While the Byzantine Catholic Church in America endures as a witness to a lost era, statistics point to its certain demise unless something drastic changes.
D.P. Curtin | March
16, 2026
On the far end of South
Philadelphia, at the end of its seemingly endless labyrinth of tight,
narrow streets, is a small, gold-capped, domed church with its crumbling stairs
facing the public sidewalks along 24th Street. Its cornerstone commemorates the
construction of the new church in 1923, under the jurisdiction of the “Holy
Ghost Byzantine Catholic Church.” The narthex is fairly mundane, with
commemorations to donors from the 1960s and ’70s and salient members of the
parish prominently displayed on wall mountings.
However, going into the basement
reveals much older ghosts. Hung on the fading beadboards are pictures of the
late Austro-Hungarian Empire, with photos of long-forgotten Christmas pageants
flanking various old newsprints that have been mounted. Kaiser Franz Josef,
dead since 1916, stands sentinel at the end of the room over the community
coffee pots. The parish itself dates from 1891, when 600 Carpatho-Rusyns
settled the local neighborhoods, pooling their money to retain their ethnic
heritage for the next generation.
Today, the local parish bulletin
publishes liturgy attendance. Sometimes it goes as high as 20, but most Sundays
it averages around a dozen or so, including the priest and cantor. Part of the
dome over the nave sags into the roof, a side chapel is rough and partially
collapsed, and the celestial ceiling with the vision of Christ Pantocrator
on it is marked with holes and water stains. The state of Holy Ghost is not
anomalous. It is the material manifestation of the state of the whole of the
Ruthenian Catholic Church, which is in heavy, if not potentially terminal,
decline.
For the unfamiliar, the Ruthenian
Catholic Church is an autonomous Eastern Catholic Church in union with Rome
since the 16th century. In its history, it was under the protection of the King
of Poland-Lithuania until that polity collapsed in the late 18th century. The
eastern lands came under the jurisdiction of the Russian Empire and would
become the Ukrainian Catholic Church. The western lands were tied to the
Catholic Habsburg monarchy under Austria-Hungary. Despite the collapse of the
latter in 1918, and the fact that Ruthenia is now part of Ukraine, these
historic distinctions are still held to this day.
Ruthenia’s history in the 20th
century has been stormy, passing from Austria-Hungary to Czechoslovakia; from
Czechoslovakia to Romania; from Romania to the Soviet Union; and, with the
collapse of the Soviet Union, to the modern Ukrainian Republic. Like many
Eastern European groups, the height of their immigration was between 1890 and
1940 and would inform the state of the Ruthenian Church in the United States,
which would flourish for some time in Pennsylvania and Ohio. However, the last
three decades have seen a dramatic shift in the constitution of the Ruthenian
Catholic Church (also known as the Byzantine Catholic Church).
To understand the contraction of
the Byzantine Catholic presence in the United States, it is necessary to look
squarely at the number of parishioners. In the mid-1990s, the Ruthenian
Catholic Church in the United States reported roughly 190,000–200,000 faithful
on its rolls, filling their pews weekly. However, by the late 2010s, after
internal audits and demographic decline, that number of the faithful had fallen
dramatically.
Recent editions of the Official
Catholic Directory list total membership closer to 55,000–60,000
nationwide. That is to say, within roughly 25 years, the Church has lost well
over two-thirds of its recorded membership. This decline is not merely
statistical housekeeping. Average Sunday attendance in many parishes now
consists of a handful of very elderly parishioners who were brought up in the
faith by their immigrant parents but were ultimately unable to transmit the
rite to a new generation detached from the memory of Ruthenian heritage. Entire
regions once dense with Carpatho-Rusyn and Slovak immigrants no longer sustain
the vast parish networks they did in the 20th century.
What is more, the contraction in
ordained clergy mirrors the drastic fall in church membership. In the 1960s and
1970s, the Ruthenian Church in America could rely on well over 300 priests
across its four major eparchies (the Eastern equivalent of dioceses). Today,
that number is closer to 100–120 active priests, many of them well past
retirement age. In some larger parishes, there is no resident clergy. They are
granted a deacon or must share a priest between multiple parishes.
In addition to this, the median
age of Byzantine clergy continues to rise. While the Byzantine tradition
permits married priests, vocations have not kept pace with attrition. In recent
years, the Byzantine Catholic Church has been importing priests from Ukraine to
cover its clerical shortage. Of course, the foreign priests only heighten the
attrition of parishioners, who are now multiple generations removed from the
“old country” and have no cultural or linguistic ties to Ruthenia.
In the past two decades,
Byzantine parish closures and consolidations have accelerated as the financial
apparatus that has supported these churches has collapsed. At its height, the
Byzantine Church maintained over 200 parishes across the United States, most of
them in the Atlantic Northeast. That number has fallen to roughly 80–90
canonical parishes and missions, with many church communities merged, reduced
to mission status, or shuttered entirely. In industrial towns in western
Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio, once-vibrant domed churches now stand sold,
repurposed, or demolished.
The financial dimension compounds
the expanding demographic crisis. Small congregations struggle to maintain
large, aging buildings constructed for immigrant congregations multiple times
their current size. Insurance, heating, salaries, upkeep, and structural
repairs alone often exceed annual offertory income, and fundraising is a
challenge with an aging population. Several eparchies have quietly undertaken
property sales to stabilize their freefalling budgets.
While the Byzantine Church has
not faced the high-profile bankruptcy proceedings famously seen in some Latin
dioceses, it carries the structural burden of shrinking revenue streams against
fixed institutional costs. The result is not an overnight collapse but a slow
institutional corrosion. A church that once functioned as the religious and
cultural heart of a thriving Carpatho-Rusyn immigrant population now exists as
a relic of another time and place—faithful, liturgically rich, but increasingly
fragile.
The larger question is not
sociological but ecclesial: How does a church preserve a theological and
liturgical patrimony when its identity has eroded? Should it even try? The
Ruthenian experience may prove emblematic of a broader phenomenon in American Catholicism,
where identity, assimilation, and secularization converge to hollow out
communities that were founded to be permanent institutions.
The golden onion domes still
stand in some American cities. The Divine Liturgy is still celebrated. But the
statistics tell a sobering story: the Byzantine Catholic Church in America is
no longer a vibrant, thriving, immigrant church. It is a contracting
inheritance that will soon fade into oblivion, saved only by the efforts of its
clergy and administration.
Perhaps this will not happen
within this decade, or even within this generation, but it is likely to happen
soon, even if we “do not know the day or the hour” (Matthew 24:36). Until then,
the great golden Byzantine domes will remain standing over the old neighborhood
streets, bearing witness to a people, a faith, and a world that once filled
them with life.
Source: https://crisismagazine.com/opinion/the-sad-collapse-of-the-byzantine-catholic-church
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