Difference between revisions of "Western Rite in the Twentieth Century"

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{{westernrite}}This article is a chronicle of the history of the '''Western Rite in the Twentieth Century'''.
  
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==False Starts==
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In the 20th century, Western Rite Orthodoxy continued:
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:The dream of Western Orthodoxy did not die with Overbeck. In 1911, an Old Catholic bishop, Arnold Harris Mathew, entered into a short lived union with the Patriarchate of Antioch, under Metropolitan [[Gerasimos (Messarah) of Beirut]]. Even though this union was short-lived, it provided a model for future Western groups who would seek to return to Orthodoxy...
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[[Image:Fon-du-Lac Circus.jpg|left|thumb|300px|The so-called “Fon-du-Lac Circus

Revision as of 10:04, June 20, 2006

This article forms part
of the series on the

Western Rite
History
Rule of St. Benedict
Nineteenth Century
Twentieth Century
Criticism
Liturgics
Liturgy of St. Gregory
Liturgy of St. Tikhon
Liturgy of St. Germanus
Sarum Rite
Gallican Rite
Stowe Missal
Service Books
Vestments
Groupings
Antiochian Western Rite Vicariate
Society of St. Basil
Orthodox Church of France
Monasteries
Christminster
Saint Petroc
Holy Name Abbey (Old Calendarist)
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This article is a chronicle of the history of the Western Rite in the Twentieth Century.

False Starts

In the 20th century, Western Rite Orthodoxy continued:

The dream of Western Orthodoxy did not die with Overbeck. In 1911, an Old Catholic bishop, Arnold Harris Mathew, entered into a short lived union with the Patriarchate of Antioch, under Metropolitan Gerasimos (Messarah) of Beirut. Even though this union was short-lived, it provided a model for future Western groups who would seek to return to Orthodoxy...

[[Image:Fon-du-Lac Circus.jpg|left|thumb|300px|The so-called “Fon-du-Lac Circus