Pope Benedict XVI on Dec. 19 accepted the resignation of Cardinal
Emmanuel III Delly, head of the Chaldean Catholic Church, and called the
Chaldean bishops to Rome for a synod to elect his successor.
Cardinal Delly, the Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans, was elected
the Chaldean patriarch on Dec. 3, 2003.
Pope Benedict XVI made him a
cardinal in November 2007.
The 85-year-old resigned for age and health
reasons, the Italian newspaper La Stampa reports.
The Chaldean bishops oversee a Church of more than 1.5 million members
in Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Australia, Canada, the
U.S. and Europe. Chaldeans are the most numerous Christian group in
Iraq, with eight dioceses, 100 parishes, and about 500,000 faithful, the
Catholic Near East Welfare Association says.
However, Iraqi Chaldean numbers have fallen drastically since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Patriarch Emmanuel, whose see is based in Baghdad, led Chaldean
Catholics at a time when Iraqi Christians suffered from bombings,
kidnappings and murders due to a lack of security. Archbishop Paulos
Faraj Rahho and three companions were abducted in February 2008 and
subsequently murdered.
Pope Benedict in 2007 said his choice of Patriarch Emmanuel as a
cardinal showed his “spiritual closeness and affection” for Iraq’s
Christians, Vatican Radio says.
The Chaldean bishops' synod will take place Jan. 28, 2013 under the
leadership of Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, prefect of the Congregation for
Oriental Churches.
On Dec. 14 Cardinal Sandri presided at the Mass that consecrated the
restored Syro-Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in
Baghdad. The cathedral was the site of a deadly terrorist attack on
October 31, 2010 that killed two priests and 50 other faithful.
He praised the “honorable sacrifices” that allowed the cathedral to
reopen and said that God “encourages Eastern Christians, and especially
those of Iraq, to communion and testimony.”
Pope Benedict has appointed Archbishop Jacques Ishaq as administrator
of the Chaldean Church until the next patriarch is elected.
The Chaldean Catholic Church has been in unbroken communion with the
Roman Catholic Church since the early 19th century. It uses Syriac as a
liturgical language.
The Chaldean Catholic Church has two U.S. dioceses: the Southfield,
Mich.-based Eparchy of St. Thomas the Apostle of the Chaldeans, headed
by Bishop Ibrahim Ibrahim; and the Eparchy of St. Peter the Apostle of
the Chaldeans in San Diego, headed by Bishop Sarhad Jammo.