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SSPX and Rome: Timeline from the 1988 Consecrations to the 2026 Episcopal Consecrations

A documented timeline: The preservation of Catholic Tradition, the traditional priesthood, and the sacraments must be judged in light of the supreme law of the Church..."The salvation of souls."

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Major Events

Timeline of the SSPX and Rome

July 1, 2026

Episcopal Consecrations Scheduled at Écône

Event

The official Écône 2026 website presents the ceremonies surrounding the priestly ordinations and episcopal consecrations at Écône, scheduled from June 29 to July 2, 2026, with the episcopal consecrations taking place on July 1.

Why It Matters

This final event shows that the 2026 consecrations are not merely a private internal decision, but a public and organized act in continuity with the Society’s mission. From the SSPX perspective, Écône is especially significant because it is the place associated with Archbishop Lefebvre’s seminary and the 1988 consecrations.

May 26, 2026

The SSPX Announces the Four Future Bishops

Event

The General House announced Fr. Pascal Schreiber, Fr. Michael Goldade, Fr. Michel Poinsinet de Sivry, and Fr. Marc Hanappier as the priests chosen for consecration.

Why It Matters

The naming of the bishops shows that the SSPX intends to secure continuity of its episcopal ministry for confirmations, ordinations, and the preservation of Tradition worldwide.

Source Guide

Read the General House announcement naming the four future bishops.

Source: FSSPX News: Future Bishops Announced

May 14, 2026

Fr. Pagliarani Addresses a Declaration of Catholic Faith to Pope Leo XIV

Event

The day after the Vatican warning against the planned consecrations, Fr. Davide Pagliarani, Superior General of the SSPX, addressed a Declaration of Catholic Faith to Pope Leo XIV from Menzingen on the Feast of the Ascension.

Why It Matters

This event is important because it presents the SSPX response not as a declaration of separation, but as a public profession of Catholic Faith addressed directly to the Pope. It reinforces the Society’s argument that the issue is fundamentally doctrinal: communion with the Church must be rooted first in the immutable Catholic Faith, not merely in canonical penalties or administrative submission.

May 13, 2026

The Vatican Warns Against the Planned Consecrations

Event

The Vatican warned that the planned episcopal consecrations would be performed without pontifical mandate.

Why It Matters

Rome repeats the accusation that episcopal consecrations without pontifical mandate would be schismatic. The SSPX defense answers that the decisive issue is not the external lack of mandate alone, but whether there is schismatic intent and whether necessity excuses the act.

Source Guide

Read the Vatican warning together with the SSPX canonical study on the distinction between unauthorized consecration and formal schism.

Source: Vatican Press Office: May 13, 2026 Warning

February 12–19, 2026

Fr. Pagliarani Meets Cardinal Fernández and Responds in Writing

Event

Fr. Pagliarani met Cardinal Fernández and later responded in writing on behalf of the SSPX General Council.

Why It Matters

This matters because the SSPX again shows it is willing to meet and discuss with Rome. But it refuses to postpone the consecrations because, in its judgment, the crisis itself remains unresolved.

Source Guide

Read the letter to Cardinal Fernández, especially where the SSPX welcomes doctrinal dialogue but refuses to delay the consecrations.

Source: FSSPX News: Letter to Cardinal Fernández

February 2, 2026

Fr. Pagliarani Announces New SSPX Episcopal Consecrations

Event

Fr. Davide Pagliarani announced that the SSPX would consecrate new bishops on July 1, 2026.

Why It Matters

The SSPX frames the decision as continuity with 1988: not a rejection of Rome, but a necessary act to preserve the priesthood, sacraments, and Tradition for souls.

Source Guide

Read the SSPX announcement page and interview with Fr. Pagliarani explaining the motive of necessity.

Source: SSPX Announcement of Bishops’ Consecrations

August - November 2025

Fr. Pagliarani Writes to Rome Before Announcing the Consecrations

Event

Before publicly announcing the July 1, 2026 consecrations, Fr. Davide Pagliarani wrote letters in August and November 2025 seeking to explain the SSPX’s dilemma and the need for new bishops.

Why It Matters

This strengthens the SSPX defense because it shows the Society did not act rashly or refuse contact with Rome.

July 16, 2021

Pope Francis Issues Traditionis Custodes

Event

Pope Francis restricted the use of the traditional Roman Missal.

Why It Matters

From the SSPX viewpoint, this confirmed Archbishop Lefebvre’s warnings: the traditional Mass remained under threat, and earlier reassurances could be reversed. It strengthened the argument that Tradition needs secure protection, not merely temporary permissions.

Source Guide

Read Traditionis custodes in light of the contrast with Summorum Pontificum.

Source: Vatican: Traditionis Custodes

January 17, 2019

The Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei Is Suppressed

Event

Pope Francis suppressed the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei and transferred its work to the doctrinal office.

Why It Matters

This reinforces that the SSPX issue is fundamentally doctrinal. For the SSPX, the dispute cannot be solved by mere paperwork while the crisis of doctrine and Tradition remains unresolved.

Source Guide

Read the Vatican notice explaining the transfer of competencies.

Source: Vatican: Suppression of Ecclesia Dei Commission

April 4, 2017

Rome Provides a Path for SSPX Marriages

Event

Rome established a way for SSPX marriages to be celebrated or recognized through diocesan delegation.

Why It Matters

This is another major concession. It shows Rome taking practical steps to protect the faithful who attend SSPX chapels, especially regarding sacramental validity.

Source Guide

Read the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei letter, especially the concern to ensure validity and remove anxiety for the faithful.

Source: Vatican Press Office: SSPX Marriages

2015–2016

Pope Francis Grants SSPX Priests Faculties for Confession

Event

Pope Francis granted SSPX priests faculties to validly and licitly hear confessions during the Jubilee Year of Mercy, then extended them.

Why It Matters

This is a major practical recognition of the SSPX’s ministry. The SSPX can argue that Rome itself acknowledged the spiritual needs of the faithful and the real pastoral work of SSPX priests, even before full canonical regularization.

Source Guide

Read Misericordia et misera, where Francis extends the faculty for SSPX priests to validly hear confessions.

Source: Vatican: Misericordia et Misera

July 2, 2009

Benedict XVI Issues Ecclesiae Unitatem

Event

Rome stated that the SSPX had no canonical status and that doctrinal questions remained unresolved.

Why It Matters

From the SSPX perspective, this is important because Rome itself identifies doctrine, not merely discipline, as the heart of the dispute.

Source Guide

Read the section explaining why SSPX questions were attached to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Source: Vatican: Ecclesiae Unitatem

March 10, 2009

Benedict XVI Clarifies the Meaning of the Remission

Event

Pope Benedict XVI explained that the lifting of excommunications did not resolve the doctrinal and canonical questions.

Why It Matters

Rome distinguished between the disciplinary penalty and the unresolved doctrinal dispute. For the SSPX, this confirms that the real conflict was doctrinal: Vatican II, religious liberty, ecumenism, collegiality, and the postconciliar reforms.

Source Guide

Read Benedict XVI’s letter explaining that the excommunication issue was disciplinary, while the canonical-status issue remained doctrinal.

Source: Vatican: Letter on the Remission

January 21, 2009

Rome Remits the Excommunications of the Four Surviving Bishops

Event

The Congregation for Bishops remitted the excommunications of Bishops Bernard Fellay, Bernard Tissier de Mallerais, Richard Williamson, and Alfonso de Galarreta.

Why It Matters

This is often called the “lifting” of the excommunications. From the SSPX side, it strongly supports the claim that the 1988 crisis was not a simple matter of permanent schism. However, Rome clarified that the SSPX still lacked regular canonical status.

Source Guide

Read the decree itself, especially where it says the remission was intended to promote unity and restore relations.

Source: Vatican: Remission of the Excommunication

July 7, 2007

Benedict XVI Issues Summorum Pontificum

Event

Pope Benedict XVI broadened the use of the traditional Roman Missal.

Why It Matters

This was a major vindication of one of Archbishop Lefebvre’s central claims: the traditional Roman Mass had never been lawfully abolished. For the SSPX, this confirmed that its decades-long defense of the old Mass had been justified.

Source Guide

Read Benedict XVI’s recognition that the older Roman Missal was never abrogated.

Source: Vatican: Summorum Pontificum

2000

The SSPX Pilgrimage to Rome Reopens Serious Contact

Event

The SSPX made a public pilgrimage to Rome, helping renew serious contact with Roman authorities.

Why It Matters

The public pilgrimage to Rome is important because it contradicts the claim that the Society had separated itself from the Church or rejected Rome as such.

Source Guide

Read SSPX material on renewed dialogue and relations with Rome after 1988.

Source: Responding to False Accusations

1988 onward

The SSPX Continues Its Apostolate Worldwide

Event

The Society continued its work through seminaries, priories, schools, chapels, missions, ordinations, confirmations, and the traditional Mass.

Why It Matters

The SSPX sees its survival and growth as evidence that the work was not sterile rebellion, but a providential preservation of traditional doctrine, the Mass, priestly formation, schools, missions, and sacraments.

Source Guide

Read the SSPX explanation of the state of necessity and how it connects the crisis to the defense of the Catholic Faith.

Source: State of Necessity

July 1–2, 1988

Rome Declares Excommunications and Issues Ecclesia Dei

Event

Rome declared excommunications, and Pope John Paul II issued Ecclesia Dei adflicta.

Why It Matters

Rome called the consecrations unlawful and described them as a schismatic act. The SSPX defense responds that consecrating bishops without papal mandate does not automatically prove schism if there is no intention to reject papal authority or create a separate Church.

Source Guide

Read the Vatican accusation in Ecclesia Dei, then compare it with the SSPX canonical defense.

Source: Vatican: Ecclesia Dei

June 30, 1988

Archbishop Lefebvre Acts under Higher Law to Preserve Tradition

Event

Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, together with Bishop Antonio de Castro Mayer, consecrated four SSPX priests as bishops, making clear that he was transmitting the fullness of the sacramental priesthood, not conferring governing jurisdiction.

Why It Matters

This source strengthens the SSPX defense by framing the consecrations under the Catholic principle of higher law. The argument is that human ecclesiastical law exists to serve the divine law and the salvation of souls. When a particular law is used in a way that would endanger Tradition and the priesthood, equity and necessity may justify an extraordinary act.

May 6, 1988

Archbishop Lefebvre Warns That an Uncertain Delay Would Force Him to Act

Event

The day after signing the protocol, Archbishop Lefebvre wrote to Cardinal Ratzinger expressing his disappointment that the episcopal consecration was being postponed to an undetermined date. He asked that the mandate be communicated by mid-June and stated that, if the answer was no, he would be obliged in conscience to proceed.

Why It Matters

This gives crucial context for the June 30 consecrations. The SSPX argument is not that Archbishop Lefebvre rejected agreement with Rome, but that he believed Rome was delaying the one concrete guarantee necessary for the Society’s survival: a bishop. After previous delays, he judged that another postponement would endanger Tradition and the faithful.

May 5, 1988

Archbishop Lefebvre Signs the Protocol of Agreement with Rome

Event

Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre and Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger signed a Protocol of Agreement intended to reconcile the SSPX with Rome. The text included a doctrinal declaration, a proposed canonical structure as a Society of Apostolic Life, a Roman commission, and the possibility of a bishop chosen from within the Society.

Why It Matters

This is very important for the SSPX defense because it shows Archbishop Lefebvre was not seeking separation from Rome. He signed a text promising fidelity to the Catholic Church and the Roman Pontiff, while also seeking concrete guarantees that Tradition would survive through a bishop from within the Society.

October 1986

The Assisi Meeting Confirms Archbishop Lefebvre’s Concerns

Event

Pope John Paul II gathered representatives of various religions at Assisi to pray for peace.

Why It Matters

From the SSPX perspective, Assisi confirmed the danger of postconciliar ecumenism and religious indifferentism.

1976

Archbishop Lefebvre Is Suspended

Event

Rome penalized Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre after he continued ordaining priests for the SSPX.

Why It Matters

The SSPX presents this as a consequence of Archbishop Lefebvre’s duty to preserve traditional priestly formation. The essential question becomes whether obedience to administrative commands can require the abandonment of Tradition.

Source Guide

Read SSPX’s historical account of the escalation between Rome and Archbishop Lefebvre.

Source: The Episcopal Consecration

1975

The SSPX Is Suppressed

Event

The local ordinary withdrew approval of the SSPX, with Roman support.

Why It Matters

From the SSPX perspective, this was the first major injustice. A canonically approved priestly society was suppressed because it resisted the doctrinal and liturgical revolution following Vatican II. The SSPX argues that this suppression did not lawfully extinguish its right to exist.

Source Guide

Read the section on the SSPX’s legal existence and the argument that the suppression was invalid or at least seriously contestable.

Source: The Legal Existence of the SSPX

November 21, 1974

Archbishop Lefebvre Issues His Declaration of Fidelity to Eternal Rome

Event

After the apostolic visitation at Écône, Archbishop Lefebvre issued his famous declaration, affirming adherence to Catholic Rome while refusing the neo-modernist and neo-Protestant tendencies manifested in the Council and postconciliar reforms.

Why It Matters

This declaration is central to the SSPX defense because it shows the Society’s position clearly: fidelity to Catholic Rome, not separation from Rome; resistance to modernist errors, not rebellion against the Church.

Source Guide

Read the section quoting Archbishop Lefebvre’s declaration: “We wholeheartedly adhere to Catholic Rome...”

Source: How Does the SSPX Justify the July 1, 2026 Consecrations?

November 1974

Apostolic Visitors Come to Écône

Event

Two apostolic visitors, Bishop Albert Descamps and Bishop Guillaume Onclin, came from Rome to Écône to examine the teaching being given at the seminary.

Why It Matters

According to the SSPX account, the visit confirmed Archbishop Lefebvre’s concern that the crisis was not merely disciplinary, but doctrinal.

February 18, 1971

The Holy See Praises the Newly Founded SSPX

Event

The Sacred Congregation for the Clergy issued a letter praising the Society of Saint Pius X, noting the approval of several ordinaries and expressing hope for its success.

Why It Matters

This is especially important because the SSPX received not only local diocesan approval, but also favorable recognition from Rome. This strengthens the argument that the Society’s origin was fully Catholic and that the later conflict must be understood as a later crisis, not as rebellion from the beginning.

Source Guide

As for the Sacred Congregation, the Priestly Society will certainly be able to conform to the end proposed by the Council...

Source: SSPX’s Founding Documents

November 1, 1970

The SSPX Is Canonically Erected

Event

Bishop François Charrière formally erected the International Priestly Society of Saint Pius X in the Diocese of Fribourg as a pia unio and approved its statutes for six years ad experimentum.

Why It Matters

This is one of the strongest points in the SSPX defense. The Society was not self-created or founded outside the Church. It was canonically erected by a diocesan bishop according to the normal authority of the Church.

Source Guide

Given the urgent necessity for the formation of zealous and generous priests conforming to the directives of the cited decree...

Source: SSPX’s Founding Documents

August 18, 1970

Authorization to Open the SSPX House of Studies

Event

Bishop François Charrière, Bishop of Fribourg, authorized Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre to open an international house of studies in Fribourg for priestly candidates.

Why It Matters

This is the first important foundation point. The SSPX did not begin as an unauthorized or independent movement. Its first house of priestly formation was opened with the permission of the local ordinary.

Source Guide

confirm the authorization which We gave to His Excellency Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, in an audience on June 6, 1969...

Source: SSPX’s Founding Documents

The SSPX Defense in Summary

Three claims at the heart of the SSPX position

1

The SSPX did not create a parallel Church.

The SSPX bishops do not claim ordinary territorial jurisdiction like diocesan bishops. They do not claim to replace the Pope or establish a separate hierarchy.

2

The consecrations were acts of necessity.

The SSPX argues that Archbishop Lefebvre acted under a grave state of necessity to preserve Tradition, priestly formation, and the sacraments.

3

Rome’s later actions partially vindicate the SSPX.

The remission of excommunications, confession faculties, marriage provisions, and continued dialogue show an internal Catholic crisis, not a simple outside sect.

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