Vatican excommunicates all members of ultra-conservative rebels SSPX
ONP Summary
The Society of Saint Pius X, an ultra-traditionalist Catholic organization, consecrated bishops without papal approval, acting against Pope Leo XIV's explicit opposition. The action triggered automatic excommunication and constitutes a formal breach threatening schism, as the group persists in rejecting changes adopted at Vatican II.
Progressive: Progressive outlets frame the consecrations as rebellion by a defiant sect, emphasizing automatic excommunication and the schism threat to Catholic institutional unity.
Moderate: Moderate outlets report the violation and excommunication factually while providing historical context about the group's 1970 founding and theological objections to Vatican II reforms.
Conservative: Conservative outlets acknowledge the group's view that defending traditional Catholic faith justified their action, while detailing the violation of requiring papal approval for bishop consecrations.
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Schism caused by ordaining of four bishops without papal consent presents first crisis for Pope Leo
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The Vatican has excommunicated a rebel group of ultra-conservative Catholics who defied Pope Leo by ordaining bishops without his consent, creating a schism in the Roman Catholic church.
In a statement on Thursday, cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, who heads up the Holy See’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, said the group from the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX), founded in the Swiss village of Ecône in 1970, had “committed an act of a schismatic nature” which, under canon law, is punishable with automatic excommunication.
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