"The Old Catholic Movement maintains that the obvious basis of
reuniting the several divisions of the Christian Church is the common acceptance of the
Faith of the entire Church prior to the first division in the year 1054 A.D. from whence
all the familiar divisions of today ultimately stem. This theory admits that the 16th
century Reformation is not principally responsible for the unhappy divisions
that beset the Christian religion in the western world. What caused the first division was
not a point of faith so much as it was a matter of jurisdiction and administration.
History reveals that the early Church was governed by the Apostolic authority vested in
all the bishops. Matters of faith and morals affecting the whole Church were brought
before an Ecumenical Council (of which there were seven universally accepted) over which
the five great bishops of Christendom presided. These bishops, whose Sees represented the
important cities of Jerusalem, Antioch, Constantinople, Alexandria, and Rome, were known
as patriarchs in whom the Church of the ancients recognized its sovereignty.
"If we are to single out the primary cause of the first
division of this Church, it would be the deeply rooted objection of the Patriarch of Rome
to this particular theory of Church government. Rome maintained that they and their
successors held supreme authority over all Christendom as spiritual heirs of St. Peter,
whom, they held, was the first Bishop of Rome and to whom, they contended, the keys
to the kingdom of heaven were alone divinely entrusted. The four patriarchs of the
Church in the East maintained the traditional belief in the administration of Christ's
Church, offering for the sake of unity the title primus inter pares (first
amongst equals) to the Roman bishop.
"But with the Church of the West developing a strong belief
that a kind of primacy resided in the Roman bishop by divine enactment, the breach widened
into an open division and henceforth the Christian Church in the East and in the West was
to be distinct and divided. In the East, to this day, the patriarchal theory of the
Church's government is held, while in the West the emphasis on the personal supremacy of
the Pope over all Christendom was gradually increased from the year 1054 until the final
definition of Papal infallibility was decreed in the Vatican Council of A.D. 1870 as a
dogma which all Christians were bound to accept as an article of faith.
"A school of thought regarding the Church's administration
developed within the Roman Church, flourishing time and again in such celebrated and
glorious figures as Savanarola, Paulo Sarpl, the Scholars of Port-Royal, the so-called
Jansenists, the Church of Holland and others, to develop finally in the
twilight of the nineteenth century into what came to be known as primitive or
old Catholicism.
"We are left free now in the following sections to touch upon
the stirring and romantic history of the Port-Royalists of France, the rise of the
movement within the Church of Rome, and finally the dramatic Vatican Council which
culminated in the definite formation of the present Old Catholic movement whose purpose is
not a new reformation from without, but a quiet restoration of the Christian Church to its
original state from within.