Dear brother Andrew,
I’m a little surprised why they have to ask permission from Rome to be granted Patriarchal status. In the case of the Ukrainians, they already consider their head to be the Patriarch. Rome never had any qualms about this, or at least not publicly.
I am of the opinion that more power needs to return to the local churches, and I’m sure many of my Eastern brethren (Catholic and Orthodox) will agree. If we ever expect reunion with the other Apostolic Churches, Rome needs to, quite frankly, stay out of the Eastern Churches’ business and let them govern themselves.
Maybe I’m just a little fed up with how we are treated by Rome and the Latins as Eastern and Oriental Catholics. I’ll certainly pray for them though.
I am fully sympathetic to the issue of self-governance. Rome should not intervene in the affairs of other Churches (aside from a matter of universally established doctrine/morals/canons, of course). However, there is absolutely no precedence in the history of the Church for a Patriarchate to self-establish itself. The closest I can think of is the Jerusalem Patriarchate. When it attempted to establish its independence back in the 4th century, it took an ecumenical council to bring the Church into proper order amidst cries of “foul.”
I fully understand, however, that a particular Church can recognize ITSELF as a Patriarchate apart from the approbation of any other authority outside itself. But to gain OFFICIAL recognition from the OTHER particular Churches, it requires the approval of an Ecumenical Council.
Now, our Canons admit that only the “Supreme authority in the Church” can establish new jurisdictions. I do notice that our Eastern Canons make a distinction between the term “Roman Pontiff” and the term “Supreme authority in the Church,” much more so than the Latin Canons. Though the “Roman Pontiff” can be regarded as the “Supreme authority” at times in our canons, it is more specific than the Latin Canons between what the “Supreme authority” as the “Roman Pontiff” on the one hand, can do, and what the “Supreme authority” as the “Ecumenical Council,” on the other hand, can do. IIRC, it is only the “Supreme authority” as “Ecumenical Council” that can establish new jurisdictions that the entire Church will recognize.
The Pope has indeed established new jurisdictions for the Eastern and Oriental Churches, but he has done so ONLY in what is traditionally the Latin Patriarchal jurisdiction. I do not believe the Pope has the authority to establish a PATRIARCHAL jurisdiction outside his traditional Patriarchal jurisdiction, according to our Eastern canons. He may have done so in the past since the general paradigm in those days was that the new jurisdictions were Latin missionary fields, but that is no longer the official viewpoint of the Catholic Church as a whole.
So the Syro-Malabar Church is in a bit of a catch-22. They are requesting that the Pope establish their particular Church as a Patriarchate. HOWEVER, the Pope can only do this if they admit that India is traditionally in the Latin jurisdiction. The catch-22 comes from the fact that they are requesting Patriarchal status on the basis of their claim that India is NOT in the Latin jurisdiction (i.e., ancient and direct establishment by St. Thomas).
The issue is no doubt exacerbated by the fact that the majority of dioceses in India are in the Latin jurisdiction. They can certainly self-proclaim patriarchal status if they are willing to accept that no other Catholic Church will recognize their jurisdiction (as such recognition can only come from an ECUMENICAL Council). But that would definitely create terrible conflict with the Latin hierarchs.
It would seem the best course of action would be for them to admit that India is traditionally in the Latin jurisdiction, so the Holy Father can on his own authority as Patriarch of the Latin Church, establish a new jurisdiction for them. But this presents another quandary for the identity of the Syro-Malabar Church as St. Thomas Christians. Admitting that India is traditionally in the Latin jurisdiction might (at least on paper) be viewed as a denial of their even more ancient and God-protected ecclesiastical heritage from St. Thomas.
The only other course of action would be to offer up numerous prayers so the pride of the Latin hierarchs in India will give way to an appreciation of the needs and rights of their Oriental brethren.
Blessings, with a mind to much prayer,
Marduk