H
Hesychios
Guest
Yes.Let me get this straight, if someone has Ruthenian heritage and their ancestors came to the US in the 19th century, and because their ancestor got married to a Latin rite Catholic woman or they moved to an area where a Ruthenian church wasn’t available, they (4 generations afterwards) are still considered canonically Ruthenian?
An excellent question.Does it make a difference if one of the intervening generations worshipped as methodists or not at all?
Protestants are (normally) automatically ascribed to the Latin rite, if the question does not come up.
I agree.It seems like a real quirk, which really doesn’t make sense.
If I am not mistaken, the Ruthenian church/Pittsburgh Metropolia has about 100,000 persons across the USA these days. Somewheere I read that at least 300,000 migrated from the Hungarian kingdom over a few decades (hard to believe, but I did read that somewhere) at the end of the 19th century and into the 20th century.
Even allowing for the massive ‘defections’ to Orthodoxy the metropolia had some 240,000 members by the 1970’s, even allowing for losses into the Latin rite. Every generation since has seen the sons as well as the daughters marrying out into the Latin church at an accelerated rate. There could easily be 500,000 (canonically Ruthenian) Roman Catholics (descended through the male line), most of whom vaguely know of “Russian” great-grandparents who used to have a Christmas in January!
It’s a huge problem for active Ruthenian priests who are trying to reconnect with the large number of Ruthenian families out there and grow the congregations.
Michael