I’m just now reading this thread and I see my Church being used as the subject of a number of posts.

I can’t speak for the other three Russian Greek Catholic parishes in America, nor really can I speak
for my own parish. I will share again that during the recent profound changes my parish has gone through it seems entirely possible we could have been forced to close had we not been given the tremendous support we received from the Latin Archbishop through his Chancery staff and the administrator assigned to us. When we were advised of the very serious issues we faced, the representative from the Chancery who met with us called our Eastern Church “a jewel” (and he was not referring to our building when he referred to our Church), a very valuable part of the Archdiocese sacramentally and spiritually, and emphasized the goal of the Archbishop to assist us in maintaining our parish and helping it to grow.
Perhaps the most important gift we had from the Archdiocese was the highly competent, and deeply pastoral administrator who was assigned to us. Without his skilled managing of administration during the first year of transition I think we would have drowned in the issues facing us. He came and concelebrated with us, ate with us, every opportunity he had, including nearly til dawn at Pascha

, while still in charge and very busy of his own parish and school, and serving as chaplain to the City firefighters, and possibly other duties I don’t know about. The profound kindness and love he showed us was a huge emotional help to us in a very difficult transition. His parish gifted us with beautiful much needed signage for our church, and at the time of our first Liturgy in our new location they gifted us with beautiful vestments for our priest which they commissioned from Russia.
Sundays we typically now have about 20-25 total for DL, including choir and clergy, and visitors (this is larger than we had in our old location). I believe we have only six who are canonically Russian Catholic in the parish. The rest are canoncially Latin, Orthodox, or another EC (Byzantine/Ruthenian, UGCC, Melkite). With four very small Russian Catholic parishes in America, two in CA, one in NY, one in CO, who may have as few canonically Russian parishioners as we do, I see no way practically have a bishop serving us as a particular Church, nor do I see how were there one assigned to our global Church-- our four US parishes, and the one parish in Australia, one in Argentina, in Paris, some few in Russia, and the monks of Chevetogne, that hierarch could have provided the resources that were needed for my parish to survive. We’ll never know, but I am far from alone in my opinion that being under a Latin Archbishop has kept us open, and moving forward.
As far as ordinations, Bishop Nicholas Samra celebrated our last ordination, our deacon, photos of that remain on our website, and we were recently told he will be tonsuring a reader for us.

Likewise, I see on their Facebook today that a parishioner of St. Michael’s Russian Catholic NYC will be tonsured to the orders of Reader and Subdeacon by Sayedna Nicholas.
facebook.com/pages/St-Michaels-Russian-Catholic-Church/110310162336951
So for this Russian Greek Catholic, I have no sense of having been “denied a hierarch”. You’re welcome to discuss various theories but in the real world, my parish has been very blest to be under the resources, in time and talent, of the local Latin Archbishop. With our brand new Archbishop Salvatore who has close personal friendships with a number of Eastern Catholic Clergy, two of whom were able to make it to the Installation Mass, we’re confident the support for our tiny parish will continue to be useful for our future growth.
I’m not saying anything I haven’t said before in this Section in other threads. Because I see such focus on my ritual Church in this thread I’m sharing these various components here again.
