L
Little_Boy_Lost
Guest
What are the implications for the Coptic Patriarch becoming a cardinal? Technically isn’t he (or rather shouldn’t he be = D) the second highest ranking bishop in the church? Will he receive the red hat?
Symbolic.What are the implications for the Coptic Patriarch becoming a cardinal?
I suppose that depends if he is really a successor of Saint Mark in the sense the Vatican officials would understand it. He is not allowed to be identified with the term ‘Pope’, and his office as patriarch of the Coptic Catholics dates back to a decision made by a Pope of Rome in the late 19th century. The Coptic Catholic church itself, perhaps about 200,000 people, owes much to the work of Latin religious orders working in that region under the Turkish regime.Technically isn’t he (or rather shouldn’t he be = D) the second highest ranking bishop in the church?
Perhaps, or at least a ring, I thought they dispensed with the hats.Will he receive the red hat?
Can I please have more information on this? Brother Aramis explained the proper canonical procedure, and I doubt that the Pope would purposefully oppose it.Sorry Aramis…not quite right. The Melkites are going thru this right now. They tried to move Archbishop Cyril from the US to Lebanon. Rome told them they CANT more a bishop from the diaspora. Only Rome can…Rome has finally agreed to the move.
We don’t know the whole story here, yet, I think. The role of the Pope according to Vatican 1 is to preseve and protect the rights of his brother bishops, not take them away. If the Pope was involved at all (as distinct from the Curia), I have no reason to doubt that it was to support the inherent right of the Melkite Synod to make its canonical decision.Those bishops are not under the Pope’s jurisdiction. Why does he have any say in a matter like this?
These are very insightful comments. Several have asked, “why do the Patriarchs need to ask for their rights?”No not at all. You wrote:
Now you are talking about the distinctive situation of the third millenium. So were you talking about a tradition of ten years?
We have had diaspora before – even in the first millenium. How was it handled traditionally?
My thought: There are lots of ideas about the authority that one might like one’s patriarch to have. But let’s be honest about what is innovation and what is tradition, and avoid special pleading.
And let’s think hard about how we would like to handle issues that arise between sui juris churches on common territory. The Orthodox in America are not especially fond of the “power to the homeland patriarch” approach that they are largely saddled with.