The Dimond Brothers have this to sayFAQ- Must the Catholic Remnant Have Governing or Jurisdictional Bishops?
The answer to this question is no. During the Arian heresy in the 4th Century, only 1-3% of the Episcopal Chairs (i.e., the Bishops’ Sees) were occupied by Catholics, the rest were overtaken by the Arians, as the eminent patristic scholar Fr. Jurgens notes.
“At one point in the Church’s history, only a few years before Gregory’s [nαzιanz] present preaching (+380 A.D.), perhaps the number of Catholic bishops in possession of sees, as opposed to Arian bishops in possession of sees, was no greater than something between 1% and 3% of the total. Had doctrine been determined by popularity, today we should all be deniers of Christ and opponents of the Spirit.” (W.A. Jurgens, The Faith of the Early Fathers, Vol. 2, p. 39.)
In the 4th century the Arian heresy became so widespread that the Arians (who denied the Divinity of Christ) came to occupy almost all the Catholic churches and appeared to be the legitimate hierarchy basically everywhere.
St. Ambrose (+382): “There are not enough hours in the day for me to recite even the names of all the various sects of heretics.” (The Faith of the Early Fathers, Vol. 2, p. 158)
Things were so bad that St. Gregory nαzιanz felt compelled to say what the Catholic remnant today could very well say.
St. Gregory nαzιanz (+380): “Where are they who revile us for our poverty and pride themselves in their riches? They who define the Church by numbers and scorn the little flock?” (“Against the Arians,” The Faith of the Early Fathers, Vol. 2, p. 33)
This period of Church history, therefore, proves an important point for our time: If the Church's indefectible mission of teaching, governing and sanctifying required a governing (i.e., jurisdictional) bishop for the Church of Christ to be present and operative in a particular See or diocese, then one would have to say that the Church of Christ defected in all those territories where there was no governing Catholic bishop during the Arian heresy. However, it is a fact that in the 4th century, where the faithful retained the true Catholic faith, even in those Sees where the Bishop defected to Arianism, the faithful Catholic remnant constituted the true Church of Christ; and therefore, in that remnant, the Catholic Church existed and endured in her mission to teach, govern and sanctify without a governing bishop. This demonstrates that the Church of Christ's indefectibility and mission to teach, govern and sanctify does not require the presence of a jurisdictional bishop.
St. Athanasius: “Even if Catholics faithful to Tradition were reduced to a handful, they would be the true Church.”
One could make the argument that there must always be at least one jurisdictional bishop somewhere in the world; but even if that could be proven, all that would mean is that somewhere in the world today there is at least one fully Catholic jurisdictional bishop who rejects the heresies of Vatican II and upholds the rest of the Church’s teaching. But we doubt that this is even necessary, as the Church continues to govern, teach and sanctify by the deposit of faith, her law and Tradition, even in places where there is no jurisdictional Bishop to be the official teacher and governor, as proven by the Arian period.
It is also important to point out that the hierarchy of the Church can be defined in two ways: jurisdictionally and ecclesiastically. The jurisdictional hierarchy (all those possessing offices with ordinary jurisdiction) could conceivably defect from the Church by falling into heresy, as have Benedict XVI’s bishops, while as long as there is a valid Catholic priest or bishop who possesses the full deposit of faith (even if that person doesn’t possess ordinary jurisdiction) the ecclesiastical hierarchy is represented and remains intact. And those few remaining Catholic priests or bishops of the remnant, even though they don’t govern any territory or possess ordinary jurisdiction, would have jurisdiction supplied to them automatically by the Church to operate for the salvation of souls. Episcopal Consecrations without the consent of a pope (since there is no pope) by such bishops would of course be lawful in such a state of necessity.
Therefore, there is nothing contrary to the Church’s indefectibility when we point out that Benedict XVI and his pack of apostate bishops (who claim to be the governors in the Church of Christ) do not occupy the Episcopal Chairs of the Church of Christ due to the fact that they: repudiate the dogma Outside the Church There is No Salvation; repudiate the necessity for Jєωs and Eastern Schismatics to convert to the Catholic Church; embrace and respect non-Christian religions of the devil; teach the heresies of freedom of religion and conscience; maintain communion with heretical Protestant sects; accept the heretical docuмents of Vatican II and the New Mass; and many other things.
Just as it was during the Arian heresy in the 4th century, the Church of Jesus Christ exists today with the remnant of faithful Catholics who maintain the traditional Catholic faith, not with the apostate bishops who appear to occupy the positions of authority.
Fr. William Jurgens: “In the time of the Emperor Valens (4th century), Basil was virtually the only orthodox Bishop in all the East who succeeded in retaining charge of his see… If it has no other importance for modern man, a knowledge of the history of Arianism should demonstrate at least that the Catholic Church takes no account of popularity and numbers in shaping and maintaining doctrine: else, we should long since have had to abandon Basil and Hilary and Athanasius and Liberius and Ossius and call ourselves after Arius.” (The Faith of the Early Fathers, Vol. 2, p. 3.)
If the Arian heresy was so bad that approximately 1% of the jurisdictional bishops remained Catholic and 99% became Arian, and the Great Apostasy preceding the Second Coming of Christ is predicted to be even worse – the worst apostasy of all time – then one should not be surprised by the fact that there are barely any authentically Catholic priests in the world today and no fully Catholic jurisdictional (i.e., governing) bishops to speak of.