Polish Catholic Church

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The Polish Catholic Church, is a Catholic denomination in Poland which which belongs to the Union of Utrecht, the World Council of Churches and the Polish Ecumenical Council. It is not affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church. The Polish Catholic Church currently supports roughly 23,000 members. Bishop Wiktor Wysoczański has been the church's superior since 1995.

Contents

[edit] History

The Polish Catholic Church was established in Poland in the early 1900s by returning Catholic immigrants from the USA who belonged to the American Polish National Catholic Church (PNCC). In 1924, the first national parish emerged in Cracow.

After 1945, Polish communist authorities were not keen on legalizing the Polish National Catholic Church because of its leader, bishop Franciszek Hodur was a citizen of USA.

In 1951, under pressure from the communist authorities, the Polish diocese of PNCC declared the church independent from the PNCC. This was partially as a result of the arrests of bishop Joseph Padewski and priest Edward Narbutt-Narbuttowicz. In autumn of 1951 the church changed its name to the Polish Catholic Church. The new leader of the church was priest Józef Dobrochowski who, in close cooperation with priest Eugeniusz Krieglewicz, followed the orders of the communist authorities. In this way the Polish communist government took complete control over the Polish Catholic Church: they were appointing bishops, relieving them of duty, managing the personnel and financing the church.

Among the duties of the new church were organizing masses for the celebration of 22 July (the anniversary of Polish constitution of 1952, a communist holiday otherwise not supported by the Roman Catholic Church) and sending letters of congratulation to the authorities because of other anniversaries.


On May 26, 2000 the Polish Catholic Church and the Roman Catholic Church of Poland agreed upon mutual respect and cooperation.

[edit] Theology

The theology of the Polish Catholic Church is in line with orthodox lines of the Roman Catholic Church. The Church honors the Virgin Mary, but rejects the Roman Catholic doctrine of the Immaculate Conception of Mary.

The liturgy of church is similar to that of Roman Catholic Church.

[edit] Clergy

Currently the Polish Catholic Church consists of 80 parishs with 111 priests. A priest must be male, needs to graduate from the Christian Academy of Theology in Warsaw, specializing in Old-Catholic Theology and the Higher Clerical Seminary of the Polish Catholic Church in Warsaw and needs approval from the church authorities or deacon ordination or above.

The head Bishop of the Polish National Church is chosen by the National Synode and is consecrated by at least three bishops that are members of the International Conference of Old-Catholic Bishops (the Utrecht Union). Priests are required to take vows of celibacy.

[edit] List of superiors of Polish Catholic Church

  • 1951 - priest Józef Dobrochowski
  • 1951 - 1958 - bishop Eugeniusz Kriegelewicz
  • 1958 - 1965 - bishop Maksymilian Rode
  • 1965 - 1976 - bishop Julian Pękala
  • 1976 - 1994 - bishop Tadeusz Majewski
  • 1995 - bishop Wiktor Wysoczański

[edit] Links

The Union of Utrecht of the Old Catholic Churches
Unifying Institutions

Old Catholic Archbishop of Utrecht | International Old Catholic Bishops' Conference | International Old Catholic Congresses |

Member Churches

Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands | Catholic Diocese of the Old Catholics in Germany | Old Catholic Church of Austria | Christian Catholic Church of Switzerland | Old Catholic Church of the Czech Republic | Polish Catholic Church |

Dependent jurisdictions

Old Catholic Church of Croatia | Old Catholic Mission in France | Old Catholic Church in Italy | Old Catholic Church in Sweden and Denmark | St. John's Polish Catholic Cathedral, Toronto |

Churches in full communion

Anglican Communion | Philippine Independent Church

In other languages