Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: Validity of +Thuc-Line Bishops -- a 30-Second Debunk of the Kelly-ite Position  (Read 358908 times)

0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline Ladislaus

  • Supporter
  • *****
  • Posts: 47141
  • Reputation: +27941/-5208
  • Gender: Male
In a desperate attempt to attack the validity of the +Thuc-line bishops, Bishop Kelly invented this criterion where for episcopal consecrations you had to have two COMPETENT witnesses who could testify that the essential form (and matter) of the Sacrament had been correctly administered.

Father Cekada discovered in his extensive research that there simply is no such criterion anywhere to be found, and that the same degree of moral certainty is all that the Church requires to presume the consecrations valid.

Yet SSPV persist in claiming that episcopal consecration requires a higher degree of certainty.

But ... they forget the principle of peiorem partem sequitur conclusio, the logical "weakest link" principle.

OK, so we're triple-sure that a particular episcopal consecration was valid.  Great.  Fantastic.

How sure are we that the consecrand's ordination was valid?

How about his Baptism?

What if the bishop (ordaining alone) botched his ordination?  What if the priest botched his Baptism, was tired and out of habit pronounced the words as ego te absolvo instead of baptizo, since he hears about 200 Confessions each week but only does a handful of Baptisms ... and the old lady who signed on as a witness didn't know Latin from Swahili?  Has anyone else heard that audio/video of +Cushing attempting to offer Mass? ... or possibly just simulating it?  If he's that bad with the basic form of the Mass, could he have been trusted to ordain valid priests?  What then if those priests later went on to be consecrated bishops?  And I'm sure that +Cushing was not alone.

We could have 350 co-consecrating bishops all fluent in Latin and watching the Rite like a hawk with 5 video recordings being made simultaneously ... but it makes no difference whatsoever if the consecrand's Baptism was invalid or his Ordination invalid.

QED ... the Church does not require any additional degree of certainty for episcopal consecrations than for any other Sacrament, since the certainty of any given episcopal consecration reduces to the degree of certainty required for the other Sacraments, in particular Baptism and Ordination..


Offline Ladislaus

  • Supporter
  • *****
  • Posts: 47141
  • Reputation: +27941/-5208
  • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0


  • Unfortunately the narrator is talking over it, but the consecation of the wine was almost completely unintelligible, though the form for the consecation of the bread is so simple you'd have to almost deliberately mess it up.

    I'm fluent in Latin and, did I not know the Canon and could therefore fill most of it in by heart, I don't think I would understand 5% of what he said.

    Do we think this man could have been trusted to validly ordain priests?


    Offline OremusVO

    • Newbie
    • *
    • Posts: 1
    • Reputation: +1/-0
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0
  • Well ABL said to avoid THUC line

    Offline Ladislaus

    • Supporter
    • *****
    • Posts: 47141
    • Reputation: +27941/-5208
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!3
  • No Thanks!0
  • Well ABL said to avoid THUC line

    Irrelevant to the point at hand.

    Offline valleyzoomer

    • Newbie
    • *
    • Posts: 4
    • Reputation: +4/-0
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!2
  • No Thanks!0
  • Well ABL said to avoid THUC line
    Oh well if Pope Lefebvre said it I guess it is infallible.. :laugh2:


    Offline SimpleMan

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 5072
    • Reputation: +1987/-246
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0


  • Unfortunately the narrator is talking over it, but the consecation of the wine was almost completely unintelligible, though the form for the consecation of the bread is so simple you'd have to almost deliberately mess it up.

    I'm fluent in Latin and, did I not know the Canon and could therefore fill most of it in by heart, I don't think I would understand 5% of what he said.

    Do we think this man could have been trusted to validly ordain priests?

    Why was he reading the Canon in such a loud voice?

    Granted, it was softer than the parts that are said in full voice, but it was still quite audible.  It's not usually nearly that loud.

    Offline Maverick

    • Newbie
    • *
    • Posts: 31
    • Reputation: +4/-34
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!7
  • So much focus on validity, the orthodox have valid bishops and they aren’t Catholic.

    All THUC bishops today are sedevacantist or some sort of flavour, sedevacantism is a great error and not a son of the great Archbishop Lefebvre.

    Stay away from these THUC bishops, you and I today can decide we want to become a priest and absolutely find some THUC bishop to make us a priest in someone’s garage.

    Offline Ladislaus

    • Supporter
    • *****
    • Posts: 47141
    • Reputation: +27941/-5208
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Why was he reading the Canon in such a loud voice?

    Granted, it was softer than the parts that are said in full voice, but it was still quite audible.  It's not usually nearly that loud.

    I'm not sure if it was just that the microphones were close and picking it up  ... or ... I do know some priests from the 1950s and their idea of low voice for the Canon was not particularly low, and one priest who actually gets a bit louder for the actual essential form (words of consecration).  I wonder if that's something in line with Dialog Mass, lay "participation", etc. ... since it was also one of the things the Prots (and Luther) railed against, the silent parts of the Mass, as if the people were excluded.  Certainly that flies in the face of (re-)defining the Mass as an assembly of the faithful in which they participate fully, to have parts they can't even here.

    Short answer:
    1) that's just him (some older priests who are hard of hearing can do this also)
    2) it was because of how the microphones were placed
    3) it was a transitional thing toward the New Mass


    Offline Ladislaus

    • Supporter
    • *****
    • Posts: 47141
    • Reputation: +27941/-5208
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • So much focus on validity, the orthodox have valid bishops and they aren’t Catholic.

    All THUC bishops today are sedevacantist or some sort of flavour, sedevacantism is a great error and not a son of the great Archbishop Lefebvre.

    Stay away from these THUC bishops, you and I today can decide we want to become a priest and absolutely find some THUC bishop to make us a priest in someone’s garage.

    Again, irrelevant.  We sedevacantist types believe that R&R is the "great error", since it flies in the face of Traditional ecclesiology before Vatican II.  And stop it with the garage nonsense.  Many of the +Thuc-line bishops, at least in the US, are quite respectable and run very solid seminaries:  CMRI and Bishop Sanborn's groups in particular.  There's nothing "garage-like" about their seminaries, and +Sanborn's is much more rigorous a formation than that of the SSPX even.

    Offline Ladislaus

    • Supporter
    • *****
    • Posts: 47141
    • Reputation: +27941/-5208
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Oh well if Pope Lefebvre said it I guess it is infallible.. :laugh2:

    Yes, there's that too, but +Lefebvre did accept a +Thuc-ordained priest without conditional at one point.  Those quotes from the Archbishop were from the early 1980s, where he had become hostile to sedevacantism, as he was very optimistic about Rome ... and the entire thing with "The Nine" was going on.  Closer to the time of Assisi, when he realized that Wojtyla was almost worse than Montini had been, i.e. that Montini had not simply been a one-off aberration, the Archbishop correct that attitude.

    Offline Maverick

    • Newbie
    • *
    • Posts: 31
    • Reputation: +4/-34
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!9
  • Again, irrelevant.  We sedevacantist types believe that R&R is the "great error", since it flies in the face of Traditional ecclesiology before Vatican II.  And stop it with the garage nonsense.  Many of the +Thuc-line bishops, at least in the US, are quite respectable and run very solid seminaries:  CMRI and Bishop Sanborn's groups in particular.  There's nothing "garage-like" about their seminaries, and +Sanborn's is much more rigorous a formation than that of the SSPX even.


    Utter nonsense, Sedevacantism is a grave error and a LARP, a complete dead end with zero resistance as no one takes them seriously.

    True sons of Lefebvre are not sedevacantist.


    Offline Ladislaus

    • Supporter
    • *****
    • Posts: 47141
    • Reputation: +27941/-5208
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0
  • Utter nonsense, Sedevacantism is a grave error and a LARP, a complete dead end with zero resistance as no one takes them seriously.

    True sons of Lefebvre are not sedevacantist.

    :sleep: :sleep: :sleep:

    Just keep telling yourself that and making grautitious statements.  It's your posts that no one takes seriously.  And of course you are the one who will determine who are "TRUE sons of Lefebvfre".


    Offline Maverick

    • Newbie
    • *
    • Posts: 31
    • Reputation: +4/-34
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!6
  • :sleep: :sleep: :sleep:

    Just keep telling yourself that and making grautitious statements.  It's your posts that no one takes seriously.  And of course you are the one who will determine who are "TRUE sons of Lefebvfre".



    Ladislaus in your younger years you just made sense, a lot of your earlier work completely dismantles this new position you have created in your mind.

    You are like a Sean, Salza or Fellay and even Williamson to some degree, your older positions completely contradict and nuke your current position.

    My question is, when did you abandon Lefebvre was it early 2000’s or so.

    Offline SimpleMan

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 5072
    • Reputation: +1987/-246
    • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0
  • I'm not sure if it was just that the microphones were close and picking it up  ... or ... I do know some priests from the 1950s and their idea of low voice for the Canon was not particularly low, and one priest who actually gets a bit louder for the actual essential form (words of consecration).  I wonder if that's something in line with Dialog Mass, lay "participation", etc. ... since it was also one of the things the Prots (and Luther) railed against, the silent parts of the Mass, as if the people were excluded.  Certainly that flies in the face of (re-)defining the Mass as an assembly of the faithful in which they participate fully, to have parts they can't even here.

    Short answer:
    1) that's just him (some older priests who are hard of hearing can do this also)
    2) it was because of how the microphones were placed
    3) it was a transitional thing toward the New Mass
    I wondered if it might have been #2 or possibly even #3.

    Some apologists for the Novus Ordo like to use this Mass to justify their assertion that the TLM was horrible, attempting to use the principle of peiorem partem sequitur conclusio, used upthread in another context.  

    Granted, Cardinal Cushing's Latin diction was horrible, but this is no way vitiated the grace and holiness of the Mass itself.

    Offline ElwinRansom1970

    • Supporter
    • ***
    • Posts: 1073
    • Reputation: +818/-157
    • Gender: Male
    • γνῶθι σεαυτόν - temet nosce
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0
  • Ladislaus in your younger years you just made sense, a lot of your earlier work completely dismantles this new position you have created in your mind.

    You are like a Sean, Salza or Fellay and even Williamson to some degree, your older positions completely contradict and nuke your current position.

    My question is, when did you abandon Lefebvre was it early 2000’s or so.
    If one remains in the same opinions for more than a decade, one is either incapable of critical thinking or too lazy to exercise it. In the 1980s and 90s, I supported the opinions and arguments of the SSPX. By 2000 I saw glaring holes in those arguments. By 2010 I had arrived at sedeprivationism or, better yet, "sededoubtism" as the term was coined by Ladislaus to understand the current Church crisis.

    The fall of the SSPX is very well present in this new video that is theologically weak and historically false:

    https://youtu.be/jVui774HhE4?si=6gFHY4bpp38pY7j0

    The imposition of the 1962 liturgical books was the result of talk between +Lefebvre and then-Cardinal Ratizinger. Using the 62 would weed-out sedes from the SSPX since they would never accept that revision having been promulgated by Roncalli. +Lefebvre desperately wanted recognition from Rome in the early 1980s and this was one way to help create a path for the recognition that never came.

    Prior to 1982, the liturgical usage in the SSPX varied greatly and this was accepted by the 1978 General Chapter. Germany tended to go 62; France tended towards 64; the English-speaking world generally used the pre-54. This imposition of the 62 liturgy was among the catalysts for the split of the so-called Nine in the USA. The imposition violated the agreement establish in the General Chapter.
    "I distrust every idea that does not seem obsolete and grotesque to my contemporaries."
    Nicolás Gómez Dávila