Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church


The Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church is an independent Catholic church established in 1945 by excommunicated Brazilian Catholic bishop Carlos Duarte Costa.
ICAB had 39 dioceses in Brazil and sister churches in several countries. It is the mother church of an international network called the Worldwide Communion of Catholic Apostolic Churches. The current President of the Episcopal Council of ICAB in Brazil is Josivaldo Pereira de Oliveira.

History

Costa was an outspoken critic of the regime of Brazilian president Getúlio Vargas and of the Vatican's alleged relationship with fascist regimes. He also publicly criticized the dogma of papal infallibility and Catholic doctrines on divorce and clerical celibacy. As a result of his outspoken views, Duarte Costa resigned from his office of bishop of Botucatu in 1937 and was appointed to a titular see.
In 1940 Cardinal Sebastião da Silveira Cintra, archbishop of Rio de Janeiro, permitted Costa, as titular bishop of Maura, to co-consecrate Bishop Eliseu Maria Coroli. Costa continued to criticize the government and the Catholic Church, advocating policies that were regarded by the authorities as Communist. In 1944 the Brazilian government imprisoned him, but later freed him under political pressure from the United States and Great Britain.
In May 1945 Costa gave newspaper interviews accusing Brazil's Papal nuncio of Nazi-Fascist spying, and accused the Vatican of having aided and abetted Hitler. In addition, he announced plans to set up his own Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church, in which priests would be permitted to marry, and bishops would be elected by popular vote.
On June 1945, Costa established the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church. Costa's act of schism resulted in his automatic excommunication from the Catholic Church. Later Costa was declared a vitandus – a person to be avoided by Catholics – and those Catholics who became adherents of ICAB were excommunicated also. According to Peter Anson, Costa was excommunicated "for attacks against the papacy,"
In 1949, the Brazilian government temporarily suppressed all public worship by ICAB, because its liturgy and its clerical attire would result in confusion by being indistinguishable from those of the Catholic Church and were tantamount to deception of the public. However, a few months later ICAB churches were permitted to reopen, provided that their liturgy would not duplicate the Catholic liturgy, and their clergy would wear gray clerical attire in contrast to the black attire worn by Catholic clergy.
Costa implemented reforms in ICAB of what he saw as problems in the Catholic Church. Clerical celibacy was abolished, though he himself never married and remained celibate. Rules for the reconciliation of divorced and remarried persons were implemented. The liturgy was translated into the vernacular, clergy were expected to live and work among the people and support themselves and their ministries by holding secular employment.
Shortly after founding ICAB Costa consecrated four bishops, Salomão Barbosa Ferraz in 1945, Antidio Jose Vargas and Jorge Alves de Souza in 1946, and Luis Fernando Castillo Mendez in 1948. Costa, Ferraz, and Mendez attempted to establish similar autonomous National Catholic Apostolic Churches in several other Latin American countries. Costa was consecrator or co-consecrator of 11 additional bishops, each of whom took a leadership role in either ICAB or one of the other National Churches.
Ferraz left ICAB in 1958. Ferraz reconciled with the Catholic Church in 1959 and his episcopal consecration was recognized as valid. However, Ferraz was excluded from church affairs such as the Roman Synod of 1960, even though he was present in Rome at the time, while the Vatican belatedly questioned the legitimacy of having recognized his status. Shortly thereafter, in 1961, Costa died and ICAB underwent several years of tumult as dissensions, schisms, and multiple claimants to the patriarchal throne threw the church into disarray. After this period, the church found stability and growth under Mendez, Costa's successor.
Some sources seem to indicate that Mendez assumed leadership of ICAB upon Costa's death in 1961. Bishop Antidio Jose Vargas initially stepped in as General Supervisor, followed by Pedro dos Santos Silva as first president of the Episcopal Council, followed by the Italian-born Luigi Mascolo during the 1970's. By 1982 Castillo Mendez was elected president of the Episcopal Council, and was designated as Patriarch of ICAB in 1988 and as Patriarch of Iglesias Católicas Apostólicas Nacionales the international communion of similar churches in 1990.

Beliefs and organization

ICAB accepts the Nicene, Athanasian, and Apostles' creeds and observes seven sacraments. The ICAB practices open communion for all Christians who acknowledge the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. The church acknowledges divorce as a reality of life and permitted in Holy Scripture and will marry divorced persons after an ecclesiastical process of investigation and baptize the children of divorced.
ICAB teaches that birth control is acceptable in certain circumstances. It opposes abortion, euthanasia, capital punishment, and any other taking of human life. The church has three administrative branches, in line with the conception of a nation state: executive, legislative, and judicial. There are currently 52 bishops and 39 dioceses within Brazil. The official motto is Deus, Terra e Liberdade.
ICAB is historically open to people of all faiths and philosophies, or none: Theosophists and Freemasons featured in early senior roles as well as atheists and communists. According to Roger Bastide, "since 1945 its priests have been attending Umbanda spiritism séances, blessing statues of the Virgin identified with Yemanjá, saying mass in macumba sanctuaries".

Apostolic succession

ICAB holds that apostolic succession is maintained through the consecration of its bishops in an unbroken succession back to the Apostles. All ICAB bishops trace their apostolic succession back to Duarte Costa, a former bishop of the Roman Catholic Church. It is widely believed that ICAB's consecrations follow the Roman Catholic Tridentine rite in a vernacular version of the Pontifical, but this is not certain: ICAB's rites were altered on several occasions, and uniformity in practice has never been enforced anyway; furthermore, the Tridentine rite in an unauthorized vernacular form would no longer be considered the Tridentine rite according to Catholic theology.
ICAB cites the unique case of Ferraz as evidence that its apostolic succession is valid, even by Roman Catholic standards. Just over a month after the church's foundation, in 1945, Duarte Costa consecrated Ferraz as bishop. Thirteen years later Ferraz reconciled with the Roman Catholic Church and was eventually recognized as a bishop, even though he was married at the time. Ferraz was not ordained or consecrated again, even conditionally; however
he was initially held at arm's length by the Vatican while they examined his case, somewhat belatedly, and mooted the possibility of an affidavit to affirm that Ferraz, aged 80, and his Italian wife were chaste. He did pastoral work in the Archdiocese of São Paulo until May 12, 1963, when he was appointed titular bishop of Eleutherna by Pope John XXIII. Ferraz participated in all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council, and Pope Paul VI appointed him to serve on one of Vatican II's working commissions. Upon his death in 1969, Ferraz was buried with full honors accorded a bishop of the Roman Catholic Church. Since then, however, the Vatican has repeatedly expressed reservations about ICAB's sacraments and does not recognize them; in 2012 Rome declared ICAB schismatic and reaffirmed its negation of ICAB's "illicit" orders.

International communion

Costa, Ferraz, and Mendez consecrated, or assisted in the consecrations, of dozens of bishops in various countries from the 1940s to the 1990s. Some bishops in the Costa line maintained formal ties with ICAB, but the majority appear to have gone their separate ways to found or participate in independent Catholic bodies without ties to ICAB. Such bishops have been declared doubtful at best by the new regime, citing the claim that a defect in proper intention exists in all bishops who have strayed from ICAB.
Churches in full communion with ICAB are members of. There has been a fluctuating number of partner churches in and a current list of official members is not available. The last world conference was held in 2009 in Guatemala. Since that meeting there has been a reorganization in the works of of those considered to have remained true to the teachings of Duarte Costa. Those churches who have obtained consecrations at the hands of Castillo Mendez or Pereira de Oliveira, with false intentions, as in lies and simony, are considered to be in grave sin and are not considered validly consecrated or ordained.
Under Castillo Mendez, ICAB created the Canadian Catholic Apostolic Church in 1988, ordaining Claude R. Baron as the first Canadian bishop.
In 1997 Mendez agreed to intercommunion between and the International Communion of the Charismatic Episcopal Church.
1997 also saw the ordination of the first 'ICAB succession' bishop in the United Kingdom, namely John Christopher Simmons of Ashford, Kent. John Simmons formed part of a house community involved in child pornography and pedophilia, which included Frederick Gilbert Linale and Roger Gleaves. Both Gleaves and Linale received lengthy sentences; Simmons stood in as head of the church in their absence. The UK branch of ICAB still exists, though currently in no formal relationship with the Brazilian church, and it has changed name several times since John Christopher Simmons' day. The current leader of this branch, now called Catholic Church of England & Wales, is James Atkinson-Wake, also known as David Bell.

List of bishops and dioceses

As of 2007, the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church has 39 registered dioceses throughout the country, along with missions in other countries.

Brazil

State of Acre
State of Alagoas
State of Amazonas
State of Amapá
State of Bahia
State of Ceará
State of Distrito Federal
State of Espírito Santo
State of Goiás
State of Maranhão
State of Mato Grosso
State of Mato Grosso do Sul
State of Minas Gerais
State of Pará
State of Paraíba
State of Paraná
State of Pernambuco
State of Piauí
State of Rio de Janeiro
State of Rio Grande do Norte
State of Rio Grande do Sul
State of Rondônia
State of Roraima
State of Santa Catarina
State of Sergipe
State of São Paulo
State of Tocantins
The church has at various times spiritually supported dioceses and bishops in a number of foreign countries, including Angola, Australia, Argentina, Bolivia, Canada, Cameroon, Colombia, Ecuador, France, Martinique, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, the Philippines, Uganda, the United Kingdom and the United States. The list has tended to fluctuate and change frequently, suggesting that maintaining anything more than a loose and occasional dialogue with its branches and affiliates has been a challenge for ICAB.