Ruthenian Catholic Eparchy of the Holy Protection of Mary of Phoenix explained

Jurisdiction:Eparchy
the Holy Protection of Mary of Phoenix
Latin:Eparchia Sanctae Mariae a Patrocinio in urbe Phoenicensi
Country:United States
Province:Pittsburgh
Metropolitan:William C. Skurla
Territory:Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, and Washington
Population As Of:2019
Catholics:2,261
Parishes:19
Denomination:Catholic Church
Sui Iuris Church:Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church
Rite:Byzantine Rite (Ruthenian and Russian recensions)
Established:December 3, 1981 (years ago)
Cathedral:St. Stephen Cathedral
Cocathedral:Proto-Cathedral of St. Mary
Patron:Holy Protection of Mary
Bishop Title:Eparch
Bishop:Sede Vacante
Apostolic Admin:Kurt Burnette
Vicar General:Diodoro Mendoza
Emeritus Bishops:John Stephen Pazak
Map:Eparchy of Phoenix map.png
Website:www.ephx.org
Founded:\

The Holy Protection of Mary Byzantine Catholic Eparchy of Phoenix, commonly known as the Eparchy of Phoenix and formerly known as the Byzantine Catholic Eparchy of Van Nuys, (Latin: Eparchia Vannaisensis) is a Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church territory jurisdiction or eparchy of the Catholic Church in the western United States. Its episcopal see is Phoenix, Arizona. The last bishop was the Most Reverend John Stephen Pazak.

The Eparchy of Phoenix's territorial jurisdiction consists of thirteen Western States. Churches are presently located in the states of Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, and Washington. It is a suffragan eparchy in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archeparchy of Pittsburgh., Holy Protection Eparchy of Phoenix has 19 parishes and 2 missions under its canonical jurisdiction. Most parishes follow the Ruthenian recension, although the eparchy includes one parish of the Italo-Albanian Catholic Church[1] and one of the Russian Greek Catholic Church.[2]

History

The creation of a new eparchy for the western United States was proposed by the metropolitan Council of Hierarchs in 1981. The Congregation for the Oriental Churches, a dicastery of the Roman Curia responsible for the Eastern Catholic Churches in communion with the Holy See, recommended the erection of a new eparchy, and it was approved by Pope John Paul II.

The Eparchy of Van Nuys was canonically inaugurated on March 9, 1982, when Archbishop Stephen Kocisko, Metropolitan of the Metropolia of Pittsburgh enthroned Thomas Dolinay as the first bishop of the eparchy. Archbishop Pio Laghi, Apostolic Delegate to the United States, represented the Roman Pontiff and read the Papal Bulla creating the eparchy and appointing Dolinay. Cardinal Timothy Manning, Archbishop of Los Angeles delivered the homily. The Church of St. Mary in Sherman Oaks, California, was designated as the cathedral.[3]

In 1990, with the retirement of Archbishop Kocisko of Pittsburgh approaching, Pope John Paul II relieved Dolinay of his duties as Bishop of Van Nuys and appointed him Coadjutor Archbishop of the Byzantine Catholic Archeparchy of Pittsburgh on February 19, 1990.[4] The Pope appointed the Auxiliary Bishop of Passaic, George M. Kuzma, to succeed Bishop Dolinay.

After the Northridge earthquake of 1994 damaged the Cathedral of St. Mary, the eparchial offices, and the bishop's residence, Bishop Kuzma moved his office and residence to Phoenix, Arizona. On February 10, 2010, the seat of the diocese was officially changed to Phoenix. Accordingly, the former pro-cathedral of St. Stephen was given the title of Cathedral, and the Cathedral of St. Mary received the title of Proto-Cathedral.[5]

Eparchs

The eparchal headquarters are at 8105 North 16th Street, Phoenix, Arizona.

Ordinaries

  1. Bishop Thomas Dolinay (1982 - 1990) †
  2. Bishop George Kuzma (1991 - 2000) †
  3. Bishop William C. Skurla (2002 - 2007)
  4. Bishop Gerald N. Dino (2007 - 2016) †
  5. Bishop John Stephen Pazak (2016 - 2021)
  6. Bishop Thomas Olmsted (Apostolic Administrator, 2018-2023; Apostolic Administrator Sede vacante as of August 1, 2018)[6]
  7. Bishop Kurt Burnette (Apostolic Administrator, 2023–present; Apostolic Administrator *Sede vacante as of January 23, 2023)[7]

† = deceased

Other priests of this eparchy who became bishops

Statistics

The eparchy has 19 parishes, two missions, 2,261 faithful, 35 priests, 12 deacons and 1 religious.[8]

See also

Parishes

Bibliography

External links

Eparchy of Phoenix
Other

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Our Lady of Wisdom Italo-Greek Byzantine Church. discovermass.com. 11 June 2020.
  2. Web site: Parishes – Eparchy of Phoenix.
  3. Web site: The Byzantine Church in the West. Eparchy of Phoenix..
  4. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bdolinay.html Thomas Dolinay bio sketch at Catholic-Hierarchy.org
  5. Web site: No possibility of moving back to California . California Catholic Daily . April 19, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110708111933/http://www.calcatholic.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?id=2ed0a59e-c79f-4a7d-a4cf-41c2ced290dd . July 8, 2011.
  6. News: Pope Francis Names Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted As Apostolic Administrator of the Byzantine Eparchy of Phoenix . March 29, 2023.
  7. News: Resignations and Appointments, 23.01.2023 . January 23, 2023.
  8. Web site: Holy Protection of Mary of Phoenix (Ruthenian Eparchy) [Catholic-Hierarchy] .