Details, Explanation and Meaning About Latin Rite

Latin Rite Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Latin Rite is the name given to the rituals, customs and laws followed by the Roman Catholic Church. Of the many Latin rites of the past, three have survived: the Roman rite (the more common), and the Mozarabic and Ambrosian rites, used mostly in Lombardy (Italy). Unfortunately, "Roman Catholic" is an ambiguous term. Sometimes it is used to refer to all churches in the Catholic Communion, which are in full communion with the Pope and acknowledge that all Christians owe obedience to the Pope, including the Eastern-rite Catholic churches. But in the present context it means the body of Catholics in "western" countries who are subject directly to the Pope in his role as Patriarch of the West (about 98 percent of all Catholics), and not to the Eastern-Rite Catholics who are indirectly subject to the Pope by being directly subject to the Eastern-Rite Catholic Patriarchs, Major Archbishops, and Metropolitan Archbishops. The differences between the Latin Rite and the Eastern Rites are not in matters considered infallible dogmas, but are in canon law, discipline, and custom, the Eastern Rites following usages similar to those of the Orthodox churches.

Latin-rite Catholic priests must be celibate. Eastern-rite Catholic priests, like Eastern Orthodox priests, may marry before they are ordained, but if they do so, they may not become bishops. In Latin-Rite Catholic jurisdictions, the sacrament of confirmation may, with some exceptions, be licitly performed only by a bishop, and is usually given only to persons old enough to understand the importance of the sacrament. In Eastern-rite Catholic churches, that sacrament is administered by parish priests to newly baptized infants via the rite of chrismation.

The Latin Rite is so-called because until the 1960s, Latin was used as the liturgical language in Catholic churches in "Western" countries. The Second Vatican Council decided that the vernacular would be allowed as an optional alternative to Latin.

See also: Catholicism, Particular church, Anglican Use

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