Having said that we are "Catholics", we must now state that we are NOT Roman Catholics, but Catholics who are identified as being Eastern Catholics. AS Catholics, we Eastern and Roman Catholics share the same faith and have the same seven sacraments. The difference is that we Eastern Catholics have a different way or rite of expressing our faith in regards to Liturgy and customs.
At the Last Supper, after Jesus
changed bread and wine into His own Body and Blood, He told His disciples
to "Do this in Memory of me." This they did. As the disciples brought the
Gospel to different parts of the world, they adapted ceremonies of the
Liturgy to the customs and music of that people. In the end, four great
centers of Christianity emerged with distinctive Christian customs, but
the same faith. These centers were located in the great cities of Jerusalem,
Antioch, Rome and Alexandria. A couple of centuries later when the capital
of the Roman empire was moved to the Eastern city of Byzantium and renamed
Constastantinople, an adaptation of the Antioch way of celebrating Liturgy
was made. Thus a new center of Christianity arose in Constantinople and
her ritual became known as the Byzantine Rite. From Constantinople the
Slavic peoples of Eastern Europe were converted by Sts. Cyril and Methodius
and naturally followed the Byzantine Rite. Today the Byzantine Rite is
subdivided into ecclesiastical jurisdictions based on ethnic groupings,
such as Greek, Ukrainian, Ruthenian, Russian, etc.