Is as old as Christianity itself. As early as the 90's C.E., St. Clement of Rome, in a letter addressed to the feuding community of Corinth, reminded his fellow Christians that the apostles had appointed and anointed the bishops as their valid successors, and that it would be against God's will for the people to replace them. In early Christendom, men (and, it would seem, women) called episkopoi received authority from their predecessors by the laying on of hands to exercise the fullness of spiritual power bestowed by Jesus on his apostles. The bishops then delegated special functions, such as teaching, forgiveness of sins, healing, and counseling, to ministers who acted as their helpers. The office of bishop is thus more ancient than that of priest, deacon, or other lesser churchly orders, all of which were established by the second century C.E., considerably later than the apostolic order of bishop.
The
apostles and their successors functioned in two ways: some were permanently
attached to a particular city and geographical area where they cared for the
spiritual welfare of a community of Christians, while others, inspired by the
words of their founder commanding them to teach all peoples and nations,
traveled to distant lands spreading the message of their faith. These leaders
roamed far from the Mid-Eastern cradle of Christianity, penetrating even such
remote countries as India, as did the apostle Thomas. Apostles of Jesus such as
Thomas, Bartholomew, and Andrew, who did not remain in fixed residences caring
for an established community, may thus be regarded as the first traveling, or
"wandering," bishops.
Later, other categories of wandering bishops came upon the scene.
Emperor Constantine established Christianity as the state religion of his realm
and proceeded to enforce an artificial unity on the Christian communities.
Prior to this time, there was a strong pluralistic orientation of such
communities and of their leaders. Acknowledging a common devotion to Christ and
his teachings, they differed widely in doctrine and practice. With Constantine
conditions changed; "orthodoxy" was declared as binding upon all.
Those who did not conform were forced to leave the community and often their
places of residence. They became wanderers. Gnostic, Arian, Nestorian,
Monophysite, and other non-conforming Christian leaders became wandering
bishops. A new trend was created. Those who conformed to emperor and bishop
were allowed to remain in office and enjoy the support of the state, while
those who dissented were invited to depart and became wanderers. Yet, such
wanderers were not without followers, for kindred, dissenting clergy and
congregants rallied around wherever they went, often impelling the orthodox
authorities to acts of persecution. The rest of the story is a familiar and
sorrowful one.
From
early times, transmission of apostolic authority existed outside of the
mainstream of the churches of Rome, Constantinople, Antioch, and others. Many
of these transmissions were condemned by their "big brothers" as
heretical. Curiously, the validity of their apostolic orders was acknowledged
by their critics. Due to an early tradition, articulated but not invented by
St. Augustine, the orthodoxy and validity of apostolic succession were not
considered identical. Bishops could be heretics, yet could exercise their
office as stewards of the sacraments in a valid manner. This doctrine (known as
the Augustinian doctrine of orders) has been held to this day by the Roman
Catholic Church. Provided the "wandering ones" held the same
intentions when ordaining their successors as those traditionally held by
sacramental Christendom over the ages, they could pass on their sacred powers
and administer the sacraments in a manner that the popes would recognize as
valid. Such is the character and status of the so-called wandering bishops as
they exist today.
THE MODERN WANDERING
EPISCOPATE
Wandering bishops existed throughout history. In the Middle Ages, local
bishops frequently complained to the pope about traveling prelates moving
through the countryside performing functions reserved for bishops, such as
confirming young people and ordaining priests and deacons. In modern times,
following the Reformation, such activities sometimes became the cause of large
communities falling away from the Church of Rome. One such cause célêbre
involved the French bishop Varlet, who, while traveling through Holland, began
to minister to an isolated group within the Catholic minority remaining in that
Calvinist land. Bishop Varlet was finally persuaded to bestow the episcopate on
the leader of this group of Dutch Catholics, and in 1724, the Dutch Old
Catholic Church was born. This staunch, devoted community retained its identity
as a Catholic church separate from Rome, yet was grudgingly recognized as a
valid Catholic body by the popes, and still retains this status today. In the
records of the latest council of the Roman Catholic Church (known as Vatican
II), the tiny Old Catholic Church of Holland is listed at the top of the list
of observers, far ahead of such huge Protestant bodies as the Anglican or
Presbyterian churches, because of its unquestioned validity.
Another place where wandering bishops abounded was the ancient Christian
missionary territory of southern India, where, according to local tradition,
the greatest and most vigorous of all wandering bishops, Apostle Thomas, lies
in a tomb not far from the city of Madras. The Christians of St Thomas,
originally Brahmins from the Malabar coast, continued for centuries as a
fiercely independent series of communities, forever asserting their rights
against popes and patriarchs who claimed jurisdiction over them. And so it came
to pass that the stubborn Dutch Old Catholics and the factious South Indian
Christians became the unpremeditated progenitors of independent, or wandering,
bishops, who are now numbered in the thousands and are spread over every
continent of the globe. The initiators of this unprecedented proliferation were
two priests, one English, the other French-American, who, in the latter part of
the nineteenth and early part of the twentieth centuries received consecration
at the hands of representatives of the Dutch and South Indian Catholic bishops.
They were Arnold Harris Matthew (1852-1919) and Joseph René Vilatte
(1854-1929), respectively. Matthew became the leading prelate of the Old
Catholic Church in Great Britain, while Vilatte brought the stream of the
originally Syrian succession of the South Indian church to the United States.
Not bound by traditional rules and restrictions regarding the consecrations of
other bishops, these two free-lance prelates proceeded to lay their anointed
hands on a goodly number of men on both sides of the Atlantic, and thus
initiated a new era in the history of wandering bishops.
ENTER THE OCCULT
CONNECTION
In
1913, the aging, cantankerous leader of the rather unsuccessful English branch
of Dutch Old Catholicism, Matthew, received a visitor. The thirty-year-old,
handsome, cultured, and enthusiastic man who knocked at the door of Bishop
Matthew was James Wedgwood, scion of England's noted Wedgwood china family. He
was a theosophist, an avid follower of the neo-gnostic spiritual system
publicized since 1875 by the Russian noblewoman and prolific writer, H.P.
Blavatsky. Unlike other theosophists (and many of their counterparts in today's
New Age), Wedgwood valued the Western spiritual traditions, such as ceremonial
magic, esoteric masonry, and the mystery and sacred magic of the Christian
sacraments. Wedgwood joined the small Old Catholic movement in England, and
after some time and vicissitudes became a bishop in 1916. Many of his fellow
theosophists also became attracted to the stately beauty and mysticism of the
Mass and the other sacraments administered by Wedgwood and his associates.
Among these was the leonine "grand old man" of the Theosophical
Society, the noted teacher, writer, and clairvoyant, Charles Webster
Leadbeater. Soon Wedgwood and Leadbeater settled down in Australia to a
prolonged period of planning and work. The result was a new ecclesiastical body
possessing its distinctive liturgy, philosophy, and customs. It came to be
called the Liberal Catholic Church, and with it was born a new occult mysticism
that was to have influence and consequences far exceeding the numerical
strength of the new church or even of its senior ally, the Theosophical
Society.
To
say that there could be an occult Catholicism is not as absurd as some might
think. History teems with prelates, priests, and nuns of the Catholic Church
who were devoted and skilled occultists. Kabbalah, hermeticism, astrology and
magic were all patronized by numerous popes and championed by Churchmen.
(Depending on the persons involved as well as on the historical period,
practitioners of these same disciplines were also at times burnt at the stake
by the Inquisition.) Viewed psychologically, the relationship of the Church and
occultism appears to resemble the relationship of ego and shadow; in spite of
their frequent conflict, they belong together and depend on each other in many
ways. The greatest estrangement of Catholicism from its dark esoteric twin came
about after the Enlightenment, when rationalistic considerations made inroads
into the Church. Even today, one may discover that persons of gnostic-hermetic
interests have more in common with traditionalist Catholics than with either
modernist Vatican II Catholics or with Protestants. Without articulating these
thoughts consciously, the theosophical Catholics of Wedgwood's and Leadbeater's
type seem to have intuited these archetypal relationships and compatabilities
between essential Catholicism and basic occultism. With these intuitions, they
may have become pioneers of an approach to sacramental Christianity that has
significant promise for the future of Western religion.
A NEW MAGICAL VIEW OF
SACRAMENTAL POWER
The
champion-in-chief of occult Catholicism was undoubtedly C.W. Leadbeater. A
former Anglican priest who had left church, family, and country to follow
Madame Blavatsky to India and into the world of theosophy late in the
nineteenth century, he remained a mysterious and compelling figure until his
death in the late 1930s. Utterly devoted to the teachings of theosophy,
Leadbeater was nevertheless aware that the magic of the Christian sacraments
was still very much needed by contemporary humanity. As early as April 1917, he
wrote in The Theosophist:
When
the great World-Teacher was last on earth, He made a special arrangement that
what we may think of as a compartment of a reservoir of spiritual power should
be available for the use of the new religion that he founded, and that its
officials should be empowered, by the use of certain ceremonies, words, and
signs of power, to draw upon it for the spiritual benefit of their people.
Bishop Leadbeater felt that by way of his extrasensory faculties he was
able to describe with some accuracy the mechanism whereby the sacraments were
able to work effectively. In such works as The Science of the Sacraments, The
Inner Side of Christian Festivals, and his recently and posthumously published
"The Christian Gnosis," he left an impressive legacy wherein he
demonstrated to the satisfaction of many that the Mass and other sacraments of
apostolic Christendom are capable of assisting the spiritual welfare and
transformative growth of persons in our age as well as in the past. The small,
but disciplined, church that Leadbeater and Wedgwood founded is still in
existence on five continents, in countries such as Holland, Australia, and New
Zealand, and possesses numerous impressive church buildings with large congregations.
A serious blow was dealt to the Liberal Catholic Church, however, in the 1930s,
when Jiddu Krishnamurti, who was heralded by the leading theosophists as the
vehicle of the World-Teacher (Christ), abandoned the cause of his messiahship,
and criticized all rites and ceremonies with particular vehemence.
Leadbeater and his new brand of occult Catholicism have acted as seminal
influences for many of the wandering bishops who followed him, and who
frequently functioned outside of the formal ecclesiastical body founded by the
theosophical bishops. One such churchman was Lowell Paul Wadle, principle
representative in the United States of the successions brought to this
continent by the French wanderer Vilatte. Bishop Wadle was a theosophist and a
popular lecturer in circles of alternative spirituality, particularly in
California. A charming and kindly man, his influence upon occult Catholicism
was perhaps second only to Leadbeater's. Holding forth in his exquisitely
appointed church of St Francis in Laguna Beach, California, he was a man whom
churchmen and laity of many denominations sought out for counsel and company.
It is
no exaggeration to say that the occult and theosophical view introduced into
sacramental church worship by these pioneers had more far-reaching implications
and exerted a greater influence that is discernible on the surface. Numerous
creative persons have been deeply impressed by the possibility of an effective
separation of the sacraments from the weight of the dogma and outdated moralizing
with which the mainstream churches have inevitably tended to combine them. One
could now partake of the benefits of sacramental grace without being forced
into systems of belief and commandment that might be contrary to one's deeper
convictions. More than half a century before, liberal and permissive
theological trends made inroads into the main bastions of sacramental
Christendom; an opening was thus created for freedom, creativity, and, more
importantly, for unconventional kinds of magico-mystical thought within the
grace and stately beauty of the time-honored ceremonial of the Church.
GNOSTIC BISHOPS ENTER
THE FRAY
The
ostensibly Roman Catholic country of France has harbored heretics, schismatics,
and wandering bishops for numerous centuries. The gnostics of Lyon annoyed the
Church Father Irenaeus so greatly that he devoted volumes of diatribes to
combat them. Gnostic groups of various kinds existed in the French provinces
throughout history, the best-known and most numerous being the Cathar church in
the thirteenth century. It is interesting to note that every time the hold of
the Church of Rome weakened on the government of France, gnostic religious
bodies emerged from hiding, usually only to be suppressed soon after by another
clerical government. Thus, at the time of the French Revolution, the
once-suppressed Templar Order was reorganized along vaguely gnostic lines by
its grand master, former Roman Catholic priest and esotericist Bernard Fabré-Palaprat,
who in the early 1800s was consecrated Patriarch of the Johannite Church of
Primitive Christians allied to the Order of Templars. This consecration set a
pattern for many subsequent creations of French wandering bishops of gnostic
and related persuasion, for the consecrating prelate, Monsignor Mauviel, was a
so-called Constitutional bishop, that is, a member of a hierarchy of validly
consecrated French Catholic bishops set up by the revolutionary government in
opposition to the papacy. Gnostic, Templar, Cathar, and other secret groups
usually possessed their own esoteric successions, but from that time on, they
found it useful to receive consecration at the hands of valid but irregular
Catholic prelates who were not hard to find in the wake of the revolution and
its ecclesiastical confusion.
By
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, at least one major public
gnostic church, the Eglise Gnostique Universalle, was moderately active in
France, led by such distinguished esotericists as Jules Doinel, Jean Bricaud,
and eventually the leader of the revived Martinist order, know as Papus (Dr. G.
Encausse). The revival of a Catholic Gnostic (or Gnostic Catholic) public movement
was thus accomplished.
As in
the case of the theosophical occult Catholicism, so here the question suggests
itself: Why should occult or gnostic persons aspire to the office of bishop in
the Catholic sense, and why should they practice the sacraments of the Roman
Catholic Church? The answer is not difficult. Gnostic movements of various
kinds that survived secretly in Europe were all originally part of the Roman
Catholic Church. Although they differed with their larger relative and were
frequently persecuted by her, they still regarded her as the model of
ecclesiastical life. They may have considered the content of their religion as
quite at variance with the teachings of Rome, but the form of their worship was
still the one that ancient and universal Christendom had always practiced. The
kind of innovative religious pluralism that evolved in North America was
unknown to them, and in all likelihood they would have been repulsed by it had
they know it. A gnostic, although a heretic, was still a member of the one,
Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, and had both a right and an obligation to
practice the seven historic sacraments in the traditional manner.
French gnosticism thus established its own ecclesiastical life,
following the example of Roman Catholic practice. The movement was never
lacking in vicissitudes. As late as March 22, 1944, the head of the major
gnostic religious body in France, Monsignor Constant Chevillon (Tau Harmonius)
was cruelly executed after the Vichy collaborationist government suppressed the
Gnostic Church. Still, the movement spread to Germany, Spain, Portugal, Latin
America, and such French-speaking countries as Haiti. There matters rested until
years after World War II.
The
gnostic tradition, which originally had its home in France, came to be
established in England and later in the United States, initially as a result of
the efforts of a bishop of French descent who was raised in Australia. Born
Ronald Powell, he took the name Richard Jean Chretien Duc de Palatine. A
learned and charismatic man, de Palatine (who received his successions from the
well-known British independent prelate Hugh de Wilmott-Newman) may be regarded
as the pioneer of sacramental gnosticism in both England and the United States.
His tradition survives chiefly in the Ecclesia Gnostica, based in Los Angeles
and headed by the present writer, who was consecrated in 1967 by Bishop de
Palatine. Other gnostic churches of a very similar orientation have sprung up
in recent years in increasing numbers. Today, there are vigorous and stable
descendants of the French gnostic movement functioning in New York, Chicago
(headed by Monsignor Robert Conikis), and Barbados (headed by Tau Thomas). The
first woman bishop in the gnostic tradition in modern times is Bishop Rosamonde
Miller, who has founded the Ecclesia Gnostica Mysteriorum in Palo Alto, Calif.
TOWARD A NEW CHRISTIAN
GNOSIS
The
names and movements mentioned above by no means exhaust the number of wandering
bishops and the movements they have founded. The most populous and stable of
such organizations are the Independent Church of the Philippines, whose origins
reach back to the separation of the Philippines from Spain; and the Brazilian
Catholic Church, founded decades ago by a discontented Brazilian Roman Catholic
bishop. Both of these churches maintain vaguely defined theories of an orthodox
character, although occasional positive interactions between them and the
occult-gnostic bodies exist. A potential for a large schismatic Catholic church
exists in mainland China, where a non-papal Roman Catholic Church came into
existence under orders from Mao Tse-tung. This movement with validly
consecrated bishops still functions, and curiously conducts its services
without any of the changes introduced by the Vatican II council.
Only
time will tell what the role of the wandering bishops will be within the
unfolding structures of sacramental Christendom. Since the second Vatican
Council in the 1960s, confusion and overt dissension have appeared even within
the Roman Catholic monolith. Liturgical "reforms" combined with
laxity and sheer trivial-mindedness have so changed the nature of Roman
Catholic church services in many countries that many of the wandering bishops
can lay claim to greater traditional authenticity today than can their far
wealthier and mover-powerful Roman Catholic counterparts. Also, while women
still fight a seemingly hopeless battle for the priesthood with Rome, many of
the wandering bishops can justly claim not only to have bestowed holy orders on
women, but to have espoused a certain spiritual feminism for a considerable
time. The gnostic patriarch, Tau Synesius thus wrote to a religious congress as
early as 1908:
There
is among our tenets one to which I shall call particular attention: the tenet
of feminine salvation. The work of the Father has been accomplished, that of
the Son, as well. There remains that of the Spirit, which alone is capable of
bringing about the final salvation of humanity on earth and thereby, of laying
the way for the reconstitution of the Spirit. Now the Spirit, the Paraclete,
corresponds to what the divine partakes of a feminine nature, and our teachings
state explicitly that this is the only facet of the godhead that is truly
accessible to our mind. What will be in fact the nature of this new and
not-too-far-distant Messiah?
The
seeming promise residing in the wandering bishops is obscured and at times
negated by the personal eccentricities and unsavory character of a large number
of these bishops. Since consecration to the episcopate is often so easily
obtained in the subculture of the wandering ones, venal, unstable, and woefully
ill-educated persons abound in the ranks of the "independent"
episcopate. Quite a large number of these bishops are simply people one would
not wish to invite to dinner. The "sleaze factor" is all too evident
and ubiquitous, and this factor will probably remain the greatest obstacle to
the positive work the wandering bishops could accomplish in this age.
The
unworthiness of the many should not blind one to the potential residing in the
few. The mass of wandering bishops is very much like a kind of alchemical prima
materia from whence a true stone of the philosophers might yet emerge.
Christianity started as a disreputable Jewish heresy, having an executed
criminal as its founder. Christian schisms and heresies that are today held in
disrepute might lead to great and transformative spiritual developments as
well. Cornerstones of the future are frequently made up of stones once rejected
by the builders. The strange and paradoxical phenomenon of the wandering
bishops may reveal itself as a vital ingredient in the historical-spiritual
alchemy of the coming age. Some of us hope that this will be the case, while
others sneer or turn away from such concerns. The last word, however, belongs
to Powers that transcend both the advocates and the critics. And their word, we
may be assured, will be final and to the point.
The Gnosis
Archive. The Office of Bishop. S. A. Hoeller. Extract.
T The article first appeared in Gnosis:
A Journal of Western Inner Traditions (Vol. 12, Summer 1989), and is reproduced
here by permission of the author.
The Gnosis
Archive
http://gnosis.org/wandering_bishops.htm
http://gnosis.org/wandering_bishops.htm
·
LVX
26/11/2019
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario