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Latin Rite

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:''This is a page regarding the majority rite in the Roman Catholic Church. For the Orthodox [[Western Rite]] based on pre-Vatican reforms, see [[Liturgy of St. Gregory the Great]].'' The '''Latin Rite''' designates the particular [[church]] which developed in western Europe and northern Africa when and where Latin was the language of education, culture, and diplomacy, and also of the [[liturgy]]. It is now present worldwide and is the majority rite within the [[Roman Catholic Church]]. It is distinct from the [[Eastern Rite Catholic]] Churches, whose liturgies use the languages dominant in their areas at the time of their formation, such as [[Church Slavonic]], or a modern language such as Arabic.  ==Interactions with the Orthodox Church==<!--please change this heading, and enlarge this section-->The Latin Rite should being the majority rite of the Roman Catholic Church has caused internal problems, most notably in America, where bishops (who were of the Latin Rite) would not be confused with , for various reasons, accept Eastern Rite Catholic priests or practises, or would attempt to [[latinization|latinise]] the churches, by insisting on the [[filioque]] or [[celibacy|clerical celibacy]]. This caused two large-scale conversions to Orthodoxy: the first led by St. [[Alexis Toth]] into what is now known as the [[Western RiteOCA]], which is a strand of Orthodox Christian worship based on and the liturgical traditions of second into the ancient preespecially-formed [[American Carpatho-Schism Russian Orthodox Church Diocese]], led by Metr. [[Orestes (Chornock) of the WestAgathoniketa|Orestes Chornock]].
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