Marcel Lefebvre
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Marcel François Marie Joseph LefebvreTemplate:Efn Template:Post-nominals (29 November 1905 – 25 March 1991) was a French Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Dakar from 1955 to 1962. He was a major influence in modern traditionalist Catholicism, founding in 1970 the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) to train traditionalist seminarians. In 1988, Pope John Paul II declared that Lefebvre had been automatically excommunicated for consecrating four bishops that year without permission and despite the pope's express prohibition.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Ordained a diocesan priest in 1929, Lefebvre joined the Holy Ghost Fathers for missionary work and was assigned to teach at a seminary in Gabon in 1932. In 1947, he was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Dakar, and the next year as the apostolic nuncio to French West Africa. Upon his return to Europe, Lefebvre was elected superior general of the Holy Ghost Fathers and assigned draft and prepare documents for the Second Vatican Council. He was a major leader of the conservative bloc during its proceedings. He later took the lead in opposing certain changes associated with the council. He refused to implement council-inspired reforms demanded by the Holy Ghost Fathers and resigned from the order in 1968.
In 1970, Lefebvre founded the SSPX as a small community of seminarians in the village of Écône, Switzerland, with the permission of the local bishop. In 1975, after a flare of tensions with the Holy See, Lefebvre was ordered to disband the society, but ignored the decision and continued to maintain its activities and existence. In 1988, against the express prohibition of Pope John Paul II, he consecrated four bishops to continue his work with the SSPX. The Holy See immediately declared that all parties in the ceremony had incurred automatic excommunication,Template:Efn which Lefebvre refused to acknowledge.<ref name="sermon" /><ref name="interview">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> These excommunications were rescinded in 2009 by Pope Benedict XVI, though the SSPX itself remains “canonically irregular”.
Early life and familyEdit
Marcel Lefebvre was born in Tourcoing, Nord.<ref name="Apologia1">Template:Harnvb</ref><ref name=CathEncy446>Template:Harvnb</ref> He was the second son and third child of eight children<ref name="own 2002-02">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}. Society of St. Pius X – South Africa. sspxafrica.com. February 2002.</ref> of textile factory-owner René Lefebvre<ref>René Lefebvre, a factory owner The ghost at all our tables Template:Webarchive, Oriens, Summer 2005</ref> and Gabrielle, born Watine, who died in 1938.<ref name=CathEncy446 />
His parents were devout Catholics who brought their children to daily Mass.<ref name="own 2002-02" /> His father, René, was an outspoken monarchist, devoting his life to the cause of the French Dynasty, seeing in a monarchy the only way of restoring to his country its past grandeur and a Christian revival.<ref name=CathEncy446 /><ref>A Calvary 1941–1944 René Lefebvre Part 1, June 1984, Volume VII, Number 6, The Angelus</ref>
His father ran a spy-ring for British Intelligence when Tourcoing was occupied by the Germans during World War I. René died at Sonnenburg aged 65 in 1944, having been sentenced to death one year before.<ref>René LeFebvre, Holocaust Survivors and Victims Database</ref>
PriestEdit
In 1923 Lefebvre began studies for the priesthood; at the insistence of his father he followed his brother to the French Seminary in Rome, as his father suspected the diocesan seminaries of liberal leanings.<ref>The ghost at all our tables Template:Webarchive, Oriens journal</ref> He later credited his conservative views to the rector, a Breton priest named Father Henri Le Floch.<ref>"Archbishop Lefebvre readily admitted that were it not for the solid formation he received from Fr. Le Floch, he too might have succumbed to the creeping liberalism of the age." John Vennari (August 2005){{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}, The Angelus.</ref> He interrupted his studies in 1926 and 1927 to perform his military service.<ref name="own 2002-04">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}. Society of St. Pius X – South Africa. sspxafrica.com. April 2002.</ref> On 25 May 1929 he was ordained deacon by Cardinal Basilio Pompili in the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome.<ref name=mallerais_vie>Template:Harvnb</ref> On 21 September 1929 he was ordained a priest of Diocese of Lille by its bishop, Achille Liénart.<ref>Ordained priest at Lille, France, by Msgr Achille Liénart, Bishop of Lille, on 21 September 1929{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}. Society of Saint Pius X, District of Great Britain</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb: "His Grace, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, was ordained to the priesthood on 21 September 1929, and consecrated a bishop on 18 September 1947, by Achille Cardinal Lienart, Bishop of Archbishop Lefebvre's Diocese of Lille (France)."</ref> After ordination, he continued his studies in Rome, completing a doctorate in theology in July 1930.<ref>Seminary training: 1923–29 in the French Seminary, Rome, Doctor in philosophy and in theology. I – Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre Template:Webarchive</ref>
Lefebvre asked to be allowed to perform missionary work as a member of the Holy Ghost Fathers, but in August 1930 Liénart required him to first work as assistant curate in a parish in Lomme, a suburb of Lille.<ref name=Apologia3>Template:Harnvb</ref><ref name=mallerais_vie83>Template:Harvnb</ref> Liénart released him from the diocese in July 1931 and Lefebvre entered the novitiate of the Holy Ghost Fathers at Orly in September.<ref name="own 2002-02" /> On 8 September 1932, he took simple vows for a period of three years.<ref name="own2002-06">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}. Society of St. Pius X – South Africa. sspxafrica.com. June/July 2002</ref>
Lefebvre's first assignment as a Holy Ghost Father was as a professor at St. John's Seminary in Libreville, Gabon.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1934 he was made rector of the seminary.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> On 28 September 1935 he made his perpetual vows. He served as superior of a number of missions of the Holy Ghost Fathers in Gabon.Template:Efn In October 1945 Lefebvre returned to France to become rector of the Holy Ghost Fathers seminary in Mortain.<ref name="Apologia3" />
Bishop in AfricaEdit
On 12 June 1947, Pope Pius XII appointed him Vicar Apostolic of Dakar in Senegal and titular bishop of Anthedon.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> On 18 September 1947 he was consecrated a bishop in his family's parish church in Tourcoing by Liénart, now a cardinal, with Bishops Jean-Baptiste Fauret and Alfred-Jean-Félix Ancel as co-consecrators.<ref name=mallerais_vie170>Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> In his new position Lefebvre was responsible for an area with a population of three and a half million people, of whom only 50,000 were Catholics.<ref name="own2002-09">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
On 22 September 1948, Lefebvre, while continuing as Vicar Apostolic of Dakar, received the additional responsibilities of Apostolic Delegate to French Africa, with his title changed to titular archbishop of Arcadiopolis in Europa.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He became responsible for representing the interests of the Holy See to Church authorities in 46 dioceses<ref name="own2002-11" /> in "continental and insular Africa subject to the French Government, with the addition of the Diocese of Reunion, the whole of the island of Madagascar and the other neighbouring islands under French rule, but excluding the dioceses of North Africa, namely those of Carthage, Constantine, Algiers and Oran."<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>Template:Efn
In the late 1940s, Lefebvre established a ministry in Paris to care for Catholic students from the French colonies in Africa. He and other missionaries in Africa thought young Africans would otherwise be attracted to radical ideologies, including anti-colonialism and atheism. This idea of "safeguarding the Catholicism of the emerging African elite" was later adopted by Pope Pius in his encyclical on the missions, Fidei donum (1957).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Lefebvre's chief duty was the building up of the ecclesiastical structure in French Africa.<ref name="Short">Template:HarvnbTemplate:Page needed</ref> Pope Pius XII wanted to move quickly towards an ecclesiastical structure with dioceses instead of vicariates and apostolic prefectures. Lefebvre was responsible for selecting these new bishops,<ref name="own2002-11">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> increasing the number of priests and religious sisters,<ref name="own2003-01">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> as well as the number of churches in the various dioceses.<ref name="Apologia1" /> On 14 September 1955, Pope Pius decreed a complete reorganization of the ecclesiastical jurisdictions in French Africa. The Apostolic Vicariate of Dakar was made an archdiocese and Lefebvre became its first archbishop.<ref name="Short" /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Transition years, 1959–1962Edit
Lefebvre's career shifted rapidly with the death of Pope Pius XII, moving from the missions to Rome, though not directly, and with indications he was at times favored and at times disfavored by the new pope. Pope John XXIII replaced Lefebvre as Apostolic Delegate to Dakar on 9 July 1959, a position that would quickly evolve as the colonies gained their independence in the 1960s.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The next year, Pope John appointed Lefebvre to the 120-member Central Preparatory Commission for the Second Vatican Council.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
After Senegal declared its independence in June 1960, its first president, Léopold Sédar Senghor proposed the country adopt its own form of socialism, which he as a Catholic believed compatible with Church doctrine. Lefebvre, still Archbishop of Dakar, criticized Senghor's views in a March 1961 pastoral letter and then in a personal audience with Senghor, drawing on Pope Pius XI's denunciation of socialism in his 1931 encyclical Quadragesimo anno. Now at odds with the government, Lefebvre watched as the Holy See replaced European missionary bishops with Africans and tried to delay his own removal by asking for the appointment of a coadjutor, which met with no response.<ref name=cleary>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Efn He told Pope John "the Africans are not yet ripe" and did not want to be responsible. Pope John said he took the responsibility and would see Lefebvre was taken care of properly.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
On 23 January 1962, Lefebvre was transferred to the Diocese of Tulle, one of the smallest in France, while retaining the personal title of archbishop.<ref name=cleary/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Efn On 4 April 1962, he was named a consultor to the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
On 26 July 1962, the Chapter General of the Holy Ghost Fathers, dominated by those in leadership positions with fewer representatives of local communities, elected Lefebvre to a 12-year term as their Superior General. He won 53 of the 75 votes cast on the first ballot, though some delegates had "strong misgivings". This meeting also moved the order's headquarters from Paris to Rome.<ref name=cleary2>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=mallerais_biog>Template:Harvnb</ref> Upon being elected Superior General, Lefebvre resigned as bishop of Tulle; Pope John accepted his resignation on 7 August and named him titular archbishop of Synnada in Phrygia.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Second Vatican CouncilEdit
As a member of the Central Preparatory Commission Lefebvre participated in drafting documents for consideration by the Council Fathers, meeting in seven sessions between June 1961 and June 1962. Within the first two weeks of the first session of the council (October to December 1962)<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> the Council Fathers rejected all the drafts.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Efn
Lefebvre and some like-minded bishops became concerned about the direction of the council's deliberations and, led by Archbishop Geraldo de Proença Sigaud of Diamantina, formed a bloc that became known as the Coetus Internationalis Patrum (CIP) or International Group of Fathers, with the aim of guaranteeing their views were part of every council discussion.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="membres">Template:Citation</ref>
The CIP was especially concerned about the principle of religious liberty. During the council's third session (September to November 1964), Archbishop Pericle Felici, the secretary of the council and a prominent Curial conservative, announced that Lefebvre, with two other like-minded bishops, was appointed to a special four-member commission charged with rewriting the draft document on the topic,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> but it was soon discovered that this measure did not have papal approval, and major responsibility for preparing the draft document was given to the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity.<ref>"In interviews with Bea and Frings, Paul VI agreed that the Christian Unity office would bear the major responsibility for revising the two declarations."(Cum Magno DoloreTemplate:Dead link, Time Magazine, 23 October 1964)</ref>
The CIP managed to get the preliminary vote (with suggestions for modifications) on the document postponed until the fourth session of the council, where, on 7 December 1965, an overwhelming majority approved the final text of the declaration Dignitatis humanae. Lefebvre was one of the 70, about 3%, who voted against the declaration, but he added his signature to the document after that of the pope, though some withheld their signatures.<ref name="harrison"/>Template:Efn
The Council and the Holy Ghost FathersEdit
At one point during the Council, some 40 bishops who were members of the Holy Ghost Fathers met with him to express their disagreement with his views and the role he was playing at the Council. He heard their views but did not engage in dialogue. His closing statement, "We all have a conscience: everyone must follow his own.", left them dissatisfied. One said: "He seemed to have a blockage. He seemed incapable of reviewing his ways of thinking."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Lefebvre felt the Council's impact directly when the Holy Ghost Fathers held an Extraordinary General Chapter to respond to it. The order's leadership, though their terms had years remaining, tendered their resignations effective with the close of the meeting as was traditional. The membership had insisted on a larger role for elected delegates, and they constituted half of the body. Lefebvre's opponents were well organized, and when he tried to assume the chair, they insisted that the Chapter was a legislative body entitled to elect its own officers. On 11 September 1968 the Chapter supported that position on a vote of 63 to 40, and Lefebvre stopped attending. The Chapter then elected its leaders and proceeded with intense but respectful debate on the critical issue: the balance between the constraints of the order's religious life and the exercise of its missionary charge. Lefebvre returned on 28 September and addressed the issue in uncompromising language. He predicted any changes would lead to "a caricature of community life where anarchy, disorder, and individual initiative have free rein". His tone and arguments won him no support; the convention elected Fr. Joseph Lécuyer, a French theologian, his successor as superior general on 26 October.<ref name="cleary3">Template:Cite book</ref>
Theological and political positionsEdit
Template:Conservatism in France Template:See also
BackgroundEdit
Lefebvre belonged to an identifiable strand of right-wing political and religious opinion in French society that originated among the defeated royalists after the 1789 French Revolution. Lefebvre's political and theological outlook mirrored that of a significant number of conservative members of French society under the French Third Republic (1870–1940). The Third Republic was reft by conflicts between the secular Left and the Catholic Right, with many individuals on both sides espousing distinctly radical positions (see, for example, the article on the famous Dreyfus affair). Thus it has been said that "Lefebvre was... a man formed by the bitter hatreds that defined the battle lines in French society and culture from the French Revolution to the Vichy regime".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Lefebvre's first biographer, the English traditionalist writer Michael Davies, wrote in the first volume of his Apologia Pro Marcel Lefebvre:<ref name="Davies13">Template:Harnvb</ref>
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In France political feeling tends to be more polarized, more extreme, and far more deeply felt than in England. It can only be understood in the light of the French Revolution and subsequent history... At the risk of a serious over-simplification, it is reasonable to state that up to the Second World War Catholicism in France tended to be identified with right-wing politics and anti-Catholicism with the left... [Lefebvre's] own alleged right-wing political philosophy is nothing more than straight-forward Catholic social teaching as expounded by the Popes for a century or more...{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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In similar vein, the pro-SSPX English priest Michael Crowdy wrote, in his preface to his translation of Lefebvre's Open Letter to Confused Catholics:<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
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We must remember that Lefebvre is writing against the background of France, where ideas are generally more clear‑cut than they are in Great Britain. ... Take the word "socialism", for example; that means to some of us, first and foremost, a social ideal of brotherhood and justice. We have had our Christian socialists. On the Continent, however, Socialism is uncompromisingly anti‑religious, or almost a substitute for religion, and Communism is seen as the natural development from it. This is the Socialism the Archbishop is writing about. And when he rejects Liberalism, he is not thinking of the [British] Liberal Party ... but of that religious liberalism that exalts human liberty above the claims of God or of His Church ...{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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Theological positionsEdit
Lefebvre was associated with the following positions:
- The rejection of 'false' or 'aberrant' ecumenism in favour of Catholic exclusivism;<ref>"This spirit of adultery is also made clear in the ecumenism instituted by The Secretariat for the Unity of Christians."{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}, 19 October 1983, hosted by the United States district of the Society of Pius X</ref>
- The espousal of pragmatic religious tolerance instead of the principle of religious liberty;<ref>Bernard Tissier de Mallerais{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }} . Fideliter. The English translation was taken from the May 2002 issue of The Angelus. "Hence, to accept Religious Liberty was in principle to accept the "rights of man" within the Church. Now, the Church has always condemned these declarations on the "rights of man" which have been made against the authority of God." Conference Of His Excellency Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre Template:Webarchive, Long Island, New York, 5 November 1983, hosted by SSPXasia.com</ref>
- The rejection of collegiality within the church in favour of strict papal supremacy;<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
- Opposition to the replacement of the Tridentine Mass with the Mass of Paul VI.<ref>Template:Harvnb: "However, Lefebvre's continued use of the Tridentine Mass eventually became an issue with the Vatican."</ref>
Political positionsEdit
Political positions espoused by Lefebvre included the following:
- Condemnation of the 1789 French Revolution and what he called its "Masonic and anti-Catholic principles".<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
- Support for the "Catholic order" of the authoritarian French Vichy government (1940–1944) of Marshal Philippe Pétain.<ref>Jeremy Rich, "Marcel Lefebvre in Gabon", in Kevin J. Callahan and Sarah Ann Curtis, eds., Views from the Margins: Creating Identities in Modern France (Univ. of Nebraska Press, 2008), 62–63. Template:ISBN</ref>
- Support for the National Front led by Jean-Marie Le Pen.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- Opposition to Muslim immigration into Europe. In 1990, Lefebvre was convicted in a French court and sentenced to pay a fine of 5,000 francs when he stated in this connection that "it is your wives, your daughters, your children who will be kidnapped and dragged off to a certain kind of places Template:Sic as they exist in Casablanca".<ref>Afterword: The Rushdie Affair's Legacy Template:Webarchive, Koenraad Elst</ref><ref>Archived at GhostarchiveTemplate:Cbignore and the Wayback MachineTemplate:Cbignore: {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}Template:Cbignore</ref>
Society of Saint Pius XEdit
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Lawful formationEdit
After retiring from the post of Superior General of the Holy Ghost Fathers, Lefebvre was approached by traditionalists from the French Seminary in Rome who had been refused tonsure,<ref>The Wanderer Interviews Fr. Aulagnier, SSPX Template:Webarchive, Luc Gagnon, 18 September 2003</ref> the rite by which, until 1973,<ref>motu proprio "Ministeria quaedam". Ewtn.com. Retrieved on 1 November 2013.</ref> a seminarian became a cleric. They asked for a conservative seminary to complete their studies. After directing them to the University of Fribourg, Switzerland,<ref name="seminary" /><ref name="own2003-09">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}. Society of St. Pius X – South Africa. sspxafrica.com. September/October 2003.</ref> Lefebvre was urged to teach these seminarians personally.<ref name="own2003-09" /> In 1969, he received permission from the local bishop to establish a seminary in Fribourg which opened with nine students, moving to Écône, Switzerland in 1971.<ref name="own 2003-11">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}. Society of St. Pius X – South Africa. sspxafrica.com. November/December 2003.</ref> Template:Irrelevant citation
Lefebvre proposed to his seminarians the establishment of a society of priests without vows.<ref name="own2003-09" /> In November 1970, Bishop François Charrière of Fribourg established, on a provisional (ad experimentum) basis for six years, the International Priestly Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) as a "pious union".<ref>Pia unio – the preliminary stage towards becoming an officially recognized religious institute or Society of Apostolic Life. For the decree seeTemplate:Harnvb</ref> He chose the name of Pope Saint Pius X as the patron saint of the society, because of his admiration for the pontiff's stance on modernism.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Early oppositionEdit
In November 1972, the bishops of France, gathered as the Plenary Assembly of French Bishops at Lourdes, whose theological outlook was quite different from Lefebvre's, treated the then-legal Écône seminary with suspicion and referred to it as Séminaire sauvage or "Outlaw Seminary".<ref name="seminary">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Apologia2">Template:Harnvb</ref> They indicated that they would incardinate none of the seminarians.<ref name="Apologia4">Template:Harnvb</ref> Cardinal Secretary of State Jean-Marie Villot accused Lefebvre before Pope Paul VI of making his seminarians sign a condemnation of the Pope, which Lefebvre vigorously denied.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Apostolic VisitorsEdit
In November 1974, two Belgian priests carried out a rigorous inspection on the instructions of a commission of cardinals,<ref name="Apologia4" /> producing, the SSPX claims, a favourable report.<ref>Archbishop Lefebvre was told that this examination was very positive and that he just had to come to Rome and clarify some questions. Conference of Father Franz Schmidberger, Superior General of the Society of St. Pius X Template:Webarchive at Rockdale, Sydney, Australia 16 October 1990 by Father Gerard Hogan and Father François Laisney</ref> In what he later described as a mood of "doubtlessly excessive indignation",<ref name="Apologia4" /> on 21 November 1974, Lefebvre wrote a "Declaration" in which he attacked the modernist and liberal trends that he saw in the reforms being undertaken within the church at that time:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}. sspx.org. 21 November 1974.</ref>
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We adhere with all our heart and all our soul to Catholic Rome, guardian of the Catholic Faith and the traditions necessary to maintain it, and to Eternal Rome, mistress of wisdom and truth. On the other hand we refuse and have always refused to follow the Rome of the neo-Modernist and the new Protestant trend which was clearly evident in the Second Vatican Council and, after the Council in all the reforms which flowed from it.{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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The Commission of Cardinals declared in reply that the declaration was "unacceptable on all points".<ref name="seminary" /> At the same time, the French episcopate indicated that they would not incardinate any of Lefebvre's priests in their dioceses.
In January 1975, Bishop Pierre Mamie, who had succeeded Charrière in Fribourg in 1970, determined that the SSPX's status as a "pious union" should end. On 24 January 1975, he asked the prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Religious, Cardinal Arturo Tabera, to terminate its status as a "pious union".<ref name="lessard">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
On 13 February, Lefebvre was invited to Rome for a meeting with the commission of cardinals,<ref name="seminary" /> which he described as "a close cross examination of the judicial type", regarding the contents of his "Declaration", followed by a second meeting on 3 March.<ref name="seminary" /> In May, the commission announced it approved Mamie's plan. Lefebvre contended that canon law gave the pope alone the authority to suppress a religious congregation, and only by his direct decree.<ref name="seminary" />
Tabera responded in April expressing full agreement and telling Mamie to proceed himself, and Mamie suppressed the SSPX on 6 May 1975, effective immediately.<ref name="lessard" />Template:Efn This action was upheld by Pope Paul, who wrote to Lefebvre in June 1975. Lefebvre nevertheless continued his work citing legal advice from canon lawyers that the Society had not been "legally suppressed" and that the Society continued to enjoy the privilege of incardinating its own priests.<ref name="Apologia11">Template:Harnvb</ref> Lefebvre also argued that there were insufficient grounds for suppression as the Apostolic Visitors, by the Commission's own admission, delivered a positive report, and that since his Declaration had not been condemned by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, he appealed, twice, to the appellate court of the church, the Apostolic Signatura.<ref name="seminary" /> Lefebvre later wrote that Cardinal Villot blocked the move,<ref name="seminary" /> and one of his supporters wrote that Villot threatened the Prefect of the Apostolic Signatura, Cardinal Dino Staffa, with dismissal if the appeals were not denied.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
In 1976, Mamie warned Lefebvre that saying Mass though Catholic Church authorities had forbidden him from exercising his priestly functions would further exacerbate his relationship with Rome.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Disagreement with the VaticanEdit
During the consistory of 24 May 1976, Pope Paul VI criticized Lefebvre by name and appealed to him and his followers to change their minds.<ref name="shuster" /><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
On 29 June 1976, Lefebvre went ahead with planned priestly ordinations without the approval of the local bishop and despite receiving letters from Rome forbidding them. As a result Lefebvre was suspended a collatione ordinum, i.e., forbidden to ordain any priests. A week later, the Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops informed him that, to have his situation regularized, he needed to ask the pope's pardon. Lefebvre responded with a letter claiming that the modernization of the church was a "compromise with the ideas of modern man" originating in a secret agreement between high dignitaries in the church and senior Freemasons before the council.<ref name="Apologia12letter">"Letter of Mgr. Lefebvre to Pope Paul VI" (17 July 1976), quoted in: Template:Harnvb</ref> Lefebvre was then notified that, since he had not apologized to the pope, he was suspended a divinis,<ref>Roger McCaffrey and Thomas Woods, "All We Ask is for the Mass", May 2005, Catholic World News</ref> i.e., he could no longer legally administer any of the sacraments.<ref>Holier than Thou Template:Webarchive, Brian O'Neel, This Rock, April 2003, Pages 18 – 24, quoting Vere and William Woestman, O.M.I., Is the Society of St. Pius X in Schism? </ref> Lefebvre remarked that he had been forbidden from celebrating the new rite of Mass.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}, Conference given by Fr. Anglés at Kansas City, 1 November 1995</ref> Pope Paul apparently took this seriously and stated that Lefebvre "thought he dodged the penalty by administering the sacraments using the previous formulas".<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> In spite of his suspension, Lefebvre continued to celebrate Mass and to administer the other sacraments, including the conferral of Holy Orders to the students of his seminary.
Pope Paul received Lefebvre in audience on 11 September 1976,<ref name="Apologia14">Template:Harnvb</ref> and one month later wrote to him a letter severely admonishing him and repeating the appeal he had made at the audience. In his letter to Lefebvre, Paul VI ordered him to accept the documents of the Second Vatican Council in their obvious meaning (sensu obvio) and the subsequent reforms, to retract his accusations against the Roman Pontiff and his collaborators and recognise the authority of the local bishops; furthermore, he demanded that Lefebvre hand over all activities of the FSSPX to the Holy See. The Pope reminded Lefebvre of his duty of obedience to the Chair of Peter, quoting the dogmatic constitutions Pastor aeternus (1870, First Vatican Council) and Lumen gentium (1964, Second Vatican Council).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Following the death of Paul VI, both Pope John Paul I and Pope John Paul II made various attempts to reconcile the FSSPX with the Church; the latter received Lefebvre in audience sixty days after his 1978 election, where he repeatedly expressed his desire for peace.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Écône consecrationsEdit
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In a 1987 sermon, Lefebvre, his health failing at age 81, announced his intention to consecrate a bishop to carry on his work after his death.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Under Catholic canon law, the consecration of a bishop without the permission of the pope incurs excommunication: "A bishop who consecrates someone a bishop without a pontifical mandate and the person who receives the consecration from him incur a latae sententiae excommunication reserved to the Apostolic See".<ref>1983 Code of Canon Law, Canon 1382</ref>
During 1987 Lefebvre tried to reach an agreement with Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> However, on 4 September 1987, in Ecône, Lefebvre stated that the Vatican was in apostasy and that he would no longer collaborate with Ratzinger.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
On 5 May 1988, Lefebvre signed an agreement with Ratzinger to regularize the situation of the Society of St Pius X. Ratzinger agreed that one bishop would be consecrated for the Society, to be approved by the pope.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Breaking of the agreement, consecrationsEdit
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Shortly after the agreement, however, Lefebvre announced that he had received a note from Ratzinger that asked him "to beg pardon for [his] errors", which he interpreted to mean that he would be made to accept the teachings of the Second Vatican Council and the "spirit of Assisi". Lefebvre referred to the alleged prophecy of Our Lady of La Salette that "Rome will lose the Faith" and declared himself obliged to consecrate a successor—if necessary, without papal approval.<ref name=sermon>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> As the agreement did not specify a date for the episcopal consecration, should Lefebvre have died before it was granted, the Society would have been unable to ordain any seminarians and forced into submission to the Holy See.<ref name=interview /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Lefebvre dubbed his plan "Operation Survival":<ref name="sermon" />
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That is why, taking into account the strong will of the present Roman authorities to reduce Tradition to naught, to gather the world to the spirit of Vatican II and the spirit of Assisi, we have preferred to withdraw ourselves and to say that we could not continue. It was not possible. We would have evidently been under the authority of Cardinal Ratzinger, President of the Roman Commission, which would have directed us; we were putting ourselves into his hands, and consequently putting ourselves into the hands of those who wish to draw us into the spirit of the Council and the spirit of Assisi. This was simply not possible.{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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Pope John Paul II appealed to him not to proceed in "a schismatic act", warning of "theological and canonical consequences".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
On 30 June 1988, Lefebvre, with Bishop Emeritus Antônio de Castro Mayer of Campos, Brazil, as co-consecrator, consecrated four SSPX priests as bishops: Bernard Tissier de Mallerais, Richard Williamson, Alfonso de Galarreta and Bernard Fellay.
Shortly before the consecrations, Lefebvre gave the following sermon:
... this ceremony, which is apparently done against the will of Rome, is in no way a schism. We are not schismatics! If an excommunication was pronounced against the bishops of China, who separated themselves from Rome and put themselves under the Chinese government, one very easily understands why Pope Pius XII excommunicated them. There is no question of us separating ourselves from Rome, nor of putting ourselves under a foreign government, nor of establishing a sort of parallel church as the Bishops of Palmar de Troya have done in Spain. They have even elected a pope, formed a college of cardinals... It is out of the question for us to do such things. Far from us be this miserable thought to separate ourselves from Rome!<ref name=sermon />
The next day, 1 July, the Congregation for Bishops issued a decree stating that this was a schismatic act and that all six direct participants had incurred automatic excommunication.<ref>Decree of Excommunication. Cin.org (1 July 1988). Retrieved on 1 November 2013.</ref>
AftermathEdit
On 2 July, Pope John Paul II condemned the consecration in his apostolic letter Ecclesia Dei, in which he stated that the consecration constituted a schismatic act and that the bishops and priests involved were automatically excommunicated:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
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In itself, this act was one of disobedience to the Roman Pontiff in a very grave matter and of supreme importance for the unity of the church, such as is the ordination of bishops whereby the apostolic succession is sacramentally perpetuated. Hence such disobedience – which implies in practice the rejection of the Roman primacy – constitutes a schismatic act. In performing such an act, notwithstanding the formal canonical warning sent to them by the Cardinal Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops on 17 June last, Mons. Lefebvre and the priests Bernard Fellay, Bernard Tissier de Mallerais, Richard Williamson and Alfonso de Galarreta, have incurred the grave penalty of excommunication envisaged by ecclesiastical law (cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 1382).{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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Lefebvre responded by contradicting Pope John Paul II, saying that he and the other clerics involved had not "separated themselves from Rome" and were not schismatic.<ref name="sermon" /> He invoked canon 1323 of the 1983 Code of Canon Law that they "found themselves in a case of necessity", not having succeeded, as they said, in making "Rome" understand that "this change which has occurred in the Church" since the Second Vatican Council was "not Catholic".Template:Efn In a letter addressed to the four priests he was about to consecrate as bishops, Lefebvre wrote: "I do not think one can say that Rome has not lost the Faith."<ref>Letter to the Four Bishops Elect Template:Webarchive. Sspxasia.com. 13 June 1988.</ref>
On 18 July, twelve priests and some seminarians led by Josef Bisig left the SSPX because of the Ecône consecrations.<ref name="synod">Template:Cite conference</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Bisig became the first superior general of the newly formed Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter (FSSP), a group that reached an agreement with the Holy See.
DeathEdit
Lefebvre died from cancer on 25 March 1991 at the age of 85 in Martigny, Switzerland.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Eight days later he was buried in the crypt at the society's international seminary in Écône. Archbishop Edoardo Rovida, Apostolic Nuncio to Switzerland, and Bishop Henri Schwery of Sion, the local diocese, came and prayed at his body.<ref>For an account of the funeral and burial see In Memoriam Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, The Angelus, April 2002, Volume XXV, Number 4 Template:Webarchive</ref>
Legacy of the 1988 consecrationsEdit
Lifting of excommunicationsEdit
On 10 March 2009, at the request of the four surviving bishops, Pope Benedict XVI lifted their excommunications.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb: "I wished to remit the excommunication of the four Bishops illicitly ordained by Archbishop Lefebvre. With this decision I intended to remove an impediment that might have jeopardized the opening of a door to dialogue and thereby to invite the Bishops and the "Society of St Pius X" to rediscover the path to full communion with the Church."</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> In a letter to the bishops of the entire Church, Benedict offered this clarification:
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The fact that the Society of Saint Pius X does not possess a canonical status in the Church is not, in the end, based on disciplinary but on doctrinal reasons. As long as the Society does not have a canonical status in the Church, its ministers do not exercise legitimate ministries in the Church.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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— {{#if:|, in }}Template:Comma separated entries}}
{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Blockquote with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | author | by | char | character | cite | class | content | multiline | personquoted | publication | quote | quotesource | quotetext | sign | source | style | text | title | ts }} One of the four bishops, Richard Williamson, was subsequently expelled from the FSSPX in 2012 and excommunicated again in 2015 by Pope Francis for consecrating a bishop without permission of the Holy See.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Episcopal lineageEdit
The lineage originated by the 1988 consecrations amounts to 10 bishops as of 2025, out of whom 7 are alive:
- Bp Alfonso Ruiz de Galarreta
- Bp Licinio Rangel (consecrated by Bp Bernard Tissier de Mallerais – plus Bp Alfonso Ruiz de Galarreta operating as a co-consecrator)
- Bp Bernard Fellay
- Bp Bernard Tissier de Mallerais (+)
- Bp Licinio Rangel (+)
- Bp Fernando Arêas Rifan (consecrated by Cdl Dario Castrillon Hoyos – plus Bp Licinio Rangel operating as a consecrator) – with papal approval.
- Bp Licinio Rangel (+)
- Bp Richard Nelson Williamson (+)
- Bp Licinio Rangel (consecrated by Bp Bernard Tissier de Mallerais – plus Bp Richard Nelson Williamson operating as a consecrator)
- Jean-Michel Faure (consecrated Bp Richard Nelson Williamson)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Tomás de Aquino Ferreira da Costa (consecrated Bp Richard Nelson Williamson – plus Bp Jean-Michel Faure operating as a consecrator)
- Gerardo Zendejas (consecrated Bp Richard Nelson Williamson – plus Bp Jean-Michel Faure & Bp Dom Tomás de Aquino Ferreira da Costa operating as consecrators)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Bp Giacomo Ballini (consecrated Bp Richard Nelson Williamson)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Michał Stobnicki (consecrated Bp Richard Nelson Williamson)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Decorations and awardsEdit
During his career, Lefebvre was decorated by several governments, including:
- France: Legion of Honor<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref>
- Gabon: Equatorial Star of Gabon<ref name=":0" />
- Senegal: Grand National Order of Senegal<ref name=":0" />
WorksEdit
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See alsoEdit
- Marcel Lefebvre – Archbishop in Stormy Times, 2012 documentary film based on the biography by Bishop Bernard Tissier de Mallerais
- François Ducaud-Bourget
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Citations
SourcesEdit
- General
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- Publications of the Society of Saint Pius X
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- Template:Cite book The official biography of Lefebvre, originally published in French (Clovis, 2002).
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- Publications of the Holy See
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External linksEdit
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