Early episcopal consecrations without papal approval The consecration of bishops without the approval of the wider church or papal mandate appears to be an ancient phenomenon, which led to Canon VI of the
Council of Chalcedon's assertion that any potential sacramental validity of such consecrations is valueless without the church's endorsement. The resurgence of the phenomenon in the modern era seems to have coincided with the spread of
Enlightenment values. Beginning in 1724,
Dominique Marie Varlet (1678–1742), the
Latin Catholic Bishop of
Babylon, consecrated four men successively as
Archbishop of Utrecht without
papal approval. This consecration by Varlet caused a theological controversy and
schism within the Catholic Church, which now possessed bishops who were validly consecrated without the permission of the pope. This
schism marked the birth of the movement that would later be known as the
Old Catholic Church (a term coined in 1853 for the Catholics of
Utrecht).
First departure from the Catholic Church The sharing of apostolic succession in the west outside the Catholic Church was largely confined to the
Church of Utrecht for over a century. After the (First)
Vatican Council in 1870, many
Austro-Hungarian,
German and
Swiss Catholics rejected assertions of universal jurisdiction of the pope and the declaration of
papal infallibility, and their bishops, inspired by earlier acts in
Utrecht, decided to leave the Catholic Church to form their own churches, independent of Rome. Now independent of the
Pope, these bishops were sometimes referred to as autocephalous (or self-governing) bishops from within their circles or
episcopi vaganti (wandering bishops) from outside of their circles. These validly-consecrated bishops could claim apostolic succession, and they continued to share valid lines of apostolic succession with the
priests and
deacons they ordained. In 1889, they formally united as part of the
Utrecht Union of Churches (UU).
Arnold Harris Mathew (1852–1919) In 1908, the movement that would become Independent Catholicism left
continental Europe when
Arnold Harris Mathew (1852–1919), a former Catholic priest, was consecrated in
Great Britain by Archbishop
Gerardus Gul (1847–1920) of the
Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands. Mathew believed that
Old Catholicism might provide a home for disaffected
Anglican clergy who reacted to
Pope Leo XIII's declaration that
Anglican orders were null and void, and Gul incorrectly believed that Mathew had a significant following in the
United Kingdom. Two years later, in 1910, Mathew consecrated two priests to the
episcopate, without clear reasons and without consulting the
Archbishop of Utrecht, and, in response to the ensuing protest, declared his autonomy from the
Old Catholic Church. Mathew later consecrated several other bishops who spread through
England and
North America. Plummer writes that, as a result, "we begin to see the small, endlessly multiplying groups, with a high percentage of the membership in
holy orders, which came to characterize the independent movement."
Joseph René Vilatte Joseph René Vilatte (1854–1929), is credited with being the first person to bring to
North America the movement that would result in Independent Catholicism. In 1892, Vilatte traveled to
India, where he was consecrated, as Mar Timotheos, by
Mar Julius I (1836–1923) of the
Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church. In 1915, Vilatte founded the
American Catholic Church which no longer exists. During the following 28 years, Vilatte consecrated "a number of men who are the episcopal ancestors of an enormous variety of descendants" in North America.
Subsequent departures The 20th century has seen a number of clergy and laity move into the Independent Catholic movement from the Catholic Church.
Czechoslovak Hussite Church Perhaps the largest departure from the Catholic Church was the
Czechoslovak Hussite Church (CHC), which organized on 8 January 1920, when several thousand priests and laypeople formed an independent church in response to their deep concerns over the Catholic Church's opposition to
modernism. The church's first patriarch was
Karel Farský (1880–1927), a modernist and former Catholic priest. The first bishops of the CHC were consecrated by priests through the laying on of hands. In 1931,
Louis-Charles Winnaert (1880–1937), who was consecrated by
Liberal Catholic bishop
James Wedgwood (1883–1951), consecrated two CHC bishops,
Gustav Procházka (1872–1942) and
Rostislav Stejskal (1894–1946), thus sharing
apostolic succession with the CHC. The CHC ordained its first
woman priest in 1947, and it consecrated its first
woman bishop in 1999. According to the 2011
Czech Republic census, 39,276 people at that time self-identified as members of the CHC.
Carlos Duarte Costa Carlos Duarte Costa (1888–1961) was a
Catholic bishop in
Brazil for twenty years before distancing himself, and being excommunicated by the Catholic Church over his opposition to its position on
clerical celibacy,
divorce,
vernacular liturgy, and accused the Catholic Church of
fascist sympathies. In 1945, Duarte Costa founded the
Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church and began consecrating numerous bishops in the
apostolic succession. He is known as "St. Charles of Brazil" by the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church, which had grown to 560,781 members by 2010.
Pierre Martin Ngo Dinh Thuc From 1975 until his death in 1984, exiled Catholic archbishop
Ngô Đình Thục (1897–1984) of
Huế, Vietnam, an older brother of
Ngo Dinh Diem, the first president of
South Vietnam, consecrated a number of bishops, first for the
Palmarian Catholic Church, then for the
sedevacantists of the Tridentine Latin Rite Catholic Church.
Emmanuel Milingo Emmanuel Milingo served as Catholic archbishop of
Lusaka, Zambia from 1969 to 1982. He resigned in 1982 over the issues of
faith healing and exorcism. After marrying, Milingo formed
Married Priests Now!, and ordained married priests. He also consecrated four married priests as bishops, including
George Stallings of
Imani Temple African-American Catholic Congregation and
Peter Paul Brennan of the Old Catholic Confederation.
Telesphore George Mpundu In 2024 the former Catholic archbishop of Lusaka,
Telesphore George Mpundu, secretly consecrated Anthony Ward for the
Servants of the Holy Family; and by November 2025, Mpundu and Ward "received notice" from Cardinal
Victor Manuel Fernandez, that they had incurred
latae sententiae excommunication. The excommunication has been disregarded by the group. ==Appeal==