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The
name Maronite points out a particular relationship with the saint
monk whose name was Maroun in Syriac and Maron in Greek. He is mentioned
in a letter written sometime before the year 407 by the powerful
patriarch of Constantinople, John Chrysostom. He is also mentioned
about thirty years later by Theodoret, Bishop of Cyrrhus (d. 466),
who described the profound devotion which the monks of the monastery
Beth-Maron had to their departed spiritual father Maron. If it were
not for these two references, the only indication of the saint's
existence would be the oral tradition of the Maronite community
itself.
Maron was a contemporary
of Saint Patrick. As with Patrick in Ireland, Saint Maron attracted
people from far and near who were drawn by his godliness and wisdom
and who desired to live under his spiritual guidance. Just as later
in Europe the settlements that grew up around monasteries became
cities and nations, the monastery Beth-Maron built near Saint Maron's
tomb became the nucleus of a community where men and women, under
the guidance of the monks, could find material and spiritual happiness.
This is the reason why the liturgy and the organization of the Maronite
community even today have monastic characteristics. It is also the
reason why for centuries the spiritual leaders of the Maronites
have kept watch over the political and social rights of their flocks.
The history of the
monastery Beth-Maron was agitated and eventful. Situated in the
north of Syria on the banks of the Orantes, probably at Qal'at al-Madiq,
the monastery belonged juridically to the venerable patriarch church
of Antioch. The church of Antioch was founded by Saint Peter and
was the church where the disciples of Jesus were first called Christians.
Along with Alexandria in Egypt and Constantinople, Antioch was one
of the most important spiritual centers of the east. It outranked
the others in biblical scholarship. Two factors, however, led to
the gradual decay of the church of Antioch: its political position
as a buffer state between the Byzantine Empire and its antagonistic
powers; and its ecclesiastical division by schisms and heresies.
More and more the
faithful set all their hopes on the Maronite community where, in
spite of persecutions and devastating wars, the spiritual leaders
guided and protected their faithful with moderation and wisdom.
In the beginning of the 8th century, the community of Beth-Maron
had to proclaim one of its members, the monk John, already bishop
of Botrys in Lebanon, as patriarch of Antioch. Since that day, the
spiritual leader of the Maronite community has been patriarch of
Antioch and "the Whole East," that is, of the territory
administered by the capital Antioch.
Unfortunately, what
we know about the first Maronite patriarch John Maron cannot be
grounded in contemporary documents. What we have are pious stories
about his life created by devoted people to honor him. There are
documents written since the time of the Crusaders, but the legends
they contain must be set aside as unreliable evidence.
It seems that it was
during the reign of Saint John Maron that the Maronite community
left the north of Syria to take refuge in the "Holy Valley",
the Qadish of the Lebanese mountains. There, probably in the year
749, they built their first church in Lebanon, Mar-Mama in Ehden.
While the Maronites began a new life in Lebanon, the monastery of
Beth-Maron continued its struggle to survive the damages caused
by the armies of the Byzantine Empire and by the invasions of the
Arabs. This holy site of the Maronites was completely devastated,
probably in the 10th century. So far as we know, only one manuscript
of its rich library escaped the pillage and is preserved now in
the British Museum.
In the meantime, thanks
to the prudence of their spiritual leaders, the Maronite community
enjoyed the peace of the Cedars and the relative security of the
Lebanese mountains. From that time, the history of the Maronites
and the history of Lebanon have been intertwined. Without the Maronites
there would not have been a Lebanon, and without Lebanon the destiny
of Christianity in the Middle East would certainly have been more
unstable.
In the beginning of
their stay in Lebanon, isolated by the mountains and worried about
the political unrest in the Near East, the Maronites faithfully
adhered to the creed of the Catholic Church. But here is a paradox.
Because the tradition of Antioch always preferred biblical expressions
over dogmatic formulations the creed they professed did not contain
the "new" formulations of the councils regarding the Incarnation
of Jesus Christ. Hesitations to accept these formulations belonged
to the sphere of theological terminology; they did not lessen the
unshakable attachment of the Maronites to the Catholic faith. They
did, however, become harmful to the reputation of the Maronites.
No council condemned them, but in many publications, for example
the article "Maronites" in the first edition of the Catholic
Encyclopedia (vol. 9, 683-688), the Maronites are accused of the
heresy of monothelitism which taught that there is only one will
in Christ. In our day, as we experience once again the difficulty
of translating into human language the mystery of the Ineffable,
we can better understand the complexity of the theological situation
in which the Maronites had to find their way.
In the Lebanon of
the 11th and 12th centuries, the Maronites found themselves once
more between two worlds; the Latin Church of the West and the churches
of the East. The Latin missionaries found warm welcome in the Maronite
community. They did not, however, understand or appreciate the profound
value and the riches of the oriental traditions, and tried to impose,
often with success, the juridical and liturgical structures of the
Latin Church as the "only true Catholic" structures. The
Maronites, in turn, with their traditional spirit of moderation
and openness, enjoyed enriching their oriental patrimony with the
richness of Christian dogmas as it had developed in the West. They
also introduced into the Oriental churches such expressions of Western
devotional life as the rosary and the Stations of the Cross.
It would be easy to
assume the Maronites of being responsible for the "Latinization"
of the Eastern churches. But such would be an unfair accusation.
The Maronites always kept and jealously guarded their Oriental traditions.
They were convinced, however, and still are, that their own traditions
can grow only in the always challenging contact with the universal
church.
This contact with
the Latin Church enriched the intellectual world of Europe in the
Middle Ages. Maronites taught Oriental languages and literature
at the universities of Italy and France. Thanks to their position
between East and West, and to their knowledge of the occidental
theological tradition, they successfully started the dialogue with
the Orthodox churches of the Near East. The history of the Melkites
and Chaldeans, of Catholic Armenians and Syrians, shows the important
role of the Maronites in the foundation of these communities.
Today some one million
fifty thousand Maronites in Lebanon courageously maintain, under
the guidance of their patriarch, this tradition of hospitality and
openness in the politically explosive and religiously nearly impossible
situation of the Near East. This is the history of the Maronites,
a people between two worlds, between East and West, between Latin
Church and the Oriental churches, between Catholicism and Orthodoxy,
between Islam and Christianity.
In the post-Vatican
II Latin Church, the introduction of the vernacular language into
the Roman liturgy has encouraged all nations to celebrate the unique
sacrifice of the Lord in the language, music and symbolism proper
to each people and culture. While the Latin Church is rediscovering,
sometimes painfully, the riches of this liturgical renewal, the
Maronites always celebrated a liturgy in which they can recognize
their culture and history: their relation to Antioch, their monastic
origins, their contact with the Latin Church. It is always with
emotion that the Maronites listen to the words of consecration sung
by the Maronite priest in Syriac, so close to the language in which
our Lord, on the day before He suffered and died, pronounced these
words for the first time.
The Maronite liturgy
stresses these words with gestures which probably belong to a very
old Christian symbolism. After the words, "He gave thanks and
praise, and blessed the bread," the priest blesses the bread
with the sign of the cross; and after the words "He broke the
bread," he touches the four ends of the host. In the same way,
the sign of the cross is drawn on the chalice, and after the words,
"this blood is to be shed", the priest inclines the chalice
to the four sides as if to shed it in reality. With these gestures,
the Maronite liturgy likes to stress the universal character of
the Eucharist, and the faithful, by their "Amen", participate
in this universal gift and universal mission.
There is another important
element in the consecration of the Maronite liturgy. While the Latin
Mass brings the consecration to a close by the recitation of the
words "Do this in memory of me," the Maronite liturgy
continues with the biblical reference "Do this in memory of
me . . . until I come again," a verse which always was a favorite
text in the spirituality of Antioch.
In this addition,
the eschatological character of the theology of Antioch, which the
Maronite Church has inherited and enriched, clearly takes form.
Once more this theology is situated between the theology of the
East and that of the West, as the Maronite patriarch pointed out
in one of his interventions at Vatican Council II. While the theology
of the West has always stressed the actualization of the world,
and while the theology of Byzantine Christianity continues to celebrate
the divine liturgy which the Risen Lord accomplishes in His heavenly
glory (compared to which all things of this world are vain and idle)
the Maronite liturgy celebrates the Eucharist in expectation of
the coming of the Lord.
The Maronites in their
liturgy are painfully aware of the fact that we are actually not
in the glory of the Lord and in the plenitude of His redemption.
We are awaiting it. On the other hand, they realize in faith that
this sacramental sign is really rahbouno, a pledge of glory to come,
and zouodo, a viaticum which really transforms a simple terrestrial
being into a pilgrim on the way to his or her home, the "house
of the heavenly Father".
The interventions
of the Maronite bishops at the Vatican Council and the publications
of Maronite scholars show clearly that the Maronites are aware of
the precious contribution that the realistic and biblical theology
of Antioch can make, not only in the dialogue between Rome and Byzantium,
but especially in the delicate interfaith relations with Islam and
Synagogue for which the death of God and the divinization of a man
remain a scandal. The long tradition of living between two worlds
prepared more than 475,000 Maronites to live far from their country
and holy sites, between the culture of their adopted country and
their own tradition.
In the 19th century,
the Maronites found their way to the United States. It is interesting
to note that the first Maronite to come to Boston in 1854, Youssef
Daher Beshaleini from Salima (Metn, Lebanon) did not come for financial
reasons. By his contact with Americans in Lebanon, he became more
and more eager simply to discover the United States. He died at
the age of 19, two years after coming to Boston.
Years later, groups
of Maronites found their way to Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and
the Mid-West. They had hardly settled in Boston when, in 1893, they
built their first church in the United States. Because their common
personality as not so much based on a political or national foundation,
but on long religious tradition, they became indisputably attached
to the values of the American heritage which enlarged their vision
and, at the same time, strengthened their religious fidelity to
the Church of Saint Maron. The Maronite Church in the United States
is neither a national church nor a territorial church. It is the
implantation of a venerable old Christian tradition in the New World.
Maronite saints, like
Maron himself and his recently canonized disciple Saint Sharbel,
were always silent saints. We may wish that the Maronites speak
loudly about their theological and liturgical treasures, not only
to preserve the future of their own church in the United States,
but also to encourage and enrich the whole Catholic Church in America
in its growth and fulfillment.
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