D
Diakonia
Guest
Vico, your final sentence makes no sense.It is the use of titular, not jurisdiction that I am referring to. It is in this way that the Giga-Catholic site uses the term:
“A **Titular See **is a diocese that is no longer in existence. In Asia Minor and North Africa, many dioceses became defunct over them when they became schismatic, or when they were swept by other religions, or when they disappeared simply because the importance of the cities declined. The Apostolic See can also suppress a diocese when the number of Catholics in the diocese has declined sharply.”
gcatholic.com/dioceses/dioc-tit.htm
It appears that canonically the Protosynchellus administers with the rights and obligations of a vacant eparchy. See CCEO 220, and:
CCEO Canon 129
The administrator of the patriarchal Church in the eparchy of the patriarch, in stauropegial monasteries and in those places where neither an eparchy nor an exarchy is erected, has the same rights and obligations as the administrator of a vacant eparchy.
To be non-titular requires non-eparchal and non-exarchal.
A titular see has no geographic, canonical, reality. If Jerusalem of the Melkites were a titular see, it would not have a vicar/protosynchellus (who is titular bishop of another see because he is not ordinary of Jerusalem, but auxiliary of the ordinary - the Melkite Patriarch) because titular sees have no need of a vicar/protosynchellus.
The Archparchy of Jerusalem of the Melkites is not vacant and does not lack faithful. The Melkites are the dominant Eastern/Oriental Catholic Church in Jerusalem*. AP reports no less than 3,000 faithful in any year since 1990 - with 3,300 each year since 2000. For 2010, it cited 8 parishes, 8 presbyters (5 patriarchal - 3 religious), 5 other male religious, 23 female religious, and 2 deacons.
*Numbers of faithful for the same year:
Maronites - 504 (including Jordan);
Armenians - 800 (including Jordan);
Syriacs - 1,500 (including Jordan);
Chaldeans - 0 (7,000 in Jordan).
G-Catholic is, for the final time, not an authoritative source in anyone’s view, except its own and yours.
See CNEWA’s excerpted AP data here
Antioch & Alexandria are dependent on the Patriarchate because the Patriarch is the non-resident Archeparch of both.
Finally, from “History of the Melkite Patriarchates Vol. III - Part 2” by Rev. Cyril Charon (Korolevsky), translated by John Collorafi & Bishop Nicholas (Samra), ed. Bishop Nicholas (Samra), Eastern Christian Publications, 2001.
(Note that Father Cyril, of blessed memory, was consultor to the Congregation for the Eastern Churches, under Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, also of blessed memory, its long-time Prefect)
At page 193, Father Cyril discusses Patriarchal Vicars:
At page 195ff, he quotes, in translation, the authority granted by Maximos III to the patriarchal vicar at Jerusalem. I excerpt:essentially an ecclesiastic who administers in the patriarch’s name a more or less extensive territory over which the patriach has immediate jurisdiction … (emphasis added)
- He may carry out episcopal functions and ceremonies in their plenitude throughout the eparchy of Jerusalem, which is immediately under us, … However, he may not sit upon the episcopal throne, nor may he have his diptychs sung or his name mentioned in the Divine Liturgy.
- He may confer the jurisdiction to administer the sacraments …
- He is free to reserve to himself the absolution of certain sins, …
- He has the power to punish by the medicinal censures of the Church, …
- We grant him the power of dispening from the ecclesiastical impediments of marriage …
- He has the power to hear trials …He may not, however, render the final judgement about the nullity of any legal marriage, for in this case he must refer it to us and ask our opinion
- He may confer the clerical state …
- He has the faculty to take in whomever may want to devote himself to the service of our patriarchal See … He may examine … after having informed us and heard our wishes. He will then do what we have decided …
- /he may exercise his authority over all the regular and secular clergy …
- He may collect the patriarchal rights *
Note also that the authority to erect and suppress eparchies within the patriarchal territories is resident in the Patriarch and Holy Synod.
Canon 85Jerusalem is within the Melkite Patriarchal territories, i.e., the bounds of the former Ottoman Empire.
- For a serious reason, with the consent of the synod of bishops of the patriarchal Church and having consulted the Apostolic See, the patriarch can establish provinces and eparchies, modify their boundaries, unite, divide, suppress, and modify their hierarchical status and transfer the eparchial see.
You can continue to argue this matter with yourself. I’m done explaining it to you.