Dioceses of the Syrian Catholic Church

Dioceses of the Syrian Catholic Church

The Syrian Catholic Church, established in the second half of the 17th century as a Catholic offshoot of the Syrian Orthodox Church, had around a dozen dioceses in the eastern provinces of the Ottoman empire in the 18th and 19th centuries. Three of these dioceses were ruined during the First World War in the Assyrian and Armenian massacres, and the 20th century also saw the growth of an important Syriac Catholic diaspora in America, Europe and Australasia. The Syrian Catholic Church presently has fifteen dioceses, mostly in the Middle East, and four patriarchal vicariates for the diaspora communities.

Contents

History

During the 18th century the Syrian Catholic church established dioceses in the major cities of the Ottoman empire with significant West Syrian communities, and also became the dominant West Syrian grouping in a number of villages in northern Iraq, gaining control of the monastery of Mar Behnam near Mosul.

At the beginning of the 19th century the Syrian Catholic Church had dioceses for Jerusalem, Aleppo, Damascus, Edessa, Amid, Mardin, Gazarta (from 1818), Mosul (from 1790) and the Monastery of Mar Behnam. In 1817 a diocese was created for Beirut, which persisted until 1898. In 1862 a separate diocese was created for Baghdad and Basra, hitherto under the jurisdiction of the bishops of Mosul.[1]

According to a population statistic of 1898, the Syrian Catholic church had just under 23,000 members, organised in nine dioceses.[2]

Like their Syrian Orthodox and Chaldean counterparts, the Syrian Catholic dioceses of Amid, Mardin and Gazarta were ruined in the First World War (Flavian Mikha’il Malke, Syrian Catholic bishop of Gazarta, was killed by the Turks in 1915), and were not afterwards revived. A new Syrian Catholic diocese was established for Hasakah in 1957, and the town has been the seat of a Syrian Catholic bishop since 1959. The diocese of Beirut has remained vacant since 1898, and the relatively small Syrian Catholic community of Beirut has been under the jurisdiction of a patriarchal vicar or apostolic administrator for most of the past eleven decades.

According to a Catholic statistic of 1962, the Syrian Catholic Church had just over 65,000 members in the Middle East at that time, plus a further 15,000 or so members in America and elsewhere.[3]

Table 1: Population of the Syrian Catholic Church, 1962

Region No. of Parishes No. of Churches No. of Priests No. of Believers Region No. of Parishes No. of Churches No. of Priests No. of Believers
Lebanon 6 6 14 14,500 Damascus 4 4 5 3,807
Egypt 2 3 4 4,000 Hims 12 12 12 4,135
Jordan 1 1 2 1,200 Mosul 8 10 25 17,000
Turkey 4 4 2 800 Hassakeh 7 8 9 4,000
Aleppo 6 2 6 7,100 Baghdad 5 5 11 8,750
Total 55 55 90 65,292

According to a Catholic statistic of 1964, the Syrian Catholic Church consisted of a patriarchal archdiocese, four archdioceses (Aleppo, Damascus, Mosul, and Baghdad), two dioceses (Homs and Hama, and Jazira and Euphrates), and six patriarchal vicariates (Lebanon, Egypt, Jordan–Palestine, Mardin, Rome, and Paris).[4]

Table 2: Population of the Syrian Catholic Church, 1964

Region No. of Churches No. of Priests No. of Believers Region No. of Villages No. of Churches No. of Believers
Lebanon 8 14 15,000 Damascus 5 7 4,250
Egypt 4 5 4,750 Mosul 17 24 14,000
Jordan and Palestine 2 1 1,500 Baghdad 8 10 15,000
Turkey 5 3 9,000 Homs and Hama 12 10 5,100
Rome 1 1 370 Mosul 10 25 17,000
Paris 1 2 3,500 Jazira and Euphrates 7 9 6,400
Aleppo 5 6 8,000 Total 85 117 103,870

Present hierarchy

The Syrian Catholic Church presently has fifteen dioceses: one patriarchal see (in Beirut); two metropolitanates (Damascus and Homs); four archdioceses (Aleppo, Hassakeh–Nisibis, Baghdad and Mosul); three dioceses (Beirut, Cairo and Our Lady of Deliverance of Newark); one apostolic exarchate (Venezuela); three patriarchal exarchates (Basra and Kuwait, Jerusalem and Turkey); and the patriarchal territory of Sudan. The diocese of Our Lady of Deliverance of Newark covers the United States and Canada, while the patriarchal exarchate of Jerusalem covers Israel, Palestine and Jordan.

The Syrian Catholic Church presently has eleven bishops:

  • Ignatius Joseph III Yonan, Patriarch of Antioch (since January 2009);
  • Gregory Eliya Tabe, Metropolitan of Damascus (since June 2001);
  • Theophilus Giwargis Kassab, Metropolitan of Homs (since December 1999);
  • Dionysius Anton Chahda, Archbishop of Aleppo (since September 2001);
  • Yaʿqob Behnam Hindo, Archbishop of Hassakeh–Nisibis (since June 1996);
  • Yousif Abba (Yousif Mansoor), Archbishop-elect of Baghdad (since March 2011);
  • Father Boutros Moshe, Archbishop-elect of Mosul (since March 2011);
  • Clement Joseph Hannush, Bishop of Cairo (since June 1995);
  • Yousif Benham Habash, Bishop of the Eparchy of Our Lady of Deliverance of Newark;
  • Iwanis Lewis Awad, Apostolic Exarch of Venezuela (since May 2003); and
  • Gregory Peter Melki, Patriarchal Exarch of Jerusalem (since February 2002).

His Excellency, Basile Georges Casmoussa, 72, who had been the Archbishop of the Archeparchy of Mosul, was transferred to a position in the Syriac Catholic Patriarchal Curia. The Synod of Bishops of the Patriarchal Syriac Catholic Church elected the Protosyncellus (Vicar General) of the Archeparchy of Mosul, Father Boutros Moshe, 67, to be the new Archbishop. The Holy Father, His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI, consented to his canonical election on Tuesday, March 1, 2011, sealing the appointment. He will be ordained an Archbishop and installed at a later date. The Mosul Archeparchy has 35,000 Catholics, 36 priests, and 55 religious.

Also on Tuesday, March 1, 2011, His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI consented to the canonical election by the Syriac Synod of Bishops of the Right Reverend Father Yousif Abba (Yousif Mansoor), 59, until now the Chancellor of the Syriac Catholic Eparchy of the United States and Canada under Bishop Habash and currently serving at the St. Joseph Syrian Catholic Church in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, as the new Archbishop-elect of the Syriac Catholic Archeparchy of Baghdad, Iraq. Archbishop Yousif is a native Iraqi. Since 1997, he has been in charge of pastoral care for Syrian-rite Catholics in the United States and Canada. He speaks Syrian, French, Arabic, and English. He succeeds His Excellency, the Most Reverend Athanase Mattai Shaba Matoka, who resigned from that position (he has been there since 1983) as Archbishop Emeritus. He will be ordained an Archbishop and installed at a later date. The Baghdad Archeparchy has 18,000 Syriac Catholics and seven priests.

Finally, also on March 1, 2011, the Pope approved the canonical election of the Right Reverend Father Jihad Battah, 54, until then the Protosyncellus (Vicar General) of the Syriac Catholic Archeparchy of Damascus, Syria, under Metropolitan Gregory Aliya Tabe, as a Bishop-elect of the Syrian Catholic Patriarchal Curia. He will be ordained a Bishop and installed at a later date.

The diocese of Beirut has remained vacant for more than a century. Theophilus Giwargis Kassab, metropolitan of Homs, presently administers the diocese in the capacity of apostolic administrator. The patriarchal exarchate of Basra and Kuwait has been under the care of Father Marzena Eshak since 2003, and the patriarchal exarchate of Turkey has been under the care of Monsignor Joseph Sagh since 1991. Clement Joseph Hannush, bishop of Cairo, has been responsible for the patriarchal territory of Sudan since 1997, in the capacity of protosyncellus.

The church also has four patriarchal vicariates (Brazil, Australia and New Zealand, Sweden and France), and a patriarchal procurate in Rome. In 2010 there were an estimated 159,000 Syrian Catholics, under the care of 11 bishops and over a hundred priests.

See also

  • Dioceses of the Syrian Orthodox Church
  • Syrian Catholic Church

Notes

  1. ^ Fiey, POCN, 161 (Aleppo), 164 (Amid), 174 (Baghdad and Basra), 177 (Mar Behnam), 189–90 (Damascus), 180–1 (Beirut), 192–3 (Gazarta), 196–7 (Edessa), 222–3 (Jerusalem), 238–9 (Mardin), and 246 (Mosul)
  2. ^ Vailhé and Ermoni, Antioch, 1433
  3. ^ Oriente Cattolico (1962), 161–74
  4. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia, 904

References

  • Fiey, J.M. (1962). Assyrie chrétienne (3 vols). Beirut. 
  • Fiey, J.M. (1993). Pour un Oriens Christianus novus; répertoire des diocèses Syriaques orientaux et occidentaux. Beirut. ISBN 3515057188. 

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Dioceses of the Syriac Orthodox Church — Deir Zaʿfaran, the saffron monastery , seat of the Syrian Orthodox patriarchs after the First World War In the period of its greatest expansion, in the tenth century, the Syrian Orthodox Church had around 20 metropolitan dioceses and a little… …   Wikipedia

  • Catholic Church hierarchy — The term Hierarchy in the Catholic Church has a variety of related usages. Literally, holy government , the term is employed in different instances. There is a Hierarchy of Truths,[1] which refers to the levels of solemnity of the official… …   Wikipedia

  • Syrian Catholic Eparchy of Our Lady of Deliverance of Newark — The Eparchy of Our Lady of Deliverance of Newark is an eparchy of the Syrian Catholic Church, an Eastern Catholic church in communion with the Roman Catholic Church. The territory of the eparchy encompasses the entire United States and Canada. It …   Wikipedia

  • Dioceses of the Church of the East to 1318 — Syrian, Armenian and Latin bishops debate Christian doctrine in the Crusader city of Acre, late 13th century At the height of its power, in the 10th century AD, the dioceses of the Church of the East numbered well over a hundred and stretched… …   Wikipedia

  • Dioceses of the Church of the East, 1552–1913 — After the 1552 schism in the Church of the East, the Nestorian and Chaldean sections of the church each had, by the end of the 19th century, around twelve dioceses each. The country of the Church of the East, 1913 Contents 1 Background …   Wikipedia

  • Catholic Church — This article is about the church in communion with the See of Rome. For other uses, see Catholic Church (disambiguation). Roman Christianity redirects here. For other uses, see Roman Christianity (disambiguation). Part of a series on the Catholic …   Wikipedia

  • History of the Eastern Orthodox Church — The Eastern Orthodox Churches trace their roots back to the Apostles and Jesus Christ. Eastern Orthodoxy reached its golden age during the high point of the Byzantine Empire, and then continued to flourish in Russia after the Fall of… …   Wikipedia

  • Dioceses of the Church of the East, 1318–1552 — The Dioceses of the Church of the East, 1318–1552 were far fewer in number than during the period of the Church s greatest expansion in the tenth century. Between 1318 and 1552, the geographical horizons of the Church of the East, which had once… …   Wikipedia

  • List of the Roman Catholic dioceses of the United States — The following is the List of the Roman Catholic dioceses of the United States (this list also includes not only dioceses of the Latin or Western Church but also the eparchies (dioceses) of the Eastern Catholic Churches that are in full communion… …   Wikipedia

  • Jacobite Syrian Christian Church — Catholicate Emblem Founder St. Thomas the Apostle Independence Apostolic Era …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”