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Amado,
I don't quite understand your point. What specifically in the above list of patriarchs are you objecting to?
I have tried to follow CCEO can. 59, which grants precedence first to 1. Constantinople, 2. Alexandria, 3. Antioch and 4. Jerusalem (§ 2) and then to other patriarchal sees according to their antiquity (§ 3). Furthermore, I have followed can. 59 § 4 which grants precedence to patriarchs of the same title (e.g. Antioch) according to seniority of promotion to the patriarchal dignity. Furthermore I have tried to follow CCEO can. 154 which assigns precedence to major archbishops according to the order in which their churches received major archiepiscopal dignity.
Thus we have the following order of precedence:
1. Patriarchal sees: 1.1. Coptic Catholic Patriarch of Alexandria 1.2. Patriarchs of Antioch according to seniority: 1.2.1. Greek-Melkite Catholic Patriarch of Antioch (patriarch elected 2000) 1.2.2. Syrian Catholic Patriarch of Antioch (patriarch elected 2009) 1.2.3. Maronite Patriarch of Antioch (patriarch elected 2011) 1.3. Chaldean Patriarch of Babylon (patriarchs since 3rd century; Catholic patriarchs since 1553) 1.4. Armenian Catholic Patriarch of Cilicia (patriarchs since ca. 294; Catholic patriarchs since 1742) 2. Major archiepiscopal sees: 2.1. Major archbishop of Kyiv‒Halych (Lviv 1963; Kyiv 2004) 2.2. Major archbishop of Ernakulam‒Angamaly (1992) 2.3. Major archbishop of Trivandrum (10 Feb. 2005) 2.4. Major archbishop of Făgăraş şi Alba Iulia (16 Dec. 2005)
So the order of precedence provided for by cann. 59 and 154 is applied. Can. 60 is not applicable to this kind of list of all patriarchs and major archbishops.
Please let me know what your objections are. I would appreciate any legitimate corrections.
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you may wish to factor in that the Melkite Patriarch is Patriarch of Antioch, Alexandria, and Jerusalem.
so perhaps he may take precendence over the Coptic Catholic Pope of Alexandria?
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Herbigny, That is an interesting point. Though as I understand it the Greek Melkite Patriarch is Patriarch of Antioch first and only by courtesy Patriarch of Alexandria and Jerusalem. After all he resides in Damascus, which is within the Patriarchate of Antioch. He does not normally reside either in Jerusalem or in Alexandria. Also the majority of the Greek Melkite faithful are found in Syria and Lebanon, not in Jerusalem or in Alexandria. Thus my contention would be that Patriarch Antonios takes precedence over Patriarch Gregorios III. I don't think Patriarch Gregorios III would disagree. This discussion brings to mind the beautiful scene [ youtube.com] at the funeral of Pope John Paul II when Coptic Patriarch Stephanos II of blessed memory censed the coffin and Melkite Patriarch Gregorios III chanted the prayers for the departed. Trying to oppose one to the other seems rather pointless.
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The first is last and the last is first. The whole idea of precedence seems utterly pointless to me.
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dear LC:
The Melkite Patriarch has episcopal vicars in Both Alexandria and Jerusalem. I'm not sure whether there are a lot of Melkites in Egypt, but the biggest Catholic church (not sure if it is the biggest church) in Israel is Melkite.
Yes, the Panakhyda for JPII was indeed beautiful! by the way, it was natural for the Melkite to sing the service because it was a Byzantine Panakhyda that they did - not a Coptic Service.
(I wonder what the Coptic equivalent of a panakhyda is?)
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Yet the Church makes a very definite point of regulating precedence, whether it be among patriarchs or among parish priests and their curates. Perhaps it is meant to remind everyone that "the last [shall] be first, and the first last" (Mt. 20:16).
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It has little to do with that.
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Dear Herbigny,
your point is well taken. If we are to trust the Annuario Pontificio 2010 there are about 6,200 Melkites in Egypt and Sudan, compared to about 163,630 Copts in Egypt alone. While I do not think we can rely completely on these figures, I think they are indicative. Furthermore, for historical reasons I would go a long way to defend the rights of the Copts in the patriarchate of Alexandria against the Melkites. But, as I have tried to point out, unity should be our theme, not division or precedence.
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Amado,
I don't quite understand your point. What specifically in the above list of patriarchs are you objecting to?
I have tried to follow CCEO can. 59, which grants precedence first to 1. Constantinople, 2. Alexandria, 3. Antioch and 4. Jerusalem (§ 2) and then to other patriarchal sees according to their antiquity (§ 3). Furthermore, I have followed can. 59 § 4 which grants precedence to patriarchs of the same title (e.g. Antioch) according to seniority of promotion to the patriarchal dignity. Furthermore I have tried to follow CCEO can. 154 which assigns precedence to major archbishops according to the order in which their churches received major archiepiscopal dignity.
Thus we have the following order of precedence:
1. Patriarchal sees: 1.1. Coptic Catholic Patriarch of Alexandria 1.2. Patriarchs of Antioch according to seniority: 1.2.1. Greek-Melkite Catholic Patriarch of Antioch (patriarch elected 2000) 1.2.2. Syrian Catholic Patriarch of Antioch (patriarch elected 2009) 1.2.3. Maronite Patriarch of Antioch (patriarch elected 2011) 1.3. Chaldean Patriarch of Babylon (patriarchs since 3rd century; Catholic patriarchs since 1553) 1.4. Armenian Catholic Patriarch of Cilicia (patriarchs since ca. 294; Catholic patriarchs since 1742) 2. Major archiepiscopal sees: 2.1. Major archbishop of Kyiv‒Halych (Lviv 1963; Kyiv 2004) 2.2. Major archbishop of Ernakulam‒Angamaly (1992) 2.3. Major archbishop of Trivandrum (10 Feb. 2005) 2.4. Major archbishop of Făgăraş şi Alba Iulia (16 Dec. 2005)
So the order of precedence provided for by cann. 59 and 154 is applied. Can. 60 is not applicable to this kind of list of all patriarchs and major archbishops.
Please let me know what your objections are. I would appreciate any legitimate corrections. Dear LC: I was not objecting to your iteration; I was directing my objection to the posts previous to yours. Amado
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Dear Amado,
I am sorry, I misunderstood you. Mea culpa.
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It has little to do with that. It has a lot to do with that. If you are the pope or the patriarch, and recognized by everyone as the "first," Mt. 20:16 should put the fear of God into you.
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That does not make sense.
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What about His Beatitude Lucian Mureşan, Major Archbishop of the Romanian Greek Catholic Church? Wouldn't he be regarded as a patriarch?
Edit: Oops, I see Latin Catholic just posted before me. In my opinion, Major Archbishop is not the same thing as Patriarch. Head of the Church would be a better way to call it than Major Archbishop. Actually to call them Archbishop and grant them the title "Beatitude" is the best, I think. The term "major archbishop" is a 20th century invention that has nothing to do with the traditions of the Church. The Orthodox leader of the Church of Greece is the archbishop of Athens, who is not a patriarch and won't be consider as such also because of historical reasons. I gave one example, but the list can go on.
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It's too late in the night to do more than skim thru the myrid posts made in the past 24h, as I have an early appt in the morning, so I'll limit my comment to one regarding the precedence involved with Alexandria and Antioch. It is my understanding that the Melkite Patriarch of Antioch takes precedence next after the Coptic Patriarch (and before the Maronite and Syriac Patriarchs of Antioch) by virtue of the fact that he bears the additional title of Alexandria, albeit ad personam.
LS is correct as regards Major Archbishops. While they are accorded the styling 'Beatitude', for purpose of precedence, they follow Patriarchs except that, within their own territory, they are commemorated first in the dyptichs.
Many years,
Neil
"One day all our ethnic traits ... will have disappeared. Time itself is seeing to this. And so we can not think of our communities as ethnic parishes, ... unless we wish to assure the death of our community."
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Dearly beloved, I knew this was going to happen. The original question was the precedence of Greek-Catholic Patriarchs. The Copts, the Maronites, the Armenians, the Chaldeans and so forth are Eastern Catholics, but they are not Greek-Catholics.
Metropolitan Lucian of Romania does not use the Patriarchal title - probably in order to avoid unpleasantness with the Romanian Orthodox Patriarchate.
So that leaves us with exactly two Greek-Catholic Patriarchs: Gregory III and Sviatoslav.
Father Serge
Last edited by Fr Serge Keleher; 03/29/11 03:05 AM.
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