I find it odd that he dropped it. Is he denying the Latin Rite, or the Roman Catholic Church sui juris (as opposed to the whole Catholic Church)?
The Pope is successively higher levels of authority. He is pastor of St. John Lateran, Bishop of Rome, Archbishop Metropolitan of the Roman Province, Primate of Italy, Patriarch of the Latin Rite, and Pope of the Universal Church.
The Church is subdivided, parish, diocese, province, nation, sui juris church or “rite”, and then the universal Church.
The Pope, besides being Pope, also has the role of Patriarch regarding the Latin Rite. In his role as bishop he administers in a special way the diocese of rome. And in his role as Patriarch, he makes certain directive, disciplinary and liturgical, that apply to only Latin Rite Catholics, not other rites whose own Patriarchs (or equivalent chief hierarchs) have those powers.
I dont know why he dropped the title from the yearbook (which doesnt mean it is officially totally dropped), the title serves to show that the Latin Church is, as a ritual sui juris church, equal to the other sui juris churches. its not like the latin rite is the “norm” and the other rites are exceptions or offshoots…
I think this, from another thread, is an interesting thought:
That a traditionalist such as Papa Ratzinger has removed a title in use for nearly 1,500 years is certainly significant. I wonder, though, whether this might have less to do with gestures toward the Orthodox than with a fascinating thought that the current Pope expressed some time back, about the possibility of breaking up the immense region that is now, more or less, the “Western Patriarchate” and according patriarchal status to churches in Asia and Africa. If this is the intention, then we’ll probably see the old title reformed into something like Patriarch of Rome or Patriarch of the Latins. Such a move would also alleviate some of the tensions arising from the desire to “inculturate” faith and worship, on the one hand, and to remain faithful to the Roman Rite, on the other. The inculturated liturgy in those places could become the standard liturgical Rite for a particular Patriarchate, rather than a localized tinkering with the universal Rite of Rome.
Could be. The Latin Patriarchate is perhaps disproportionally huge compared to the Eastern Rites. Maybe it could be broken up into some more localized rites…