebrant will again turn to the faithful in the concluding part of the celebration or after the communion.

The new format is consistent with the 1999 proposal that was approved by the Congregation for the Eastern Churches, but was resisted in communities where the liturgy was celebrated with the priest facing the faithful during the entire rite.

In a letter on July 3 to the Syro-Malabar Church, Pope Francis wrote that “the Holy See looks with particular approval and encouragement to the agreement reached unanimously by the Synod of Bishops of the Syro-Malabar Church in 1999.”

The pontiff said a “uniform way of celebrating the Holy Qurbana” is “an important step towards the growth of ecclesial stability and communion within the entire body of your beloved Church.”

In his decree, Cardinal Alencherry said that “through an effective catechesis, the uniform modality can be gradually introduced into the entire eparchy as soon as possible and in any case no later than Easter 2022.”

For years, ,embers of the Syro-Malabar Church have been divided on how the Mass should celebrated.

While most parishes celebrate the Mass with the priest facing the faithful, there are some dioceses where the Mass celebrated with the priest facing facing the tabernacle.

There are also some parishes where the celebrant faces the people during most of the Mass time and faces the altar or turns away from the participants for brief periods of the rituals.

Cardinal Alencherry’s pastoral letter noted that the Syro-Malabar Church had been on the path of renewing the liturgy since 1934.

He said that the pandemic had created unrest among Church members over the different ways the Mass was being celebrated.

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