The Catholic Church was plunged into
schism Wednesday after the ultraconservative Lefebvrist group
ordained new bishops defying an order from Pope Leo XIV who had
said the move would spell their automatic excommunication and a
split in the Church.
Leo on Wednesday made a last-ditch appeal to the
ultra-traditionalist group for it to drop its plan to ordain
four new bishops without a pontifical mandate.
The Vatican has said this would amount to a schismatic act and
entail excommunication.
The Switzerland-based fraternity, whose official name is the
Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) and has hundreds of thousands of
followers, was founded in 1970 by late French Archbishop Marcel
Lefebvre in opposition to the changes adopted with the Second
Vatican Council of some 60 years ago.
The break from the Catholic Church was cemented with the
excommunication of four bishops Lefebvre consecrated without the
Apostolic Mandate in 1988.
Pope Benedict XVI lifted the excommunication in 2009 and Pope
Francis subsequently said SSPX priests can celebrate marriages
in traditionalist churches under some circumstances, a move that
was followed by attempts to bring the group fully back into the
fold.
On Wednesday the Lefebvrists held firm and in Econe,
Switzerland, four new bishops were consecrated, despite the
Pope's call for a halt.
Formal communication of excommunication and schism from the
Vatican could arrive later Wednesday or within a few days.
The first act of the actual consecration was the laying on of
hands on the heads of the new bishops by the celebrant, Msgr.
Alfonso de Galarreta, and Msgr. Bernard Fellay, co-consecrator.
Other liturgical gestures followed.
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