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Peter_J
Guest
Can you elaborate on “The Americas is Latin Church territory according to the ecclesiastical standards of Eastern Christianity itself.” and the Synod of Baltimore?
Thanks for the info. However, it doesn’t seem to substantiate the assertion in question, i.e. “The Americas is Latin Church territory according to the ecclesiastical standards of Eastern Christianity itself.”Peter J, some US immigration history, related to the Catholics:On 7 Nov., 1791, he held the First Synod of Baltimore, attended by twenty-two priests of five nationalities. To train priests for his diocese of three million square miles, Bishop Carroll had asked the Fathers of the Company of Saint Sulpice to come to Baltimore, where they arrived in 1791 and started the nucleus of St. Mary’s College and Seminary. Bishop Carroll issued his first pastoral letter 28 March, 1792; very practical, yet tender, appealing for support for the clergy by means of the offertory collections. In 1793 for the first time, Bishop Carroll conferred Holy orders, the recipient being the Rev. Stephen Badin, the first priest ordained within the limits of the original thirteen of the United States. In 1795, he ordained to the priesthood Prince Demetrius Gallitzin who was to add 6,000 converts to his flock. In 1798, Bishop Carroll won an interesting and important lawsuit, the famous Fromm Case (Shea, op. cit., 448-5), in which Judge Addison, President of the Court of Common Pleas of the Fifth Circuit of Pennsylvania, decided that “The Bishop of Baltimore has the sole episcopal authority over the Catholic Church of the United States. Every Catholic congregation within the United States is subject to his inspection; and without authority from him no Catholic priest can exercise any pastoral function over any congregation within the United States.”
About a hundred years later in the 1870s when the Ruthenians immigrated to the USA (from two areas that were then the 1- Austria and 2- Hungary) the Catholic Church had a US Catholic diocese in the same areas that they were moving into. It was Bishop John Ireland of the Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, that was enforcing the rule of jurisdiction there. (Pope Pius IX setup the predecessor diocese in 1850 called St. Paul Minnesota).