

The "Question & Answer Section" contains
the most commonly asked questions, along
with answers, about our Church.
Married clergy isn't something new. St. Peter
himself was married, and throughout Christian history there have been married
deacons, priests and bishops. Celibacy is not a requirement to be a priest.
Within the Eastern Orthodox Churches married deacons and priests are
commonplace, and also in the Eastern Rite of the Roman Catholic Church, deacons
and priests are married. In certain circumstances, converts to the Roman
Catholic Church who had been, for instance, Episcopalian or Anglican married
priests, who are approved by the Vatican, are ordained as Roman Catholic
priests, and serve in parishes and other ministries as married men who are
Roman Catholic priests. So you see, the fact that we ordain single and married
men to the priesthood isn't something new or unusual, but married priests have
always been a part of the Church.
No! We acknowledge the Holy Father as "First
Among Equals", Bishop of
A priest does both these things, he pastors (protects and looks out
for) the people of the parish or mission he is assigned to, and he ministers to
them (cares for and teaches) the Word of God, the Sacraments and daily concerns.
A priest is a sacramentally ordained individual, who, as a result of
ordination, has imparted upon his soul an indelible character as a result of
ordination. This indelible character is a gift of God through the Holy Spirit,
and is that sacred grace and spiritual authority that Christ gave to His
Apostles and the Apostles passed on to other men within the church through
prayer and the laying on of hands. This authority was given to the Elders of
the
Absolutely! We believe that in the Eucharist, we
receive Christ, Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity, as He Himself instructed us in
Holy Writ, and which has been the unified testimony of the Church, without
exception, from the Apostles, the
Our Statement of Faith is to be interpreted
through the lens of understanding created by the Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed, the seven Oecumenical Councils of the
Church and two thousand years of theological expression of orthodox Christian
faith. Our Statement of Faith is not a substitute but rather a reaffirmation of
those basic theological principles, particularly in today's world as
sociopolitical forces seek to redefine Catholicism, the Sacraments and Catholic
Theology. We hold to the long-held and traditional expressions and
understanding of Catholic theology, rather than submit to the “spirit of
the age”.
Our Apostolic Succession originates from Jesus Christ,
through His Apostles. Our apostolic succession derives from the Roman Catholic
Church through Bishop Carlos Duarte Costa, Bishop of
The timeless witness of the Church is that Christ
Himself chose the Apostles, instructed them and imbued them with the Holy
Spirit. These Apostles, even being more graced through Christ's teaching after
His resurrection, maintain the process of selecting men for the tasks of
sacramental ministry. We here today, do not have the authority to change that
witness because individuals may not understand or like it. Nor do we dismantle
that witness due to a perceived slight, based upon a twentieth-century
socio-political agenda, which seeks to "fix" the Word of God, so that
it is, finally, "correct". Arguments that offer that Christ was
unable to select women due to the culture of the time, fall on their face, in
light of the fact that there were many religions headed by
"priestesses" or matriarchs at the time, that, obviously not Jewish,
were nonetheless, very strong in followers and very popular, as revealed by
Holy Writ. Christ broke many social and cultural taboos of the time, went where
He pleased, chose whom He wanted and what they would do, and spoke the truth
boldly and directly. The truth is that Men and Women, being of equal dignity
and worth, can be equal and at the same time unique, as God made us. The truth
is that there are spiritual tasks that both share, and there are spiritual
tasks, which are unique to each, as God has determined. Human pride, arrogance
and hubris blinds us to this truth, and prevents us from the blessings He has
planned for our lives.
Efforts to "modernize" the Church by
abolishing annulment and recognizing civil divorce, same-sex marriages,
inclusive language bibles and other such movements reject and overturn the
teachings and fundamental tenets of Catholicism, until what you are left with
is not Catholicism at all. Such efforts require Churches to surrender their
theology to become part of a socio-theological gathering that introduces
concepts and belief systems that are not Catholic in particular, nor Christian
in general. We reject any effort to trivialize our Catholicity, brought about
by new faces placed upon old heresies. An "effort to bring commonality and
social acceptance, through political correctness in order to recognize the
equality of all religion" is Indifferentialism
and Social -Theology, and it is wrong. God created man in His image; we don't
get to return the favor! Holy Writ admonishes us to "stand fast to what
you have been taught…"
You can expect to encounter a small group of
prayerful people committed to making Christ a part of their everyday lives. You
can expect to see priests, along with their wives and families, a part of the
regular lives of the people of the parish. You can expect to see a parish which
is truly a part of the lives of the people of the parish, and that the people
truly are the church, and make the community thrive and develop. No one is a number,
and many parishes host special projects, missions, and ministries which are run
by the laity and not the clergy. We are a church of tent-makers, establishing
parishes where there is a need, and it is requested.
While it's true that many organized churches are
losing members, we have been steadily growing and increasing in membership.
People want orthodox theology, and when churches stray from that, people leave.
We have remained true to the theological expression of Catholicism, as
practiced and understood over two hundred years ago as its inception as a
separate Catholic community of faith, and as blossomed again sixty years ago in
Brazil, through Bishop Carlos Duarte Costa. We have
met multitudes of people seeking a church that has remained faithful to the
orthodox expression and practice of Catholic theology, and has rejected
modernism, indifferentialism and other problems we
all face today. The Catholic Apostolic National Church, remain true to
Traditional Catholicism.
In spite of the immutable nature of Holy Writ and
Sacred Tradition, several groups have sprung up, which engage in a variety of
practices that are not Catholic theology, and cannot be supported by Holy Writ
or Sacred Tradition. One is not "Catholic" because they claim to be, one
is Catholic as evidenced by the faith that they profess and practice.
National Catholicism is not an opportunity to throw away our Catholic heritage
and history, and doing so necessarily means that you are, in fact, not National
Catholic, but rather something else. "Cafeteria Catholicism" is
really no Catholicism at all.
Why Do Catholics Call Their
Priests "Father"? Didn't Christ Say, "Call No Man 'Father"?
Why Do Catholics Call
Mary "Ever-Virgin"? The Bible Says That Jesus Had Brothers.
I Have Heard That
Catholics Worship Statues. Is That True?
I Belong To A Bible Church, Don’t You Wish You Had The Assurance Of
Salvation?
How Can You Explain Why
Catholics Pray To Saints?
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ESBN:
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