Posted on 09/10/2004 5:55:21 AM PDT by nyconse
COLCHESTER, Conn. -- A church in Colchester was leveled by an explosion Friday morning. St. Mary's Ukrainian Church on Route 16, also known as Linwood Ave., was flattened by the explosion just before 7 a.m., according to state police. State police spokesman, Sgt. J. Paul Vance, said the area had been cordoned off and the highway was shut down in both directions. Vance said there was no initial report of injuries and there was no immediate indication of what caused the explosion. The state fire marshal was called to the scene as well utility company crews.
(Excerpt) Read more at newsday.com ...
Priests do not marry. Candidates for priestly ordination may get married prior to becoming priests. Once they are ordained they may not marry.
Sorry...When I worked at the Ukranian Prep schools in the late 80's, a Ukranian Catholic priest had an affaire with the math instructer. She became pregnant. He was told that if he wanted to marry her, he would have to go back to the Ukraine..He was already a Priest..He left the Ukranian Catholic Church and went on to become a Russian Orthodox priest. When the Ukranian's were reconciled in the Middle Ages-the agreement reached between Rome and the Ukranian Catholics was...priest could marry. Now Rome doesn't like this, and I have not doubt it is discouraged...but they did agree to it and priests can marry in the Ukraine (probably really frowned on by Rome but possible by doctrine).
Hey Friday is there day of worship, and they are stupid.
10:30 AM is the witching hour.
Lots of infidels out in the streets, good Muslims praying in church.
Is the east coast on EST or on EDT right now?
George W. Bush will be reelected by a margin of at least ten per cent
No...it Rove's fault. LOL
No. No. No.
Kosta50 is absolutely correct. Priest cannot marry but both Ukrainian Catholics (in Ukraine not America)& Orthodox have a married priesthood. Huge difference.
EDT. Hopefully, no one was near the church at the time.
Ukranian Catholics are part of the Roman Catholic Church...there was a reconciliation which allows marriage. See below:
Last Updated: Thursday - 06/13/2002
Week of June 17, 2002
One Church, different traditions
Ukrainian, Roman Catholics have one faith, but express it in different ways
By RAMON GONZALEZ
WCR Staff Writer
Edmonton
By WCR Staff Writer Edmonton Ukrainian Catholics are Catholics with a difference. They are not Roman Catholics but Eastern Catholics with their own distinctive liturgical and legal system as well as their own theology.
They have the same faith as Roman Catholics, but they express it differently.
The Ukrainian Catholic Church is one of 22 Eastern churches in the Catholic communion, each of which enjoys the same dignity, rights and obligations as the Latin or Roman Church.
From a historical perspective, the 22 Eastern churches are usually divided into five families or groups - the Byzantine, Alexandrian, Armenian, Antiochene and Chaldean.
Ukrainian Catholics, along with 13 other Eastern Catholic churches, celebrate the Divine Liturgy in the Byzantine or Constantinopolian tradition.
Eastern Catholics worldwide number more than 12 million, including about seven million Ukrainian Catholics. There are about 128,000 Ukrainian Catholics across Canada, 26,000 in Alberta.
The Roman Catholic Church has more than a billion members worldwide.
Ukrainian Catholics have been in full communion with the pope since the 1596 Union of Brest-Litovsk. However, the synod of bishops which produced that union also created a split in the Ukrainian Church - Orthodox bishops did not rejoin the Catholic Church and are not in union with Rome.
Ukrainian and Roman Catholics can receive Communion at each other's liturgies and priests of either Church can celebrate the liturgy in the other one.
While accepting the primacy of the pope, Ukrainian Catholics are governed by their own synod of bishops. They also retain their own traditions in both liturgy and Church discipline.
However, they also want greater recognition of their traditions by Rome. For example, Ukrainian Catholics want their leader to be recognized as a patriarch with rights such as the power to convoke synods of bishops.
For its part, the Vatican has urged Eastern churches to restore some ancient liturgical practices, such as giving infants First Communion immediately after Baptism and Chrismation (Confirmation).
One area of some controversy is the ordination of married men.
The Eastern churches admit married men to the priesthood in their regions of origin but do not permit marriage after ordination. Neither do they permit the priest to remarry if his wife should die.
Outside their regions of origin, Eastern Catholics have not been able to ordain married men. A 1929 Vatican instruction prohibits the ordination of married Ukrainian Catholic priests in the United States. A similar ban was instituted in Canada in 1930.
Ukrainian bishops in Canada have gotten around this decree by sending married men to Ukraine for ordination; however, some Ukrainian Catholic bishops have ordained married men in Canada arguing they had as much right to do so as bishops in Ukraine.
"If they can ordain married men, then so can I," the now-retired Bishop Basil Filevich of Saskatoon said in 1994.
There is also controversy over whether the 1929 prohibition still applies. Some canon law experts maintain that since the 1990 Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches did not mention the ban, it is no longer in effect. Other experts disagree.
Married priests, moreover, are not eligible to be bishops in the Eastern churches. In the Western Church, married men can only be ordained deacons.
Further, most celibate priests in the Ukrainian Catholic Church are members of religious orders. The result is that most bishops are religious and few are drawn from the diocesan clergy.
The worship service in the Ukrainian Church and in most Eastern churches is called the Divine Liturgy, not the Mass. During the celebration, the priest stands facing the altar along with the people. In the Roman Catholic Church, during most celebrations, the priest faces the congregation.
While Ukrainian remains the official language of the Ukrainian Catholic Church, in Canada, many Church members are no longer familiar with that language. Thus, in recent years, there has been a great increase in the amount of English in the liturgy.
Communion in the Eastern churches ordinarily is given under both forms, and ordinarily leavened bread is used.
The sacraments of Baptism and Chrismation are now administered together in infancy. Until the 18th century, First Communion was also administered to newly-baptized infants.
Now, as in the Roman Church, First Communion is administered at about age seven, although since the Second Vatican Council many Ukrainian priests give the three sacraments of initiation together at infancy.
In the Ukrainian Catholic Church, it is the priest who is the ordinary minister of the sacrament of Chrismation. In the Roman Church, the bishop is the ordinary minister of Confirmation, while priests may be allowed to do so in special circumstances.
The different approach to theology in the East is linked with a different approach to the sacraments.
Baptism is one example. As in many other circumstances, the Ukrainian priest takes the role of mediator in the ceremony, calling upon God to baptize the child. When pouring the water, he says "The servant of God is baptized . . .". In the Western Church, the priest says, "I baptize you . . .".
(This article originally appeared in the March 31, 1997 WCR. Information for it was gleaned from WCR files and from a primer prepared for Edmonton Catholic Schools.)
Copyright © 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 -- Western Catholic Reporter
The Mission of the Western Catholic Reporter is . . . .
"To serve our readers by helping them deepen their faith through accurate information and reflective commentary on events and issues of concern to the church."
Now I know for a fact that my Priest was told he would be allowed to marry if he returned to the Ukraine...suicide during those years however.
so far no deaths reported...any Conn. freepers out there. What's the latest?
Yeah. "The Religion of Peace (TM)".
In the last two years, I have come to know some REAL moderate muslims. Virtually NO muslim who uses the phrase "The Religion of Peace" is a true moderate!!!! They are all lying fifth columnists or worse. Real moderate muslims know that islam has a real, deep-seated problem with violence, tyranny, and backwardness, which muslims need to deal with for their own good.
As for non-muslims (especially political and religious leaders) who use that phrase, I shall leave that one up to all of you to figure out.
This was a comment from a news reporter on the radio.
Just cover your nose and it won't smell bad.
I don't know. Maybe a couple hundred yards or so. They say they're treating it as a crime for "investigation" purposes. I don't know if they fear other explosions. I still have the news on and there's nothing new.
Okay, thanks.
Anyone who has any expertise who can comment on an "implosion"??
Any links to some arial shots??
>>Its beautiful.>>
WAS beautiful.
UR# 109......yep........
.....................................?......'AQ'......?
Church bells to ring.......
Just one thing. Ukrainian Catholics are NOT part of the Roman Catholic Church. They are a sister church - part of the universal Catholic Church - albeit the Roman Church is the largest.
Yes - article 9 of the Union of Brest and Kosta50 is still absolutely correct.
From your article- alot more eloquent than I was:
The Eastern churches admit married men to the priesthood in their regions of origin but do not permit marriage after ordination. Neither do they permit the priest to remarry if his wife should die.
Outside their regions of origin, Eastern Catholics have not been able to ordain married men.
No, it was Dan Rather. He's trying to deflect attention from the fake memos he used on his show to try to destroy Bush.
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