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5Loaves
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First ordination to the priesthood in US of married Maronite deacon. 
According to the article:Please explain how this is a first. The Eastern Catholic Churches have many married priests. They were all deacons before the priesthood.
He will be the first married man to be ordained into priesthood under the U.S. Maronite Catholic Church, according to Eparchy of our Lady of Lebanon Deacon Louis Peters.
It will be a “first” for the Maronites.It could be a first in the sense of a married man being ordained IN the USA.
That’s never happened for us. None of the bishops would touch it. It seems that they still won’t.Many married priests in the USA get ordained in the Patriarchal territories, then come back to the USA.
Indeed. We’re not quite sui iuris if every time we want to do an ancient tradition one of our bishops has to go kowtow to the Curia. I wouldn’t be surprised if the next bishop of Los Angeles reverts to not permitting married priests to serve in his diocese, just like the bishop of Brooklyn.That’s never happened for us. None of the bishops would touch it. It seems that they still won’t.
I think you need to be more specific as to which part you don’t understand. As the thread title says, this was the first time a married Maronite deacon was ordained to the priesthood in USA.Please explain how this is a first. The Eastern Catholic Churches have many married priests. They were all deacons before the priesthood.
You’ve missed the point; this was about the ordination of a married deacon to the priesthood, apparently a first in the US for Maronites.Uh, doesn’t the Latin rite allow married men to be deacons as well? How is this news from any standpoint?
Great news. Finally, the Bishops are starting to go back to our tradition.
Good point. Byzantine (Ruthenian) particular law shows that the norms of the Apostolic See are to be followed unless dispensed by the same. So it is not in the power of the local hierarch for the Byzantine Metropolitan Church. Bishop Andrew tried to get that changed but is was not granted.I thought the local Bishop had no authority over Priests of other Rites-is that not so?![]()
The local bishop of the place has jurisdiction over all priests in his diocese save those incardinated into other overlapping ordinaries’ jurisdictions (ordinariates, ECC’s Eparchies, personal prelatures, religious orders).I thought the local Bishop had no authority over Priests of other Rites-is that not so?![]()
It should be noted in India, although the Malabarese were thoroughly Latinized by the Portuguese, when Mor Ivanios reunited the Syro-Malankarese, the Pope specifically said that the Tradition of Married men in the diaconate and priesthood would be NO obstacle. Mor Ivanios had many married clergy join initially, but most were celibates, as he founded and headed the monastic communities. My impression from reading the history of the time, was that Mor Ivanios took for granted that the rest of the Church would reunite with him and this would never come up as an issue. Today’s writing suggests that Mor Ivanios chose celibacy “perpetually” to conform to the Latin and Syro-Malabarese practice - although I don’t think that is what actually took place. A priest-canon lawyer who I am close to suggested that the option to return to the Traditional practice was again mentioned in 2002 or 2005 when the Eastern Code and Syro-Malankara particular laws were being promulgated but nothing came of it publicly, and no mention of a restoration was brought to fruition.Any inter-eparchial/diocesan issue within a Metropolitan See requires the consent of the head bishop of the Metropolitan See.
Any inter-Metropolitan issue within a Patriarchal See requires the consent of the head bishop of the Patriarchal See.
Any inter-Patriarchal issue within the universal Church requires the consent of the head bishop of the Church universal.
The issue of a married priesthood is, in fact, an inter-Patriarchal issue, which is why the bishop of Rome is involved.
IF the Latin bishops in the Latin territories had no problem with married priests, then the Pope would not be involved. But it is because the Latin bishops historically (and perhaps still do) have a general problem with married priests that the Pope is involved.
The Pope’s involvement is not a reflection on or diminution of the sui juris status of Oriental and Eastern Churches, but rather a sign that the Pope is protecting the patrimony of the Oriental and Eastern Churches in Latin territories.
If the Pope of Rome was not involved, the Latin bishops would have it ALL their way, and we would not have any married priests at all in Latin jurisdictional territories.
The issue of married priests is really only a part of the “big picture” of particular Tradition. The Pope has always supported the conventional Tradition of the local region. In Ukraine and India, for example, the Pope has simply supported the decisions of the local Synods, when asked to intervene between the preservation of local Tradition and the intrusion of Latinizations. The Pope is merely doing likewise in the traditional Latin territories - supporting the decisions of the local episcopal conferences, except he is more proactive in giving dispensations from the local rules for Oriental and Eastern Churches.
Blessings