L
Little_Boy_Lost
Guest
What claim does the Roman Rite have to the Patriarchate of Jerusalem? Do any other Eastern Catholic Churches have a Patriarch of Jerusalem?
How? In the first place, Jerusalem was certainly not (ever) Byzantine. In the second place, any claim the Orthodox might have to “lineage” (which would be a stretch in any case) expired with the advent of the Melkite Church.My impression is that the current “Greek” Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem is the only one who can trace his lineage back to Nicea (and from there back to St. James).
How? In the first place, Jerusalem was certainly not (ever) Byzantine. In the second place, any claim the Orthodox might have to “lineage” (which would be a stretch in any case) expired with the advent of the Melkite Church.
It seems to me that the Greek Orthodox “Patriarchate” of Jerusalem (as well as their claim to the title “Patriarchate” of Alexandria) is just as artificial as the Latin. And, even though it took centuries, at least the Latins have finally given up the pretense of both Alexandria and Antioch.
Sorry, Malphono, I don’t get this. I’m sure if you go through the history (especially one as problematic as the various bishops of Jerusalem), you can question whether or not any one bishop or synod was canonical. Nevertheless, there were people in Patriarchates of Alexandria and Jerusalem who sided with Chalcedon (and for that matter in Antioch and Constantinople who were against Chalcedon), and I don’t think you can just dismiss them.How? In the first place, Jerusalem was certainly not (ever) Byzantine. In the second place, any claim the Orthodox might have to “lineage” (which would be a stretch in any case) expired with the advent of the Melkite Church.
It seems to me that the Greek Orthodox “Patriarchate” of Jerusalem (as well as their claim to the title “Patriarchate” of Alexandria) is just as artificial as the Latin. And, even though it took centuries, at least the Latins have finally given up the pretense of both Alexandria and Antioch.
AFAIK, the Latin Catholic Church does not have or claim to have any Traditional jurisdiction in the See of Jerusalem. The Church universal has always worked under the principle of TERRITORIAL jurisdiction. What the Latin Church possessed or possesses in Jerusalem is simply PERSONAL jurisdiction - the same type of jurisdiction that Syriac Orthodox have in the See of Alexandria, or the Eastern and Oriental Catholics have in the diaspora. Personal jurisdiction within territorial jurisdiciton seems to be an unknown concept in Eastern Orthodoxy.What claim does the Roman Rite have to the Patriarchate of Jerusalem? Do any other Eastern Catholic Churches have a Patriarch of Jerusalem?
The Patriarchate of Jerusalem traces to St James the Just
33 - 135 an independent bishopric, as were most first century Sees
135 - 325 - suffragn of the Caesarean Metropolitan
325 (First Nicea) - 451 Jerusalem granted precedence, despite not being a Metropolitan See
325 - 451 suffragn to the Patriarchate of Antioch
451 (Chalcedon) - denominated a Patriarchate
451 - resident (Greek) Patriarchate, suffragn to the Patriarch of Constantinople
638 - Armenian Patriarchate established, suffragn to the Supreme Patriarch & Catholicos of Etchmiadzin for All the Armenians
638 - present resident Armenian Patriarchate
1033 - Latin Patriarchate erected
1033 - 1187 resident Latin Patriarchate
1033 - 1187 Greek Patriarchate in exile at Constantinople
1187 - resident Greek Patriarchate reinstituted
1187 - present - resident Greek Patriarchate
1187 - 1291 Latin Patriarchate in exile at Akka
1291 - 1374 Latin Patriarchate in exile at Cyprus
1374 - 1847 titular Latin Patriarchate at Rome
1838 - His Beatitude Maimos III Mazloum, Patriarch of Antioch & All the East of the Melkites, accorded the title ad personam of Alexandria and of Jerusalem
1838 - present each Melkite Patriarch holds that same title ad personam
1847 - Latin Patriarchate reinstituted
1847 - present resident Latin Patriarchate
The valid line of succession of the patriarchal title “of Jerusalem” among Eastern & Oriental Christians belongs to the Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem. Neither the Melkites, Latins, nor Armenians can assert a claim of anywhere near the validity of that held by the Orthodox.
You may be referring to the allegation that the Patriarchs of Constantinople, Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Antioch all held Miaphysite beliefs in the late 5th and early 6th century - matters that St Sophronius debated with them in their own Sees, before he himself took the See of Jerusalem.I believe there was a line of Miaphysite Patriarchs in Jerusalem during the Muslim occupation after St. Sophronius? I’m not 100% sure, but I believe the Oriental Orthodox through the Armenians and Syrians have laid claim to the See of Jerusalem since the 7th century during the tumultuous period of Muslim occupation.
Properly, at this point in history, it’s no one’s see. It’s merely titular and has been for well over a millennium. Some claim it as “their own” but the Syriac Church doesn’t claim it at all. I’m not sure about the Copts, but I seem to think they don’t either.So whose see is it properly? The Syriac Catholic Church?
I am particularly interested in this period, at the moment:The Patriarchate of Jerusalem traces to St James the Just
33 - 135 an independent bishopric, as were most first century Sees
135 - 325 - suffragn of the Caesarean Metropolitan
325 (First Nicea) - 451 Jerusalem granted precedence, despite not being a Metropolitan See
325 - 451 suffragn to the Patriarchate of Antioch
451 (Chalcedon) - denominated a Patriarchate
451 - resident (Greek) Patriarchate, suffragn to the Patriarch of Constantinople …
Marcus??? A.K.A. Reader Macarios??? Seriously?! I’m a little shocked… and very happy to see you here!My impression is that the current “Greek” Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem is the only one who can trace his lineage back to Nicea (and from there back to St. James).
Wikipedia says the Armenian Orthodox Episcopate was established in the 600s (doubtlessly due to the Chalcedonian schism).
I believe the Latin Patriarchate was established when the crusaders took Jerusalem, kicked out the “Greek” Orthodox Patriarch and put their own Latin churchman on it. [before anyone gets upset about this, my impression is that this was unfortunately common practice in Western European warfare due to the bishop’s political value. The east Romans did it too, especially when the Latin-Greek ecclesial controversy stepped up].
In 1772 - or about 50 years after the Melkite-Antiochian schism- Rome extended the Melkite Patriarchate of Antioch 's jurisdiction to cover Jerusalem and Alexandria, to remove the local Melkites from the jurisdiction of the local Latin bishops.
Constantinople was not created a Patriarchate until 381 (at the 1st Council of Constantinople) and, even then, its incumbent was effectively ranked after the Patriarchs of Antioch, Alexandria, and Rome - despite the Council’s declaration that Constantinople was ‘New Rome’ and that it should hold a primacy of honor after that of Rome.Interesting post!
I am particularly interested in this period, at the moment:
325 - 451 suffragn to the Patriarchate of Antioch
How is it that this happened ?
Not sure where you would come by that notion from what’s been posted. As I already said and Malphono has reiterated, neither the Catholic nor Orthodox Syriacs have any claim there. To follow up on Malphono’s other observation, the Copts likewise have no real claim to it - an episcopal presence on the part of the Orthodox, not even that on the part of the Coptic Catholics.So whose see is it properly? The Syriac Catholic Church?
hmm, spent too long editing, forgive the repetition of a bit of the last post.So whose see is it properly? The Syriac Catholic Church?
The Syriac Catholic Patriarchal Exarchate of Jerusalem is actually headed up by a bishop, currently Bishop Pierre Melki.The Syriac Catholics have a Patriarchal Exarchate of Jerusalem and Amman (Jordan), headed up by a presbyteral vicar. The exarchate consists of 3 parishes (1 actually in Jerusalem) served by a single priest (who also serves Bethlehem, I believe; a second priest is in Jordan). In its entirety (Israel and Jordan), the exarchate provides pastoral care to about 1,500 faithful.
You bring up an Interesting point which I have never really thought about. IIRC, Jerusalem was established as a Patriarchate by the 4th Ecum, and since Oriental Orthodoxy did not sign on, I think the See of Jerusalem has always been viewed as suffragan to one of the other major Sees, and - to the OO - does not have Patriarchal status like Alexandria or Antioch.You may be referring to the allegation that the Patriarchs of Constantinople, Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Antioch all held Miaphysite beliefs in the late 5th and early 6th century - matters that St Sophronius debated with them in their own Sees, before he himself took the See of Jerusalem.
The Armenians established their patriarchate in Jerusalem less than a half-dozen years after the Saint’s repose.
The Syriacs claim 14 or 15 early bishops of Jerusalem to have been Syrian - those are probably the ones who served between First Nicea and Chalcedon, during which time Jerusalem was under Antioch. After Chalcedon, it became subject to Constantinople. But the Syriacs have not had a continuous episcopal presence there and never a patriarchate.