Amount of Rome's Control on Eastern Catholics

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What little I know of the Coptic CC does place the Franciscans in the picture, at least insofar as (if memory serves) the OFM ceded some its churches (maybe 6?) in Egypt to the Copts to help give them a start. I suppose they may have tried to impose some latinizations, but considering that OFM are the Custodians of the Holy Land, one would think they would have thought twice about doing so. Plus (again, if memory serves) it was the OFM that was instrumental in preserving the Mozarabic Rite in Spain, so their record would seem to say that they respect other liturgical traditions.
Their record is not completely untarnished. It was a Franciscan bishop, Matthew Saraceni, who completely abolished the Byzantine rite in Rossano in Calabria in 1461 (Fortescue, The Uniate Eastern Churches, p. 109). The Franciscan clergy of Galatina took over the Byzantine churches in that town and enforced the Latin liturgy in 1507 (Fortescue, op. cit., 111).
 
Their record is not completely untarnished. It was a Franciscan bishop, Matthew Saraceni, who completely abolished the Byzantine rite in Rossano in Calabria in 1461 (Fortescue, The Uniate Eastern Churches, p. 109). The Franciscan clergy of Galatina took over the Byzantine churches in that town and enforced the Latin liturgy in 1507 (Fortescue, op. cit., 111).
Interesting. I suppose I should note here that I wasn’t trying to defend the Franciscans. History indeed has shown that they, too, have had their darker moments. But of course that reference from Fortescue did not involve the Commissariat of the Holy Land, (I seem to think Egypt falls under that particular jurisdiction), which seems to (generally) have a bit more sensitivity.

As an aside, did you notice the surname of that bishop? I wonder if that’s what got the better of him?
 
That’s not what I am referring to at all.

I am referring to the allegation that a Pope imposed elements of the*** Byzantine*** tradition on the Coptic Catholics of Egypt.
Regarding the Coptic Catholic Liturgy of Saint Mark (Saint Cyril) from the Catholic Encyclopedia, dated before the recensions were published in 1941, etc.:
“A few prayers have been added to the original Greek Liturgy, such as a very definite act of faith in the Real Presence said by the priest before his Communion.”
Fortescue, Adrian. “The Alexandrine Liturgy.” The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907.

newadvent.org/cathen/01303b.htm
 
Interesting. I suppose I should note here that I wasn’t trying to defend the Franciscans. History indeed has shown that they, too, have had their darker moments. But of course that reference from Fortescue did not involve the Commissariat of the Holy Land, (I seem to think Egypt falls under that particular jurisdiction), which seems to (generally) have a bit more sensitivity.

As an aside, did you notice the surname of that bishop? I wonder if that’s what got the better of him?
lol I certainly have noticed - it could have a lot to do with it.
 
Dear brother Malphono,
What little I know of the Coptic CC does place the Franciscans in the picture, at least insofar as (if memory serves) the OFM ceded some its churches (maybe 6?) in Egypt to the Copts to help give them a start. I suppose they may have tried to impose some latinizations, but considering that OFM are the Custodians of the Holy Land, one would think they would have thought twice about doing so. Plus (again, if memory serves) it was the OFM that was instrumental in preserving the Mozarabic Rite in Spain, so their record would seem to say that they respect other liturgical traditions.
The Latinizations were not spearheaded by the Franciscans, but by indigenous Catholic Copts. The Catholic Copts petitioned Pope Leo XIII to establish a Patriarchate in 1895. Pope Leo approved it, and the ensuing Synod headed by Cyril Maqar introduced a host of Latinizations in the new Coptic Catholic Patriarchate.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Aside from Pope Leo XIII, there were earlier Popes who showed genuine concern for the maintenance of Eastern and Oriental Traditions.

Pope Gregory XIII established the Greek college in Rome in the 16th century with the stipulation that the students be instructed in the Greek language, theology, literature, and ecclesiastical rites. He also forbade the use of Latin in the college. After his death, Latinizers (not necessarily the Popes) basically overturned the original purpose of the college and started to use it as a tool for Latinization.

Pope Clement VIII tried to establish a Coptic college in Rome in the 17th century with similar goals, but it never fully materialized.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Dear brother Michael,
I have problems with the assertion.

Not because I am unwilling to believe it, but that I cannot that I cannot see how a bishop of Rome in the 19th century could be so stupid. Ninth century perhaps, but not the nineteenth.

Plus, now that you mention it, the Coptic Encyclopedia could only be second hand information since the matter does not concern the Coptic church at all, but the Catholic missions in Egypt. That makes it apocryphal unless supported by corroborating evidence.

I think the account is not genuine.
That’s a very sensible opinion.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Dear brother Cecilianus,
In that the bishop is no less bound to obey the Supreme Pontiff “in all things, short of very evident sin or heresy”. Example being Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre’s disobedience to the Holy See regarding the 1989 episcopal ordinations for which the SSPX ended up in schism. I can’t think of an example in the East because frankly the Pope has little reason to meddle with us, but if a metropolitan were to insist on horrible Latinizations or if he were to try to alter the Liturgy in a radical way I am pretty sure the Pope would intervene, and that he would have the right to do so.
I agree with you, but would not consider that viewpoint as tantatmount to the Absolutist Petrine position. I’ll give you an example, which I mentioned in an earlier post. A few months ago, I debated some Latins in the Traditional Catholic Forum who claimed that the Pope’s authority depends on his will. I opposed that position by stating that the Pope’s authority does not depend on his will, but on the needs of the Church, and does not and cannot go beyond that. Trust me, I had a hard time of it, but the ones I was debating eventually came around to the position I proposed. I would say that the ones I was debating held an Absolutist Petrine position, while I was proposing a High Petrine position. The Absolutist Petrine position interprets jurisdiction in terms of control (i.e., it is a matter of the Pope’s will), while the High Petrine position interprets jurisdiction in terms of solicitude (i.e., his authority only extends as far as what builds up the Church). Indeed, a great Latin Saint and Doctor, St. Robert Bellarmine, asserted that if the Pope tears down the Church, we are bound by conscience to oppose him.

Here is a statement from HH JP2 of thrice-blessed memory:
Inasmuch as the Church is a group of human beings called to carry out in history God’s plan for the salvation of the world, power in her appears as an indispensable requirement of mission. Nevertheless, the analogical value of the language used allows power to be conceived in the sense provided by Jesus’ maxim on “power in order to serve” and by the Gospel idea of the pastoral leader. The power required by the mission of Peter and his successors is identified with this authoritative leadership guaranteed of divine assistance, which Jesus himself called the ministry (service) of a shepherd.

Jurisdiction is power, but it is power to serve and only to serve. Obedience to that kind of authority does not coincide with the Absolutist Petrine excesses.

I do have a recent example for you of papal intervention in an Oriental Church. I forget the exact dates, but it concerned the Chaldean Church. After their Patriarch passed away (of happy memory, though I forget his name), there was a delay in electing a new Patriarch. The canonical time limit had expired, and after a few weeks even beyond that time limit, the Holy Father finally put his foot down and called the Chaldean bishops to account for the delay. Would you regard situation as a matter of papal control, or a matter of papal solicitude? In any case, I’ve always believed (as a Catholic) that the Pope has the right to enforce a universal law of the Church if local Churches are found to be disobeying or contradicting that law. Universal laws are there for the good of the Church universal, and the Pope’s enforcement of it, I truly believe, is evidence of solicitude and care for the Church, not control.

CONTINUED
 
CONTINUED
An example where I am not sure about is the enforcing of clerical celibacy on the Ruthenian Church in the United States. Did Fr. Alexis Toth, a professor of canon law, do the right thing or not by breaking communion with Rome for Orthodoxy in order to preserve the Eastern rite among his flock (who have a canonical right to the rite by the canons of the Union of Brest) in Minneapolis? I don’t know, and I can’t answer that. On the one hand, I cannot conceive it as anything but a sin to disobey the Pope or your local bishop unless obeying him would be sin or heresy - just as it would be a sin for a monk to disobey his abbot. Whether the Pope is overstepping his bounds is a matter of his conscience, not that of the faithful. On the other hand, Archbishop Ireland clearly violated Fr. Toth’s canonical rights, and rights exist because they are good for the faithful not just because we have a right to them.
I am certainly sympathetic to the Traditions of my Byzantine brethren, but I oppose schism. I don’t understand why the Pope gets such guff over the matter. The blame rests squarely with Archbishop Ireland - and not just Archbishop Ireland, but basically all the North American bishops at the time. In fact, the Pope mitigated the situation for the Easterns. Ea Semper is couched in language which made the prohibition dependant on the condition of the times, and was thus not an absolute bar to ordination of married men in North America forever and ever. Further, as a result of the whole debacle, the Pope gave the Easterns their own bishop within the territory of another bishop. All this did not sit too well with the Latin bishops. Many people really have a misunderstanding of the papacy if they think it is all about control. Vatican 1 asserts that the Pope cannot impede the divinely-given authority of local bishops. And every Latin bishop in North American at the time really did not want any married priests in their districts. What could the Pope do? The Pope really did as much as a he could for the Eastern Catholics, given the circumstances. And I think he deserves a thank you instead of being villified by certain circles in Eastern Christendom (Catholic and Orthodox).
Yet on the other hand, schism from the Holy See is a mortal sin, as Pope Boniface defined in Unam Sanctam: “We declare, say, define, and pronounce that it is absolutely necessary for the salvation of every human creature to be subject to the Roman Pontiff.” That statement is about as universal (it concerns every human creature) and ex cathedra as they come.
I am not altogether certain I can accept Unam Sanctam as an ex cathedra declaration - just for the reason that it was not addressed to the universal Church, but to King Philip of France. I can go as far as admitting that it was an infallible teaching of the ordinary Magisterium, but I find it hard to see how it could be an ex cathedra decree - for the reason mentioned above. Of course, I assume that “subject to the Roman Pontiff” was meant by Pope Boniface to mean “subject to the orthodox teaching of the Roman Pontiff.” I mean, it is certainly not necessary for salvation that we jump off a bridge if the Pope says so, so the “subjection” must refer to only those things that are actually necessary for salvation, as the Decree itself states (I guess you can say it is self-referential).
From the indefectability of the Church, I have a very difficult time conceiving how the Pope could knowingly overstep his bounds and act tyrannically. I do not think he could abolish the Byzantine Rite and impose the Latin one universally, but I also do not think the Holy Spirit would ever let him try. I cannot think of a historicaI example where such an overreaching did occur - do you know any?
I certainly agree with you. The reason I agree is because of the principle I mentioned earlier - the Pope’s authority only extends as far as what builds up the Church. Abolishing the Rites of a particular Church does not build up, but destroy. Ergo, he has no authority to do such a thing.

And, no. I cannot think of an example of such an overreaching - objectively speaking, that is. There was a time - a loooong time - when miaphysite theology was not yet distinguished from monophyisitism. Hence, I know the Maronites had to bear the burden of destroying a lot of their Syriac Orthodox heritage. But this was a matter of ignorance on the part of a Pope, not a matter of consciously opposing what is orthodox.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Aside from Pope Leo XIII, there were earlier Popes who showed genuine concern for the maintenance of Eastern and Oriental Traditions.

Pope Gregory XIII established the Greek college in Rome in the 16th century with the stipulation that the students be instructed in the Greek language, theology, literature, and ecclesiastical rites. He also forbade the use of Latin in the college. After his death, Latinizers (not necessarily the Popes) basically overturned the original purpose of the college and started to use it as a tool for Latinization.

Pope Clement VIII tried to establish a Coptic college in Rome in the 17th century with similar goals, but it never fully materialized.

Blessings,
Marduk
Also Clement VIII was the Pope at the time of the Union of Brest (1595 Poland-Lithuania) and also supported the work of the Jesuits to bring the Syro-Malabar Christians of India into union with Rome, Synod of Diamper (1599) but did not confirm the latinizing decrees.

spuscizna.org/spuscizna/union-brest.html
 
I do have a recent example for you of papal intervention in an Oriental Church. I forget the exact dates, but it concerned the Chaldean Church. After their Patriarch passed away (of happy memory, though I forget his name), there was a delay in electing a new Patriarch. The canonical time limit had expired, and after a few weeks even beyond that time limit, the Holy Father finally put his foot down and called the Chaldean bishops to account for the delay. Would you regard situation as a matter of papal control, or a matter of papal solicitude? In any case, I’ve always believed (as a Catholic) that the Pope has the right to enforce a universal law of the Church if local Churches are found to be disobeying or contradicting that law. Universal laws are there for the good of the Church universal, and the Pope’s enforcement of it, I truly believe, is evidence of solicitude and care for the Church, not control.
Mar Emmanuel was elected in 2003, the same year that his predecessor passed away. Are you sure you don’t mean The Syriac CC? The case there was that Mar Ignatious Peter VII Abdel-Ahad resigned in Feb 2008. After almost a year of no action on the part of the Synod, PP Benedict XVI put his foot down and forced it to convene, when the current Patriarch, Mar Ignatious Yousef Younan was elected in Jan of 2009 (I think I have the dates straight).
 
Also Clement VIII was the Pope at the time of the Union of Brest (1595 Poland-Lithuania) and also supported the work of the Jesuits to bring the Syro-Malabar Christians of India into union with Rome, Synod of Diamper (1599) but did not confirm the latinizing decrees.

spuscizna.org/spuscizna/union-brest.html
Perhaps the latinizations weren’t “confirmed” as such, but still the Syro-Malabars were latinized to the n-th degree, even to the point of moving the Missal from the “epistle” side to the “Gospel” side and back again.
 
Mar Emmanuel was elected in 2003, the same year that his predecessor passed away. Are you sure you don’t mean The Syriac CC? The case there was that Mar Ignatious Peter VII Abdel-Ahad resigned in Feb 2008. After almost a year of no action on the part of the Synod, PP Benedict XVI put his foot down and forced it to convene, when the current Patriarch, Mar Ignatious Yousef Younan was elected in Jan of 2009 (I think I have the dates straight).
Two Chaldean Catholic Patriarchs are listed below with a 13 month vacant See between after HB Patriarch Audishu died:

Patriarch Audishu V Khayyat (1895.03.18 – 1899.11.06)

Patriarch Yousef Emmanuel II Thoma (1900.12.17 – 1947.07.21)
 
Two Chaldean Catholic Patriarchs are listed below with a 13 month vacant See between after HB Patriarch Audishu died:

Patriarch Audishu V Khayyat (1895.03.18 – 1899.11.06)

Patriarch Yousef Emmanuel II Thoma (1900.12.17 – 1947.07.21)
That may well be, but notice that [post=7512414]mardukm[/post] said recent.
 
Dear brother Cecilianus,

I agree with you, but would not consider that viewpoint as tantatmount to the Absolutist Petrine position. I’ll give you an example, which I mentioned in an earlier post. A few months ago, I debated some Latins in the Traditional Catholic Forum who claimed that the Pope’s authority depends on his will. I opposed that position by stating that the Pope’s authority does not depend on his will, but on the needs of the Church, and does not and cannot go beyond that.
I would say that’s a false dichotomy - the Pope’s will depends on the needs of the Church. The only exceptions I can think of would be political issues - for example, the frequent machinations of Renaissance and Medici Popes. In matters other than matters of faith, the Pope simply does not have any authority. Plenty of Italian families - including that of St. Thomas Aquinas (and incidentally, another noble family which my mother’s side claims descent from) fought various Popes in battle, and did no wrong by doing so. The Pope’s jurisdiction only covers matters of faith (including episcopal investiture and ecclesial governance), and in that area his authority is absolute. I expect you will try to nuance that statement a bit. The Pope can certainly make prudential errors in matters of Church governance, but we still have to obey him; the Holy Spirit prevents him from making such errors in the form of dogmatic declarations.
Indeed, a great Latin Saint and Doctor, St. Robert Bellarmine, asserted that if the Pope tears down the Church, we are bound by conscience to oppose him.
But to what extent and by what means are we to oppose him? I certainly believe that Vatican II tore down the Latin Church; I do not believe Archbishop Lefebvre was justified in going into schism in order to preserve his Society which opposed it.
Here is a statement from HH JP2 of thrice-blessed memory:
Inasmuch as the Church is a group of human beings called to carry out in history God’s plan for the salvation of the world, power in her appears as an indispensable requirement of mission. Nevertheless, the analogical value of the language used allows power to be conceived in the sense provided by Jesus’ maxim on “power in order to serve” and by the Gospel idea of the pastoral leader. The power required by the mission of Peter and his successors is identified with this authoritative leadership guaranteed of divine assistance, which Jesus himself called the ministry (service) of a shepherd.
Jurisdiction is power, but it is power to serve and only to serve. Obedience to that kind of authority does not coincide with the Absolutist Petrine excesses.
I strongly agree with this - but I do not believe (and you indicated in the second half of your post) that none such “Absolutist Petrine” excesses have ever occurred.
I do have a recent example for you of papal intervention in an Oriental Church. I forget the exact dates, but it concerned the Chaldean Church. After their Patriarch passed away (of happy memory, though I forget his name), there was a delay in electing a new Patriarch. The canonical time limit had expired, and after a few weeks even beyond that time limit, the Holy Father finally put his foot down and called the Chaldean bishops to account for the delay. Would you regard situation as a matter of papal control, or a matter of papal solicitude? In any case, I’ve always believed (as a Catholic) that the Pope has the right to enforce a universal law of the Church if local Churches are found to be disobeying or contradicting that law. Universal laws are there for the good of the Church universal, and the Pope’s enforcement of it, I truly believe, is evidence of solicitude and care for the Church, not control.
CONTINUED
Completely agreed - and I would welcome more such solicitude if the Holy Father were to strongly condemn Latinizations and call our bishops to account for continuing to permit them.
 
Vatican 1 asserts that the Pope cannot impede the divinely-given authority of local bishops.
Does Vatican I say that the Holy Spirit will not let the Pope impede the divinely-given authority of local bishops, or that if the Pope tries to do so his authority will simply be legitimately disobeyed (as when an ordinary bishop, one who is not the final appeal in the Church, tries to violate someone’s canonical rights)? Can you think of any historical examples where the Pope has tried to impede the divinely-given authority of local bishops?
I am not altogether certain I can accept Unam Sanctam as an ex cathedra declaration - just for the reason that it was not addressed to the universal Church, but to King Philip of France. I can go as far as admitting that it was an infallible teaching of the ordinary Magisterium, but I find it hard to see how it could be an ex cathedra decree - for the reason mentioned above. Of course, I assume that “subject to the Roman Pontiff” was meant by Pope Boniface to mean “subject to the orthodox teaching of the Roman Pontiff.” I mean, it is certainly not necessary for salvation that we jump off a bridge if the Pope says so, so the “subjection” must refer to only those things that are actually necessary for salvation, as the Decree itself states (I guess you can say it is self-referential).
The “subjection” could only be in matters of faith or morals, since those are the only things the Church has been given authority over, according to my understanding of Vatican I. I have a difficult time saying that it is not an ex cathedra decree given the terms “declare, define, and pronounce”. I do understand your argument about its universality, but my it seems to me the more likely opinion that because it concerns “the salvation of every human creature” it is a universal statement even though the words were spoken only in condemnation of Philip the Fair, just as the dogmatic definitions of Nicea are universal, infallible statements despite the fact that they were only spoken on the opportunity to condemn the Arians. (And, likewise, Trent is universal and infallible, even for Eastern Christians where Protestantism was never an issue [setting aside the occasional Calvinist Patriarch of Constantinople, of course!].)
And, no. I cannot think of an example of such an overreaching - objectively speaking, that is. There was a time - a loooong time - when miaphysite theology was not yet distinguished from monophyisitism. Hence, I know the Maronites had to bear the burden of destroying a lot of their Syriac Orthodox heritage. But this was a matter of ignorance on the part of a Pope, not a matter of consciously opposing what is orthodox.
Blessings,
Marduk
In that case I guess the question of “Absolute Petrine” versus “High Petrine” views only bear practical differences in the case that this overreaching does happen in the future. For my part, I’m content to wait to cross that bridge if it comes, and pray to the Holy Spirit that it won’t.
 
Dear brother Cecilianus,

I don’t have time to respond right now. I am interested to see if you have any comments on my statements on the Fr. Toth incident.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
There was a time - a loooong time - when miaphysite theology was not yet distinguished from monophyisitism. Hence, I know the Maronites had to bear the burden of destroying a lot of their Syriac Orthodox heritage. But this was a matter of ignorance on the part of a Pope, not a matter of consciously opposing what is orthodox.
I just now caught this, and I’m not sure what it means. Truth to tell, despite the 16th century latinizations and such, very little was destroyed, although some things may have re-worded. The destruction has come many years later with the unending wave of post-conciliar neo-latinization.
 
I just now caught this, and I’m not sure what it means. Truth to tell, despite the 16th century latinizations and such, very little was destroyed, although some things may have re-worded. The destruction has come many years later with the unending wave of post-conciliar neo-latinization.
Very quickly - from what I’ve read, the Maronites had to destroy many Syriac manuals from their libraries that had the taint of “monophysitism.” However, IIRC, this wasn’t exactly opposed by the local clergy. I’m not trying to lay blame on anyone for anything.🙂

Gotta go.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
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