An Introduction to Western Rite Orthodoxy
Orthodox Odyssey
By the Rt. Rev’d John A. Mangels Former Rector of St. Augustine’s Orthodox Church, Denver, Colorado, now Pastor of St. George Orthodox Church (Eastern Rite), St. Paul, Minnesota
Originally published by Conciliar Press.
As a Child, I remember looking forward each year to the autumn, when the parish choir of my Church in Casper, Wyoming returned from their summer holiday, signalling the resumption of the splendid Sunday High Masses. In the late 1950s and early ’60s, participation in the awesome beauty of the age-old Roman Mass was quite an experience.
Even for a child, this was not like everyday life. One knew one was
participating in something very special. Incense, Gregorian chants, the
stately movements of the sacred ministers in their brocade vestments,
the polyphony of the choir echoing through the large Romanesque Church
all made this, The official public worship of the Church.
It was
the highlight of this young boy’s week! I did not have words for it
then, but now I know I had worshipped God in the beauty of
holiness.
Casper was an oil boom town
in the late ’50s, having
grown in population to nearly 60,000 souls. My parents wanted to give
their children the best education possible in this setting. For us that
meant attending the local Catholic parochial school which had an
enrollment of nearly 600 students and was staffed by the Sisters of
Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. The school was excellent, and the
sisters were well educated, dedicating themselves totally to providing a
complete education—the best of the traditional Catholic school
models. They gave us the time-proven rudiments of Christian education
and made sure that we had a solid foundation in the faith of the Holy
Roman Church.
This training, coupled with the rich liturgical life of my parish, formed in me a deep love of God and my faith. As a youth, I was active as an altar boy, played the organ, and sang in the choirs. My love and interest in the Church did not go unnoticed. Both the sisters and the priests took an active interest in me and began to encourage me in my desire to move toward the priesthood.
It was a good life. I was a happy child with a loving and supportive home life, a superior elementary education, and the sure knowledge of a future in the unchanging Church which made me feel very secure.
The Great Experiment
An event occurred in late November of 1964, however, which marked the
beginning of a very disquieting period in my life, and in the lives of
countless other Roman Catholics. As I entered the Church one day for
Confession, I was shocked to see a small wooden table standing in the
sanctuary before the great marble altar of the Church. My pastor,
sensing the obvious agitation in my voice, said quietly, It’s only an
experiment
(a word I would grow to hate). They’ll see it doesn’t
work and everything will be back to normal.
This experiment
was the work of Vatican II, which had been
convened in Rome to let some fresh air into the Church.
On that
Sunday, the priest entered the sanctuary for Mass, faced the people, and
used a great deal of contemporary language. I did not like it from the
start. Something was wrong—very wrong! I have since learned the
wisdom behind the modern adage, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
Thank God for conservative priests! My pastor kept the High Mass as it
was—celebrated on the High Altar—and that was to remain
until I went to high school.
Meanwhile, in religion class, which was always interactive, we were
discussing other Churches. Sister told us about the Greek Orthodox
Church—the Church we could go to if there was not a Catholic Church in
a town (but we could not receive Communion). She also told us about the
Polish National Catholic Church and the Old Catholic Movement in Europe.
I was puzzled yet fascinated by these Churches which were Catholic
Churches
yet not part of the Roman Catholic Church.
Out with the Old, in with the Odd
After grade school, arrangements were made for me to attend a minor seminary. I would begin my studies for the priesthood that fall at the Capuchin Seminary of Saint Laurence in Mount Calvary, Wisconsin.
I loved the seminary but was deeply troubled to discover that the
liturgical experimentation
begun in ’64 was now in full tilt.
Gone were the days of the majestic liturgies of my childhood. Choir,
organ, and holy dignity were replaced by guitars, folk songs, and
kicking back.
Even then, I was enough of a musician to know that
the tunes were infantile. And the texts with their nonsense syllables
were a far cry from the great sacred masterworks I remembered adorning
the sacred liturgy at home.
My voiced concerns over these innovations were often met with
ridicule. You are simply not being relevant,
they told me. Still,
how could one square the ancient tradition of the Church with these
novelties? I heard stories of churches being ripped apart and made
modern.
A Second Option
In the summer between my junior and senior years of high school I
decided to make contact with the Greek Orthodox priest in Casper.
Father Petros cordially invited me to attend the liturgy on the Feast of
the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist (my patron). Here I experienced
for the first time the riches of the Eastern Orthodox Church: the icons,
the Byzantine chant, the liturgy itself. While different from that
which I had previously known, the service was beautiful to behold.
Obviously, this liturgy had not fallen prey to innovations and
experimentation.
I spoke with Father at length and he gave me some
things to read. The thought in my mind as I left Church that day was,
These people really are part of the Catholic Church, the Schism of
1054 not withstanding!
That year, at school I studied more about the Orthodox Church, and in my reading I again came upon the Old Catholic Movement of which I had first heard so long before. During my senior year, I was informed that I would be continuing my studies at Saint Thomas Seminary in Denver, Colorado. The Bishop of Cheyenne made all of the arrangements and my studies continued—bringing me closer to my goal of priesthood.
My first service in the exquisitely beautiful seminary chapel proved to be unforgettable. I can still picture all of us freshmen standing together in our new cassocks, collars, and surplices. How enjoyable it was to begin classes, to enter into the lively discussions, and to realize with each passing month that my dream of becoming a priest was coming closer.
Sadly, a tragic reality confronted me which I could not dismiss. My
worries about the Church were no longer merely liturgical. I remember
the rector of the seminary saying in a New Testament Class that he
would not be surprised if one day they found the bones of Jesus
!
My spiritual directors, who were otherwise quite good, downplayed all of
this and assured me that things were still on track
in the
Church.
During this time, I studied music at the University of Denver. The
diocese was training me as a church musician. I also held a Sunday
field education
job in a parish where I worked as organist and
choirmaster. I managed to maintain a degree of sanity here by bringing
some of the best sacred music back into the Church (alas, all of this
was lost when the new pastor came in).
In my senior year of college something wonderful happened. A young Orthodox priest from the Transfiguration Church started coming to the seminary. He wanted to take some classes, and in the end, team-taught a course in Eastern Orthodox spirituality with a Uniate priest. To experience the sobriety and spiritual insight of this man, Father Dragan Filipovich, was a turning point for me.
No longer was theology a dry science
but rather a living
reality. This young priest displayed a great love for the sacred, for
Christian antiquity, and for the truth. He gave me my first copy of
The Orthodox Church by Timothy Ware, Great
Lent by Alexander Schmemann, and also my first copy of the
classic book, The Way of a Pilgrim.
I was hooked! The joy of Liturgy at Transfiguration Church was
diminished only by the fact that, as a non-Orthodox, I could not receive
Holy Communion. Meanwhile, as my formation
for the Catholic
priesthood continued, I found myself more and more out of step in my
previous setting.
One day, the Dean of the School of Theology called me in and informed
me that because I wore a long-sleeved white shirt with French cuffs and
cufflinks under my cassock, I really was not the kind of person the
new
Church needed. He suggested I change my ways.
The Old Catholic Movement
Before taking Holy Orders, I decided to take some time off to consider my situation. After all, I had been in school for almost eleven years studying for the priesthood. I asked for and was granted a one-year leave of absence to think, pray, and study. Among other things, this research once again put me in touch with the Old Catholic Church. It seemed that in this Church, one could be catholic (not Roman) and orthodox without giving up one’s Western traditions.
I found the Old Catholics to be committed to returning their Church to its roots in Orthodoxy. Much impressed, I contacted the Old Catholic Archbishop in upstate New York and went for an interview. His community proved to be a praying, working fellowship dedicated to the principles of orthodox doctrine and the living out of a strong liturgical life. Had I found a home?
Historically, Old Catholicism began as a reaction to the promulgation of the Dogma of Papal Infallibility in 1871 at the First Vatican Council. Having watched Pope Paul VI preside over what many considered to be the disintegration of the Roman Church, the collapse of the Catholic school system, the decimation of the religious orders, and the loss of the Catholic hospital system, I was already questioning this dogma. The Old Catholics were seeking to revive the old or ancient Catholic Faith from before the Schism and Protestant Reformation, and to bring their group into union with that Church which had remained true to the Apostolic Faith, namely the Orthodox Church.
This made sense to me. I sought and was accepted for Holy Orders in the Old Catholic Church. First ordained a deacon, then a priest, I was immediately sent back to Denver to begin a work. What an exciting and incredibly busy year 1978 turned out to be! I started a parish with no money, no resources, and no people. Within the next year and a half, however, a viable mission had begun. It was made up of friends, acquaintances, and people who had heard about us by chance. Most were from the Roman Catholic background; some had come from the Episcopal Church or elsewhere.
We all had at least one thing in common: the desire to worship the
transcendent God in a traditional Christian way. We were all tired of
subculture liturgies
: Masses for children, teenagers, gays, and
so on. Most of those who came to us at the first realized our worship
had to be God-centered, not man-centered. In those early years a strong
family spirit developed—as it turned out, a common characteristic
of Orthodox parishes.
So, with salary from secular employment, an inheritance, and the kind gifts of parishioners, we began to build Saint Augustine’s parish. First we met in parishioners’ homes. Then we rented space. Finally we were given hospitality by the Episcopal Church. In the meantime I had established a choral group, The Abbey Singers, with the goal of restoring the great treasury of sacred music to the liturgy of the Church. People came at first to hear the choir, but they heard more than music. They heard the Orthodox Faith sung and preached. Here they received the historical stuff of Orthodoxy.
In 1983 we were strong enough to step out in faith and purchase our own building. A fine Edwardian Gothic structure of stone and brick, which had been the mother Church of the Lutheran Missouri Synod in the area, became the new home of Saint Augustine’s parish.
Full Circle
Now that we had become established
we could do out part in
pursuing a relationship with the Orthodox Church. I had the opportunity
to meet with Bishop Basil of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA), who
was quite encouraging. Another breakthrough came in 1985, when Father
Alexey Young, a priest of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, came to
Denver to take a parish. He was fascinated by our story and our desire
to become Orthodox. Having a missionary heart, Father Alexey
immediately set to work on the task of bringing us together. A meeting
with the Synod of the Russian Church Abroad was arranged in New York, to
which our Old Catholic Archbishop and I went. While the meeting was at
first encouraging, our petition did not go anywhere. The doctrinal
statement of the Old Catholic Church and our liturgical books were
examined, and since they all conformed to the 1870 decree of the Holy
Synod of Moscow authorizing a Western Rite, we at least had common
ground.
We took great comfort in the discovery that the Eastern Orthodox Church, in her desire to bring all to the Faith of Christ, had reclaimed what was rightfully hers, the liturgy of the pre-schism Orthodox West—the Mass of Saint Gregory the Great. She had made this available to her new children coming from western backgrounds. What a loving Mother, indeed! Not only did this decision manifest the missionary spirit of the Church, but it restored a crucial cultural balance which had been upset by the Roman Church’s departure from Catholic unity in 1054. It showed the catholicity of the Eastern Orthodox Church—unity within diversity of rite.
After further research, and under the guidance of Father Alexey and Father Michael Trigg, a former Episcopal clergyman who had converted to Orthodoxy and founded a Western Rite parish in California, we found ourselves at the threshold of the ancient Apostolic See of Antioch. The doors were widely opened to us and, on the Feast of Saint Augustine of Hippo in late August of 1990, Bishop Antoun, representing Metropolitan Philip, Primate of the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America, received over 100 of our people by the Sacrament of Holy Chrismation.
I had the great joy of celebrating the Mass of my childhood with
incense, Gregorian chants, the stately movements of the sacred
ministers in our brocade vestments, the polyphony of the choir echoing
through the Church
—all within the ancient, undivided, Holy
Orthodox Church. We were truly home!
Within Western Christianity today, many people feel alienated from their respective Churches. Catholics, Anglicans, and Protestants alike are experiencing a wholesale sellout of values once held immutable. These values are being traded for secular humanism and situation ethics.
Brothers and sisters, if this brief account of my journey and that of my people has struck a chord in you, please seek out Orthodoxy. This is the only Church that can historically substantiate its claim to being the True Church of the New Testament. The Church is true to the Divine Mandate and cares for you and for your soul. Come and share your needs with us. I can assure you, you will receive the same encouraging welcome we did.