Orthodox-Catholic Church of America explained

Orthodox-Catholic Church of America
Caption:Seal of the OCCA
Polity:Episcopal
Main Classification:Christian syncretic (Eastern Orthodox/Oriental Orthodox/Western Catholic)
Founded Date:1892
Orientation:Western Christianity (Latin Rite)/Eastern Christianity (Byzantine Rite/East Syriac Rite)
Leader Title:Primate
Leader Name:Vacant
Founded Place:United States
Associations:Communion with Catholic Apostolic Church in North America[1]
Separated From:Syriac Orthodox Church (1910)
Area:United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Cameroon, Australia
Language:English

The Orthodox-Catholic Church of America (OCCA) is an independent and self-governing Christian syncretic (Eastern Orthodox/Oriental Orthodox/Western Catholic) jurisdiction based in the United States (including the territory of the US Virgin Islands), with clergy also in Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Africa, and Australia.[2]

The church celebrates predominantly a version of the Western Liturgy (Roman Rite) though some priests also celebrate the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom (Byzantine Rite) or the Liturgy of Addai and Mari (East Syriac Rite).[3] The OCCA is not associated with the Eastern Orthodox churches whose bishops are members of the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of the United States of America.

The OCCA is governed by a synod of diocesan bishops, currently six. The ecclesial purpose of the OCCA is to be a loving, welcoming and inclusive community where all people can attain the fundamental goal of the Orthodox Catholic faith, summed up by St. Maximos the Confessor (580-662 CE) as "All that God is, except for an identity in being, one becomes when one is deified by grace". This is effected through the worship of God in the Holy Trinity and the proclamation and living of the faith as taught in Holy Scripture, the Apostolic tradition, and the first three ecumenical councils of the Ancient church. The church recognizes sacramental ordination of women to the clergy and homosexual marriage.[4]

The OCCA is one of a number of churches practicing Orthodoxy in an American setting. Its worship and beliefs are influenced by Oriental, Eastern, and Western traditions, and considers itself to be one "self-governing" church out of many in the Orthodox tradition.[3]

Clergy and sacraments

The clergy ordained by the OCCA operate their ministries independently from the OCCA . According to a statement on the OCCA website:

History

The Orthodox-Catholic Church of America was established in the United States in 1892 under the mandate of the Syriac Orthodox Patriarch, Ignatius Peter IV. The founding archbishop, Joseph René Vilatte (ordained as Mar Timotheus), had been ordained as a priest by Bishop Ernst Herzog of the Old Catholic Church in Bern, Switzerland on June 7, 1885.[5] Working in the Great Lakes area, predominantly in Wisconsin, Vilatte sought to bring about the return of a Western Rite of Orthodoxy. Fr. Vilatte received both support and opposition in this attempt, but eventually he was consecrated as archbishop for North America, in Colombo, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) by Archbishop Francis Alvarez with the permission of the Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch in 1892.[6]

Saints

The OCCA has canonized two saints: St. David Edwards, a former priest of the OCCA, and St. Fr. Mychal Judge, O.F.M., a Catholic Franciscan friar and firehouse chaplain who was the first identified victim of the September 11 attacks in 2001.[7]

Name

In May 1891, Bishop Vladimir (Sokolovsky), the head of the Russian Orthodox Church in the United States, referred to Fr. Vilatte's flock as "true 'Old Catholic-Orthodox Christians' [now] under the patronage of our Church".[6]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Affiliations of the Orthodox-Catholic Church of America . Orthodox-Catholic Church of America . 2017-11-13.
  2. https://www.orthodoxcatholicchurch.org/about_background_3councils.html "OCCA Background – 3 Councils"
  3. https://www.orthodoxcatholicchurch.org/about.html "About OCCA"
  4. Web site: January 13, 2022. Frequently Asked Questions about the Orthodox Catholic Church of America.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20100424234746/http://www.concentric.net/~cosmas/vilatte.htm Joseph René Vilatte – First Independent Catholic Prelate in North America
  6. Theriault, Serge A., 2006. Msgr. Rene Vilatte: Community Organizer of Religion (1854–1929). Berkeley: Apocryphile Press.
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20100629155713/http://www.orthodoxcatholicchurch.org/saints.html Saints of the Orthodox-Catholic Church of America