M
mardukm
Guest
The ousting of Patriarch Simeon was not supported by the Pope at all. But what could he do after Simeon fled? The residents in Jerusalem still needed a spiritual head, and it was for this need whereby the Pope approved the Latin Patriarchate.How could it be that a Latin ecclesiastical jurisdiction was established against the express wishes of the then-reigning Pope? In such a case, one word from him would have abolished it in a minute. But that didn’t happen, so one has to presume that the establishment of such “Patriarchate” was accepted.
From an ecclesiastical perspective, it would be wholly false, as brother Volodomyr suggested, that the Latin Patriarchate in Jerusalem was set up with papal approval for the purpose of opposing the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchate. However, from the perspective of the secular rulers, his statement would have merit.
During the time of the Crusades, I’m pretty sure no Latin Patriarch was ever appointed in any of the Patriarchal Sees while there was an Eastern Orthodox Patriarch in residence. It’s probably true that the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchs either were driven out or themselves felt they could not effectively serve a large Latin Catholic populace and thereby volutarily left their See (an indication of abdication, I guess). I think that of all the Patriarchs, the Patriarch of Antioch had the most long-lasting relations with the Latins, and stayed on for some time during the Latin occupation.
Blessings,
Marduk