Titular bishop
- Titular bishop
::"Main article:
Bishop (Catholic Church) "A titular bishop is a bishop of the
Catholic Church who is not in charge of adiocese (Code of Canon Law, Canon 376). Examples of bishops belonging to this category arecoadjutor bishop s,auxiliary bishop s, bishops emeriti, vicars apostolic,nuncio s, superiors of departments in theRoman Curia , andCardinal Bishop s ofsuburbicarian diocese s (since they are not in charge of the suburbicarian dioceses). Most titular bishops hold the title to atitular see . Assigning titular sees serves two purposes. Since part of being a bishop means being the head of a Church, titular sees serve that purpose for bishops without a diocese. At the same time, the office of titular bishop memorializes ancient Churches, most of which were suppressed because they fell into the hands of non-Christian conquerors. For this reason the former terminology was not "titular bishop" but "bishop in infidel regions" ("in partibus infidelium"). In recent times the names of titular sees are drawn also in numerous cases from those of former dioceses which were absorbed into other dioceses or expanded and hence moved to larger towns and cities.Since 1970, there are two more exceptions. Diocesan bishops who resign their see or are transferred to a non-diocesan appointment are no longer habitually transferred to a titular see. Instead, they take the title "Bishop
Emeritus " of the former see. Also,coadjutor s are no longer named to titular sees, instead taking the title "Coadjutor Bishop" of the see they will inherit. In other cases titular bishops still take a titular see.Here are two examples to illustrate the difference. When Bishop Francis Green [http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bgreenf.html] was named coadjutor of
Tucson, Arizona , in 1960, his official title remained "Titular Bishop of Serra" until he succeeded the Bishop of Tucson later that same year. However, when Bishop Gerald Kicanas [http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bkicanas.html] became Coadjutor Bishop of Tucson in 2001, he ceased being Titular Bishop of Bela. He still remained a titular bishop until he succeeded the Bishop of Tucson in 2003, but his official title changed from "Titular Bishop of Bela" to "Coadjutor Bishop of Tucson."Cardinal Bishops of
suburbicarian diocese s are also titular bishops, but they hold titles to existing dioceses, namely one or more of the suburbicarian sees, but while they do not govern their see they are obliged to give it their patronage.Angelo Cardinal Sodano is TitularBishop of Albano [http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bsodano.html] , while Bishop Marcello Vallini is its actual diocesan bishop [http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bsemeraro.html] . The Cardinal Dean is by traditionCardinal Bishop of Ostia , in addition to the suburbicarian see he previously held.Occasionally, the transfer of a diocesan bishop to a titular see has been used by the
Holy See to strip of his responsibilities a bishop whose behavior it disapproved of. For instance, in1995 ,Jacques Gaillot , known for his activism on Catholic-sensitive social and political topics (pro-contraception, abortion, etc...), was transferred from thesee of Évreux inFrance toPartenia , a titular see inAlgeria .References
*cite book | author= | title=Codex Juris Canonici (Code of Canon Law), Vatican City: Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1983
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Titular bishop — Bishop Bish op, n. [OE. bischop, biscop, bisceop, AS. bisceop, biscop, L. episcopus overseer, superintendent, bishop, fr. Gr. ?, ? over + ? inspector, fr. root of ?, ?, to look to, perh. akin to L. specere to look at. See {Spy}, and cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Titular bishop — Titular Tit u*lar, a. [F. titulaire, fr. L. titulus. See {Title}.] Existing in title or name only; nominal; having the title to an office or dignity without discharging its appropriate duties; as, a titular prince. [1913 Webster] If these… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Titular see of Bethlehem — Bishop of Bethlehem redirects here. For modern bishops and dioceses of this name in the USA and South Africa, see Episcopal Diocese of Bethlehem and Roman Catholic Diocese of Bethlehem. The See or Diocese of Bethlehem was a diocese in the Roman… … Wikipedia
Bishop — • The title of an ecclesiastical dignitary who possesses the fullness of the priesthood to rule a diocese as its chief pastor, in due submission to the primacy of the pope Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Bishop Bishop … Catholic encyclopedia
Titular — means existing in title only. *Titular ruler *Titular head (film festival) *Titular (Catholicism) bishop or titular cardinal, holder of a titulus, titular see or titular bishopric … Wikipedia
Titular — Tit u*lar, a. [F. titulaire, fr. L. titulus. See {Title}.] Existing in title or name only; nominal; having the title to an office or dignity without discharging its appropriate duties; as, a titular prince. [1913 Webster] If these magnificent… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Titular See of Philadelphia — Philadelphia † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Philadelphia A titular see in Lydia, suffragan of Sardes. The city was founded by Philadelphus, King of Pergamon (159 38 B. C.), in the vicinity of Callatebus on the left bank of… … Catholic encyclopedia
titular — 1> лицо, номинально носящее титул или имеющее звание 2> номинальный Ex: titular professor профессор без кафедры Ex: titular bishop епископ ликвидированной епархии Ex: titular possessions номинальные владения Ex: titular sovereignty номинальный… … Новый большой англо-русский словарь
Bishop — Bish op, n. [OE. bischop, biscop, bisceop, AS. bisceop, biscop, L. episcopus overseer, superintendent, bishop, fr. Gr. ?, ? over + ? inspector, fr. root of ?, ?, to look to, perh. akin to L. specere to look at. See {Spy}, and cf. {Episcopal}.]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bishop in partibus infidelium — Bishop Bish op, n. [OE. bischop, biscop, bisceop, AS. bisceop, biscop, L. episcopus overseer, superintendent, bishop, fr. Gr. ?, ? over + ? inspector, fr. root of ?, ?, to look to, perh. akin to L. specere to look at. See {Spy}, and cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
