Rome, Mother of All Churches

 Lăudat să fie Isus!


 


When soeaking about the Catholic Church, one might be thinking of the Pope, Rome, the West, the Roman Empire, celibate priests, Benedictine monks and such. Yet this is but a fraction of the Church. Technically speaking, the Church is constituted by 24 churches called sui iuris , which is to say each of these 24 has the autonomy to establish its own set of rules, so long as these are not contrary to the Catholic faith. One of these 24, which you dear reader likely belong to, we call the Latin Church. There are however 23 more, called Eastern, across the globe. This blog dares aspire to be merely a voice, as that of John the Baptist, crying out in the wilderness in order to cast a little more light upon this reality which eludes many. 

But is the Church not one? What do you mean 24?

The Church is indeed One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic. She is one because her Faith, though manifested in many ways, is one, as is her God and her visible head, the Pope. She is holy because her founder, Christ, God himself, is Holy. She is Catholic, a Greek term meaning universal, because all are called into her bosom. And she is apostolic because she is rooted in the Apostles and their successors, the Bishops.

Each of these 24 churches is present in Rome, whose true nature has been buried under a millennium of her being seen as the mere head of the Latin church, ever since the Great Schism; this nature of Rome is what I should hope everyone comes to see. As for my Eastern brethren, my aim is no less ambitious: that they will see Rome not just as the head of the Latin church but indeed as the Mother of All Churches which she truly is, Mater Roma, hence the name of this blog. Another wish of mine is that all Catholics may come to see the Pope, rightly, as the Pastor of the Universal Church, as opposed to that of the Latin Church only. Saint Leo the Great, patron of this blog, spoke of the care which the Papacy owes to all the churches, primarily by Divine institution (curara quam universis ecclesiis principaliter ex divina institutione debemus) and it is in this sense that the Pope is called Servant of the Servants of God, thanks to Saint Gregory the Great, known as Dialogul (the Dialogist) in the East.

This first post is my mission statement as a Catholic of one of those 23 Eastern churches. May this blog serve, once again, as a light to disperse the darkness of oblivion, and may everyone but especially Catholics come to see the greatness and beauty of their Church.



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