Thirteenth
Century Support for Greek Churches
8. At the start of the
thirteenth century the Latins gained control of Constantinople. Innocent III
then decided to establish a Latin Patriarch in that city with jurisdiction
over Greeks as well as Latins; but he still was careful to state openly that
he did not want any harm done to the Greek rites, excepting only those
traditional customs which endangered souls or were at variance with the honor
of the Church. The decretal of this pope, issued at the Fourth Lateran
Council, is to be found both in Harduin's Collectionis Conciliorum,
vol. I, p. 22, and in the chapter Licet, de Baptismo. "Although
the Greeks have returned to obedience to the Apostolic See in Our day, We
desire them as greatly as We can in the Lord to cherish and hold in honor
their custom and rites, except for those customs which give rise to danger
for souls and detract from the honor of the Church, for in these cases We
neither should nor do We want to respect them." Later Honorius III, the
immediate successor of Innocent, used the same words in a letter to the king
of Cyprus who wanted two bishops in some cities in his kingdom, a Latin
bishop for the Latin inhabitants and a Greek bishop for the Greeks living in
the same district. This letter of Honorius is printed in the Annals of
Raynaldus, 1222, a. 5.
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