Deanery: Northern - Deanery of Our Lady of Perpetual Help
All Saints Church
5 Castlegate, Thirsk, YO7 1HL
Rev Rejimon Devasia - Parish Priest
Correspondence Address | All Saints Presbytery 5 Castlegate Thirsk YO7 1HL |
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Phone | 01845 527011 |
Click here to email All Saints Catholic Church | |
www.allsaintsthirsk.org.uk |
All Saints Catholic Primary, Sowerby (0.3 miles)
Sacred Heart, Northallerton (7.9 miles)
St Wilfrid, Ripon (9.7 miles)
Our Lady of Mount Grace, Osmotherley (9.7 miles)
St John the Evangelist, Easingwold (10 miles)
Our Lady and St Benedict, Ampleforth (10 miles)
Nearest Schools and Churches are calculated `as the crow flies` and may not be the closest or easiest when travelling.
Lambert Memorial Hospital - Hospital
Cheery Garth Old People`s Home - Hospice/Home for the Elderley
Sowerby House - Hospice/Home for the Elderley
The Chesters - Hospice/Home for the Elderley
De-Mowbray Hose - Hospice/Home for the Elderley
Sowerby - Hospice/Home for the Elderley
- Lambert Memorial Hospital
- Cheery Garth Old People`s Home
- De-Mowbray Hose
- Sowerby
- Sowerby House
- The Chesters
Parish of All Saints in Thirsk, (Diocese of Middlesbrough).
Scripture Study Group, Housebound Visiting Group, Parish Finance Committee, Children`s Liturgy Group, RCIA Group Cherry Garth Old People`s Home, De Mowbray House, Sowerby, Sowerby House (Private Retirement Home), The Chesters (Private Residential Home Elderly)
Part of the Catholic Church - you can find other Catholic Churches, Catholic Schools or Religious Orders/Houses and Chaplaincies nearby above. Or you can use the Find a Church Near Me box above to search for a Church, School etc.
Dates: 1839, 1867
An episcopal conference, sometimes called a conference of bishops, is an official assembly of the bishops of the Catholic Church in a given territory. ... Individual bishops do not relinquish their immediate authority for the governance of their respective dioceses to the conference (Wikipedia).
Dioceses ruled by an archbishop are commonly referred to as archdioceses; most are metropolitan sees, being placed at the head of an ecclesiastical province. A few are suffragans of a metropolitan see or are directly subject to the Holy See.
The term 'archdiocese' is not found in Canon Law, with the terms "diocese" and "episcopal see" being applicable to the area under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of any bishop.[8] If the title of archbishop is granted on personal grounds to a diocesan bishop, his diocese does not thereby become an archdiocese (Wikipedia).
The group of churches that a bishop supervises is known as a diocese. Typically, a diocese is divided into parishes that are each overseen by a priest.
The original dioceses, in ancient Rome, were political rather than religious. Rome was divided into dioceses, each of which was made up of many provinces. After Christianity became the Roman Empire's official religion in the 4th century, the term gradually came to refer to religious districts. The Catholic Church has almost 3,000 dioceses. The Greek root of diocese is dioikesis, "government, administration, or province." (Vocabulary.com).
As of April 2020, in the Catholic Church there are 2,898 regular dioceses: 1 papal see, 649 archdioceses (including 9 patriarchates, 4 major archdioceses, 560 metropolitan archdioceses, 76 single archdioceses) (Wikipedia).
Each diocese is within a Province - a group of Dioceses - the Archdiocese is the main Diocese within that Diocese. The bishop of that Archdiocese is therefore automatically an Archbishop. If a bishop has been made an Archbishop personally is referred to as an Archbishop but it does not make their Diocese an Archdiocese.
A subdivision of a diocese, consisting of a number parishes, over which presides a dean appointed by a bishop. The duty of the dean is to watch over the clergy of the deanery, to see that they fulfill the orders of the bishop, and observe the liturgical and canon laws. He summons the conference of the deanery and presides at it. Periodically he makes a report to the bishop on conditions in the deanery.www.catholicculture.org
In the Roman Catholic Church, a parish (Latin: parochia) is a stable community of the faithful within a particular church, whose pastoral care has been entrusted to a parish priest (Latin: parochus), under the authority of the diocesan bishop. It is the lowest ecclesiastical subdivision in the Catholic episcopal polity, and the primary constituent unit of a diocese. In the 1983 Code of Canon Law, parishes are constituted under cc. 515–552, entitled "Parishes, Pastors, and Parochial Vicars." Wikipedia