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Western Rite in the Nineteenth Century

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==Negotiations==
Over the next few years, Overbeck mainly focused on the development of the Old Catholic movement in Europe (which had gone into [[schism]] from Rome over the new [[dogma]] of [[Papal Infallibility]] promulgated at the First Vatican Council), probably hoping to find fertile ground for the establishment of his liturgical use, a Western liturgical rite within the Orthodox Church. In his magazine, he engaged in polemics with both Roman Catholics and Anglicans, as well as Orthodox converts who used the [[Byzantine rite]].
In 1876, he reiterated his design and issued an ''Appeal to the Patriarchs and Holy Synods of the Orthodox Catholic Church''. Three years later, he travelled to Constantinople to meet the Ecumenical Patriarch, [[Ioachim III of Constantinople|Ioachim III]], who gave him authorization for delivering sermons and addresses in defense of Orthodoxy. In August of 1881, the [[Church of Constantinople]] appointed a commission to examine the scheme and made the announcement that "an agreement on certain points has already been reached," recognizing the right of the West to have a Western church and rite as had existed before the [[Great Schism]].
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