Melkite Greek Catholic Church names new hierarchs
Damascus (byzcath.org) - His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI has given his assent to the election of two archbishops, canonically elected by the Holy Synod of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church, at Ain Traz on 25 June 2010.
They are:
- The Most Rev. Archbishop Cyril Salim Bustros, hitherto Eparch of Newton (USA), elected Metropolitan of Beirut and Jbeil, Lebanon;
- The Most Rev. Bishop Issam John Darwish, B. S., hitherto Eparch of St Michael the Archangel of Sydney, (Australia and New Zealand), elected Archbishop of Zahleh and Furzol, Lebanon.
15 June 2011
As of today, 15 June 2011, His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI, at the proposal of the Holy Synod of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church, has named two hierarchs for the eparchies of our expansion vacant as a result of the transfer of their respective eparchs to other eparchies.
They are:
- The Most Rev. Nicholas James Samra, hitherto titular Bishop of Gerasa and former Protosynkellos of the Eparchy of Newton, (USA), named Eparch of the same Eparchy of Newton;
- The Rt. Rev. Archim. Robert Rabbat, hitherto rector of the Eparchial Cathedral of Newton and editor-in-chief of the eparchy's journal Sophia, named Eparch of St Michael the Archangel of Sydney (Australia and New Zealand).
I have always wondered why the Byzantine Catholics retain the terms Eparch, Eparchy, Eparchial while the Byzantine Orthodox use the western terms diocesan, diocese, dioceses. Very bizarre.
ReplyDeleteOrthodox still use the term in the Old World - Belarusian, Bulgarian, Czech, Russian, Serbian Slovak, and Ukrainian Orthodox all use the term to refer to dioceses. From the sounds of things the Eastern Catholics in the States simply chose to use the Eastern term rather than adopt Western terminology. (We don't call a phelonion a chasuble after all :-).)
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