Carlos Duarte Costa
His Holiness, His Beatitude Saint Carlos Duarte Costa | |
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Patriarch and Founder of the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church | |
Duarte Costa (left) with Luis Fernando Castillo Mendez (right) during the Episcopal Congregation in Panama | |
Church | Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church |
Diocese | Rio de Janeiro |
See | Rio de Janeiro |
Installed | 5 July 1945 |
Term ended | 26 March 1961 |
Predecessor | Position created |
Successor | Luis Fernando Castillo Mendez |
Orders | |
Ordination |
4 May 1911 by Joaquim Arcoverde de Albuquerque Cavalcanti |
Consecration |
8 December 1924 by Sebastião da Silveira Cintra |
Rank | Patriarch-Bishop |
Personal details | |
Birth name | Carlos Duarte Costa |
Born |
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | July 21, 1888
Died |
March 26, 1961 72) Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | (aged
Nationality | Brazilian |
Denomination | Independent Catholicism, excommunicated Roman Catholic |
Previous post |
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Motto |
O Senhor é a Minha Luz ("The Lord is my Light") Charitas Christi Vrget Nos ("The Charity of Christ demands us") |
Coat of arms | |
Sainthood | |
Feast day | 21 July (not celebrated liturgically) |
Venerated in |
Independent Catholicism Old Catholicism Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church WCCAC |
Title as Saint | Saint Carlos of Brazil |
Canonized |
July 4, 1970 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil by Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church |
Attributes | Gray cassock with red piping, red biretta or zucchetto, pectoral cross |
Patronage | Independent Catholicism, ICAB, conscience, freedom, people in poverty, people in desperate situations |
Styles of Carlos Duarte Costa | |
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Reference style | His Holiness, His Beatitude, His Excellency, The Most Reverend |
Spoken style | Your Holiness, Your Beatitude |
Religious style | Patriarch-Bishop |
Posthumous style | Saint |
Ordination history of Carlos Duarte Costa | |
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Priestly ordination | |
Date of ordination | 4 May 1911 |
Place of ordination | Uberaba, Brazil |
Episcopal consecration | |
Principal consecrator | Sebastião da Silveira Cintra |
Co-consecrators |
Alberto José Gonçalves Benedito Paulo Alves de Souza |
Date of consecration | 8 December 1924 |
Place of consecration | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Bishops consecrated by as principal consecrator | |
Salomão Barbosa Ferraz | 15 August 1945 |
Luis Fernando Castillo Mendez | 3 May 1948 |
Eliseu Maria Coroli | 13 October 1940 |
Manoel Ceia Laranjeira | 29 June 1951 |
Milton Cunha | 5 June 1960 |
Luigi Mascolo | 25 April 1961 |
Antido Jose Vargas | 8 December 1946 |
Orlando Acre Moya | 30 November 1956 |
Carlos Duarte Costa (July 21, 1888 – March 26, 1961) was a Brazilian Roman Catholic bishop who became the founder and first patriarch of the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church, an independent Catholic church, and its international extension, the Worldwide Communion of Catholic Apostolic National Churches.
The former Bishop of Botucatu,[1] he was excommunicated by Pope Pius XII for doctrinal and canonical issues (such as clerical celibacy). Duarte Costa has been canonized as "St. Carlos of Brazil" by the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church.
Early life and ministry
Carlos Duarte Costa was born in Rio de Janeiro on July 21, 1888, at the residence of his uncle Eduardo Duarte de Silva. The son of João Matta Francisco Costa and Maria Carlota Duarte da Silva Costa, he completed his primary studies at the Salesian College Santa Rosa , in Niterói. At age nine, he received his first communion in the cathedral of Uberaba from the hands of his uncle, Dom Eduardo Duarte da Silva (now a bishop), on July 24, 1897. That same year he was taken by his uncle to Rome to study at the Pontificio Collegio Pio Latino Americano, a Jesuit minor seminary. In 1905 he returned to Brazil for health reasons and entered an Augustinian seminary in Uberaba, where he completed his philosophical and theological studies.
After ordination as a deacon, Duarte Costa served under his uncle, Dom Eduardo de Silva, in the cathedral church of Uberaba. On May 4, 1911, Duarte Costa was ordained to the priesthood[2] at the cathedral by Archbishop Joaquim Arcoverde de Albuquerque Cavalcanti. He then returned to Rome to further his education and obtained a doctorate in theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University. After returning to Brazil, he worked once again with his uncle in Uberaba as secretary of the diocese. Duarte Costa was awarded the title of monsignor for his publication of a catechism for children and was later named Protonotary Apostolic and General Secretary of the Archdiocese of Rio de Janeiro, serving in this capacity until 1923.
On July 4, 1924, Pope Pius XI nominated Duarte Costa as Bishop of Botucatu.[2] His episcopal consecration occurred on December 8 that year at the metropolitan cathedral of Rio de Janeiro, presided over by Cardinal Sebastian Leme da Silveira Cintra.
Attempts at church and societal reform
In the 1930s Duarte Costa became deeply involved in the social and political changes taking place in Brazil. Brazil's economy had collapsed in 1929 as a result of the Great Depression and a populist military regime had taken over the government in 1930. Led by Getúlio Vargas, the new government had an erratic policy record in its early years, sometimes anti-clerical and anti-aristocratic, sometimes swinging the opposite direction. In 1932, Duarte Costa became a leading spokesman for the Catholic Electoral League, which was organized by the church to lobby for Christian principles in the laws and acts of the government.
In 1932, Duarte Costa played an active role in the Constitutionalist Revolution, a failed attempt to restore constitutional government to Brazil. Duarte Costa formed a "Battalion of the Bishop" to fight on the side of the Constitutionalist troops and helped finance the rebellion by selling off most of the diocese's assets along with his own personal possessions. Duarte Costa's support for the Constitutionalist Revolution earned him the animosity of President Vargas, signaling the beginning of a long period of difficult relations between Duarte Costa and the Brazilian government.
In 1936, Duarte Costa made his second ad limina visit to Rome, meeting with Pope Pius XI. He presented the Pope with a list of quite radical requests for the Church of Brazil.
Bishop of Maura
In September 1937, Duarte Costa resigned from his episcopal post and was appointed titular bishop of Maura.[2] Duarte Costa left the diocesan quarters but remained in Rio de Janeiro as Bishop Emeritus of Botucatu and titular Bishop of Maura. He obtained the support of a protector, Cardinal Dom Sebastião da Silveira Cintra, who granted permission for him to keep a private chapel. At this time he established the magazine Nossos ("Ours") as a vehicle to spread devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Soon, however, Duarte Costa resumed his vocal criticism of the government and the national church administration, which he saw as an accessory to the mistreatment of the poor in Brazil. He openly criticized certain papal periodicals and encyclicals, including Rerum novarum (Leo XIII), Quadragesimo anno (Pius XI), and Divini Redemptoris (Pius XI).
In 1942 several priests and nuns of German and Italian ethnicity were arrested in Brazil for operating clandestine radio transmitters, presumably passing information to the German and Italian governments. Duarte Costa publicly said that these individuals were just the tip of the iceberg, and claimed that most German and Italian clergy in Brazil were agents of the German Nazi and Italian Fascist regimes. In light of their allegedly mixed loyalties, Duarte Costa called on all German and Italian clergy to resign.[3]
In 1944 he gained further notoriety by writing a glowing preface to the Brazilian translation of The Soviet Power by the Very Reverend Hewlett Johnson, the Anglican Dean of Canterbury known as "The Red Dean" for his uncompromising support of the Soviet Union.
As long as he enjoyed the protection of Cardinal Dom Sebastiao Leme da Silveira Cintra, Duarte Costa's political activism proceeded without much trouble. However, soon after the cardinal's death, Duarte Costa was formally accused by the Brazilian government of being a communist sympathizer. He was arrested on June 6, 1944 and imprisoned[4] in Belo Horizonte. The following month the Ecclesiastical Chamber forbade him from preaching or hearing confessions, as punishment for his undisciplined outspokenness. He remained imprisoned until September 6, 1944, when he was released in response to pressure from the embassies of Mexico and the United States on his behalf.
Excommunication
After his release from prison Carlos Duarte Costa soon found himself in trouble again. This time it was a result of his accusations that the Vatican Secretariat of State had issued Vatican passports to some high-ranking German Nazis, a practice referred to as the Ratlines.
In May 1945 Duarte Costa gave newspaper interviews accusing Brazil's papal nunciate of Nazi-Fascist spying, and accused Rome of having aided and abetted Hitler. In addition, he announced plans to set up his own Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church, in which priests would be permitted to marry (and hold regular jobs in the lay world), personal confessions and the praying of rosaries would be abolished and bishops would be elected by popular vote.[5]
In response to Duarte Costa's continued insubordination, the Vatican finally laid against him the penalty of excommunication on July 2, 1945. Upon being informed of his excommunication, Duarte Costa responded by saying, "I consider today one of the happiest days of my life." He immediately titled himself "Archbishop of Rio de Janeiro" and told the press that he hoped soon to ordain ten married lawyers and professional men as priests in his new church.[5]
Founding of ICAB
A few days after learning of his excommunication, Duarte Costa established the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church (ICAB). Its articles of incorporation were published in the federal register on July 25, and the church was legally registered as a civil society. On August 18, 1945, Duarte Costas published a "Manifesto to the Nation", in which he again criticized the Roman Catholic Church and promoted his new national church. Although he had already been excommunicated, on July 24, 1946, he was declared "excommunicado vitando". This effectively discourages Catholics from associating with him.
After establishing the ICAB, Duarte Costa continued to use the same vestments, insignia, and rites as he had in the Catholic Church. This provoked the cardinals of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro to appeal to the Minister of Justice and the President himself for an injunction against both him and the ICAB. On September 27, 1948, the ICAB churches were closed by the courts, on the grounds that they were deceiving the public into thinking they were Catholic churches and clergy. Duarte Costa quickly filed an appeal, and in 1949 the Supreme Court ruled that the ICAB could reopen its doors on condition that the church use a modified liturgy and its clergy wear gray cassocks to minimize the potential for confusion with the black-colored Roman Catholic clergy.[6]
With the formation of ICAB, Duarte Costa implemented a number of reforms of what he saw as problems in the Roman Catholic Church. Clerical celibacy was abolished. Rules for the reconciliation of divorced persons were implemented. The liturgy was translated into the vernacular and in emulation of a short-lived experiment in France clergy were expected to live and work amongst the people and support themselves and their ministries by holding secular employment. According to Randolph A. Brown, within a short time ICAB began to be identified as “The Church of the Poor”.[7]
Shortly after founding the church, Duarte Costa consecrated two more bishops, Salomão Barbosa Ferraz (August 15, 1945) and Luis Fernando Castillo Mendez (May 3, 1948). These three bishops went on to establish similar autonomous Catholic national churches in several other Latin American countries. Duarte Costa served as consecrator or co-consecrator of eleven additional bishops, each of whom took a leadership role in either the Brazilian church or one of the other national churches.[8]
Duarte Costa served as leader of the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church and its international affiliates for sixteen years until his death in 1961, by which time the church in Brazil is said to have grown to 60,000 members.[7]
Death and legacy
Duarte Costa died quietly in his sleep on March 26, 1961 (Palm Sunday), in Rio de Janeiro at 72 years of age. At that time, ICAB had 50 priests and 37 bishops, with many of the congregations meeting in private homes.[9] Duarte Costa was accredited and praised by the Church for his acts of charity for the poor and his strong devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Eucharist.[10]
The bishops consecrated by Duarte Costa went on to consecrate dozens of additional bishops, many of whom had only tenuous relationships with the Brazilian Church. Bishops tracing their apostolic succession back to Duarte Costa have formed numerous other independent Catholic denominations in the United States, Europe, and Latin America, most of which have no formal ties to the Brazilian church.[8] These bishops are not considered valid by the Brazilian church due to a perceived defect in intention. Only those bishops aligned with the Brazilian communion are considered valid. Even bishops in the Worldwide Communion of Catholic Apostolic Churches have all been consecrated sub conditione to ensure recognition of their lineage. Many consecrated bishops also hold apostolic succession to current Old Catholic bishops.[11]
In the years since his death there have been many reports on graces and miracles resulting from people praying through Duarte Costa's intercession. On July 4, 1970, after officially acknowledging his work for the poor and the church, the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church held a canonization Mass in Rio de Janeiro and officially granted Duarte Costa the title "San Carlos do Brazil".[12] He is considered to be the patron saint of ICAB and Independent Catholicism.
References
- ↑ "Bishop Carlos Duarte Costa". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
- 1 2 3 "Igreja Católica Apostólica Brasileira IICAB)", Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements, (Peter Clarke, ed.), Routledge, 2004 ISBN 9781134499700
- ↑ "Bishop Urges Weeding Out", The New York Times, September 22, 1942
- ↑ Byrne, Julie. The Other Catholics, Columbia University Press, 2016 ISBN 9780231541701
- 1 2 "Rebel in Rio", Time Magazine, July 23, 1945
- ↑ ""Freedom of Religious Worship"". Archived from the original on 2005-03-12. Retrieved 2007-07-06. from the Brazilian Supreme Court historical website
- 1 2 "Randolph A. Brown, "A Concise History of the Western Orthodox Church in America (WOCA)"". Archived from the original on 2007-08-22. Retrieved 2007-07-18.
- 1 2 Costa consecrations website
- ↑ "Carlos Duarte, 72, Led Brazil Church", The New York Times, March 27, 1961
- ↑ "Catholic Church of England and Wales". Archived from the original on 2015-08-01.
- ↑ http://www.cosmas.cnc.net/apos_success_duarte_costa.htm
- ↑ "Bishop Carlos Duarte Costa and the Catholic Apostolic National Churches". Archived from the original on 2015-07-14.
External links
Catholic Church titles | ||
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Preceded by Position created |
Patriarch of Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church 1945 – 1961 |
Succeeded by Luis Fernando Castillo Mendez |
Preceded by Lúcio Antunes de Souza |
Diocesan Bishop of Botucatu 1924 – 1937 |
Succeeded by Antonio Colturato |
Preceded by Vacant |
Titular Bishop of Maura 1937 - 1945 |
Succeeded by Cipriano Biyehima Kihangire |