Archeparchy of Petra and Philadelphia in Amman (Melkite Greek) Archeparchy Petrensis et Philadelphiensis |
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Location | |
Country | Jordan |
Statistics | |
Population - Catholics |
(as of 2007) 27,000 |
Parishes | 28 |
Information | |
Denomination | Melkite Greek Catholic Church |
Rite | Byzantine Rite |
Established | 1932 |
Cathedral | Saint George Cathedral |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Patriarch | Gregory III Laham |
Archeparch | Sede vacante |
Emeritus Bishops |
Georges El-Murr Yasser Ayyash |
Melkite Greek Catholic Archeparchy of Petra and Philadelphia in Amman (Latin: Archeparchy Petrensis et Philadelphiensis) is a branch of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church immediately subject to the Patriarchate of Antioch of the Melkites. In 2007 there were 27,000 baptized. The see is currently vacant after the resignation of Yasser Ayyash in 2015.
The archeparchy extends its jurisdiction over all the faithful of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church in Jordan.
Archeparchial seat is the city of Amman, where is the Cathedral of St. George.
The territory is divided into 28 parishes. The archeparchy at the end of 2007 counted 27,000 baptized.
The Archeparchy of Transjordan was erected on May 2, 1932 with the bull Apostolica Sedes of Pope Pius XI.
The Northern Territory was part of the Melkite Greek Catholic Archeparchy of Bosra and Hauran, while the rest of the territory was part of the ancient metropolis of the Archbishop of Petra. In this area in the early twentieth century were established missions both by the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem.
The foundation of the Archieparchy was the occasion of a comparison between the Melkite Patriarch of Antioch and the Holy See. The patriarch thought that the erection of the ecclesiastical jurisdiction depended on him, as the new home was an integral part of his patriarchate. Rome instead started from the principle that most of the territory of the new eparchy depended on the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, of which the patriarch of Antioch was only administrator, and that the conditions of this administration had never been determined or clarified.
In the above the bubble archeparchy assumed the name of Transjordan, terminology foreign to the history and tradition not only of the Melkite Church, but of all the Christian East. Moreover, the same bubble adds that "Transjordaniam regionem in veram ac propriam archidioecesim erigimus et constituimus," without specifying further if with Archidioecesis meant a home or an autocephalous metropolis of distinct groups in the Oriental Canon Law.
Patriarch Cyril IX Moghabghab consecrated in Cairo June 5, 1932 the first archeparch Paul Salman, entrusting him with the title of Metropolitan of Petra, Philadelphia and Transjordan. These securities to him two ancient sites, Petra and Philadelphia of Palestine of Arabia: the first is a metropolitan see and the second a simple suffragan dioceses; the first part of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, the second that of Antioch. According to Korolevsky (Dict. Hist. Et Geogr. Eccl.), these inaccuracies are signs of 'complete absence of knowledge on the subject of ecclesiastical geography ancient and traditional."