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Keywords admission Altar Training Anglican Anglican Rite Apostolic Succession Aramaic Artwork Ascended Masters Astral Aura Baptism Bible Bible Commentary Blessing Blessing of the Fire Book review Breviary Buddhism Burial Byzantine Church Calendar (Liturgical) Calvinism Canons Carmelite Catechism Catholic Apostolic Church of Antioch Chant Chrism Clairvoyance Communion Confession Confirmation Creed Dead Sea Scrolls Death Dreams Early Church England Eucharist Evangelical Extracanonical Fiction Gay Christians Gnostic Healing Hellenistic History Holy Order of MANS (HOOM) Holy Orders Holy Union Holy Water Holy Week Home Temple Homily Iconography India Inspiration Karma Latin Letters Liberal Catholic Church Liturgy Malabar Rite Marriage Mass Mass of the Presanctified Matrimony Meditation Middle Ages Missal monasticism Mysticism Nag Hammadi Nazi Germany Neoplatonism Occult Old Catholic Church Order of St. Benedict Ordination Orthodoxy Pacifism Poetry Prayer Prayer, contemplative Presbyterian Reformation Reincarnation Roman Catholic Church Rosary, Franciscan-style Rubrics Russia Russian Orthodox Church Sacramentals Sacramentary Sacraments Saints Sarum Rite Seminary Spain Spiritual Growth Synod Tantra Tarot Theology Theosophy Thomas Three Forms of Unity Trance Trinity Unction Union of Utrecht Vegetarianism Veneration of the Cross Vestments Viaticum Video World Council of Churches |
About the Global LibraryThe Global Library is owned, maintained and operated by the Diocese of Texas of the Old Catholic Church. The OCC at a Glance
Our History in a NutshellThe Old Catholic Church traces its lineage through the primitive church of Holland. In the year 696, the bishop of Rome (Pope Sergius I) ordained a new bishop, Willibrord, and sent him to Europe’s northern lands, now called The Netherlands. When Willibrord arrived to begin converting people to Christianity, the bishop was astonished to find a Christian community already established, in what was called Frisia. Like today’s Dutch, Christians in the ancient church insisted on being independent. Bishops were elected in Holland by Holland and for Holland, rather than being sent by Rome. This practice was acknowledged and confirmed by the Roman church in the year 1124 (fiat from Pope Eugene III) and again in 1215 (Fourth Lateran Council). One later pope went even further: Leo X ordered that no Dutch clergy or believer could ever be “tried” by a Vatican court. But in the 1700s, popes began trying to force Roman rule over the Dutch church. In 1703, Pope Clement XI summoned a Dutch bishop to Rome over a philosophical disagreement. When the bishop asserted his long-held independence, the pope declared the Dutch See vacant. Rome sent its own bishop to Romanize Christ’s church in the north. As you can guess, the Dutch didn’t stand down. From the 1700s, the ancient church called itself the Old Catholic Church to stress its belief that Christ’s teachings weren’t broken and didn’t need to be fixed. In the 1800s, the Old Catholic Church spread throughout Europe due to more unilateral innovations taken in Rome. Without asking for input or consent from the Christian church as a whole, Rome declared its pope to be infallible in 1870s. The Roman pontiff, using his new powers announced that the Blessed Virgin Mary was born without Original Sin (the so-called “Immaculate Conception”). These modernisms were novel, but they drove many Europeans to the Old Catholic Church. The exodus continued in the 20th Century when Rome’s synod, called “Vatican Council II” threw out the ancient liturgies in favor of colloquial innovations containing unfortunate doctrinal errors. Today’s Old Catholics guard the traditional liturgies as well as their independence, while honoring all Christian communities. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Global Library is maintained by the Southern Province USA in the USA.
For more information about our group, try the Old Catholic Church portal or the Catholic Wikipedia
Funding provided by The Rick and Wynn Wagner Foundation