Why do Orthodox Christians “cross themselves” different than Roman Catholics?

June 2015

They touch their right shoulder first, then their left, whereas the Roman Catholics first touch their left shoulder. Is this difference important? Does it make any difference?

Orthodox cross themselves from right to left. first we will describe the mechanics of making the cross, then explain why it is indeed important that we make the sign of the cross correctly.

“Placing the cross on oneself”

  1. We place our thumb and first two fingers together in a point, and our last we fingers flat against our palm. The three fingers together represent the Holy Trinity – Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and the two fingers in the palm represent the two natures of Christ.
  2. We touch our forehead, then our belly, tracing the vertical part of the cross.
  3. From our belly, we bring our hand up to our right shoulder, touching it.
  4. We finish placing the cross on ourself by touching our left shoulder.

The act of “Placing the cross on oneself” is a request for a blessing from God. We make if from right to left to mirror the actions of the priest when he blesses us. The priest, looking at the parishioners, blesses from left to right. Therefore, the parishioners, putting on the sign of the cross on themselves, do it from right to left.

Because the Lord separated the sheep from the goats, putting the faithful sheep on His right side, and the goats on the left, the Church always treats the right side as the preferred side. We only cross ourselves with our RIGHT hand. The priest, when blessing a person, first touches or points to their RIGHT side, then their left. Also the censing of the Holy Table in the Altar is always done from the RIGHT side first; censing of the Ikonostasis, the Congregation and of the Church itself always begins with the right side. The priest always gives communion with his RIGHT hand, even if he is left handed. There are other examples of this right side preference.

When a parent makes the sign of the cross over a child, they will cross them from left to right, just as the priest blesses. When they make the sign of the cross over themselves, they would do it, logically, the other way.

The Catholic Encyclopedia states that in the Roman Catholic Church, the faithful crossed themselves from right to left, just as the Orthodox do, until the 15th or 16th century. They must explain why they have changed an ancient and apostolic tradition. We cannot answer as to their motivations.

Is it important to cross ourselves a particular way? In a word, YES. We do not have the authority to choose willy-nilly what parts of the Christina Tradition we want to follow. Our fathers, and countless saints crossed themselves from right to left. Ancient icons show Christ or bishops beginning a blessing from right to left. the right side is referred to in a preferential way many times in scripture and our sacred hymns What should we want to change?

Thanks for Fr Alexander Lebedev for providing the majority of the ideas in this answer.

Source:

CATEGORIES
TAGS
Share This

COMMENTS

Wordpress (57)
  • comment-avatar
    TomD 9 years

    I don’t know why we Catholics changed, but we can always change back. This might be the easiest of our differences to reconcile.

  • comment-avatar
    _lawrenc1 9 years

    The only “correction” I would add is in using the right hand to bless ourselves. As someone who has had his right arm in a sling for months due to injury, my priest instructed me that since our body is a whole, not a separation, then if our right hand is unable to make the Sign of the Cross on ourselves, then using the left hand is permissible under those circumstances until the right arm is healed enough to do it with the right arm again.

  • comment-avatar
    Giovanni 9 years

    “Our fathers, and countless saints crossed themselves from right to left”

    And our Fathers and countless saints in the Coptic and Syriac Orthodox Churches crossed themselves from left to right.

  • comment-avatar
    James Carvin 9 years

    oh boy. something else meant as a blessing that we can fight over.

  • comment-avatar
    Mykolas Kasiunas 9 years

    I’m Greek Catholic and we make the sign of the Cross the same way as our Eastern Orthodox friends do. I wonder why Armenians, Maronites, Chaldeans make the sign of the Cross the same as the Roman Catholics do.

  • comment-avatar
    Giovanni 9 years

    The point is it doesn’t matter. Saintly people have used one or the other.

  • comment-avatar

    944533 365902It is difficult to get knowledgeable folks on this subject, but the truth is be understood as what happens youre preaching about! Thanks 622653

  • comment-avatar

    1950 916822Aw, it was a actually excellent post. In concept I should put in writing comparable to this in addition – spending time and actual effort to manufacture a excellent article but exactly what do I say I procrastinate alot and no indicates uncover a approach to go carried out. 745639

  • comment-avatar

    1edifying

  • comment-avatar

    gay video chat sites realty to dirtyrouletty https://newgaychat.com/

  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar

    gay video chat sites realty to dirtyrouletty https://gaychatspots.com/

  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar

    2oversight

  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar

    connecting singles online members https://freewebdating.net/

  • comment-avatar
  • comment-avatar
  • Disqus ( )