Upon the death of Archbishop
Cornelius van Steenoven on 3 April 1725, Barchmann Wuytiers was unanimously elected by the Chapter of Utrecht on 15 May 1725 to fill the vacant see. As in the case of Barchman Wuytiers' predecessor, the Chapter notified the pope of the election of the archbishop-elect, requesting the pope's confirmation of the election and a dispensation for consecration by a single bishop. On 23 August 1725,
Pope Benedict XIII issued a condemnation of the election of Barchman Wuytiers as
Archbishop of Utrecht. The papal condemnation was even harsher than that of Barchman Wuytier's predecessor, Steenoven, suggesting that both Archbishop Steenoven and a priest named Theodore Doncker, who was present at Steenoven's consecration, died due to divine vengeance. Doncker, who was actually still alive, would later use the false statement of his death in the condemnation to argue against
papal infallibility. On 30 September 1725, in the Church of St. James and St. Augustine in
The Hague, Barchman Wuytiers was consecrated
Archbishop of Utrecht by Bishop
Dominique Marie Varlet. He received more than 100 letters of congratulation, signed by more than 2,000 ecclesiastics, including all the
Roman Catholic bishops who had congratulated his predecessor, Steenoven. ==Excommunication by the Roman Catholic Church==