| That calls
for a bit of history: After the Ascension of Christ,
the disciples went, as commanded, all over the world,
teaching the Gospel, baptizing in the name of Trinity,
and founding new churches. One of those places was
Antioch in Syria, where, as noted in The Acts of the
Apostles, the followers of Jesus were first called
Christians. These churches, founded locally, used the
local languages and, in addition to baptism, celebrated
the Eucharist as Christ has commanded.
These churches kept in
contact with each other through visits and
correspondence, the most notable correspondent and
visitor was Apostle Paul. When St. Paul was returning
to Jerusalem from his third apostolic journey, he found
a thriving Christian community at Tyre in Lebanon and
stayed there for a week. This shows how busy the early
Christians were in founding local churches. Some were
under the authority and direction of the Patriarch of
Jerusalem, some under the Patriarch of Antioch, and
later, under the Patriarchs of Constantinople and Rome.
Just as the first Disciples acknowledged the primacy of
Peter, the Patriarchs generally acknowledged the primacy
of his successor, later known as the Pope. Today, our
church looks to the Patriarch of Antioch and all the
East, who, in turn, is subservient to the Pope of Rome.
Our present patriarch, Nasrallah
Boutros Sfeir, has been elevated to the rank of
Cardinal by Pope John Paul II.
Now, back to the
question. A very saintly man named Maron decided to
devote his life to God in solitude of a mountain. This
was some time prior to the middle of the fifth century
A.D. That much is known because his biography was
written in 440 A.D. His solitude did not last long,
for all kinds of people came to him to be cured, both
physically and spiritually. He re-dedicated a nearby
pagan temple to God, and spent much time preaching the
gospel and converting pagans. On account of his miracles
and saintly life, he was canonized a saint. Because of
the intensity of his teaching and the example if his
holy life, many converts organized themselves into
monasteries and called themselves 'Maronite" to show the
ideal which they attempted to follow. The earliest ones
were trained and directed by St. Maron himself. Among
those he trained were St. Simon Stylites and St.
Eusebius. His influence spread over a large area of
Asia Minor, including Lebanon and Syria. It is no
surprise that many Christians called themselves
"Maronites."
In the early days of the
spread of Christianity, theological questions were often
fought over wither bitter intensity. In the years
preceding 451 A.D., many Christians pondered over the
nature of Christ. Was he God? Some Christians reasoned
that the divine nature of Christ was so powerful that it
annihilated the human. They were called the
"Monophysites," meaning "one nature". The Ecumenical
Council of Chalcedon in 451 decreed that monophysitism
was a heresy and that Christ was both fully human and
fully God. That is the doctrine of the Catholic Church
to this day. However, after the Council, some of the
monophysites attempted to coerce the others to believe
in the single nature of Christ, and to prove their
point, they slew 350 Maronite monks and wounded an equal
number. Such is the stuff from which unyielding martyrs
are made, and Chalcedonianism and Maronitism became, and
remain, synonymous. The Superior of the Monastery of
St. Maron addressed an appeal to Pope St. Hormizdas,
relating the event and asking him to rise up and defend
them. The letter is addressed to "Hormizdas, the
Universal Patriarch, who sits in the See of Peter, the
Prince of the Apostles."
That was the first
document showing the fact that the Pope was acknowledged
as the supreme pontiff. During later years, there were
occasional strains in the relationship between the
Maronites and the Roman pontiff. Some of them were
caused by the language barriers: neither side understood
the other. Also in those days, travel and
correspondence were fraught with many dangers and
delays. In order to cultivate better correspondence
between the Church of Rome and the churches of the East,
two successive popes, Paul III and Pius IV, to found a
Maronite College in Rome, where Maronite priests could
study Western languages and liturgy. Finally, on July
5, 1584, Pope Gregory XIII, acting on further instance
of Patriarch Sarkis, founded the Maronite college of
Rome, where Maronite priests could study.
In recent years
("recent," in the context of the history of
Christianity), Pope Leo XIII wrote the Apostolic Letter Orientalium
Dignitas (1894),
in which he sought to safeguard the significance of the
Eastern traditions for the whole Church and 100 years
later (1994), Pope John Paul II wrote an Apostolic
Letter, Orientale
Lumen, in
which he states: "Since ... we believe that the
venerable and ancient tradition of the Eastern churches
is an integral part of the heritage of Christ's Church,
the first need for Catholics is to
be familiar with that tradition, so
as to be nourished by it ..."
The persecution mentioned
above was unfortunately typical of what happened to the
Maronites over the centuries. As it happened to almost
all practicing Christians under the rule of Islam and
the Turks, the Maronites had to endure persecution. But
persecution from without has been the secret that
motivated Christians from the very beginning. In part
due to the need for survival, the Maronites took refuge
in the mountains of Lebanon. Like any refugee
community, they jealously guarded and cultivated their
age-old traditions. Today, most of the Maronites are
Lebanese, or of Lebanese descent.
One of the most precious
traditions that they kept was the use of Aramaic (the
language that Christ and his disciples spoke among
themselves) in some parts of the liturgy. Today,
during the mass, at the moment of consecrations, the
priest chants the narrative of the Institution in
Aramaic so
that we presumably are hearing not only the story of the
Last Supper, but we hear it
in the language the Christ Himself used!
Written by
Dr. Robert W. Hartle |