Independent Catholic churches

From Conservapedia
This is the current revision of Independent Catholic churches as edited by Cool6dad (Talk | contribs) at 05:44, December 27, 2025. This URL is a permanent link to this version of this page.

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

The Independent Catholic churches are churches which have broken away from the Roman Catholic Church while retaining most of its liturgy, traditions and theology. By contrast, the Protestant churches also broke away, but they rejected a great deal of its traditions in the process.

Important to Distinguish

It is important to distinguish these groups from the Eastern Catholic churches which—while they follow Eastern rather than Roman traditions—do so as part of the Roman Catholic Church; from groups such as Anglo-Catholics who remain part of the Anglican Churches but see Anglicanism as closer to Catholicism than Protestantism; and from a similar movement among the Lutheran churches known as Evangelical Catholicism. It also is important to keep separate the original sense of catholic (such as in the Nicene creed), meaning universal, and the concept of all Christian churches being deemed to be part of the universal, i.e. catholic, church.

These churches consider their bishops & priests valid Catholic ones because Valid ordination according to the St Augustinian theory requires only that a man be ordained a priest by a Bishop in the line of apostolic succession originating from one who has been licitly and validly ordained to Holy Orders and who was licitly and validly consecrated a Bishop in the unbroken line of apostolic succession descended from the original Apostles. A licitly consecrated Bishop who later becomes a schismatic, even a heretic, does not lose the authoritative potestas (power) of the fullness of Holy Orders, even without the ius (lawful authority) to licitly exercise it. And those he ordains according to the proper form[1][2] of the sacrament of Holy Orders. In laymen's terms a bishop retains his power to ordain Priests and consecrate other bishops, even if excommunicated by the Roman Catholic Church or another church. The men he ordains priests still can preform valid Sacraments and the men he consecrates as bishops can ordain valid priests and consecrate valid bishops
See Apostolic succession
There is no single Independent Catholic church. There are many such churches, with completely contrary beliefs to each other. Several of these hold the belief that they are the true Roman Catholic Church, and that the mainstream Roman Catholic Church has fallen into heresy or apostasy. We can group them into a few categories:

Traditional Old Catholic Churches

  • Traditional Old Catholic churches. One entity is the Polish National Catholic Church originally just in the United States, but now also in Canada and Italy. The schism with the Roman Catholic Church started in 1901 and became complete in 1907 when Fr. Hodur is consecrated a Bishop by Dutch Old Catholic bishops, in Utrecht, Holland[3]. It did not break away over any particular doctrinal issue, but as a result of ethnic conflict. Polish immigrants to the United States felt neglected by the predominantly Italian hierarchy in the United States. [4] It was the largest member of the Union of Utrecht[5] until 2003 when it severed its ties in opposition to the Union's approval of women priests and blessing gay marriages. The Polish National Catholic Church has created the Union of Scranton[6] with the Nordic Catholic Church of Norway[7] another Traditional Old Catholic church; which has parishes all over Europe.

Liberal Old Catholic Churches

  • the Old Catholic Church was founded in 1870 by those who rejected the declaration of Papal Infallibility by the First Vatican Council. Other than that, they accepted the bulk of traditional Catholic teachings. They became attached to the See of Utrecht in the Netherlands, which had split from the Roman Catholic Church in the 1700s (partially over the issue of Jansenism[8]). In more recent decades, the Old Catholic "Union of Utrecht"[9] has moved in an increasingly liberal direction, accepting women priests, and increasingly accepting homosexuality.The more traditional Union of Scranton[10] was formed as result. The Union of Utrecht is in full communion with the Church of England[11].

Liberal Catholic Churches

  • the Liberal Catholic Churches [12][13] started when some members of the Old Catholic Church, especially in the English-speaking world, developed an interest in theosophy and the occult. They retain many of the outer practices of the Old Catholic Church, but have augmented Catholic theology with theosophy. They have splintered into a number of competing churches. Most of them share the social liberalism which has developed in the Old Catholic Church.

Traditionalist Catholic

  • Traditionalist Catholic groups, which rejected the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council exist along a spectrum. At one end, some exist definitely within the framework of the generally-recognized Roman Catholic Church; at other end, others have in effect established entirely separate churches. There are several positions in between with ambiguous relations to the mainstream Roman Catholic Church. In more detail:
    • There are those who prefer the old liturgy, but do so in full obedience to the Catholic hierarchy (e.g. the Sacerdotal Society of St. John Marie Vianney)[14]
    • There are those who believe the current church hierarchy is in error, and refuse to be obedient to it. At the same time, they accept in principle the validity of the current church hierarchy and hope to be reconciled to it (Society of St. Pius X)
    • There are those who believe the Popes since Vatican II have been antipopes, and the office of Pope is currently vacant. This view exists in a few variants:
      • sedevacantists[15] assert that the current Pope is really an antipope, and the office of Pope is vacant.
      • sedeprivationists believe that the Popes since Vatican II have not been full Popes, but only 'potential Popes' or 'half Popes.' They believe that Benedict XVI is a heretic and as such cannot really be Pope; but that if he was to recant his heresy, he would automatically become Pope the moment he did so.
      • the Society of St. Pius V[16] does not believe that the question of whether the Holy See is vacant or not has been definitely settled, but they believe that genuine doubts exist as to whether the recent Popes have actually been popes.
    • conclavists believe, like the sedevacantists, that the Papacy is vacant; but they go one step further and elect their own Pope. There are many different conclavist groups, each with its own Pope. The Roman Catholic Church considers all these to be antipopes.

Mystical Catholic churches

  • Mystical Catholic churches refers to churches which center around alleged revelations from the Saints, Jesus, or most commonly, the Virgin Mary. These revelations lead them to reject the mainstream Roman Catholic Church as heretical and to found their own churches. This is often combined with a belief in sedevacantism or conclavism, but other sedevacantists and conclavists claim to be faithfully following church tradition rather than new revelations. The most well-known groups in this category are the Palmarian Catholic Church in Spain,[17] and the Mariavite churches in Poland[18].

See also

References

  1. The Postures and Gestures of Ordination (aughustinianvocations.org)
  2. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23960143
  3. https://www.easterndiocesepncc.org/historical-timeline-of-the-polish-national-catholic-church/
  4. https://pncc.org/
  5. https://www.utrechter-union.org/en/welcome/
  6. https://theunionofscranton.org/
  7. https://nordiccatholic.com/about-us/
  8. https://www.catholic.com/magazine/print-edition/jansenism
  9. https://www.utrechter-union.org/en/welcome/
  10. https://theunionofscranton.org/
  11. https://www.churchofengland.org/
  12. https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/liberal-catholic-churches
  13. http://www.theliberalcatholicchurch.com/
  14. https://adapostolica.org/
  15. https://cmri.org/articles-on-the-traditional-catholic-faith/sedevacantism/
  16. https://sspv.org/index.php
  17. https://www.palmarianchurch.org/
  18. https://mariawita.pl/