Catholic Church in Lebanon
The Catholic Church in Lebanon is part of the worldwide Catholic Church under the spiritual leadership of the Pope in Rome.
There are about one million two hundred thousand Eastern Catholics in Lebanon, the majority of whom are not Latin Catholics, but instead follow a number of different rites of the Catholic Church - mostly Maronite, but also Melkite and non-native to Lebanon Catholic rites like Armenian, Chaldean, and Syriac.
The Maronite Catholic Church constitutes one of the largest Catholic churches in the Middle East. The "Land of the Cedars", as Lebanon is known, is the only one in the region where Catholics play an active role in national politics. Besides the President of the Republic (which, by the Constitution, must be a Maronite Catholic), there are in Lebanese Parliament 43 seats to Catholics out of a total of 128 seats. Catholics are also well represented in the government and in the public. Until the sixties Catholics were also the major component of the population and represented 43% of all Lebanese. Nowadays they are 26% of the total population, being Maronites 21% and Melkites 5%.
Recent history
Muslim and Christian communities coexist in the country for centuries. Cohabitation was sanctioned by a National Pact in 1943, which created a democracy based on religious communities. The country became a good example of religious and ethnic coexistence. But that lasted only a few decades. The larger communities, Christian and Muslim, were upset by the long civil war that raged between 1975 and 1990. The religious geography of the capital Beirut was redrawn: 65,000 Shiite Muslims abandoned their neighborhoods, and Nabaa chout; from interior regions, in contrast, to the capital flowed 80,000 Maronites and Druzes.[1] As a result of the Civil War, West Beirut was progressively abandoned by Christians. Also, a mass exodus fleeing saw tens of thousands of civilians, including Christians, Druze and Sunni Muslims.
Not enough internal upheavals, during this period, tens of thousands of Palestinian refugees entered the country. At the end of the Lebanese Civil War, Christians, by majority, were discovered minority.
Today Muslims are asked to review the National Pact agreement of 1943. For Christians there is the danger to pass from the status of full rights community to minority status.
In 1995 it was held a Special Assembly of Bishops for the Lebanon, convened by Pope John Paul II in Rome.
Territory and statistics
Since 1954 the Holy See has its own seat in Lebanon, the Apostolic Vicariate of Beirut.[2] with 15,000 Roman Catholics, 161 priests and 8 parishes in 2010. There are 1,883,000 Catholics in Lebanon (mainly Eastern Catholic Catholics), with 23 episcopal sees, 1,603 priests and 1,253 parishes belonging to the six Catholic rites.[3]
Rites of the Catholic Church in Lebanon
In addition to the Latin Church in Lebanon there are five other Catholic Churches sui iuris. Each is characterized by a liturgical rite specific differences. Among them, the main in Lebanon is the Syro-Antiochene. The Catholic Antiochian Rite form two distinct groups: the Maronite Church (main Catholic religious branch in Lebanon) and Syrian Catholic Church. Both churches have their patriarchal see in Lebanon. However, the Melkite Greek Catholic Church (second most important Catholic branch in Lebanon), Armenian Catholic Church and Chaldean Catholic Church are also present.
Apostolic Nunciature
The Apostolic Nunciature in Lebanon was established on 21 March 1947 with the short For christifidelium salutem by Pope Pius XII.
Nuncios
- Alcide Marina, CM (1947 - September 18, 1950, deceased)
- Giuseppe Beltrami (October 4, 1950 - January 31, 1959, appointed Apostolic Internuncio to the Netherlands)
- Paolo Bertoli (April 15, 1959 - April 16, 1960, appointed Apostolic Nuncio to France)
- Egano Righi-Lambertini (July 9, 1960 - September 12, 1963, appointed Apostolic Nuncio of Chile)
- Gaetano Alibrandi (December 9, 1963 - April 19, 1969, appointed Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland)
- Alfredo Bruniera (April 23, 1969 - November 6, 1978, appointed Pro-Nuncio of Kuwait)
- Carlo Furno (November 25, 1978 - August 21, 1982, appointed Apostolic Nuncio of Brazil)
- Luciano Angeloni (August 21, 1982 - July 31, 1989, appointed Apostolic Nuncio of Portugal)
- Pablo Puente Buces (July 31, 1989 - July 31, 1997, appointed Apostolic Nuncio of Great Britain)
- Antonio Maria Vegliò (October 2, 1997 - April 11, 2001 appointed secretary of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches)
- Luigi Gatti (June 28, 2001 - July 16, 2009 appointed Apostolic Nuncio of Greece)
- Gabriele Giordano Caccia, from July 16, 2009
Lebanese Religious Institute (Orders)
List of religious institutes that have the mother house in Lebanon:
Maronite Religious Institutes (Orders)
- Baladites Official website of the Lebanese Maronite Order
- Antonins Official website of the Lebanese Antonin Order
- Aleppians Official Website of the Mariamite Maronite Order (O.M.M.)
- Kreimists or Lebanese missionaries Official website of the Congregation of Maronite Lebanese Missionaries
Melkite Religious Institutes (Orders)
- Congregazione dei Sacri Cuori di Gesù e di Maria
- Francescane della Croce del Libano
- Istituto del Clero Patriarcale di Bzommar
- Monache Maronite
- Ordine Basiliano di San Giovanni Battista
- Suore Basiliane Aleppine
- Congrégation des Soeurs Basiliennes Chouérites
- Suore Salvatoriane dell'Annunciazione
See also
- Christianity in Lebanon
- Maronite Christianity in Lebanon
- Melkite Christianity in Lebanon
- Greek Orthodox Christianity in Lebanon
- Protestantism in Lebanon
- French Lebanese
- Italian Lebanese
- Levantines (Latin Christians)
- List of Saints from Asia