Eparch Cyril Bustros
His Holiness, Pope John Paul
II, has accepted the resignation of the Most Reverend John A. Elya
from pastoral governance of the Eparchy of Newton and has appointed
the Most Reverend Cyril Salim Bustros, most recently Archbishop of
Baalbeck in
Lebanon, as the
new Eparch of Newton.

Archbishop
Cyril was born at Ain-Borday, near Baalbeck in
Lebanon on January 26, 1939 . After his primary
and secondary studies at the Minor Seminary of St. Paul at Harissa,
he pursued his philosophical studies at St. Paul Institute in 1956
and 1957, and made his novitiate at the White Fathers in
Gap,
France. Then, he studied theology for four years (1958-1962) at the
Major Seminary at St. Anne of Jerusalem. He was ordained to the
Holy Priesthood in the Society of the Missionaries of St. Paul on June 29, 1962 .
From
1962-1970, he was Professor of Classical Greek and of French
Literature at the Minor Seminary. Then from 1972-1974 Professor of
Philosophy and Theology at St. Paul
Institute in Harissa.
Interrupting
his teaching, he pursued a Doctorate of Theology at the Catholic
University of Louvain in Belgium, and received his degree
in 1976. Then for eleven years he was Director of the St. Paul
Institute of Philosophy and of Theology of the Paulist Missionaries
at Harissa, and at the same time Professor at
St. Joseph
University in Beirut, and
in various lay centers.
It was in
1988 that the Holy Synod of the
Melkite
Church elected him Archbishop of
Baalbeck, succeeding the Most Reverend Elias Zoghby. He was
ordained to the Holy Episcopate on
November 27, 1988, in the Basilica of
St. Paul in Harissa, by His Beatitude Maximos V, assisted by
Archbishops Elias Zoghby and Joseph Raya.
Plans for
the Installation of Archbishop Bustros will be forthcoming as soon
as they have been formulated.
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