Maronite Catholic Archeparchy of Beirut

Archeparchy of Beirut (Maronite)
Archeparchia Berytensis Maronitarum
Location
Country Lebanon
Ecclesiastical province Immediately Subject to the Maronite Patriarch of Antioch
Statistics
Population
- Catholics
(as of 2012)
232,000
Parishes 127
Information
Sui iuris church Maronite Church
Rite West Syro-Antiochene Rite
Established 1577
Cathedral Saint George Cathedral
Current leadership
Pope Francis
Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rahi
Archeparch Paul Youssef Matar

Maronite Catholic Archeparchy of Beirut (in Latin: Archeparchia Berytensis Maronitarum) is an archeparchial seat of the Maronite Church immediately subject to the Holy See in Lebanon. In 2012 there were 232,000 baptized. It is currently ruled by Archeparch Paul Youssef Matar.

Territory and statistics

The archeparchy includes the Beirut Governorate and the central part of the Mount Lebanon Governorate. Its archeparchial seat is the city of Beirut, where is located the Saint George Cathedral.

The territory is divided into 127 parishes and in 2012 there were 232,000 Maronite Catholics.

History

The presence of a sizeable Maronite community in Beirut dates back to the Crusades, as witnessed by William of Tyre. With the departure of the Crusaders, the community had an inevitably decrease. Its first bishop known is Youssef, mentioned in 1577 in the Annals of Patriarch Boutros Estephan El Douaihy. However the history of the Maronite bishops of Beirut for the past times is too flawed to be able to say with certainty that it was Youssef its first bishop.

After that Beirut had at least a century before finding the name of another bishop, Youssef Damascus (as-Sami, 1691). By now the number of Bishops is regular and uninterrupted until today. Among the successive bishops there was a special mention to Abdallah Qara'ali, founder of the OLM, renowned jurist, who played an important role in the Synod of Maronite Bishops of Mount Lebanon in 1736. This synod canonically established the Maronite episcopal sees, including even that of Beirut.

The residence of the bishops was not the city, but the monastery of Saint John of Qataleh. Only from Peter Karam Abu bishops began to reside permanently in Beirut. This favored the development of the Maronite community in a few years (1850 - 1870) from 3,000 to 15,000 faithful.

Tobia Aoun (1803-1871)

Bishop Tobia Aoun had trouble when he took possession of his seat facing opposition from a segment of the Maronite population, which supported a candidate who aspired to become bishop of Beirut, Nicolas Murad. Aoun eventually convinced him to abandon his project. Bishop Aoun finally took possession of the chair on June 10, 1847. Tobia Aoun travelled to Rome in 1862 and was personally received during a private audience by Pope Pius IX who named him Assistant to the Pontifical Throne. In becoming Assistant to the Pontifical Throne, Tobia Aoun immediately entered the Papal nobility as Count of Rome. In 1862, Bishop Aoun was received by Emperor Napoleon III in Paris and awarded the French Legion of Honour. That same year, he was received by Sultan Abdul-Aziz in Constantinople and awarded the Ottoman Empire's Order of Medjidjie (Nishan-i-Majidia). In 1869, Tobia Aoun returned to Rome as Council Father of the First Vatican Council called by Pope Pius IX. He started the construction of the archiepiscopal palace, which was completed by his successor Yusuf Dibs. Dibs rebuilt the Saint George Cathedral, in the forms we see today, and opened a minor seminary.

Bishop Pierre Chebly formed himself in France where he had spent most of his youth. During the First World War he was exiled by the Turks in Adana where he died.

The archeparchy is one of the most populous among archeparchies and eparchies of the Maronite Church. This archeparchy was visited three times by three popes: Paul VI (1964), John Paul II (1997) and Benedict XVI (September 2012).

Archeparchs

Sources

References

  1. [Competing with Jeremiah Najim, he was confirmed in 1786.]
  2. vol. IV, p. 234. elected in 1794.
  3. [He could take possession of his see only on 10 June 1847.]

External links

Coordinates: 33°53′42″N 35°30′18″E / 33.8950°N 35.5050°E / 33.8950; 35.5050

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