Sedevacantism

Sede vacante device, used by the Holy See from a pope's death or resignation to the election of his successor

Sedevacantism is the position, held by a minority of traditionalist Catholics,[1][2] that the present occupant of the Holy See is not truly pope and that, for lack of a valid pope, the see has been vacant since the death of Pope Pius XII in 1958. Sedevacantists believe that there is at present a vacancy of the Holy See that began with John XXIII (1958–63) or at latest with Paul VI (1963–78), who, they say, espoused the heresy of modernism and otherwise denied solemnly defined Catholic dogmas and so became heretics.

The term "sedevacantism" is derived from the Latin phrase sede vacante, which literally means "with the chair [of St. Peter] vacant".[3] The phrase is commonly used to refer specifically to a vacancy of the Holy See from the death or resignation of a pope to the election of his successor. "Sedevacantism" as a term in English appears to date from the 1980s, though the movement itself is older.[4]

Among those who maintain that the see of Rome, occupied by what they declare to be an illegitimate pope, was really vacant, some have chosen an alternative pope of their own, and thus in their view ended the vacancy of the see, and are known sometimes as "conclavists".[5]

The number of sedevacantists is largely unknown, with estimates given in tens to hundreds of thousands.[6]

Positions

Sedevacantism owes its origins to the rejection of the theological and disciplinary changes implemented following the Second Vatican Council (1962–65).[7] Sedevacantists reject this Council, on the basis of their interpretation of its documents on ecumenism and religious liberty, among others, which they see as contradicting the traditional teachings of the Catholic Church and as denying the unique mission of Catholicism as the one true religion, outside of which there is no salvation. They also say that new disciplinary norms, such as the Mass of Paul VI, promulgated on 3 April 1969, undermine or conflict with the historical Catholic faith and are deemed heresies.[8] They conclude, on the basis of their rejection of the revised Mass rite and of postconciliar Church teaching as false, that the popes involved are false also.[1]

This is a minority position among traditionalist Catholics[2][9] and a highly divisive one,[1][2] so that many who hold it prefer to say nothing of their view,[1] while other sedevacantists have accepted Episcopal Consecrations from sources such as Archbishop Pierre Martin Ngô Đình Thục.[2]

Traditionalist Catholics other than sedevacantists recognize as legitimate the line of Popes leading to Pope Francis.[10] Some of them hold that one or more of the most recent popes have held and taught unorthodox beliefs, but do not go so far as to say that they have been formal heretics or have been widely and publicly judged to be heretics. Sedevacantists, on the other hand, claim that the infallible Magisterium of the Catholic Church could not have decreed the changes made in the name of the Second Vatican Council, and conclude that those who issued these changes could not have been acting with the authority of the Catholic Church.[11] Accordingly, they hold that Pope Paul VI and his successors left the true Catholic Church and thus lost legitimate authority in the Church. A formal heretic, they say, cannot be the Catholic pope.[12]

Sedevacantists defend their position using numerous arguments, including that particular provisions of canon law prevent a heretic from being elected or remaining as pope. Paul IV's 1559 bull, Cum ex apostolatus officio, stipulated that a heretic cannot be elected pope, while Canon 188.4 of the 1917 Code of Canon Law provides that a cleric who publicly defects from the Catholic faith automatically loses any office he had held in the Church. A number of writers have engaged sedevacantists in debate on some of these points. Theologian Brian Harrison has argued that Pius XII's conclave legislation permitted excommunicated cardinals to attend, from which he argues that they could also be legitimately elected. Opponents of Harrison have argued that a phrase in Pius XII's legislation, "Cardinals who have been deposed or who have resigned, however, are barred and may not be reinstated even for the purpose of voting", though it speaks of someone deposed or resigned from the cardinalate, not of someone who may have incurred automatic excommunication but has not been officially declared excommunicated, means that, even if someone is permitted to attend, that does not automatically translate into electability.

There are estimated to be between several tens of thousands and more than two hundred thousands of sedevacantists worldwide, mostly concentrated in the United States, Canada, France, the UK, Italy, and Australia, but the actual size of the sedevacantist movement has never been accurately assessed. (See further the section on statistics in the article Traditionalist Catholic.) Catholic doctrine teaches the four marks of the true Church are that it is One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic. Sedevacantists base their claim to be the remnant Roman Catholic Church on what they see as the presence in them of these four "marks", absent, they say, in the Church since the Second Vatican Council. Their critics counter that sedevacantists are not one, forming numerous splinter groups, each of them in disagreement with the rest. Most sedevacantists hold the Holy Orders conferred with the present revised rites of the Catholic Church to be invalid due to defect both of intention and form. Because they consider the 1968 revision of the rite of Holy Orders to have invalidated it, they conclude that the great majority of the bishops listed in the Holy See's Annuario Pontificio, including Benedict XVI and Francis themselves, are in reality merely priests or even laymen.

Early proponents

One of the earliest proponents of sedevacantism was the American Francis Schuckardt. Although still working within the "official" Church in 1967, he publicly took the position in 1968 that the Holy See was vacant and that the Church that had emerged from the Second Vatican Council was no longer Catholic. An associate of his, Daniel Q. Brown, arrived at the same conclusion. In 1969, Brown received episcopal orders from an Old Catholic bishop, and in 1971 he in turn consecrated Schuckardt. Schuckardt founded a congregation called the Tridentine Latin Rite Catholic Church.

In 1970, a Japanese layman, Yukio Nemoto (1925–88), created Seibo No Mikuni (Kingdom of Our Lady), a sedevacantist group.[13] Another founding sedevacantist was Father Joaquín Sáenz y Arriaga, a Jesuit theologian from Mexico. He put forward sedevacantist ideas in his books The New Montinian Church (August 1971) and Sede Vacante (1973). His writings gave rise to the sedevacantist movement in Mexico, led by Sáenz, Father Moisés Carmona and Father Adolfo Zamora, and also inspired Father Francis E. Fenton in the U.S.

In the years following the Second Vatican Council other priests took up similar positions, including:

Episcopal lineage

Bishop Lineage (apostolic succession) before and after Vatican II. Sedevacantists are depicted in yellow, white, and light blue boxes.

Bishops and holy orders

Catholic doctrine holds that any bishop can validly ordain any baptised man to the priesthood or to the episcopacy, provided that he has the correct intention and uses a doctrinally acceptable rite of ordination, whether or not he has official permission of any sort to perform the ordination, and indeed whether or not he and the ordinand are Catholics. Absent specified conditions, canon law forbids ordination to the episcopate without a mandate from the pope,[15] and both those who confer such ordination without the papal mandate and those who receive it are subject to excommunication.[16]

In a specific pronouncement in 1976, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith declared devoid of canonical effect the consecration ceremony conducted for the Palmarian Catholic Church by Archbishop Pierre Martin Ngô Đình Thục on 31 December 1975, though it refrained from pronouncing on its validity. This declaration also applied pre-emptively to any later ordinations by those who received ordination in the ceremony.[17] Of those then ordained, seven who are known to have returned to full communion with Rome did so as laymen.[18] When Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo conferred episcopal ordination on four men in Washington on 24 September 2006, the Holy See's Press Office declared that "the Church does not recognize and does not intend in the future to recognize these ordinations or any ordinations derived from them, and she holds that the canonical state of the four alleged bishops is the same as it was prior to the ordination."[19] This denial of canonical status means Milingo had no authority to exercise any ministry.

However, Rev. Ciro Benedettini, of the Holy See Press Office, who was responsible for publicly issuing, during the press conference, the communiqué on Milingo, stated to reporters that any ordinations the excommunicated Milingo had performed prior to his laicization were "illicit but valid", while any subsequent ordinations would be invalid.[20][21]

On 11 June 2011, the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts issued a statement regarding episcopal consecrations in China, saying that the penalty of excommunication imposed by law on those who consecrate or are consecrated without a papal mandate "must be tempered or a penance employed in its place" when those involved in the intrinsically evil act are "coerced by grave fear, even if only relatively grave, or due to necessity or grave inconvenience". It recalled that absolution from the excommunication in question is reserved to the Holy See. Bishop Juan Ignacio Arrieta, Secretary of the Pontifical Council, explained that the statement applied to the bishops ordained by Milingo and Thuc, as well as to the Chinese cases.[22]

The bishops who are or have been active within the sedevacantist movement can be divided into four categories:

Bishops consecrated within the official Church who later took a sedevacantist position

To date, this category seems to consist of only two individuals, both now deceased: the Vietnamese Archbishop Thục (who, before his death in 1984, may have been reconciled to Pope John Paul II) and the Chicago-born Mgr. Alfredo F. Méndez,[23] the former Bishop of Arecibo, Puerto Rico.

Bishops whose lineages derive from the foregoing bishops

Which essentially means the "Thục line" of bishops deriving from Archbishop Thục. While the "Thục line" is lengthy and complex, reportedly comprising 200 or more individuals,[24] the sedevacantist community generally accepts and respects most of the 12 or so bishops following from the three or four final consecrations that the Archbishop performed (those of Bishops Guerard des Lauriers, Carmona, Zamora and Datessen). Bishop Méndez consecrated one priest to the episcopacy, Fr. Clarence Kelly of the Society of St. Pius V,[25] who consecrated one further bishop.[26] Many bishops in the "Thục line" have been associated with the conclavist Palmarian Catholic Church. On 24 September 1991, Father Pivarunas was consecrated a bishop at Mount Saint Michael by Bishop Moisés Carmona. On 30 November 1993, Bishop Pivarunas conferred episcopal consecration to Father Daniel Dolan in Cincinnati, Ohio, and on 11 May 1999, he consecrated Martin Davila for the Unión Católica Trento to succeed Bishop Carmona.

Bishops whose lineages derive from earlier schisms

A considerable number of sedevacantist bishops are said to derive from Bishop Carlos Duarte Costa, who in 1945 set up his own schismatic "Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church".[27] More numerous are those who have had recourse to the Old Catholic line of succession. Bishops of this category include Francis Schuckardt and others associated with him. The orders of the original Old Catholic Church are regarded by the Roman Catholic Church as valid, though no such declaration of recognition has been issued with regard to the several independent Catholic churches that claim to trace their episcopal orders to this church. Some shadow of doubt hovers over the validity of the orders received from these bishops, and the claimants have not received wide acceptance in the sedevacantist community, though most have at least some small congregation.

Bishops whose orders are generally regarded as invalid through lack of proper lineage

Lucian Pulvermacher (also known as Pope Pius XIII) and Gordon Bateman of the small conclavist "True Catholic Church" fall into this category, as does Boniface Atticus I of the small form Minnesota Conclave known as "Full Circle Catholicism".

Criticism

Arguments Against Sedevacantism

Against sedevacantism, Catholics advance arguments such as:

Counter-arguments

Sedevacantists advance counter-arguments, such as:

Liturgical criticism

Like other traditionalist Catholics, sedevacantists criticize liturgical revisions made by the Holy See since the Second Vatican Council:

Groups

Sedevacantism appears to be centred in, and by far strongest in, the United States, and secondarily other English-speaking countries such as Canada and the United Kingdom, as well as Poland, Mexico, Italy, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and Brazil.[41][42] Anthony Cekada has described the United States as a "sedevacantist bastion", contrasting it with France, where the non-sedevacantist Society of St. Pius X has a virtual monopoly on the traditional Catholic movement.[43]

See also

Notes

  1. The phrase "Mass or Lord's Supper" is used exactly twice in the revised Missal: GIRM 17 and 27
  2. The phrase "the altar or the table of the Lord" is used once (GIRM 73), immediately after using the word "altar" on its own; "the eucharistic table" is used in GIRM 73 in the same sense as that in which the 1962 Missal used "table" in, for instance, the Code of Rubrics, 528
  3. The revised Missal uses the word "calix", which in the official English translation appears as "chalice", not as "cup"
  4. The word "sacrifice" appears 215 times in the revised Missal
  5. The word "altar" appear 345 times in the revised Missal
  6. The word "chalice" appears 177 times in the revised Missal.
  7. For instance, the 1973 English translation had, immediately after the consecration, "He (the priest) shows the chalice to the people, places it on the corporal, and genuflects in adoration."

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Appleby, R. Scott (1995), Being Right: Conservative Catholics in America, Indiana University Press, p. 257, ISBN 978-0-253-32922-6.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Marty, Martin E; Appleby, R. Scott (1994), Fundamentalisms Observed, University of Chicago Press, p. 88, ISBN 978-0-226-50878-8.
  3. Neuhaus, Rev. Richard J (2007), Catholic Matters: Confusion, Controversy, and the Splendor of Truth, Basic, p. 133, ISBN 0-465-04935-4.
  4. Cekada, Fr. Antony (2008). "The Nine vs. Lefebvre: We Resist You to Your Face" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-11-15.
  5. George D. Chryssides, Historical Dictionary of New Religious Movements (Rowman & Littlefield 2011 978-0-81087967-6), p. 99
  6. Collinge, William J. Historical dictionary of Catholicism (2nd ed.). Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. p. 399. ISBN 978-0-8108-5755-1. from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands.
  7. Madrid, Patrick; Vere, Peter (2004), More Catholic Than the Pope: An Inside Look at Extreme Traditionalism, Our Sunday Visitor, p. 169, ISBN 1-931709-26-2.
  8. Flinn, Frank K (2007), Encyclopedia of Catholicism, Facts on File, p. 566, ISBN 978-0-8160-5455-8.
  9. Collinge, William J (2012), Historical Dictionary of Catholicism, Scarecrow, p. 566, ISBN 978-0-8108-7979-9.
  10. Gibson, David (2007), The Rule of Benedict: Pope Benedict XVI and His Battle with the Modern World, Harper Collins, p. 355, ISBN 978-0-06-116122-3.
  11. Marty, Martin E; Appleby, R. Scott (1991), Fundamentalisms Observed, The University of Chicago Press, p. 66, ISBN 0-226-50878-1.
  12. Wójcik, Daniel (1997), The End of the World As We Know It: Faith, Fatalism, and Apocalypse in America, New York University Press, p. 86, ISBN 0-8147-9283-9.
  13. Zoccatelli, Pier Luigi (2000), Seibo Seibo No Mikuni, a Catholic Apocalyptic Splinter Movement from Japan.
  14. Case, Thomas W (October 2002), "The Society of St. Pius X Gets Sick", Fidelity Magazine, Tripod.
  15. Canon 1013, Intra text.
  16. Canon 1382, Intra text.
  17. "Episcopi qui alios", Acta Apostolicae Sedis (decree), Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, 17 September 1976, p. 623, As for those who have already thus unlawfully received ordination or any who may yet accept ordination from these, whatever may be the validity of the orders (quidquid sit de ordinum validitate), the Church does not and will not recognize their ordination (ipsorum ordinationem), and will consider them, for all legal effects, as still in the state in which they were before, except that the… penalties remain until they repent.
  18. Boyle, T, "Thục consecrations", Catholicism.
  19. Declaration (in Italian and English).
  20. D'Emilio, Frances (18 December 2009). "Vatican dismisses defiant archbishop from clergy". Boston Globe. Retrieved 2012-11-15.
  21. Allen, John L. Jr (17 December 2009). "Last act in the Milingo story?". NCR online. Retrieved 2012-11-15.
  22. Jesús Colina (14 June 2011). "Vatican Calls China's Illicitly Ordained to Examine Hearts". ZENIT News Agency. Retrieved 2012-11-15.
  23. "Mendez", SSPV bishop.
  24. Boyle, T, "Thục Consecrations", Catholicism (list and line of descent).
  25. Kelly, Clarence (1997). The Sacred and the Profane (PDF). Round Top, NY: Seminary Press. p. 101. Retrieved 2012-11-15.
  26. Consecration (photos), St Pius V chapel.
  27. Boyle, T, "Costa Consecrations", Catholicism.
  28. "FIRST VATICAN COUNCIL (1869-1870)". ewtn. Eternal Word Television Network. Retrieved 8 July 2016. |first2= missing |last2= in Authors list (help)
  29. "The Church", The Catholic encyclopædia, New advent.
  30. "Pastor Aeternus", Faith teachings, EWTN.
  31. Staples, Tim. "The Problem with Sedevacantism". Catholic Answers. Catholic Answers. Retrieved 8 July 2016.
  32. "Sedevacantism, Sedevacantists, Sede Vacante Facts Explained". prophecyfilm.com.
  33. Daly, John (1999), Fr. O'Reilly on The Idea of A Long-Term Vacancy of The Holy See, Sedevacantist.
  34. "Clergy", General info, St. Gertrude the Great.
  35. Ordination of Deacons, Priests and Bishops, Chapter III: "Ordination of a Priest", 14 and 22.
  36. Jenkins, Rev. William, The New Rite: Purging the Priesthood in the Conciliar Church (PDF), Novus ordo watch.
  37. Cekada, Rev. Anthony, Absolutely Null and Utterly Void: the 1968 Rite of Episcopal Consecration (PDF), Traditional mass.
  38. Cekada, Rev. Anthony, Why the New Bishops are Not True Bishops (PDF), Traditional mass.
  39. Cekada, Rev. Anthony, Still Null and Still Void (PDF), Traditional mass.
  40. Vaillancourt, Kevin, On the new ordination rite: the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is not the only sacred rite changed since Vatican II, Traditio.
  41. Trytek, Father Rafał, Sede vacante, EU.
  42. Trytek, Father Rafał, Interview, Bibula.
  43. Cekada (2008), The Nine vs. Lefebvre: We Resist You to Your Face (PDF), Traditional mass, p. 14.
  44. Most Holy Family Monastery.
  45. A more comprehensive list of objections can be found at "Letter of 'the Nine' to Abp. Marcel Lefebvre", The Roman Catholic, Traditional mass, May 1983.
  46. Decree of Establishment, UA: UOGCC.
  47. Declaration of an excommunication upon Pope Benedict XVI and John Paul II, UA: UOGCC.

Sedevacantist sites

Sedevacantist resources

Criticisms of sedevacantism

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.