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Who are the Maronites?
The
Maronites are Roman Catholics in full communion with the Holy See
of Rome. The Roman Catholic Church is made up of several Eastern
and Western Rites and the Maronites belong to the Syro-Antiochene
rite of the one, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. The immediate
head of the Maronite Church under the Pope of Rome is the Maronite
Patriarch who bears the title of 'Patriarch of Antioch and All the
East'. The Maronite Church is the only Eastern Catholic Church that
does not have an Eastern Orthodox equivalent.
Historically, the origins of the Maronite Church are to be found
amongst those monastic and lay people who gathered around the saintly
hermit, Maron. These Christians who accepted his way of life and
worship were soon identified as "those of St Maron" -
the Maronites.
Our Spiritual Father
Our
spiritual father, St Maron was born around AD 350. He was ordained
a priest and later withdrew as a hermit to a mountain of Taurus,
near Antioch, above the banks of the Orontes River. It was at this
chosen hermitage that he rededicated an old pagan temple as a shrine
to the True God. Here he was joined by many disciples who formed
a community.
Maron passed his life in prayer, penance and the defense of the
Catholic faith. He was a renowned miracle worker and healer. The
great Archbishop of Constantinople, St John Chrysostom, was his
friend.
St Maron died in 410. After his death, a church was built over his
grave. His feast day is kept on the 9th of February.
A
Ceaseless Struggle
The
history of the Maronites has been a ceaseless struggle to preserve
their Catholic faith and to maintain the greatest possible freedom
within the political and religious circumstances of the times.
The Maronite people have a strong emotional attachment to the mountainous
regions of Lebanon. It was to these mountains that they fled in
the seventh and eighth centuries to escape violent religious persecutions.
It was in these blessed mountains of Lebanon that they were able
to remain virtually independent of the various powers that sought
to control the region. The Maronite Patriarch was the only Christian
religious leader who did not require a decree from the Sultan to
validate his election as head of a Church within the Ottoman Empire.
Maronite Liturgy
Even a cursory survey of the intellectual movements of the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries will reveal names of Maronite scholars
prominent of Paris, Rome, Florence and Padua. There is hardly a
seat of learning in Italy, France or Spain that does not boast a
Maronite scholar amongst its great alumni. The revival of Arabic
literature and culture during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
was in large part the work of Christian writers and academics. An
indispensable role in this Renaissance of Arabic Literature was
played by Maronite thinkers, both clergy and lay people.
It is not possible to consider the Maronite people apart from that
particular religious experience which has nurtured them throughout
the centuries. The Maronites follow a rich liturgical observance
at the heart of which is the celebration of the Divine Liturgy.
The Maronite Liturgy belongs to the Antiochene Tradition and is
a West Syro-Antiochene Rite. During the history of the Maronites
there was much contact with the Western Church especially through
the Crusades and from the sixteenth century heavy latinization occurred.
The traditional anaphoras of Saint Peter (Sharar) and Saint James
were replaced by the anaphora of the Roman Church. The Maronite
College in Rome and the missionaries (Franciscan and Jesuit) in
Lebanon continued the latinisation of the Maronite Rite and they
were opposed to any reform so as to maintain their strong tie with
the See of Rome.
Following the Second Vatican Council in the 1960's, the Eastern
Churches, such as the Maronites, were encouraged to reform their
Liturgy in line with their authentic tradition. But due to the tragic
war in Lebanon, it was not possible to make these reforms until
recently. Under the guidance of the Patriarchal Liturgical Commission
and the Institute of Liturgy at Kasslik these reforms in reviving
the authentic Maronite Liturgy have begun to be realized in the
revision of the Divine Liturgy (1992) and the Lectionary (1993).
Our Patriarchate
It is through the institution of the Patriarchate that the Maronite
Church maintains communion with the Pope in Rome. Saint John Maron,
a disciple of Saint Maron, is traditionally believed to be the first
Maronite Patriarch of Antioch in 685-707 and thus the father of
the Maronite nation.
Throughout the centuries, the Maronite Patriarchs of Antioch have
been renowned for their exemplary lives, devotion to their people,
their unfailing loyalty to the Catholic faith and their learning
in all disciplines.
The name of many Patriarchates has been instrumental in preserving
the Maronite Community throughout the long centuries of persecution
and occupation. One European traveler wrote of these saintly and
heroic Patriarchs, "their staffs may be of wood, but they,
themselves, are of gold".
During the modern period, the Patriarchate has continued a courageous
ministry of service to the Lebanese people, regardless of their
religion or ecclesiastical affiliation. Even in the midst of the
most tragic of circumstances, the Patriarchate has responded to
the needs of the Nation without the slightest hint of sectarianism.
Today, as ever before, the Patriarchate is conscious that to him
who has been called to Peter's Throne at Antioch, the Church and
the Nation have entrusted The Glory of Lebanon.
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