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Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat

The Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat Kuntsevych (SSJK) is a society of traditionalist priests and seminarians originating from the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church which is led by the excommunicated priest Basil Kovpak. It is based in Riasne, Lviv, Western Ukraine.[1] In Lviv, the society maintains a seminary, at which currently thirty students reside, and takes care of a small convent of Basilian sisters.[2] The SSJK is affiliated with the Society of St. Pius X and Holy Orders are conferred by the latter society's bishops in the Roman Rite. The SSJK clergymen, however, exclusively follow a version of Slavonic Byzantine Rite in the Ruthenian recension.

Josaphat Kuncevyc, patron saint of the society

Seminary edit

The seminary of the SSJK is dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Our Lady and currently is attended by thirty seminarians. The seminary, the society says, is intended to be a modest support in the conversion to Catholicism not only of Ukraine, but of Russia as well. Devotion to Our Lady of Fatima and fidelity to traditional Catholic theology (with an emphasis on pre-conciliar theological emphases) are considered important.

Relations with the sui iuris Ukrainian Catholic Church and the Holy See edit

Opposition to de-Latinization edit

The SSJK rejects the de-Latinization reforms currently being strongly enforced within the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, which is in full communion with Rome. These reforms began with the 1930s corrections of the liturgical books by Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky. According to his biographer Cyril Korolevsky, however, Metropolitan Andrey opposed the use of force against liturgical Latinizers. He expressed fear that any attempt to do so would lead to a Greek Catholic equivalent of the 1666 Schism in the Russian Orthodox Church.[3]

The de-Latinisation of the UGCC gained further momentum with the 1964 decree Orientalium Ecclesiarum of the Second Vatican Council) and several subsequent documents. This resulted in the Latinisations being discarded within the Ukrainian diaspora. The Soviet occupation of Western Ukraine had meanwhile forced Byzantine Catholics into a clandestine existence and the Latinizations continued to be used in the underground. After the prescription against the UGCC was lifted in 1989, numerous UGCC priests and hierarchs arrive from the diaspora and attempted to enforce liturgical conformity.

In his memoir Persecuted Tradition, Basil Kovpak has accused the UGCC hierarchy of using intense psychological pressure against priests who are reluctant or unwilling to de-Latinize. He alleges that numerous laity, who have been attached to the Latinizations since the days of the underground, would prefer to stay home on Sunday rather than attend a de-Latinized liturgy.

The SSJK for instance opposes the removal of the stations of the cross, the rosary, and the monstrance from the liturgy and parishes of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. In rejecting these reforms, they also reject the right of the Church authorities to make these reforms; thus who controls the formate of liturgy becomes an important point of debate.

Critics[who?] of the SSJK point out that their liturgical practice favours severely abbreviated services and imported Roman Rite devotions over the traditional and authentic practices and ancient devotions of Eastern Tradition and particularly the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. Proponents counter that these "Latin" symbols and rituals, borrowed from the Latin liturgical practices of their Latin Catholic Polish neighbours, have long been practised by Ukrainian Greek Catholics, in some cases for centuries, and that to suppress them is to deprive the Ukrainian Catholic faithful of a part of their own sacred heritage. The central point in the dispute is over what constitutes 'organic development'.

The Holy See, however, has argued since before the Second Vatican Council that Latinization was not an organic development. Frequently cited examples of this are Pope Leo XIII's 1894 encyclical Orientalium dignitas[4] and Saint Pius X's instructions that the priests of the Russian Catholic Church should offer the liturgy "no more, no less, and no different" (nec plus, nec minus, nec aliter) than the Orthodox and Old Ritualist clergy.

Church Slavonic edit

 
Vladimir the Great. The society declares that one of its main goals is conversion of Russia and Ukraine to unity with the Catholic Church.

The SSJK also opposes the abandonment of Church Slavonic, the traditional liturgical language of the Slavic Churches (both Orthodox and Greek-Catholic) in favour of the modern Ukrainian in the Liturgy of the Ukrainian Catholic Church. The society holds that Church Slavonic is essential to stress necessary Catholic unity among all Slavic peoples, and to avoid nationalism which has for a long time divided Slavic Christians.

However, critics[who?] claim that the essence of Eastern liturgical practice is to pray in a language which is understood by the people, and that Church Slavonic has ceased to be such a language, becoming a pale imitation of the Western practice of using Latin to promote unity. The Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church has a large presence in many non-Slavic countries, with numerous eparchies and parishes in the diaspora, exacerbating the problem of parishioners not understanding what is being celebrated as well as raising issues of assimilation.

Ecumenism edit

The Society of Saint Josaphat condemns ecumenism with the Orthodox currently practised by both the Holy See and the Ukrainian Catholic Church. Instead the society promotes Catholic missionary activities among the Orthodox, who are not in communion with the Holy See. In Persecuted Tradition, Basil Kovpak cites numerous examples of the UGCC turning away Orthodox clergy and laity who wish to convert. In many cases, he alleges, this is because the converts are not ethnically Ukrainian.

Attempted excommunication edit

In 2003, Cardinal Lubomyr Husar excommunicated SSJK superior Kovpak from the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. Kovpak appealed this punishment at the Apostolic Tribunal of the Roman Rota in Vatican City and the excommunication was declared null and void by reason of a lack of canonical form.

Ordinations in 2006 edit

On 22 November 2006, Bishop Richard Williamson who was then a member of the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX), ordained two priests and seven deacons in Warsaw, Poland, for the SSJK, in violation of canon 1015 §2, and of canons 1021 and 1331 §2 of the Code of Canon Law, and the corresponding canons of the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches. An SSPX priest who was present remarked, "We were all very edified by their piety, and I myself was astonished by the resemblance of the atmosphere amongst the seminarians with that which I knew in the seminary – this in spite of the difference of language, nationality and even rite."[5]

Archbishop Ihor Vozniak of Lviv (the archdiocese in which Kovpak is incardinated) denounced Williamson's action as a "criminal act" and condemned Kovpak's participation in the ceremony. He stressed that the two priests that Williamson had ordained would not receive faculties within the archeparchy.[6] Officials of the Lviv archdiocese said that Kovpak could face excommunication, and that "'he deceives the church by declaring that he is a Greek (Byzantine) Catholic priest,' while supporting a group [SSPX] that uses the old Latin liturgy exclusively, eschewing the Byzantine tradition, and does not maintain allegiance to the Holy See."[7] Accordingly, Kovpak's excommunication process was restarted by the hierarchy of the Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church and confirmed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on 23 November 2007.[8]

Father John Jenkins, a priest of the Society of St. Pius X, said in 2006 that the new archbishop of Lviv declared that his main task for the following year was to eradicate the "Lefebvrists" from his territory.[9]

Position of the society edit

Although the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, with the backing of the Holy See, had thus declared Kovpak excommunicated and the Society of St. Josaphat lacking faculties for a ministry within the Catholic Church, they themselves maintain that, though they are in dispute with Lubomyr and, presumably, with his successor, Sviatoslav Shevchuk, and through their association with the Society of St Pius X, indirectly in dispute with the church hierarchy, they are loyal to the Pope and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, and are merely resisting what they consider to be modernism, indifferentism, and liberalism.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 June 2007.
  2. ^ A Convent for Tradition in the Ukraine Web site of the Transalpine Redemptorists who became reconciled with the Holy See in 2009. 13 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Cyril Korolevsky, Metropolitan Andrew (1868–1944), Translated and Edited by Serge Keleher. Stauropegion Brotherhood, Lviv, 1993.
  4. ^ "Orientalium Dignitas". 30 November 1894.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 August 2006. Retrieved 11 August 2006.
  6. ^ The Holy See has likewise declared SSPX priests to be "suspended from exercising their priestly functions" (Letter of Monsignor Camille Perl, Secretary of the Ecclesia Dei Commission 2 February 2003 at the Wayback Machine). A minority of them – ordained before 1976 by archbishop Marcel Lefebvre for the SSPX – were and remained until now incardinated in several European dioceses. They are thus in the same position as excommunicated Kovpak, who is incardinated in the Ukrainian Archdiocese of Lviv. The newly-ordained clergy, however, are not incardinated into any Ukrainian Catholic diocese, and thus are not clergy of the Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church.
  7. ^ Catholic World News: Byzantine Catholics decry Lefebvrite inroads into Ukraine The accusation of "eschewing the Byzantine tradition" refers to Kovpak's championing of Latinizing elements which were followed by Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church since the 17th century, but forcibly purged following the Second Vatican Council.
  8. ^ Ukrainian priest excommunicated Catholic World News, 21 November 2007
  9. ^ La Porte Latine, 31 March 2006 Interview with 'La Porte Latine' La Porte Latine, 31 March 2006, by Father Jenkins, Prior of Warsaw ] 7 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  • Official site of Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat
  • Ukrainian Rite: Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat in Lviv, Galicia 11 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • Photos: Ordinations to Diaconate and Sacred Priesthood by Bishop Williamson, Warsaw, 2006. 10 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine (Polish language)
  • "Persecuted Tradition", book by Fr. Vasyl Kovpak. Book review and introduction to SSJK. 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Catholic - Voice of Catholic Orthodoxy, November 2003.
  • CWNews: Bishop Vozniak decries Lefebvrite inroads, says these cause "confusion" among faithful
  • Обережно!!! Обман!!! - свячення лефевристів у Варшаві (Ukrainian language)
  • Проблема лефевризму знову загострилася у Львівській архиєпархії УГКЦ[permanent dead link] (Ukrainian language)
  • Priestly Ordinations of SSJK 22 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine conferred by Bishop Bernard Fellay in the Roman Rite at Warsaw, October, 2007.

priestly, society, saint, josaphat, kuntsevych, ssjk, society, traditionalist, priests, seminarians, originating, from, ukrainian, greek, catholic, church, which, excommunicated, priest, basil, kovpak, based, riasne, lviv, western, ukraine, lviv, society, main. The Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat Kuntsevych SSJK is a society of traditionalist priests and seminarians originating from the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church which is led by the excommunicated priest Basil Kovpak It is based in Riasne Lviv Western Ukraine 1 In Lviv the society maintains a seminary at which currently thirty students reside and takes care of a small convent of Basilian sisters 2 The SSJK is affiliated with the Society of St Pius X and Holy Orders are conferred by the latter society s bishops in the Roman Rite The SSJK clergymen however exclusively follow a version of Slavonic Byzantine Rite in the Ruthenian recension Josaphat Kuncevyc patron saint of the society Contents 1 Seminary 2 Relations with the sui iuris Ukrainian Catholic Church and the Holy See 2 1 Opposition to de Latinization 2 2 Church Slavonic 2 3 Ecumenism 2 4 Attempted excommunication 3 Ordinations in 2006 4 Position of the society 5 References 6 External linksSeminary editThe seminary of the SSJK is dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Our Lady and currently is attended by thirty seminarians The seminary the society says is intended to be a modest support in the conversion to Catholicism not only of Ukraine but of Russia as well Devotion to Our Lady of Fatima and fidelity to traditional Catholic theology with an emphasis on pre conciliar theological emphases are considered important Relations with the sui iuris Ukrainian Catholic Church and the Holy See editOpposition to de Latinization edit See also Eastern Catholic liturgy The SSJK rejects the de Latinization reforms currently being strongly enforced within the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church which is in full communion with Rome These reforms began with the 1930s corrections of the liturgical books by Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky According to his biographer Cyril Korolevsky however Metropolitan Andrey opposed the use of force against liturgical Latinizers He expressed fear that any attempt to do so would lead to a Greek Catholic equivalent of the 1666 Schism in the Russian Orthodox Church 3 The de Latinisation of the UGCC gained further momentum with the 1964 decree Orientalium Ecclesiarum of the Second Vatican Council and several subsequent documents This resulted in the Latinisations being discarded within the Ukrainian diaspora The Soviet occupation of Western Ukraine had meanwhile forced Byzantine Catholics into a clandestine existence and the Latinizations continued to be used in the underground After the prescription against the UGCC was lifted in 1989 numerous UGCC priests and hierarchs arrive from the diaspora and attempted to enforce liturgical conformity In his memoir Persecuted Tradition Basil Kovpak has accused the UGCC hierarchy of using intense psychological pressure against priests who are reluctant or unwilling to de Latinize He alleges that numerous laity who have been attached to the Latinizations since the days of the underground would prefer to stay home on Sunday rather than attend a de Latinized liturgy The SSJK for instance opposes the removal of the stations of the cross the rosary and the monstrance from the liturgy and parishes of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church In rejecting these reforms they also reject the right of the Church authorities to make these reforms thus who controls the formate of liturgy becomes an important point of debate Critics who of the SSJK point out that their liturgical practice favours severely abbreviated services and imported Roman Rite devotions over the traditional and authentic practices and ancient devotions of Eastern Tradition and particularly the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church Proponents counter that these Latin symbols and rituals borrowed from the Latin liturgical practices of their Latin Catholic Polish neighbours have long been practised by Ukrainian Greek Catholics in some cases for centuries and that to suppress them is to deprive the Ukrainian Catholic faithful of a part of their own sacred heritage The central point in the dispute is over what constitutes organic development The Holy See however has argued since before the Second Vatican Council that Latinization was not an organic development Frequently cited examples of this are Pope Leo XIII s 1894 encyclical Orientalium dignitas 4 and Saint Pius X s instructions that the priests of the Russian Catholic Church should offer the liturgy no more no less and no different nec plus nec minus nec aliter than the Orthodox and Old Ritualist clergy Church Slavonic edit nbsp Vladimir the Great The society declares that one of its main goals is conversion of Russia and Ukraine to unity with the Catholic Church The SSJK also opposes the abandonment of Church Slavonic the traditional liturgical language of the Slavic Churches both Orthodox and Greek Catholic in favour of the modern Ukrainian in the Liturgy of the Ukrainian Catholic Church The society holds that Church Slavonic is essential to stress necessary Catholic unity among all Slavic peoples and to avoid nationalism which has for a long time divided Slavic Christians However critics who claim that the essence of Eastern liturgical practice is to pray in a language which is understood by the people and that Church Slavonic has ceased to be such a language becoming a pale imitation of the Western practice of using Latin to promote unity The Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church has a large presence in many non Slavic countries with numerous eparchies and parishes in the diaspora exacerbating the problem of parishioners not understanding what is being celebrated as well as raising issues of assimilation Ecumenism edit The Society of Saint Josaphat condemns ecumenism with the Orthodox currently practised by both the Holy See and the Ukrainian Catholic Church Instead the society promotes Catholic missionary activities among the Orthodox who are not in communion with the Holy See In Persecuted Tradition Basil Kovpak cites numerous examples of the UGCC turning away Orthodox clergy and laity who wish to convert In many cases he alleges this is because the converts are not ethnically Ukrainian Attempted excommunication edit In 2003 Cardinal Lubomyr Husar excommunicated SSJK superior Kovpak from the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church Kovpak appealed this punishment at the Apostolic Tribunal of the Roman Rota in Vatican City and the excommunication was declared null and void by reason of a lack of canonical form Ordinations in 2006 editOn 22 November 2006 Bishop Richard Williamson who was then a member of the Society of St Pius X SSPX ordained two priests and seven deacons in Warsaw Poland for the SSJK in violation of canon 1015 2 and of canons 1021 and 1331 2 of the Code of Canon Law and the corresponding canons of the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches An SSPX priest who was present remarked We were all very edified by their piety and I myself was astonished by the resemblance of the atmosphere amongst the seminarians with that which I knew in the seminary this in spite of the difference of language nationality and even rite 5 Archbishop Ihor Vozniak of Lviv the archdiocese in which Kovpak is incardinated denounced Williamson s action as a criminal act and condemned Kovpak s participation in the ceremony He stressed that the two priests that Williamson had ordained would not receive faculties within the archeparchy 6 Officials of the Lviv archdiocese said that Kovpak could face excommunication and that he deceives the church by declaring that he is a Greek Byzantine Catholic priest while supporting a group SSPX that uses the old Latin liturgy exclusively eschewing the Byzantine tradition and does not maintain allegiance to the Holy See 7 Accordingly Kovpak s excommunication process was restarted by the hierarchy of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and confirmed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on 23 November 2007 8 Father John Jenkins a priest of the Society of St Pius X said in 2006 that the new archbishop of Lviv declared that his main task for the following year was to eradicate the Lefebvrists from his territory 9 Position of the society editAlthough the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church with the backing of the Holy See had thus declared Kovpak excommunicated and the Society of St Josaphat lacking faculties for a ministry within the Catholic Church they themselves maintain that though they are in dispute with Lubomyr and presumably with his successor Sviatoslav Shevchuk and through their association with the Society of St Pius X indirectly in dispute with the church hierarchy they are loyal to the Pope and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and are merely resisting what they consider to be modernism indifferentism and liberalism citation needed References edit Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat Ukrainian Rite Archived from the original on 11 June 2007 A Convent for Tradition in the Ukraine Web site of the Transalpine Redemptorists who became reconciled with the Holy See in 2009 Archived 13 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine Cyril Korolevsky Metropolitan Andrew 1868 1944 Translated and Edited by Serge Keleher Stauropegion Brotherhood Lviv 1993 Orientalium Dignitas 30 November 1894 La Porte Latine Jenkins anglais Archived from the original on 23 August 2006 Retrieved 11 August 2006 The Holy See has likewise declared SSPX priests to be suspended from exercising their priestly functions Letter of Monsignor Camille Perl Secretary of the Ecclesia Dei Commission Archived 2 February 2003 at the Wayback Machine A minority of them ordained before 1976 by archbishop Marcel Lefebvre for the SSPX were and remained until now incardinated in several European dioceses They are thus in the same position as excommunicated Kovpak who is incardinated in the Ukrainian Archdiocese of Lviv The newly ordained clergy however are not incardinated into any Ukrainian Catholic diocese and thus are not clergy of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church Catholic World News Byzantine Catholics decry Lefebvrite inroads into Ukraine The accusation of eschewing the Byzantine tradition refers to Kovpak s championing of Latinizing elements which were followed by Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church since the 17th century but forcibly purged following the Second Vatican Council Ukrainian priest excommunicated Catholic World News 21 November 2007 La Porte Latine 31 March 2006 Interview with La Porte Latine La Porte Latine 31 March 2006 by Father Jenkins Prior of Warsaw Archived 7 November 2006 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editOfficial site of Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat Ukrainian Rite Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat in Lviv Galicia Archived 11 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine La Porte Latine Ordinations to the Diaconate of two Ukrainian seminarians Photos Ordinations to Diaconate and Sacred Priesthood by Bishop Williamson Warsaw 2006 Archived 10 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine Polish language Persecuted Tradition book by Fr Vasyl Kovpak Book review and introduction to SSJK Archived 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Catholic Voice of Catholic Orthodoxy November 2003 CWNews Bishop Vozniak decries Lefebvrite inroads says these cause confusion among faithful Oberezhno Obman svyachennya lefevristiv u Varshavi Ukrainian language Problema lefevrizmu znovu zagostrilasya u Lvivskij arhiyeparhiyi UGKC permanent dead link Ukrainian language Priestly Ordinations of SSJK Archived 22 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine conferred by Bishop Bernard Fellay in the Roman Rite at Warsaw October 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Priestly Society of Saint Josaphat amp oldid 1175228943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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