Chaldean Catholic Church
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (April 2007) |
The Chaldean Catholic Church aka the Chaldean Church of Babylon (Arabic: الكنيسة الكلدانية, al-kanīsä 'l-kaldāniyyä) is an Eastern Rite sui juris (autonomous) particular church of the Catholic Church, maintaining full communion with the Bishop of Rome. The Chaldean Catholic Church has no direct or absolute connotations with the Neo-Babylonian "Chaldeans", but were designated with the name Chaldean in the 15th century when they united with the Catholic Church to distinguish from the adherents of the Assyrian Church of the East. The Chaldean Catholic Church presently estimates a total of 600,000 - 700,000 Chaldean Assyrians. [1]
It descends from the Church of the East. In the 15th century the Chaldean Church decreed that the title of Patriarch could pass only to relatives of then-patriarch Mar Simon IV. Dissent over this grew until in 1552, a group of bishops refused to accept the hereditary succession of an untrained boy to the Patriarchy.[citation needed]
They elected Mar John VIII Sulaqa, the superior of an abbey, as a rival Patriarch. Sulaqa travelled to Rome and met with the Pope, eventually entering into communion with the Catholic Church. The Church of the East now had two rival leaders,[attribution needed] a hereditary patriarch in Alqosh (in modern-day northern Iraq), and a Papal-appointed patriarch in Diyarbakır (in modern-day eastern Turkey). This situation lasted until 1662 when the Patriarch in Diyarbakır,[citation needed] Mar Simon XIII Dinkha,[citation needed] broke communion with Rome, and moved his seat to the village of Qochanis in the Turkish mountains. The Vatican responded by appointing a new patriarch to Diyarbakır to govern the Chaldeans who stayed loyal to the Holy See. This group became known as the Chaldean Catholic Church.
The communion with Rome was not final until 1830, when Pius VIII confirmed John Hormizdas as patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic rite, carrying the title "Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans."[citation needed] The most recent development in the Chaldean Rite of the Catholic Church has been the creation of the Eparchy of Oceania, with the title of 'St Thomas the Apostle of Sydney of the Chaldeans'.[citation needed] This jurisdiction includes the Chaldean Catholic communities of Australia and New Zealand, and the first Bishop, named by Pope Benedict XVI on 21st October 2006, is Archbishop Djibrail Kassab, until this date, Archbishop of Bassorah in Iraq.[citation needed] The church's relations with the Assyrian Church of the East have improved in recent years. A meeting in 1996 between H.H Mar Dinkha IV of the Assyrian Church and Mar Raphael I Bidawad of the Chaldean Catholic Church began an effort to bring the two churches into eventual communion.[citation needed]
The current Patriarch is Mar Emmanuel III Delly, elected in 2003 on the death of Mar Bidawid. In October of 2007 Delly became the first Chaldean Catholic to be elevated to the rank of Cardinal within the Roman Catholic Church. [2]
There has been a large immigration to the United States particularly to Southeast Michigan.[citation needed] There is also a population in parts of California and Arizona. Several thousands are stranded in passage [3]. The church's most notable member was Saddam Hussein's foreign minister, Tariq Aziz.
Contents |
See below in the Chaldean Catholic Church Hierarchy template.
- Diocese of Sanandaj
- Arcdiocese of Tehran
- Archioces of Urmih
- Arcdiocese of Ahwaz
- Fr. Ragheed Aziz Ganni, with subdeacons Basman Yousef Daud, Wahid Hanna Isho, and Gassan Isam Bidawed, 3 June 2007, Mosul, Iraq.
- Eastern Catholicism
- Eastern Orthodoxy
- Chaldean Assyrians
- Liturgies: East Syrian Rite, Holy Qurbana of Addai and Mari
- Byzantine Discalced Carmelites
- Chaldean Catholic Church - from the website of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association.
- Chaldean Catholic Diocese of Saint Peter
- Catholic Churches (In German)
- East Syrian Rite (Catholic Encyclopedia)
|
|
|
|---|---|
| Patriarchate | Babylon |
| Metropolitan Archdioceses | Baghdad | Kirkuk | Tehran | Urmya |
| Archdiocese | Ahwaz | Basra | Diyarbakir | Erbil | Mosul |
| Eparchies | Aleppe | Alquoch | Amadia | Akra | Beirut | Cairo | St Peter the Apostle of San Diego | St Thomas the Apostle of Detroit | St Thomas the Apostle of Sydney | Salmas | Sulaimaniya | Zaku |
| Territories Dependent on the Patriarch | Jerusalem | Jordan |
|
Syriac Christianity |
||
|---|---|---|
| Churches | Ancient Church of the East · Assyrian Church of the East · Assyrian Evangelical Church · Chaldean Catholic · Maronite Church · Syriac Catholic · Syriac Orthodox | |
| Subgroups | Assyrian people · Chaldeans · Nestorians · Syriacs · Naming dispute | |
Categories: Articles needing additional references from April 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since May 2007 | All pages needing cleanup | Wikipedia articles needing factual verification since July 2007 | Assyria | Chaldean Catholic Church | Chaldeans | Christianity in Iraq | Eastern Catholicism | National churches