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It claims unbroken continuity with the Church founded in the first century by Jesus Christ. The Second Vatican Council’s Decree on the Church Lumen Gentium, 8,[1] declares that “the sole Church of Christ which in the Creed we profess to be one, holy, catholic and apostolic” has a concrete realization (the Latin term is “subsistit”) "in the Catholic Church, which is governed by the successor of Peter and by the bishops in communion with him". "The successor of Peter" means his current successor as Bishop of Rome, traditionally called the Pope.
Unlike "families" or "communions" of Churches that see themselves as distinct Churches, the Church of those who are in full communion with the Pope considers itself a single Church, not a federation of Churches. It has authoritatively expressed this self-understanding in, for instance, the 28 May 1992 Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on some aspects of the Church understood as communion, 9.[2]
Accordingly, it has never adopted the usage of those who apply the term "Roman Catholic Church" to the Latin or Western Church alone, to the exclusion of the Eastern Churches that also are in full communion with the Bishop of Rome. Thus it has never treated “Roman Catholic” as synonymous with “Latin Catholic”; instead, it understands "Roman Catholic" as either referring to the whole Church governed by the Bishop of Rome and by the other bishops who are in communion with him (wherever they live and whether they are of eastern or western tradition), or else as having a purely local sense, similar to, for instance, "Quebecois Catholic" or "Warsaw Catholic".
On the other hand, the Roman Catholic Church attaches great importance to the particular Churches within it, whose theological significance the Second Vatican Council highlighted. Two categories of particular Churches are distinguished.
The highest level of particular Churches is that of what the Second Vatican Council’s Decree on the Catholic Eastern Churches Orientalium Ecclesiarum, 2[3] calls "particular Churches or rites" . The long-established use of the term "rite" for these particular Churches is due to the central place that the Eucharist holds in the Roman Catholic Church (see Mass (liturgy)), making each particular Church's liturgy its most noted distinguishing mark.
However, the word "rite" is also used of liturgical rites, without implying the existence of a particular Church. Examples are the Ambrosian rite, the Mozarabic rite and the Roman rite, different liturgical rites used within the Latin particular Church or "Latin rite" (singular).
The official yearly Vatican directory, Annuario Pontificio (Libreria Editrice Vaticana), gives the following list of particular Churches or rites within the Roman Catholic Church:
A. Eastern rites of Alexandrian tradition: Coptic, Ethiopic (2).
B. Eastern rites of Antiochian tradition: Malankara, Maronite, Syrian (3).
C. Eastern rite of Armenian tradition: Armenian Church (1).
D. Eastern rites of Chaldaean or East-Syrian tradition: Chaldean, MalabarThe Syro-Malabar Catholic Church is an Eastern Rite church in communion with the Papacy. The Synod of Diamper formally reunited this branch of the Church with the Catholic Church in 1599 by Aleixo de Meneses, archbishop of Goa. See also Syro-Malankara Cat (2).
E. Eastern rites of Constantinopolitan or Byzantine tradition: AlbanianThe Albanian Catholic Church is an Byzantine Rite church sui juris of the Catholic Communion. Not to be confused with the Italo-Albanian Catholic Church, this church consists of the Byzantine Catholics living Albania. Its present leader is Most Rev. Hil K, Belarussian, Bulgarian, Greek, Greek-Melkite, Hungarian, Italo-Albanian, RomanianThe Romanian Catholic Church is a Catholic church which belongs to the Eastern Rites, and is one of the official churches of Romania. It also has a diocese in the US headed by Most Reverend John Michael Botean, DD under separate jurisdiction. Its head sin, Russian, RuthenianThe Ruthenian Catholic Church is a sui iuris Catholic Church of the Byzantine Eastern Rite. Its geographical roots are in the region called Carpatho-Ukraine and the Carpathian Mountains. Saints Cyril and Methodius visited the region in the 9th Century and, Slovak, UkrainianThe Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church is a successor church to the acceptance of Christianity by Prince Volodymyr (also Vladimir in Kyiv Kiev , in 988. By the beginning of the 21st century, this church was the second largest church in the Catholic Communion (12).
F. Latin rite (1).
To refer to these particular Churches or rites, the 1990 Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches introduced in its Latin text the term “sui iuris”, which means “autonomous”. The autonomy of each particular Church, Eastern or Western, shows in its distinctive liturgy, canon law, theological tradition etc. The Latin or Western particular Church is governed by the Code of Canon Law, while the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches outlines the discipline that the Eastern particular Churches have in common.