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The word Church (ecclesia)
is used in its first sense to express whole congregation of Catholic
Christendom united in one Faith, obeying one hierarchy in communion
with itself. This is the sense of Matthew 16:18; 18:17; Ephesians
5:25-27, and so on. It is in this sense that we speak of the Church
without qualification, say that Christ founded one Church, and so on.
But the word is constantly applied to the various individual elements
of this union. As the whole is the Church, the universal Church, so are
its parts the Churches of Corinth, Asia, France, etc. This second use
of the word also occurs in the New Testament (Acts 15:41; 2 Corinthians
11:28; Revelation 1:4, 11, etc). Any portion then that forms a
subsidiary unity in itself may be called a local Church. The smallest
such portion is a diocese -- thus we speak of the Church of Paris, of
Milan, of Seville. Above this again we group metropolitical provinces
and national portions together as units, and speak of the Church of
Africa, of Gaul, of Spain. The expression "Church of Rome", it should
be noted, though commonly applied by non-Catholics to the whole
Catholic body, can only be used correctly in this secondary sense for
the local diocese (or possibly the province) of Rome, mother and
mistress of all Churches. A German Catholic is not, strictly speaking,
a member of the Church of Rome but of the Church of Cologne, or
Munich-Freising, or whatever it may be, in union with and under the
obedience of the Roman Church (although, no doubt, by a further
extension Roman Church may be used as equivalent to Latin Church for
the patriarchate).
The word is also used very
commonly for the still greater portions that are united under their
patriarchs, that is for the patriarchates. It is in this sense that we
speak of the Latin Church. The Latin Church is simply that vast portion
of the Catholic body which obeys the Latin patriarch, which submits to
the pope, not only in papal, but also in patriarchal matters. It is
thus distinguished from the Eastern Churches (whether Catholic or
Schismatic), which represent the other four patriarchates
(Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Jerusalem), and any fractions
broken away from them. The Latin patriarchate has always been
considerably the largest. Now, since the great part of Eastern
Christendom has fallen into schism, since vast new lands have been
colonized, conquered or (partly) converted by Latins (America,
Australia, etc.), the Latin part of the Catholic Church looms so
enormous as compared with the others that many people think that
everyone in communion with the pope is a Latin. This error is fostered
by the Anglican branch theory, which supposes the situation to be that
the Eastern Church is no longer in communion with Rome. Against this we
must always remember, and when necessary point out, that the
constitution of the Catholic Church is still essentially what it was at
the time of the Second Council of Nicaea (787; see also canon 21 of
Constantinople IV in 869 in the "Corp. Jur. can.", dist. xxii, c. vii).
Namely, there are still the five patriarchates, of which the Latin
Church is only one, although so great a part of the Eastern ones have
fallen away. The Eastern Churches, small as they are, still represent
the old Catholic Christendom of the East in union with the pope,
obeying him as pope, though not as their patriarch. All Latins are
Catholics, but not all Catholics are Latins. The old frontier passed
just east of Macedonia, Greece (Illyricum was afterwards claimed by
Constantinople), and Crete, and cut Africa west of Egypt. All to the
west of this was the Latin Church.
We must now add to Western
Europe all the new lands occupied by Western Europeans, to make up the
present enormous Latin patriarchate. Throughout this vast territory the
pope reigns as patriarch, as well as by his supreme position as visible
head of the whole Church with the exception of very small remnants of
other uses (Milan, Toledo, and the Byzantines of Southern Italy), his
Roman Rite is used throughout according to the general principle that
rite follows the patriarchate, that local bishops use the rite of their
patriarch. The medieval Western uses (Paris, Sarum and so on), of which
people at one time made much for controversial purposes, were in no
sense really independent rites, as are the remnants of the Gallican use
at Milan and Toledo. These were only the Roman Rite with very slight
local modifications. From this conception we see that the practical
disappearance of the Gallican Rite, however much the archeologist may
regret it, is justified by the general principle that rite should
follow patriarchate. Uniformity of rite throughout Christendom has
never been an ideal among Catholics; but uniformity in each
patriarchate is. We see also that the suggestion, occasionally made by
advanced Anglicans, of a "Uniate" Anglican Church with its own rite and
to some extent its own laws (for instance with a married clergy) is
utterly opposed to antiquity and to consistent canon law. England is
most certainly part of the Latin patriarchate. When Anglicans return to
the old Faith they find themselves subject to the pope, not only as
head of the Church but also as patriarch. As part of the Latin Church
England must submit to Latin canon law and the Roman Rite just as much
as France or Germany. The comparison with Eastern Rite Catholics rests
on a misconception of the whole situation. It follows also that the
expression Latin (or even Roman) Catholic is quite justifiable,
inasmuch as we express by it that we are not only Catholics but also
members of the Latin or Roman patriarchate. A Eastern Rite Catholic on
the other hand is a Byzantine, or Armenian, or Maronite Catholic. But a
person who is in schism with the Holy See is not, of course, admitted
by Catholics to be any kind of Catholic at all.
Publication information
Written by Adrian Fortescue. Transcribed by Michael C. Tinkler.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IX. Published 1910.
New York: Robert Appleton Company. Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1910. Remy
Lafort, Censor. Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York

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