
Pope Leo XIV has granted ecclesiastical communion to the new patriarch of Baghdad of the Chaldeans, His Beatitude Mar Paul III Nona. Source: EWTN News.
Until his election as patriarch, the then-Archbishop Amel Nona was the leader of the Chaldean Diocese of St Thomas the Apostle in Australia and New Zealand, based in Sydney.
The Chaldean Church is one of more than 20 Eastern Catholic Churches under the authority of the Pope in Rome and possesses autonomy in accordance with Canon 27 of the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches.
This allows it to manage its internal affairs in accordance with the laws it has established for itself. The Synod of Chaldean Bishops was the body that elected the new patriarch.
The new patriarch, who succeeds Cardinal Louis Raphael Sako following his resignation, received ecclesiastical communion on April 24, having requested it via a letter sent to Pope Leo XIV.
“With a heart filled with joy, I grant you ecclesiastica communio as an expression and bond of full communion with the Apostolic See in the common service of unity within the Church and the building up of the body of Christ,” Pope Leo wrote to Mar Paul III Nona.
Ecclesiastical communion is the formal recognition of full communion with the Diocese of Rome, therefore with the Pope, granted to the one requesting it.
This recognition enables the new patriarch to fully exercise his ministry as the head of the Chaldean Catholic Church, not only within Iraq but also among the diaspora worldwide.
Once the patriarch, who is primus inter pares (first among equals), has received ecclesiastical communion, he may convene the Synod of Bishops of the Church over which he presides and also ordain bishops.
Pope Leo XIV offered his prayers for the new patriarch and his mission to proclaim the Gospel, “strengthening ecclesial communion within his own territory and in the territories of the diaspora, which is becoming increasingly numerous”.
The Holy Father highlighted that Mar Paul III Nona was elected “on the day when the Chaldean liturgy commemorates the encounter of the risen Christ with St. Thomas, from whom the living tradition of this Church originates.”
For this reason, he encouraged the Chaldeans to persevere as “true believers,” especially in the face of the “exceedingly arduous trials” that the faithful in Iraq and other territories often confront.
FULL STORY
What is ‘ecclesiastical communion,’ which Pope Leo XIV granted to the new Chaldean patriarch? (By Walter Sánchez Silva, EWTN News)
RELATED COVERAGE
Pope grants ecclesiastical communion to Chaldean Patriarch (Vatican News)
Explainer: The Chaldean Catholic Church today (The Catholic Weekly)
