To
Missionaries Assigned to the Orient.
Beloved Sons, We give You
Greeting and Our Apostolic Blessing.
There has been brought to the
Cardinals, who are in charge of the Propagation of the Faith, the letter of a
certain priest who was assigned to conduct holy missions in the city of
Balsera. This city, commonly called Bassora, is about fifteen days'
journey from Babylon, a city well-known for the dealings of merchants. In his
letter, he informed the Cardinals that many Catholics of the Oriental rite,
Armenians or Syrians, live in that city. Because they have no temple of their
own, they come to the church of the Latin missionaries where their priests
offer masses and perform other sacred ceremonies in accordance with their own
rite. But lay people attend these ceremonies and receive the sacraments from
the priests. So he inquired whether these Armenians and Syrians should observe
their own Catholic rite or whether, to avoid different practices in a church
which Latins also attend, it would be more appropriate that the Armenians and
Syrians should abandon their ancient calendar and accept the new one to
establish the dates of Easter and movable feastdays. He further inquired
whether if the observance of the new calendar were decreed for the Armenians
and Syrians of Balsera, it should also be imposed on other orientals who,
because their own church is small, generally come to the church of the Latins
for their sacred functions.
|