The ongoing liturgical dispute in the Ernakulam-Angamaly Archeparchy of the Syro-Malabar Church is now entering its fifth year of acute crisis. What began as a disagreement over the direction of the celebrant during Mass has exposed fault lines that run far deeper: questions about how legitimate authority functions in an Eastern Catholic Church, what role the laity plays in liturgical life, and whether Rome's insistence on uniformity can coexist with the organic diversity that makes the Eastern Catholic tradition beautiful.
Let me be honest about what each side gets wrong.
The Synod of the Syro-Malabar Church is correct that it has the canonical authority to regulate the liturgy of its churches. The unified rite is theologically coherent and historically grounded. But authority exercised without pastoral sensitivity is not the fullness of the Gospel — and the speed with which the decision was implemented, without adequate preparation of the faithful, created an unnecessary rupture.
The dissenting parishes, on the other hand, have allowed legitimate liturgical concern to slide into a resistance that in some cases has become indistinguishable from defiance of legitimate episcopal authority. When a bishop is prevented from celebrating Mass in his own cathedral, something has gone gravely wrong — and no argument about tradition can justify it.
The path forward begins with the truth: that both the Synod and the dissenting community love the same ancient church, worship the same risen Lord, and have allowed a secondary matter — however important — to obscure that fundamental unity. It is time for both to return to the table, without preconditions, and let the Holy Spirit do what human intransigence has prevented.