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Conclavism
Conclavism
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Conclavism is the practice that has existed since the second half of the 20th century which consists in the convening of a pseudo-conclave to elect rival popes (antipopes) to the current pope of Rome. This method is used by some schismatic Catholics, often Sedevacantists, who do not accept the legitimacy of their present papacy. Those who hold the position that a conclave can be convened to elect an antipope to contest or rival the current Bishop of Rome are called conclavists.[1]

This claim is usually associated with claim known as sedevacantism, which asserts that the present holder of the title Bishop of Rome is not pope, which implies that the Holy See is vacant, or in a state of sede vacante. Not all Sedevacantists are Conclavists.[1]

The term "Conclavism" comes from the word "conclave", the term for a meeting of the College of Cardinals convened to elect a bishop of Rome, when that see is vacant.

Conclavism is different from what George Chryssides calls the "mysticalists" phenomenon, i.e. people declaring themselves popes after receiving a personal mystical revelation. This is because in the mysticalists' cases, no human institution is used to appoint a pope; an example of mysticalists is the Apostles of Infinite Love. Mysticalists are therefore not Conclavists according to this definition.[1]

Description

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The description and explanation of conclavism of George Chryssides is:[1]

Since most sedevacantists (although not all) object to Pope John XXIII's modernization of the Roman Catholic Church, they argue that he nullified his appointment to the papacy in 1958. It is therefore inferred that the conclave of cardinals who elected him was also invalid. Conclavists, however, hold that the method of electing a pope by a conclave remains the valid process and hence that it is necessary for a conclave to be reconstituted and convened. Since none of the members of that Pope John XXIII conclave remain alive, one must resort to the principle of epikeia ('reasonableness'), and that membership of a conclave should be drawn from the faithful community who are invited.

History

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Conclavism originated around the late 1960s and early 1970s, with one of the earliest proponents of the concept of reconvening a conclave being Joaquín Sáenz y Arriaga, a Mexican priest.[1]

In the late 1980s, David Bawden promoted the idea of an antipapal election, and ultimately sent out over 200 copies of a book of his to the editors of all the sedevacantist publications he could find, and to all the priests listed in a directory of traditionalists as being sedevacantist.[2] He was then elected in 1990 by a group of six people who included himself and his parents, and took the name "Pope Michael".[3][1]

List of Papal claimants

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  • Michael I (David Allen Bawden): In 1990 six people, including Bawden's parents, elected Bawden, who took the name Pope Michael.[1][4] He died on 2 August 2022 and was succeeded by Rogelio Martinez, who took the name of Pope Michael II, in July 2023.[5]
  • Linus II (Victor von Pentz): Another conclave, this time held in Assisi, Italy, in 1994, elected South African Victor von Pentz, an ex-seminarian of the Society of St Pius X, as Pope Linus II. Linus took up residence in Hertfordshire, England.[1][6] He was inactive for most of his reign and died in 2021. [7]
  • Pius XIII (Lucian Pulvermacher): In October 1998, the U.S.-based True Catholic Church [pl] elected Pulvermacher as Pope Pius XIII.[1] He died on 30 November 2009. No successor was named.
  • Leo XIV (Oscar Michaelli): On 24 March 2006, a group of 34 calling themselves the "Catholic Apostolic Remnant Church" elected the Argentine Michaelli as Pope Leo XIV. On his death in 2008, Michaelli was succeeded by Juan Bautista Bonetti, who took the name of Pope Innocent XIV but resigned three months later. He was succeeded by Alejandro Tomas Cardinal Greico, who took the name of Pope Alexander IX.[1][8] By coincidence, the name "Leo XIV" would later be taken by American cardinal Robert Prevost upon his own election to the papacy in 2025.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Conclavism is a schismatic practice among a small subset of traditionalist Catholics who, adhering to convictions that the papal see became vacant due to alleged heresies associated with the Second Vatican Council and its popes, organize self-convened conclaves to elect alternative papal claimants. Emerging in the late and amid broader traditionalist reactions to liturgical and doctrinal changes post-Vatican II, conclavism differs from pure by actively seeking to fill the perceived vacancy through lay- or clergy-led elections lacking from the broader Church. Notable instances include the 1990 conclave in , where was elected as "Pope Michael I" by six participants, including his parents, from which he operated a tiny following until his death in 2022. Other claimants, such as "Pope Linus II" elected in 1994, illustrate the fragmented nature of these efforts, often involving minimal electors and no recognition beyond isolated adherents. These movements remain marginal, with memberships typically numbering in the dozens or low hundreds, and are uniformly rejected by the Roman Catholic Church as invalid schisms that undermine apostolic succession and ecclesiastical governance. Controversies center on the claimants' interpretations of canon law permitting such elections during prolonged vacancies, though critics highlight the absence of legitimate cardinal electors and the risk of perpetual division, echoing historical antipapal factions but amplified by modern traditionalist disillusionment.

Definition and Principles

Core Definition

Conclavism denotes a fringe movement within traditionalist Catholicism wherein small, self-appointed groups convene unauthorized conclaves to elect alternative claimants to the papacy, rejecting the legitimacy of post-Vatican II popes on grounds of alleged heresy or doctrinal deviation. Adherents typically stem from sedevacantist circles, positing that the papal see remains vacant (sede vacante) due to the invalidity of elections or the personal apostasy of occupants since the death of Pope Pius XII in 1958, thereby necessitating remedial action to restore a true pontiff. This practice contrasts with standard Catholic procedure, which reserves papal elections exclusively to the College of Cardinals under canon law, rendering conclavist assemblies canonically illicit and their outcomes schismatic. The core principle animating conclavism is the theological imperative to avoid prolonged vacancy in the , interpreted by proponents as a divine mandate drawing from historical precedents of irregular elections during periods of Church crisis, such as the (1378–1417). Participants often justify their actions via interpretations of (e.g., 1917 Code, canons 222–231) allowing for extraordinary elections in the absence of cardinals, though mainstream canonists dismiss such extrapolations as lacking juridical force absent universal Church recognition. Conclavist "popes" claim jurisdiction over the universal Church, ordain bishops, and issue documents, yet their authority remains confined to minuscule followings, with no broader or civil acknowledgment. Prominent exemplars include the 1990 election of as "Pope Michael" by a conclave of four laypersons in , and subsequent fragmented successions, such as the 2023 elevation of "" following Bawden's death. These events underscore conclavism's decentralized and proliferative nature, yielding multiple rival claimants since its inception in the 1970s, often initiated by figures like Mexican priest Joaquín Sáenz y Arriaga, who in 1972 publicly declared Paul VI deposed. Despite doctrinal overlaps with broader traditionalism, conclavism's proactive electioneering sets it apart, frequently leading to internal divisions and further splinter groups.

Distinction from Sedevacantism

Conclavism and share the foundational premise that the papal see has been vacant since the death of in 1958, due to the alleged heresy and invalidity of subsequent claimants to the papacy, particularly following the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965). Both positions reject the legitimacy of popes from John XXIII onward, arguing that public defection from the faith disqualifies one from ecclesiastical office under divine and canonical law. However, while posits an ongoing vacancy sustained by until lawful electors—typically the —convene a valid conclave, conclavism diverges by asserting the necessity and legitimacy of immediate human action to fill the see through self-convened assemblies. The core distinction lies in conclavism's proactive election mechanism, often termed "imperfect conclaves," where laypersons, clergy, or small groups without canonical mandate claim authority to elect a based on interpretations of extraordinary circumstances or the Church's indefectibility. Notable examples include the 1990 election of as "Pope Michael I" by himself and his parents in , and the 1998 election of as "Pope Pius XIII" by a group of sedevacantist sympathizers in . Sedevacantists, in contrast, generally eschew such interventions, viewing them as presumptuous and canonically baseless, since Canon 222 of the 1917 Code requires a properly constituted electoral body, and no mechanism exists for lay-initiated papal elections. This rejection stems from theological concerns that unauthorized conclaves produce antipopes, exacerbating division rather than restoring unity, and contradict the Church's historical reliance on designated authorities for supreme jurisdiction. Sedevacantist critiques emphasize that conclavism represents a "contrived human solution" lacking guarantee of validity, potentially binding no one's conscience and leading to endless fragmentation, as seen in the proliferation of rival claimants since the 1970s. Proponents of argue instead for patience under the material-formal thesis or similar frameworks, where apparent papal material succession persists without formal jurisdiction until errors are renounced or providence intervenes. This opposition underscores a broader realism: while both recognize de facto vacancy, only adheres strictly to the Church's ordinary means of succession, avoiding the risks of self-appointed interventions that historical precedents, such as the Great Western Schism (1378–1417), ultimately resolved through conciliar judgment rather than ad hoc elections.

Fundamental Theological Assumptions

Conclavism presupposes the sedevacantist theological position that a manifestly heretical pope automatically loses his office , without requiring a formal declaration, as articulated by St. in De Romano Pontifice. Bellarmine argued that a pope who deviates from the faith ceases to be a member of the Church and thus cannot retain its headship, since "he who is not a Christian... no longer being a member of the body of the Church... can no longer be its head." This view, shared by theologians like Cajetan, underpins the claim that post-Vatican II claimants to the papacy—beginning with John XXIII (elected October 28, 1958) or Paul VI (elected June 21, 1963)—incurred this loss through promulgation of doctrines deemed heretical, such as those in on religious liberty or the Novus Ordo Missae's liturgical reforms. A second core assumption is the Church's indefectibility and perpetual visibility, implying that mandates a true as the visible principle of unity and jurisdictional authority, preventing indefinite vacancy that could lead to doctrinal dissolution. Conclavists maintain that the Church's hierarchical structure, while ordinarily vesting papal election in cardinals under norms like (1996), reverts in extraordinary circumstances to the broader ecclesiastical body— and faithful—based on historical precedents such as lay and clerical elections in the early Church (e.g., Pope Fabian's in 236 AD). This "subsidiary right" derives from the Church's inherent power to provide for itself (supplet Ecclesia), as failure of designated electors (corrupted or invalid post-Vatican II cardinals) necessitates action to avert harm. These assumptions reject notions of prolonged (where material papacy persists without formal jurisdiction) or benevacantism (benign vacancy), insisting instead on causal realism: severs papal causality over the Church, demanding restoration via imperfect conclave to fulfill Christ's promise of an enduring visible society. Critics, including some sedevacantists, contend such elections lack and risk , but proponents cite theologians like , who allowed for ecclesiastical deposition of a heretical , extending this to elective supply in vacancy.

Historical Development

Origins in Post-Vatican II Crisis (1960s-1970s)

The implementation of the Second Vatican Council's decrees under Pope Paul VI (r. 1963–1978) triggered a severe crisis among traditionalist Catholics, who viewed reforms such as the Novus Ordo Missae—promulgated on April 3, 1969, and mandatory from November 30, 1969—as a rupture with apostolic tradition and evidence of modernist heresy. This discontent, amplified by documents like Dignitatis Humanae (1965) on religious liberty and Nostra Aetate (1965) on non-Christian religions, led radical fringes to question the legitimacy of the post-conciliar papacy itself, positing that endorsement of perceived errors vacated the Holy See sede vacante. Mexican priest Joaquín Sáenz y Arriaga (1899–1976), a former Jesuit expelled in 1952 for ultraconservative views, emerged as an early architect of conclavist thought. In pamphlets and his 1971 book The New Montinian Church, Sáenz accused Paul VI of public through and liturgical innovation, declaring the papal throne vacant and urging the reconvening of a conclave by remaining faithful to elect a valid successor. His position, disseminated via the Union Católica de México, influenced nascent sedevacantist networks in and the U.S., though it drew swift Vatican condemnation; Paul VI excommunicated Sáenz latae sententiae on February 12, 1972, for and . Parallel developments occurred in Europe, where French priest Georges de Nantes (1924–2010) of the movement echoed similar charges in a 1967 to Paul VI, labeling him a heretic unfit to govern and proposing that, should he resign upon recognizing his errors, an "imperfect council" of orthodox bishops could repudiate Vatican II, restore the Tridentine rite, and convoke an . These proposals, rooted in canonical precedents like imperfect councils during vacancies, represented an initial theoretical framework for conclavism, distinguishing it from passive by emphasizing proactive papal supply, though practical implementations remained deferred amid fragmented traditionalist resistance, including Marcel Lefebvre's Society of St. Pius X founded in 1970.

Emergence of Conclavist Movements (1980s-1990s)

In the late , conclavist ideas began to coalesce among sedevacantist Catholics dissatisfied with the absence of a recognized , viewing the post-Vatican II papal claimants as invalid due to alleged and thus prompting calls for lay- or clergy-led elections to resolve the . American layman , influenced by sedevacantist writings and the theological argument that divine law required a visible head for the Church, publicly advocated for an "imperfect conclave" as a remedy, circulating notices to potential electors worldwide in 1989. His efforts built on earlier sedevacantist frustrations but marked a shift toward proactive electioneering, emphasizing that canon law's ordinary processes were in abeyance during extraordinary crises. The first documented conclavist election of this period occurred on July 16, 1990, when Bawden and five other lay participants—including his parents and associate Teresa Stanfill Benns—convened in a converted thrift store in Belvue, , owned by the Bawden family. Lacking any cardinals or bishops, the group followed self-devised procedures modeled on historical papal elections, with Bawden receiving four out of six votes to become " Michael I." This event, justified by the participants as fulfilling the Church's need for a lawful amid perceived in , attracted initial notice within fringe traditionalist circles but only a handful of adherents, underscoring the movement's marginal status. The 1990 election spurred further conclavist activity in the decade, though groups remained small and ideologically divided, often rejecting rivals' claims on grounds of procedural flaws or heretic electors. In 1994, approximately 20 sedevacantist bishops from 12 countries gathered in , , to discuss a potential conclave but ultimately deferred action due to disagreements over eligibility and timing. By 1998, Franciscan friar , a long-time sedevacantist who had criticized earlier efforts like Bawden's as premature, was elected "Pope Pius XIII" by about 30 electors in Rockyford, , in a process he defended as canonical under necessity doctrines. These initiatives, while invoking precedents like the 15th-century , produced no unified movement and faced dismissal from mainstream Catholic authorities as schismatic and invalid, with participant numbers rarely exceeding dozens.

Proliferation and Fragmentation (2000s-Present)

In the 2000s, conclavist activity persisted primarily through successor appointments and limited s within established schismatic entities, rather than widespread new conclaves. The Palmarian Catholic Church, originating from a , transitioned leadership without a formal conclave in 2000 when designated Manuel Alonso Corral as Peter II, who assumed the role upon Gómez's death in 2005. Corral led until his death on July 15, 2011, after which Sergio María Ginés Jesús Hernández y Martínez was elected on the same day; Hernández resigned in April 2016, citing the church's practices as fraudulent, which prompted further internal realignments under as Peter III. These shifts reflected ongoing doctrinal rigidity and financial opacity, contributing to member attrition. Parallel developments occurred in other groups, such as the , where Michel Lavallée was elected Pope Gregory XVIII on September 29, 2012, succeeding the group's long-time leader Jean-Gaston Tremblay, who had initially claimed papal authority through mystical visions rather than election. , elected "Pope Michael" in a 1990 conclave by a handful of lay participants, maintained his claim through the and into the from a farm, operating a small and using the to attract a modest following estimated in the dozens, including family members. Bawden's death in 2022 did not lead to a widely recognized successor, underscoring the isolation of such claims. This era highlighted fragmentation, as conclavist claimants proliferated in number—yielding multiple self-styled popes bearing identical regnal names like Gregory XVIII—but remained confined to micro-communities with negligible influence. Theological disputes over election validity, (often tracing to controversial bishops like Pierre Martin ), and critiques from broader sedevacantist circles, who viewed conclavism as presumptuous absent a of electors, exacerbated divisions. No unified conclavist body emerged, with groups splintering via expulsions, resignations, and rival assertions, preventing any consolidation and limiting appeal to fringe traditionalists wary of post-Vatican II developments.

Theological and Canonical Justifications

Arguments for Papal Vacancy

Conclavists maintain that the papal see became vacant following the death of on October 9, 1958, due to the manifestation of public by subsequent claimants, rendering them ineligible to hold office under traditional . Central to this argument is the principle that a manifest heretic automatically ceases to be a member of the Church and thus cannot exercise jurisdiction or authority within it, including the papacy. St. Robert Bellarmine, in De Romano Pontifice (Book II, Chapter 30, 1586), articulated the prevailing view among theologians: "A manifestly heretical Pope ceases by himself to be Pope and head, in the same way as he ceases to be a Christian and a member of the body of the Church; for he who is not a Christian and a visible member of the Church, is not able to enjoy the privileges of a Christian or a member of the Church." This loss of office requires no formal declaration, as the itself severs the bond with the Church, a position echoed by theologians such as Charles-René Billuart and supported by canonists interpreting pre-Vatican II law. A key historical basis invoked is Pope Paul IV's bull Cum ex apostolatus officio (March 15, 1559), which explicitly states that if a heretic or schismatic is elected to the papacy, the election is null and void ab initio, and all acts performed are invalid, with the individual deposed without need for further judgment. Conclavists extend this to post-election heresy, arguing it equates to tacit resignation or automatic deposition, as a heretic lacks the capacity to promulgate binding acts. This document, never formally abrogated, underscores that heresy disqualifies one from office regardless of apparent election or acceptance. Application to post-1958 popes centers on alleged contradictions with infallible teachings, such as the dogma extra ecclesiam nulla salus (no salvation outside the Church), affirmed in councils like Florence (1442). Claimants like John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul II, and successors are accused of heresy through endorsement of religious liberty in Dignitatis Humanae (December 7, 1965), which conclavists contend inverts Pius IX's Syllabus of Errors (1864) by permitting error in civil society, and through ecumenical acts implying salvific equality among religions. Notable examples include Paul VI's promulgation of the Novus Ordo Missae (April 3, 1969), viewed as ritually defective and conducive to Protestantism, and John Paul II's organization of the Assisi interfaith prayer meeting (October 27, 1986), where non-Christian leaders invoked deities alongside Catholics, interpreted as public denial of Christ's unique mediation. These acts, being public and pertinacious, trigger loss of office per the cited authorities, leaving the see perpetually vacant absent a valid election. Critics of this position, including some traditionalists, argue it overlooks the need for judgment to establish manifest heresy, but conclavists counter that visibility of defection suffices under theological tradition, preserving the Church's indefectibility by necessitating remedial action like imperfect conclaves.

Canonical Basis for Imperfect Conclaves

Conclavists maintain that in cases of prolonged papal vacancy, where the is either extinct, defective, or incapable of convening a valid , the authority to elect a successor devolves to an imperfect council comprising bishops, lower clergy, or even the broader Church faithful, drawing on theological precedents rather than strict modern . This position is primarily grounded in the writings of Dominican theologian (1469–1534), who argued that the ordinary electoral power vested in cardinals or Roman clergy is subsidiary; in their absence or default, it reverts to the universal Church as the 's proper . Cajetan posited that forms yield to necessity, allowing the Church's ministerial power to supply a through when standard electors are unavailable, ensuring the Church's indefectibility. St. (1542–1621), in De Romano Pontifice, further supported this framework by endorsing the convocation of an imperfect council—defined as a gathering of bishops without the —for resolving crises such as a heretical pontiff's deposition or election failure by cardinals, emphasizing that such a body possesses limited jurisdiction solely to provide for the Church's head during . Bellarmine distinguished this from ecumenical councils, limiting its scope to extraordinary governance, which conclavists extend to justify non-cardinal elections when the see remains vacant indefinitely, as they allege post-Vatican II. This aligns with historical practices, such as early papal elections by the Roman clergy and laity before the cardinal-exclusive norm solidified in the . Under the , which conclavists often prioritize over post-conciliar norms, papal elections are not exhaustively regulated, deferring to papal constitutions like Vacante Sede Apostolica (1904), but Canon 20 permits recourse to probable opinions, legitimate customs, or constant Church practice in doubtful cases of law. Conclavists interpret this to validate imperfect conclaves as a customary response to , invoking the Church's perpetual right to a visible head and citing theologians like Charles Journet (1891–1975), who echoed Cajetan in affirming that electoral rights devolve universally if cardinals fail, preventing indefectible supply. Critics, including mainstream canonists, counter that such devolution lacks explicit canonical warrant and risks , as (1996) restricts elections to cardinals under 80, though conclavists dismiss this as tainted by alleged modernist influence.

Challenges to Validity Under Canon Law

The exclusive right to elect the Roman Pontiff resides with the , as stipulated in Canon 349 of the , which designates the cardinals as the sole body empowered for this function under special norms. This provision echoes apostolic constitutions such as (1996), which reaffirm that only cardinals under 80 years of age participate as electors, convened by the Dean of the College or the senior cardinal bishop in cases of vacancy. Conclavist assemblies, typically comprising laypersons, priests, or a handful of self-appointed without cardinal status, inherently lack this authoritative composition, rendering their proceedings canonically defective from the outset. Furthermore, papal elections require formal by designated authorities to ensure validity, a process absent in conclavist efforts. Canonists such as Franciszek Wernz and Petrus Vidal have asserted that elections conducted outside a properly constituted conclave—lacking the procedural safeguards against external influence and ensuring collegial deliberation—are null and void. Conclavist groups, operating independently without summons from the cardinalatial college or equivalent hierarchical mandate, fail this criterion, as their gatherings do not fulfill the structured isolation and voting protocols outlined in canons 355 and 359, or their antecedents in the 1917 Code (e.g., canons 222-239). Conclavists occasionally invoke the speculative doctrine of an "imperfect council"—drawn from theologians like (1469–1534)—positing that, in extremis such as prolonged vacancy or papal , a gathering of bishops could theoretically intervene to provide for the Church's governance. However, this remains a theological hypothesis without codified canonical force; neither the 1917 nor 1983 Codes endorse lay or partial clerical elections as substitutes, and historical precedents (e.g., early Church elections by Roman ) presuppose ordained electors under jurisdictional authority, not fringe assemblies. Even under this theory, conclavist validity falters due to insufficient episcopal representation—often zero or derived from illicitly consecrated lines—and absence of universal summons to all bishops, as implied in discussions by Charles Journet and Cajetan for extraordinary devolution. Critics, including traditionalist canonists, argue such deviations exacerbate rather than resolve it, as uncanonical elections cannot bind the universal Church. Additional defects include the frequent election of non-bishops or unordained candidates, contravening the expectation in Canon 332 §1 that the exercise episcopal fullness, requiring immediate consecration if lacking. Conclavist ordinations, often performed post-election by bishops of questionable liceity (e.g., derived from Pierre Martin Ngô Đình Thục's controversial consecrations), compound invalidity under canons on sacramental form and intent. Collectively, these procedural and substantive flaws underscore the canonical consensus that conclavist claims lack juridical force, preserving the Church's hierarchical order against private initiatives.

Notable Claimants and Groups

Key Conclavist Popes and Elections

One prominent example of conclavism occurred on July 19, 1990, when , a lay Catholic from , was elected "Pope Michael" by a self-convened group of six sedevacantists, including Bawden himself and his parents, in , . The electors, lacking clerical authority or canonical mandate, asserted the papal see had been vacant since the death of XII in 1958 due to alleged in subsequent pontificates. Bawden, unordained at the time, later claimed jurisdiction over a small following, performing sacraments and issuing documents until his death on August 2, 2022. Another significant election took place on October 24, 1998, when former Capuchin priest was chosen as "Pope Pius XIII" through a and mail-in process involving approximately 200 sedevacantist participants, both lay and clerical, convened in . Pulvermacher, who had rejected post-Vatican II changes since leaving the Novus Ordo in 1976, led the "True Catholic Church" from there, emphasizing restoration of pre-conciliar practices; he died on November 30, 2009. In 2006, Argentine Oscar Michaelli was elected "Pope Leo XIV" on March 24 by 34 members of the "Catholic Apostolic Remnant Church," a sedevacantist group rejecting Vatican II reforms. This conclave, like others, operated without recognized structure, producing a claimant who served briefly until his death around 2008. These elections typically involved tiny, decentralized groups of lay traditionalists invoking imperfect council provisions from , such as those in the 1917 Code allowing broader participation amid extraordinary vacancy. None garnered widespread traditionalist support, often facing criticism for procedural flaws, like insufficient electors or prior lay status, leading to further fragmentation.

Associated Organizations and Followers

Conclavist activities have primarily involved gatherings of sedevacantist sympathizers rather than formalized organizations, resulting in fragmented and numerically limited followings. A key instance occurred on July 19, 1990, when was elected Pope Michael I by a self-convened group of six lay Catholics, including his parents and two other families, during a private conclave in a Kansas home. Bawden, operating from a family farm near , Kansas, cultivated a small cadre of supporters through personal outreach and online dissemination of materials, though estimates place his active followers at fewer than two dozen, with attrition over time due to doctrinal disputes and isolation. Similarly, on October 4, 1998, former Capuchin priest was selected as Pope Pius XIII by approximately 20 sedevacantist participants in a conclave, forming the nucleus of the "True ." Pulvermacher, who had abandoned mainstream structures in 1976 over liturgical reforms, directed a loose network focused on traditional Masses and publications, attracting a modest following estimated in the tens to low hundreds across the . After his death on November 30, 2009, succession claims splintered the remnant, yielding no enduring institutional framework. These examples typify conclavism's pattern: ephemeral alliances of individuals disillusioned with post-Vatican II developments, often numbering under 50 per claimant, without hierarchical clergy, dedicated properties, or widespread affiliations. Broader sedevacantist communities, such as the , have explicitly distanced themselves from conclavist elections, viewing them as precipitous or invalid, further marginalizing participants.

Criticisms and Controversies

Critiques from Mainstream Catholic Authorities

Mainstream Catholic authorities, including the and canon lawyers in communion with the , classify conclavist elections as canonically invalid and schismatic, as they contravene the exclusive authority of the to elect a upon legitimate vacancy, as stipulated in the Universi Dominici Gregis (1996), which mandates that only cardinal electors under 80 years of age convene in the under strict protocols established by the reigning . These norms derive from longstanding tradition, reinforced by Canon 349 of the , which vests the right to elect the solely in the cardinals, excluding lay-initiated or imperfect conclaves lacking this body. Such actions are deemed schismatic under Canon 751, involving refusal of submission to the Supreme Pontiff or communion with the Church subject to him, incurring latae sententiae reserved to the , as private judgments of papal vacancy do not bind the faithful absent a definitive declaration. For instance, in the case of David Bawden's 1990 self-proclaimed election as "Pope Michael," Catholic apologists and canonists highlight the absence of episcopal orders—required for the papacy as successor to the of —and the lack of universal acceptance by the Church, rendering the claim null, as no layperson or small group possesses authority to convoke or validate a conclave. Diocesan bishops aligned with the Holy See have issued warnings against sedevacantist conclavism, viewing it as a rupture from ecclesial unity that undermines the Church's indefectibility and the visibility of the papal office, as affirmed by Vatican I's teaching on the perpetual succession of Peter's successors. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has addressed analogous rejections of post-Vatican II pontiffs as heretical or schismatic, emphasizing that doctrinal disputes do not authorize private elections, which fragment the rather than resolve perceived crises. Prominent canonist Dr. Edward Peters argues that sedevacantist positions, including conclavist extensions, contradict the Church's juridical structure, as no mechanism exists for lay or clerical minorities to declare the See vacant and self-elect without incurring automatic penalties for . These critiques underscore that true papal legitimacy requires not only formal election but manifestation through the Church's public consent, absent in conclavist groups limited to dozens of adherents.

Internal Divisions Among Traditionalists

Among sedevacantist traditionalists, conclavism represents a contentious minority position, with most rejecting self-convened elections as lacking foundation and divine sanction, preferring to await resolution of the vacancy through extraordinary means rather than lay or irregular clerical initiatives. This divide stems from interpretations of , which traditionally reserves papal elections to the ; absent valid cardinals post-1958, critics argue that alternative conclaves devolve into anarchy, producing claimants without jurisdiction or apostolic legitimacy. A prominent example is the 1990 election of as "Pope Michael," organized by six lay participants—including Bawden himself and his parents—in response to perceived decades of sedevacantist disarray; this event drew sharp rebuke from fellow sedevacantists for its minuscule electorate, familial involvement, and failure to meet even minimal hierarchical standards, viewing it as emblematic of lawlessness inherent in bypassing established norms. Similar scorn targeted the 1994 gathering of 20 sedevacantist bishops from 12 countries, who elected South African Victor Von Pentz as "Pope Linus II," an action dismissed by opponents as presumptuous and divisive, further splintering groups already fractured over issues like the liceity of "una cum" Masses mentioning post-Vatican II popes. Recognize-and-resist traditionalists, including adherents to organizations like the Society of St. Pius X, amplify these critiques by condemning conclavism as inherently schismatic, arguing it multiplies antipopes—evident in claimants like ("Pope "), faulted for personal scandals and doctrinal irregularities—and erodes unified resistance to modernist reforms by fostering competing micro-churches. These rifts extend to broader theological disputes, such as (material but not formal papal validity) versus strict , and debates over clerical jurisdiction, with "home-alone" sedevacantists rejecting all post-1958 bishops, including those tied to conclavist lines. The outcome has been heightened fragmentation, with conclavist ventures yielding small, rival sects that accuse one another of invalidity or heresy, impeding collective traditionalist advocacy and reinforcing perceptions of internal instability among observers of the movement.

Broader Implications for Schism and Unity

Conclavist initiatives, by convening unauthorized elections to install rival popes, directly contravene the Church's canonical framework for papal succession, fostering schism as defined in Canon 751 of the Code of Canon Law: "the refusal of submission to the Supreme Pontiff or of communion with the members of the Church subject to him." These actions reject the legitimacy of officially recognized pontiffs, positioning claimants as the sole valid authority and thereby severing adherents from the visible unity essential to Catholic ecclesiology. Among traditionalist Catholics, conclavism exacerbates fragmentation by producing disparate papal lines—such as the 1990 election of as "Pope " by a group of four or the earlier Palmarian conclave of 1978 yielding " Gregory XVII"—each commanding only minuscule, non-overlapping followings estimated in the low thousands globally. This multiplicity undermines collective resistance to perceived post-Vatican II doctrinal shifts, diverting energy from shared liturgical or theological advocacy toward inter-claimant rivalries and doctrinal disputes over election validity. The persistence of conclavism diminishes prospects for broader Church unity, as its proponents' insistence on exclusive papal claims precludes submission to any conciliatory authority, mirroring historical antipopes that prolonged divisions like the (1378–1417) without restoring consensus. Official Church critiques frame such movements not as preservative of but as self-inflicted isolation, prioritizing interpretive autonomy over the communion required for the Church's mission.

Current Status and Legacy

Ongoing Activity and Recent Events

Following the death of , who claimed the title Michael from 1990 until his passing on August 2, 2022, his small group of followers known as the Vatican in Exile organized a conclave to select a successor. On July 29, 2023, after five rounds of drawing lots in , , Rogelio del Rosario Martinez Jr., a Filipino-born former in an independent jurisdiction, was elected and took the name Michael II. Martinez, born in 1970 in , , had joined Bawden's group in 2020 after adopting sedevacantist views; he was ordained a priest in 2003 and elevated to in 2012 within non-mainstream lines, and is married with one child. He was formally enthroned on October 28, 2023, in a ceremony planned in Kansas. Under Michael II, the group maintains a limited online presence, including a YouTube channel (@vaticaninexile4520) with videos on doctrinal matters and sedevacantist arguments, though viewership remains low. Plans announced in 2023 included consecrating a new by year's end to sustain clerical lines, reflecting efforts to perpetuate the group's structure amid ongoing rejection of post-Vatican II papal authority. Mainstream Catholic leaders, such as Jose R. Rojas of the Libmanan diocese in the , have warned that adherence to risks , viewing the claims as schismatic. As of 2025, conclavist activities remain fragmented and marginal, with no reported major elections or expansions beyond the Vatican in Exile's operations; other historical claimants, such as (Pope Pius XIII, died 2009), have no active successors. The movement's persistence centers on small, insular communities emphasizing pre-Vatican II and , but lacks broader influence within .

Influence on Traditionalist Catholicism

Conclavism represents a radical extension of sedevacantist thought within , where adherents, convinced of the Holy See's prolonged vacancy since the death of on October 9, 1958, convene unauthorized elections to install successor popes. This practice emerged in the late amid widespread traditionalist discontent with Vatican II's liturgical and doctrinal shifts, particularly the Novus Ordo Missae introduced in 1969, which many viewed as a rupture with pre-conciliar norms. By providing a mechanism to "fill" the see, conclavism appeals to a fringe seeking hierarchical continuity, as seen in the 1990 election of as "Pope Michael" by a group of four lay participants in , claiming divine mandate under canon law interpretations that prioritize material over formal papal defects. However, conclavism's influence remains marginal and largely disruptive, rejected by dominant traditionalist factions for lacking canonical legitimacy and exacerbating fragmentation. Groups like the (SSPX), founded in 1970 by , maintain recognition of the post-Vatican II popes while resisting their reforms, condemning conclavist actions as schismatic innovations that violate the Church's on papal elections, which requires cardinal electors and Vatican oversight. Even many sedevacantists, who share the vacancy thesis but eschew elections to avoid presuming on , denounce conclavism as presumptuous and invalid, citing insufficient episcopal involvement and the resultant multiplicity of claimants—over a dozen since the —each asserting exclusive authority with followings rarely exceeding a few hundred. This rejection stems from conclavism's practical failure to unify traditionalists, instead mirroring historical antipapacies like the 15th-century and Roman lines, which prolonged until resolved by conciliar decree in 1417. Within traditionalist circles, it fuels debates on —a nuanced view holding post-1958 popes as materially but not formally valid—and reinforces caution against lay-led interventions, as articulated by theologians like Michel-Louis Guérard des Lauriers in his 1978 thesis distinguishing papal jurisdiction from ontological defects. Ultimately, conclavism's legacy in traditionalism is cautionary, highlighting the perils of privatized claims amid crisis, while bolstering arguments for restraint among non-conclavist sedevacantists who prioritize doctrinal purity over provisional .

Comparative Analysis with Historical Antipopes

Conclavist claimants differ markedly from historical antipopes in the scale of ecclesiastical and societal support they garnered. During the (1378–1417), rival papal lines in , , and briefly each commanded allegiance from significant portions of the Catholic hierarchy, including cardinals and bishops, as well as secular rulers across , leading to a de facto division of that persisted for nearly four decades until resolved by the . In contrast, conclavist "popes," emerging primarily since the late amid sedevacantist convictions that the Holy See became vacant after XII's death in 1958, typically draw followings numbering in the dozens or low hundreds, lacking endorsement from any recognized Catholic prelates or states. A core similarity lies in the assertion of papal illegitimacy against the prevailing , often predicated on charges of or procedural invalidity. Historical antipopes, such as those in the obedience, frequently accused Roman claimants of or doctrinal deviation to justify their elections by dissident cardinals. Conclavists similarly denounce post-Vatican II popes as heretics who forfeited office under provisions like Cum ex Apostolatus Officio (1559), convening self-styled conclaves to elect successors, as seen in the 1990 election of " Michael" by a group of four lay voters invoking emergency . Electoral legitimacy forms a pivotal divergence. Antipapal elections in history, while irregular, often involved cardinal electors or invoked papal constitutions like Ubi periculum (1274), which regulated conclaves, providing a veneer of canonical continuity even if contested. Conclavist processes, however, bypass cardinal participation entirely—absent since no sedevacantists recognize surviving electors—relying instead on ad hoc assemblies of laity or marginal clergy, rationalized through interpretations of "universal consent" or divine mandate rather than established norms, resulting in fragmented, competing lineages without hierarchical structure. The contextual drivers further distinguish the phenomena: historical antipopacies arose from geopolitical tensions, such as French monarchic influence relocating the papacy to in 1309, fostering national schisms. Conclavism, by contrast, stems from theological rupture over the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965), with claimants positioning themselves as guardians of pre-conciliar doctrine amid perceived modernist apostasy, yet failing to achieve the institutional entrenchment or diplomatic resolution seen in precedents like the 1417 abdications at Constance. This doctrinal isolationism, unaccompanied by broad fidelity tests or episcopal adhesions, underscores conclavism's marginality relative to the Church-spanning crises of old.

References

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