Difference between revisions of "Joseph Julian Overbeck"

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(New page: '''Joseph Julian Overbeck''' (1820-1905) was an Orthodox layman who played an important role in the development of Western Rite Orthodoxy. Overbeck was born in Bonn, Germany, and att...)
 
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==Sources==
 
==Sources==
 
*"Overbeck, J.J." in ''The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity'' (2001).
 
*"Overbeck, J.J." in ''The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity'' (2001).
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[[Category:Western Rite]]

Revision as of 18:44, January 16, 2009

Joseph Julian Overbeck (1820-1905) was an Orthodox layman who played an important role in the development of Western Rite Orthodoxy.

Overbeck was born in Bonn, Germany, and attended the Univeristy of Bonn where he became a specialist in Syriac. Odained to the Catholic priesthood, he did further studies at the Vatican Library and became a professor at Bonn. Disillusioned with the claims of the Roman Church, he left his position at Bonn and began attending Lutheran services. In 1857, he moved to England where he married and taught German in Oxford and later at Staff College, Camberley.

His transaltions of Ephrem the Syrian sparked an interest in the Orthodox Church. In 1864, Overbeck was chrismated into the Orthodox Church. He then published, in 1866, Catholic Orthodoxy and Anglo-Catholicism, which contained the groundings for his work for the next twenty years. A year later, be began publishing a periodical, Orthodox Catholic Review, aimed at putting forward Orthodoxy and rejecting Catholicism and Protestantism.

1867 saw Overbeck, with 122 signatures from the Oxford Movement, petition the Church of Russia for the establishment of a Western Rite church in full communion with the Eastern Rite. A seven-member synodal commission was then formed, and invited Overbeck to attend. The idea was approved, and Overbeck set about submitting a draft of the proposed Western liturgy. The base of Overbeck's submission was the Tridentine Mass of 1570, which added in an epiclesis and the Trisagion hymn. This rite was submitted in 1871, and was examined and approved by the commission. Overbeck focused his efforts on the Old Catholic movement, which had rejected Papal Infallibility. He continued to engage in polemics with Catholics, Anglicans, and Orthodox converts using the Byzantine rite.

In 1876, Overbeck issued an appeal to the various Holy Synods, travelling to Constantinople in 1879. There he met the Ecumenical Patriarch, who authorised him to deliver sermons and apologetics. In 1881, some success was had when the Ecumenical Patriarchate agreed that the West had a right to a Western church and rite.

However, it went no further. Overbeck's marriage after his Catholic ordination was a canonical impediment to the priesthood, the Holy Synod of Greece vetoed his scheme amongst the Orthodox Churches, the Orthodox Catholic Review ended its run, and, by 1892, he admitted failure due to the Church of Greece of the time. Overbeck reposed in 1905.

Works

  • Catholic orthodoxy and Anglo-Catholicism, a word about intercommunion between the English and the Orthodox Churches (1866).
  • Liturgia missæ Orthodoxo-catholicæ occidentalis. The liturgy of the Western orthodox-Catholic mass (1871).

Sources

  • "Overbeck, J.J." in The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity (2001).