These are posted on our companion blogs.
St. Luke Ukrainian Catholic Church, Cody Wyoming.
Very interesting news. A Ukrainian Catholic congregation has been established in Cody, Wyoming.
Under The Radar Of LDS Temple Flap, Another Church Is Planned For Cody
The Eparchy for this parish relates:
St. Luke Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church is a non-profit organization that was formed in 2022 with a goal to establish a Ukrainian-Greek Catholic parish in Cody, Wyoming, under the Eparchy of St. Nicholas in Chicago. With many Ukrainian Catholics in the area, and additional interest in the broader community, we are united in our desire to worship God following these sacred traditions.In early 2023, we were declared an official mission parish of St. Nicholas Eparchy with the name of St. Luke. In September of 2023, St. Nicholas Eparchy announced that Very Reverend Roman Bobesiuk has been assigned as the pastor of St. Luke’s.
We truly believe it is God’s will that a Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church be established in Wyoming in order that all faithful Christians in the area may experience the beautiful traditions of the Eastern Catholic Church. St. Luke’s is open to all who wish to attend.
Suit over LDS Temple in Cody.
Churches of the West: Churches of the West: City of Cody issues building...: We posted this yesterday. Churches of the West: City of Cody issues building permit for LDS Temple. : Citing, amongst other things, a lack ...A new lawsuit has been filed maintaining, apparently, that the P&Z Board in Cody was biased towards the applicants.
Like the Cowboy State Daily relates, the establishment of a Ukrainian Orthodox Parish in Wyoming sort of happened "under the wire". But is it really correct, as the church's website states, that there are "many Ukrainian Catholics in the area"?
I sort of doubt it, but I could be wrong. This isn't North Dakota.
There's been a subtle move toward Protestant conversion toward Orthodoxy for some years now, accompanied by the same thing, less subtle, toward Catholicism. Now, however, Pope Francis' Synod on Synodality is raising fears that the "Roman Catholic" Church will take the road to oblivion that the Episcopal Church has. Those fears are probably overstated, but with all due respect to the Holy Father, he frankly isn't inspiring confidence except in the camp of those who would like to lay down their crosses.
That in turn has been causing a subtle drift of the orthodox in the Latin Rite toward the Eastern Rite, which is heavy on tradition, like the Orthodox. There's reason to believe that whatever the Synod on Synodality comes up with, and it won't, contrary to fears, change doctrine, will pass over the Eastern Rite.
This is something Pope Francis, quite frankly, should take note of.
Pope Francis, this past week, was condemning young Latin Rite Priests in Rome for buying cassocks and traditional clerical clothing. This demonstrates, in my view, that he continues to miss the point, but then his entire generation does. It isn't that the post Boomer generation is calling out for reform. It's rather calling out for a reform of the reform, back to authenticity, of which tradition is part. The cassocks, and the Eastern Rite drift, they're part of that. For that matter the U.S. Army going back to pinks and greens, and the young going towards localism in farms, that's part of it as well.
Also of interest here is this all happening in Cody.
Wyoming's Big Horn Basin has always had a strong Latter Day Saints population, although it's always been centered more in Powell and Lovell rather than Cody. It dates back to the early history of the state. There's also always been a fair number of Catholics in the region as well. But the recent fighting over things demonstrates a shift of demographics.
Wyoming has oddly always had a booster attitude that bringing in people was good for, well, something. What that is, isn't clear, as we have always hated the population of the state increasing, and we're extremely intolerant of any changes in the nature of the state. Well, here is the fruit of that. Cody has drawn in new populations from elsewhere, and also taken a turn toward the populist right.
In 1990 would the LDS temple have drawn opposition. No, it would not have. In 2023? Well it is. People who move in, bring the attitudes and beliefs of where they are from, even if those seem very foreign to us. And with that is the "don't spoil my view, I just got here" view that is common to new entrants.
I'm not saying that's the case for the plaintiffs in this suit. I know nothing about them. What I am saying is that the bigger a community gets, the less of a community it is.
And I'm also saying, going back to the first part of this thread, there's a sense of what we've lost that's felt particularly keenly in those who were denied the experience of being in it.
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