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Apostolicity
from The Catholic Encyclopedia
1913
with addendum by + Gordon Cardinal
Bateman
May 1999
Apostolicity is the Mark by which the Church of today is recognized
as identical with the Church founded by Jesus Christ upon the Apostles.
It is of great importance because it is the surest indication of the true
Church of Christ. It is most easily examined, and it virtually contains
the other three marks, namely, Unity, Sanctity, and Catholicity. Either
the word �Christian� or �Apostolic� might be used to express the identity
between the Church of today and the primitive Church. The term �Apostolic�
is preferred because it indicates a correlation between Christ and the
Apostles, showing the relation of the Church both to Christ, the founder,
and to the Apostles, upon whom He founded it. �Apostle� is one sent, sent
by authority of Jesus Christ to continue His Mission upon earth, especially
a member of the original band of teachers known as the Twelve Apostles.
Therefore the Church is called Apostolic, because it was founded by Jesus
Christ upon the Apostles. Apostolicity of doctrine and mission is necessary.
Apostolicity of doctrine requires that the deposit of faith committed to
the Apostles shall remain unchanged. Since the Church is infallible in
its teaching, it follows that if the Church of Christ still exists it must
be teaching His doctrine.
Hence, Apostolicity of mission is a guarantee of Apostolicity of doctrine.
St. Irenaeus (Adv. Haeres, IV, xxvi, n. 2) says: �Wherefore we must obey
the priests of the Church who have succession from the Apostles, as we
have shown, who, together with succession in the episcopate, have received
the certain mark of truth according to the will of the Father; all others,
however, are to be suspected, who separated themselves from the principal
succession�, etc. In explaining the concept of Apostolicity, then, special
attention must be given to Apostolicity of mission, or Apostolic succession.
Apostolicity of mission means that the Church is one moral body, possessing
the mission entrusted by Jesus Christ to the Apostles, and transmitted
through them and their lawful successors in an unbroken chain to the present
representatives of Christ upon earth. This authoritative transmission of
power in the Church constitutes Apostolic succession. This Apostolic succession
must be both material and formal; the material consisting in the actual
succession in the Church, through a series of persons from the Apostolic
age to the present; the formal adding the element of authority in the transmission
of power. It consists in the legitimate transmission of the ministerial
power conferred by Christ upon His Apostles. No one can give a power which
he does not possess. Hence in tracing the mission of the Church back to
the Apostles, no lacuna can be allowed, no new mission can arise; but the
mission conferred by Christ must pass from generation to generation through
an uninterrupted lawful succession. The Apostles received it from Christ
and gave it in turn to those legitimately appointed by them, and these
again selected others to continue the work of the ministry. Any break in
this succession destroys Apostolicity, because the break means the beginning
of a new series which is not apostolic. �How shall they preach unless they
be sent?� (Rom., 10, 15). An authoritative mission to teach is absolutely
necessary, a man-given mission is not authoritative. Hence any concept
of Apostolicity that excludes authoritative union with the Apostolic mission
robs the ministry of its Divine character. Apostolicity, or Apostolic succession,
then, means that the mission conferred by Jesus Christ upon the Apostles
must pass from them to their legitimate successors, in an unbroken line,
until the end of the world. This notion of Apostolicity is evolved from
the words of Christ Himself, the practice of the Apostles, and the teaching
of the Fathers and theologians of the Church.
The intention of Christ is apparent from the Bible passages, which tell
of the conferring of the mission upon the Apostles. �As the Father hath
sent Me, I also send you: (John, xx, 21). The mission of the Apostles,
like the mission of Christ, is a Divine mission; they are the Apostles,
or ambassadors, of the Eternal Father. �All power is given to Me in heaven
and on earth. Going, therefore, teach ye all nations; teaching them to
observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you, and behold I am with
you all days, even to the consummation of the world: (Matt., xxviii, 18).
This Divine mission is always to continue the same, hence it must be transmitted
with its Divine character until the end of time, i.e. there must be an
unbroken lawful succession which is called Apostolicity. The Apostles understood
their mission in this sense. St. Paul, in his Epistle to the Romans (x,
8-19), insists upon the necessity of Divinely established mission. �How
shall they preach unless they be sent?� (x, 15). In his letters to his
disciples Timothy and Titus, St. Paul speaks of the obligation of preserving
Apostolic doctrine, and of ordaining other disciples to continue the work
entrusted to the Apostles. �Hold the form of sound words, which thou hast
heard from me in faith and in the love which is in Christ Jesus� (II Tim.,
i, 13). �And the things which thou hast heard from me by many witnesses,
the same commend to faithful men, who shall be fit to teach others also�
(II Tim., ii, 2). �For this cause left I thee in Crete, that thou shouldst
set in order the things that are wanting and shouldst ordain priests in
every city, as I also appointed thee� (Titus, i, 5). Just as the Apostles
transmitted their mission by lawfully appointing others to the work of
the ministry, so their successors were to ordain priests to perpetuate
the same mission given by Jesus Christ, i.e. an Apostolic mission must
always be maintained in the Church.
The writings of the Fathers constantly refers to the Apostolic character
of the doctrine and mission of the Church. See St. Polycarp, St. Ignatius,
(Epist. ad Smyrn., n. 8), St. Clement of Alex., St. Cyril of Jerusalem,
St. Athanasius (History of Arianism), Tertullian (Lib. de Praescipt, n.
32, etc). We quote a few examples which are typical of the testimony of
the Fathers. St. Irenaeus (Adv. Haeres, IV, xxvi, n. 2): �Wherefore we
must obey the priests of the Church, who have succession from the Apostles,�
etc. - quoted above. St. Clement (Ep. I, ad. Cor., 42-44): �Christ was
sent by God the Father, and the Apostles by Christ....They appointed the
above-named and then gave them command that when they came to die other
approved men should succeed to their ministry.� St. Cyprian (Ep. 76, Ad
Magnum): �Novatianus is not in the Church, nor can he be considered a bishop,
because in contempt of Apostolic tradition he was ordained by himself without
succeeding anyone.�. Hence authoritative transmission of power, i.e. Apostolicity,
is essential. In all theological works the same explanation of Apostolicity
is found, based on the Scriptural and patristic testimony just cited. Billuart
(III, 306) concludes his remarks on Apostolicity in the words of St. Jerome:
�We must abide in that Church, which was founded by the Apostles, and endures
to this day.: Mazella (De Relig. et Eccl., 359), after speaking of Apostolic
succession as an uninterrupted substitution of persons in the place of
the Apostles, insists upon the necessity of jurisdiction or authoritative
transmission, thus excluding the hypothesis that a new mission could ever
be originated by anyone in the place of the mission bestowed by Christ
and transmitted in the manner described. Billot (De Eccl. Christi, I, 243-275)
emphasizes the idea that the Church, which is Apostolic, must be presided
over by bishops, who derive their ministry and their governing power from
the Apostles. Apostolicity, then, is that Apostolic succession by which
the Church of today is one with the Church of the Apostles in origin, doctrine,
and mission.
The history of the Catholic Church from St. Peter, the first Pontiff,
to the present Head of the Church, (then St. Pius X) is an evident proof
of its Apostolicity, for no break can be shown in the line of succession.
Cardinal Newman (Diff. of Anglicans) says: �Say there is no church at all
if you will, and at least I shall understand you; but do not meddle with
a fact attested by mankind.� Again �No other form of Christianity but this
present Catholic Communion has a pretence to resemble, even in the faintest
shadow, the Christianity of antiquity, viewed as a living religion on the
stage of the world;� and again,: �The immutability and uninterrupted action
of the laws in question throughout the course of Church history is a plain
note of identity between the Catholic Church of the first ages and that
which now goes by that name.� If any break in the Apostolic succession
had ever occurred, it could be easily shown, for no fact of such importance
could happen in the history of the world without attracting universal notice.
Regarding questions and contests in the election of certain popes, there
is no real difficulty. In the few cases in which controversies arose, the
matter was always settled by a competent tribunal in the Church, the lawful
Pope was proclaimed, and he, as the successor of St. Peter, received the
Apostolic mission and jurisdiction in the Church. Again, the heretics of
the early ages and the sects of later times have attempted to justify their
teaching and practices by appealing to the doctrine of the Catholic Church,
or to their early communion with the Catholic Church. Their appeal shows
that the Catholic Church is regarded as Apostolic even by those who have
separated from her communion.
Apostolicity is not found in any other Church. This is a necessary consequence
of the unity of the Church. If there is but one true Church, and if the
Catholic Church, as has just been shown, is Apostolic, the necessary inference
is that no other Church is Apostolic. (See above quotations from Newman,
�Diff. of Anglicans�). All sects that reject the Episcopate, by the very
fact make Apostolic succession impossible, since they destroy the channel
through which the Apostolic mission is transmitted. Historically, the beginnings
of all these Churches can be traced to a period long after the time of
Christ and the Apostles. Regarding the Greek Church, it is sufficient to
note that it lost Apostolic succession by withdrawing from the jurisdiction
of the lawful successors of St. Peter in the See of Rome. The same is to
be said of the Anglican claims to continuity (MacLaughlin, �Divine Plan
of the Church�, 213; and, Newman, �Diff. of Anglicans,� Lecture 12.) for
the very fact of separation destroys their jurisdiction. They have based
their claims on the validity of orders in the Anglican Church (see ANGLICAN
ORDERS). Anglican orders, however, have been declared invalid. But even
if they were valid, the Anglican Church would not be Apostolic, for jurisdiction
is essential to the Apostolicity of mission. A study of the organization
of the Anglican Church shows it to be entirely different from the Church
established by Jesus Christ.
Addendum by + Gordon
Cardinal Bateman
May 1999
So without this One Mark - Apostolicity, one does not have the other
three �a good point to remember. And that can only be found in the
church which has elected the successor to the last Pope - Pius XII, died
Oct. 9th 1958.
This does not apply to those who are not Catholic as with clerics of
Vatican II, nor do they apply to those other Traditional or sedevacantist
sects that propagate the false theories of the acephalous heresy or that
the church does NOT need a pope as does Briton�s Library. All other groups
or societies who have also disturbed the peace of the Church by the breaking
of Trent�s canons re. the sending of priests who have no jurisdiction from
non-juridical persons like Archbishop Lefebvre or Bishop Thuc are also
included as non-members. They are currently in schism. Only a very few
priests left in the world possess this juridical right held since Pius
XII and one of them is our priest Fr. Lucian Pulvermacher, now reigning
as Pius XIII.
�truecatholic.us
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