Ukrainian Catholics - Modern Times

Modern Times

Part of a series on the
Eastern Catholics
Alexandrian-rite Churches
  • Coptic
  • Ethiopian
West Syrian rite Churches
  • Maronite
  • Syriac
  • Syro-Malankara
Armenian-rite Churches
  • Armenian
Byzantine-rite Churches
  • Albanian
  • Belarusian
  • Bulgarian
  • Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro
  • Greek
  • Hungarian
  • Italo-Albanian
  • Macedonian
  • Melkite
  • Romanian
  • Russian
  • Ruthenian
  • Slovak
  • Ukrainian
East Syrian rite Churches
  • Chaldean
  • Syro-Malabar
Catholicism portal

Currently the church has between 3. 5 million supporters in Ukraine. Numerous surveys conducted since the late 1990s consistently show that between 6% and 8% of Ukraine's total population, or 9.4% to 12.6% of the country's religious believers, identify themselves as belonging to this Church. Worldwide, the faithful now number some 6 to 10 million, forming the largest particular Catholic Church, after the majority Latin Rite Church. Within Ukraine, the Greek Catholic Church is increasing at the expense of the majority Orthodox Church, due to higher birth rates and lower death rates among its members (see Demographics of Ukraine).

Today, most Ukrainian Catholic Churches have moved away from Church Slavonic and use Ukrainian. Many churches also offer liturgies in the official language of the country the Church is in, for example, German in Germany or English in Canada; however, some parishes continue to celebrate the liturgy in Slavonic even today, and services in a mix of languages are not unusual.

In the early first decade of the 21st century, construction began for the transfer of the major see of the Ukrainian Catholic Church back to the Ukrainian capital of Kiev. However, this move remains controversial for some Ukrainian Catholics, who view Lviv in Western Ukraine as the true stronghold of Ukrainian Catholicism, having supported and protected the Ukrainian Catholic Church through long periods of persecution. Moving the Ukrainian Catholic Church to Kiev, therefore, has taken on political overtones in the Church. The move tends to be supported by those people who favour the appointment of a Ukrainian Catholic Patriarch to oversee the Ukrainian Catholic Church.

Read more about this topic:  Ukrainian Catholics

Famous quotes containing the words modern and/or times:

    The way in which modern German poetry follows theories reminds me of pupils who, scolded by their teacher for their insubordination, justify themselves by saying that they invented new rules of propriety according to which they are quite well- behaved.
    Franz Grillparzer (1791–1872)

    An actor must communicate his author’s given message—comedy, tragedy, serio- comedy; then comes his unique moment, as he is confronted by the looked-for, yet at times unexpected, reaction of the audience. This split second is his; he is in command of his medium; the effect vanishes into thin air; but that moment has a power all its own and, like power in any form, is stimulating and alluring.
    Eleanor Robson Belmont (1878–1979)