A Study of the "Autonomous" Episcopate

by Fr. Louis-Marie de Blignières, FSVF
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  • Product Code: asofae
  • Publication date: Mid-April 2026
  • Pages: 112
  • Size: 5.5 x 8.5
  • $14.95

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  • Translated from the original French

    Part I is a translation of the article “Libre entretien sur l’été 1988” published in the June 2022 (no. 160) issue of Sedes Sapientiæ.

    Part II (the study) is a translation of “Réflexions sur l’épiscopat 'autonome'” published as a supplement to the 1987 issue of Sedes Sapientiæ.

    Contents

    Publisher’s Note 
    Preface (2026) 
    Part I: A Candid Conversation about the Summer of 1988 (2022) 
    Part II: A Study of the “Autonomous” Episcopate (1987) 

    Introduction 
    I. Is It Possible to Receive an “Autonomous” Episcopate within the Church? 
    II. Is It Lawful to Confer the “Autonomous” Episcopate within the Church? 
    III. Is Establishing an “Autonomous” Episcopate in the Church expedient? 

    Conclusion 
    Brief Response to an Objection 

    About the Author 

    IN 1987, OFFERED HERE FOR THE FIRST TIME in English, Fr. Louis-Marie de Blignières presents a sustained theological study taking seriously the teachings of papal encyclicals, the writings of the Church Fathers, the doctrine of St. Thomas Aquinas, and numerous works by theologians, and applies them to the question of an “autonomous” episcopate: i.e., bishops instituted without any mandate from the Church and with the intention of forming an entity functionally self-sufficient and independent from the Church hierarchy founded by Christ (thus rendering, intentionally or not, the quest for unity unnecessary).

    In a characteristically Thomistic manner, Fr. de Blignières brings perennial principles to bear on a modern ecclesial problem. These “autonomous” bishops are not part of the governance [hierarchy] of the Church. The central question thus becomes whether there can be bishops who possess a merely material apostolicity while lacking a formal apostolic mission (see Part II). The author also asks whether the crisis in the Church—which he readily acknowledges—can justify the emergence of such an episcopate. His study gives a clear and rigorous answer.

    The accompanying essay from 2022, included here as Part I, was chosen in order to present the reasoning of those who could not in conscience support Archbishop Lefebvre’s episcopal consecrations of 1988 without papal mandate. It provides an important contextual framework for understanding the intellectual and ecclesial climate surrounding that unprecedented event, the repercussions of which continue into 2026.

    It is our hope that this study will be read with serenity and objectivity and that it will foster honest debate and serious reflection on a question of great importance for all those concerned with the crisis in the Church and with the preservation of all that the Church holds dear.

  • Louis-Marie de Blignières

    Fr Louis-Marie de Blignières was born in Madrid in 1949, to French parents who were also practising Catholics. His father was at that time an army officer on active duty, and his mother was living with her own father, an engineer in a Spanish mining company. After a traditional secondary education in Paris, Fr Louis-Marie pursued scientific studies at university, and gained a master's degree in Astrophysics in 1972. He passed through a period of atheism, during which time he nevertheless continued to admire Catholicism and Christian civilisation. He returned to the practice of the faith in 1970, during an Ignatian retreat preached at a Benedictine abbey dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary.  His time as an agnostic and his subsequent conversion has left him with a keen desire to explain and defend the rational credibility of the Christian faith.

    In 1972, he discovered again the vocation that he had first sensed as a child. After studies at a Benedictine monastery, and then at the seminary of Ecône in Switzerland, he was ordained priest in 1977 by Archbishop Lefebvre, as an oblate of what would become the abbey of Barroux in France. In 1979, he founded the Fraternity of St Vincent Ferrer in western France, between Le Mans and Rennes. This institute is Dominican in its spirituality, though distinct from the Order of Preachers. It is characterized by a traditional religious observance, the place of St Thomas Aquinas in its life of study, the use of the Dominican liturgical books in force in 1962, and a doctrinal preaching that takes many forms, especially that of retreats on the mysteries of the rosary.

    In 1988, after the publication of the ‘motu proprio’ Ecclesia Dei, the Fraternity became a religious institute of pontifical right. It currently has 21 members, of whom 14 are priests, including several with canonical doctorates in theology, canon law and philosophy.

    Fr Louis-Marie obtained a doctorate in metaphysics in 2003, at the university of Paris-Sorbonne. He has written several books of theology and spirituality, and he is the author of many articles in Sedes Sapientiae, the Fraternity’s journal. In 2022, a special edition of this journal was published in English.

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