Sedevacantism
Sedevacantism is the belief that since the time of Pope John XXIII, who called the Second Vatican Council in the early 1960s, the office of pope of the Roman Catholic Church is not legitimately held by the persons widely acknowledged as pope, sitting in the Vatican. The term sede vacante is Latin for empty chair. In standard Catholic Church usage, it refers to the vacancy in the papal office between the death or resignation of the pope and the election of his successor. Most sedevacantists hold that the office has been vacant since 1958, the year when Pope John XXIII was elected. Some Sedevacantists have elected "legitimate" pontiffs, generally held to be antipopes. These are known as Conclavists, see below.
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Sedevacantism
Generally, Sedevacantists consider themselves traditional Catholics who oppose the reforms of the Second Vatican Council and the replacement of the Latin language Tridentine Roman Missal and its order of Mass with a new one which allows the celebration of the Mass in the vernacular. They insist that the men who have occupied the Vatican palace since the latter part of the 20th century are heretics for promulgating those changes. Other traditionalists maintain that the popes since Pope Pius XII, although they may have personally held many of what some traditionalists perceive as scandalous heretical beliefs, nevertheless were true popes who never tried to use their infallible power (which is only used exceptionally) to promulgate a heresy, which all Catholics believe would be impossible.
The Sedevacantist view is often based in part on the decree on Papal Infallibility of the First Vatican Council. If a pope promulgates heresy, they reason, he lacks infallibility and thus cannot be the Pope. Alternatively, a pope falls from office if he embraces heresy and even if he does not explicitly promulgate heretical teachings by doing so. Sedevacantists also cite Paul IV's 1559 Bull Cum ex apostolatus officio, which teaches that a heretic cannot be elected pope.
Sedevacantists also argue that recent occupants of the Vatican palace have performed actions that they believe could not be carried out by true popes, often pointing to Pope Paul VI's (reigned: 1963-1978) refusal to wear the papal tiara, the traditional symbol of the papacy. Sedevacantists also note that Pope John Paul I (reigned: August-September 1978) abandoned the Papal Coronation and that Pope John Paul II (reigned: 1978-2005) declined to take the Papal oath.
Sedevacantists are a small group compared to the mainstream of Catholicism, with a membership of only a few thousand. However, they assert that unity, sanctity, catholicity and apostolicity are the characteristics that make theirs the legitimate Catholic Church, and not the size of their membership.
Some sedevacantists in England prefer to be called recusants instead.
Objections to Sedevacantist Criticism of Mainstream Catholicism
Many mainstream Catholics argue that the Church's catholicity (universality) means precisely that: The true Catholic Church is universal and its truth cannot be hidden. Sedevacantists (or conclavists) argue that the true nature of the Catholic Church has been successfully hidden from the world for nearly fifty years and that only they have uncovered it. Mainstream Catholicism considers this a heretical position, and that in accordance with the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church of Christ, adopted at the First Vatican Council in 1870, the visible Church must have a visible Head, and that visible Head is the Vicar of Jesus Christ (Vicarius Christi), the Roman Pontiff.
Typically, sedevacantists are accused of citing as infallible documents such as Papal encyclicals, bulls, homilies and other sources traditionally held not to be sources of infallible teachings. It is argued by mainstream Catholics that the traditional use of Latin and especially the Tridentine Order of Mass set down by the Council of Trent (1545–1563) is not an infallible dogmatic teaching but simply a small-t tradition, and can be revised or reformed by a General Council of the Church at any time. Further, sedevacantists are accused of indulging in the logical fallacy of post hoc, ergo propter hoc (coincidental correlation) by confusing the general decrease in religiosity in the Western world for a failing of the Church in particular. Finally, sedevacantist claims of unity are accused of being mere partisan rhetoric, as there are many groups of sedevancantists and conclavists, each with either their own Pope or no Pope at all and few or no formal ties to each other.
Conclavism
Some groups have put forward their own popes in opposition to those in Rome, making them "conclavists" rather than "sedevacantists" in the strict sense of the word. The Palmar de Troya movement asserts that Christ appeared to Clemente Domínguez y Gómez, a Spaniard, and told him that he was to assume the papacy on Pope Paul VI's death. This claimant, known as "Pope Gregory XVII", died in March 2005. One of his followers, Manuel Corral, succeeded him as "Pope Peter II."
The United States-based true Catholic Church elected a traditionalist priest to be Pope Pius XIII in the late 1990s, claiming that all popes following the death of Pope Pius XII (reigned: 1939-1958) were invalidly elected or disqualified by virtue of their excommunication. This group claims that Pope John XXIII (reigned: 1958-1963) joined the freemasons in 1935, an act that, if true, would have earned automatic excommunication and so made him ineligible for the papacy. "Pius XIII", however, in an interesting wrinkle, admits to having divined with a pendulum since his seminary days, an act which carries a similar penalty of automatic excommunication, and would therefore result in his own ineligibility for the Papacy.
One group of conclavists believe that Karol Wojtyła was a heretical antipope, but also accept the Catholic doctrine that there will be a perpetual line of successors in the Papacy. These conclavists elected David Bawden as Pope Michael on July 16, 1990. Bawden has declared Pope Benedict XVI an antipope. Others have rejected this pope in favor of other conclaves that have elected Victor von Pentz (Pope Linus II) and Lucian Pulvermacher (Pope Pius XIII). For a full list of rival popes elected by sedevacantist groups, see the article Antipope.
Main sedevacanist and conclavist groups
- Society of St. Pius V (formed when a small number of priests of the Society of St. Pius X split over sedevacantism)
- The Ngo-Dinh-Thuc line of episcopal succession
- Palmar de Troya
- true Catholic Church
See also
- antipope
- David Bawden, the self-proclaimed "Pope Michael"
- Clemente Domínguez y Gómez, the self-proclaimed "Pope Gregory XVII"
- Lucian Pulvermacher, the self-proclaimed "Pope Pius XIII"
- Novus Ordo Missae
- Five Popes in the conventional (Roman) line have been declared antipopes by Sedevacantist and Conclavist groups, they are:
- Pope John XXIII (all except for Palmar de Troya)
- Pope Paul VI (all except for Palmar de Troya)
- Pope John Paul I (all)
- Pope John Paul II (all)
- Pope Benedict XVI (all)
External links
Sedevcantist sites
Criticism of Sedevacantism
- Critique of sedevacantism
- Do-It-Yourself Popes: the Wacky World of Sedevacantists
- A Prescription Against "Traditionalism" Part 3: A Refutation of the Heresy of Sedevacantism
Categories: Catholics not in Communion with Rome | 20th century antipopes