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The Saint Pius X Fraternity formally contests, through an appeal, the decree of excommunication of July 2. Rome will soon have to respond in law, not just in pastoral care.
We had followed, week after week, the march of Écône towards the break: letter from Léon XIV of June 24, 2026 calling to renounce the consecrations, Pagliarani's refusal, episcopal ordinations of July 1 (Fellay and de Galarreta as consecrators), notification by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (July 2, Cardinal Fernández) of the latae sententiae excommunication of the six bishops involved. The Fraternity is now taking a new step. It officially files an appeal against this decree.
Two dispatches confirm the filing: Le Salon Beige (July 14, 2026) and Catholic News Agency (July 14, 2026), quoting a statement from the Superior General. The appeal was formally introduced on July 11, 2026 to the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith itself. It contests the qualification of an act of a schismatic nature retained by the DDF and invokes the state of necessity, already mobilized by Mgr Lefebvre in 1988. The FSSPX requests the nullity of the decree and the opening of a true contradictory canonical trial.
The decree of July 2 is based on canon 1382 of the CIC 1983 (latae sententiae penalty for episcopal consecration without pontifical mandate) and on the motu proprio Ecclesia Dei (John Paul II, July 2, 1988). The FSSPX's appeal is based on canons 1323, 4° (state of necessity) and 1324, 8° (invincible error of law). The canonical procedure unfolds in two stages: first a petitio revocationis addressed to the author of the decree (canon 1734), here the DDF itself; then, in case of refusal, an appeal to the hierarchical superior (canon 1737) who, for an act of a dicastery, ultimately turns to the Apostolic Signature (canon 1445). The doctrinal point is old: Rome, under John Paul II as under Benedict XVI (Ut unum sint, n° 11), has never recognized a permanent state of necessity as the foundation of a parallel ministry.
Three stakes. First, canonical clarity: if the appeal goes as far as the Apostolic Signature, the supreme tribunal of the Church, its decision will set doctrine. Then the sacramental charge: meanwhile, the faithful remain bound by the DDF's warnings about the validity but illicit nature of the sacraments. Finally, the place of dialogue: will Rome respond in law or by extending the pastoral offered by Fernández?
The invocation of the state of necessity (canon 1323) presupposes an imminent peril for the soul, not a subjective judgment on the doctrinal crisis of the Church. No Roman tribunal, since 1988, has admitted this reading. The appeal is therefore more of a political and media act than a likely legal path to success. Blind spot: the fate of the laity, on which current Roman ordinances remain silent.
Let us pray for the Apostolic Signature and for the return to full communion. Let us read Ecclesia Dei (John Paul II, 1988) and Ut unum sint (John Paul II, 1995): fidelity to the Successor of Peter is the foundation of Catholic communion. The extraordinary form of the Roman rite has never been banned by Rome as such. It is indeed the secession that is problematic, not the traditional mass.
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Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
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