John Elya Explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific-Prefix:His Grace, The Most Reverend
John Adel Elya, B.S.O.
Eparchial Bishop of Newton
Church:Melkite Greek Catholic Church
Diocese:Melkite Greek Catholic Eparchy of Newton
Enthroned:January 25, 1994
Term End:June 22, 2004
Successor:Cyril Salim Bustros
Ordination:February 17, 1952
Consecration:June 29, 1986
Consecrated By:Maximos V Hakim, Joseph Tawil and Michel Hakim
Birth Date:16 September 1928
Birth Place:Maghdouché, Lebanon
Death Place:Joun, Lebanon
Previous Post:Auxiliary Eparch of Newton
Titular Bishop of Abila Lysaniae
Motto:That all may be one
John Adel Elya, B.S.O.
Dipstyle:

John Adel Elya (16 September 1928 – 19 July 2019) was a bishop of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church.[1] From 1993 to 2004, he served as Eparch of Newton, with jurisdiction over Melkite churches in the United States.

Biography

Elya, a native of Maghdouché, Lebanon, entered the Melkite Basilian Salvatorian Order, where he professed his solemn vows in 1949. After completing his philosophical and theological studies, Elya was ordained a priest on 17 February 1952. He later obtained a licentiate in theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University and taught moral theology and philosophy in the Monastery of Saint Savior in Lebanon and served as rector of the seminary of Saint Basil in Methuen, Massachusetts.

Elya went on to serve as a parish priest in Zerka, Jordan. He also served as the pastor of churches in Manchester, New Hampshire, Toronto, Ontario, and Lawrence, Massachusetts, and as rector of the Annunciation Melkite Catholic Cathedral in Roslindale, Massachusetts. While a priest in the United States he earned a master's degree from Boston College.

In 1977 Elya was named an archimandrite. He was appointed titular Bishop of Abilene of Lysanias and auxiliary to the Eparch of Newton. On 25 November 1993 he was appointed Eparch of Newton, succeeding the deceased Bishop Ignatius Ghattas. Elya was installed 25 January 1994, serving as eparch until his retirement on 22 June 2004. He was succeeded as eparch by Archbishop Cyril Salim Bustros.

In 1996, Bishop Elya took the notable action of ordaining a married man to the priesthood.[2] The Vatican had taken a restrictive view of ordaining married men to the priesthood in the Eastern Catholic churches of North America. Previously, North American married Melkites had gone overseas for ordination and returned as parish priests. Elya was the first to ordain a married man in the United States. In 2011 the Melkite Eparchy formally announced it was not observing the Vatican restriction of married men in the priesthood and in 2014, Pope Francis ended the prohibition.

Distinctions

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External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gcatholic.org/dioceses/diocese/newt0.htm#1978 Greek-Melkite Diocese of Newton
  2. https://orthocath.files.wordpress.com/2010/01/a_quiet_revolution.pdf
  3. Web site: His Excellency Cyrille Salim Boustros Mission Protection of the Most Holy Theotokos Monastery Organization of Commandry . 2016-05-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160604034302/http://java-man.net/wolff/pohcj/his_excellency_john_a_elya.htm . 2016-06-04 . dead .