Bishop
Carlos Duarte Costa and
the beginning of the Catholic Apostolic National Churches
Bishop Carlos Duarte Costa was consecrated as the
Roman Catholic Diocesan Bishop of Botucatu, Brazil, on December 8,
1924, until certain views he expressed about treatment of the
Brazil's poor, by both the civil government and the Roman Catholic
Church in Brazil, caused his removal from the Diocese of Botucatu.
Bishop Duarte Costa was subsequently named Titular Bishop of Maura
by the late Pope Pius XII (Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli, formerly
Vatican Secretary of State until 1939, under Pope Pius XI). Bishop
Duarte Costa had been a strong advocate in the 1930's for reform of
the Roman Church; he challenged many of the key issues that the
Second Vatican Council would later thirty-five years take action
upon.
Bishop Duarte Costa's criticisms of the Holy See, particularly about
Vatican foreign policy during World War II toward Nazi Germany, were
not well received at the Vatican, and he was eventually separated
from the Roman Church by Pope Pius XII. This action was taken only
after Duarte Costa's strong and repeated public denunciations over
the fact that the Vatican Secretariat of State was engaged in the
issuance of Vatican Passports to some very high ranking German
ex-Nazis, a practice referred to as the "Ratline."
These former Nazi officials were among some of the most notorious of
war criminals, such as, the Auschwitz Concentration Camp Commandant
Adolf Eichmann and the infamous, Dr. Josef Mengele, the "Angel of
Death," both of whom traveled after the War on officially issued
Vatican Passports. Such criminals were in flight from trial to South
America in 1945.
The Brazilian Government came under the criticism of Bishop Duarte
Costa for collaboration with the Roman Church over these passports.
Bishop Duarte Costa espoused more pastoral church positions on
divorce, challenged mandatory celibacy for the clergy, and publicly
stated his contempt regarding abuses of papal power, including the
concept of Papal Infallibility, which the Bishop considered a
misguided and false dogma.
Infancy to Vocation
The founder of the legal entity of the Brazilian
Catholic Apostolic Church (ICAB) was born in the city of Rio de
Janeiro, on July 21, 1888 in the neighborhood of Saint Antonio, in
the residence of his uncle, then Eduardo Duarte Da Silva. Son of
Joao Matta Francisco Costa, and Maria Carlota Duarte Da Silva Costa,
he was baptized on September 3, 1888, by the priest Francisco
Goulart, and confirmed by Bishop Joao Eberhard.
At the age of nine, he made his first communion, on July 24, 1897,
in the Cathedral of Uberaba, at the hands of his uncle, Dom Eduardo
Duarte Silva. He concluded his primary studies in the Santa Rosa
College, in Rio De Janeiro. Later, his uncle was raised to the
Episcopal Dignity, being nominated Diocesan Bishop with his See in
Uberaba, exerting a dynamic and efficient apostolate in the
pasturing of the souls in his Diocese. As a child of nine years,
Carlos Duarte Costa, was taken by his uncle Dom Eduardo Duarte
Silva, now a Bishop, to Rome to study in the American College
Boarding School Pius-Latin, where he completed courses in the minor
seminary.
In 1905, he returned to Brazil for health reasons, having been
entered in the largest seminary in Uberaba, for the Congregation of
Augustinian Priests, where he finished his Philosophical and
Theological studies in the Major Seminary.
Deacon Carlos Duarte Costa was a senior cleric for his uncle, Dom
Eduardo Duarte Silva, in the Cathedral Church of Uberaba. In the
same Cathedral Church, Fr. Carlos Duarte Costa, celebrated his first
Mass, in a Cathedral filled with the faithful on May 04, 1911. After
his ordination, he returned to Rome to further his education, and
obtained a Doctorate in Theology, in the Gregorian Pontifical
University of Rome.
Returning from Rome, he worked with his uncle, Dom Eduardo in
Uberaba, as secretary of the Diocese. The priest, Fr. Carlos Duarte
Costa, was awarded with title of Monsignor for the publication of a
catechism for children. Soon afterwards, he was nominated Apostolic
Protonotary and General Secretary of the Archdiocese of Rio De
Janeiro, for Sebastiao Cardinal Helm of the Silveira Cintra,
succeeding Dom Cardinal Joaquin Arcoverde Albuquerque Cavalcante,
executing this function until May 24, 1923, when the Vicar General
of the Archdiocese of Rio De Janeiro was nominated.
Bishop
of Botucatu
Since the death of Dom Lacio in 1923, Botucatu
remained a vacant diocese. For his work, for his dynamism and
virtues, in the fulfillment of his duty in the Archdiocese of Rio De
Janeiro, on July 04, 1924, Pope Pius XI nominated Dom Carlos as the
Bishop of Botucatu. His Episcopal consecration occurred on December
8, 1924, in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Rio De Janeiro, being
consecrated by Cardinal Dom Sebastian Leme da Silveira Cintra,
having as assistants: Dom Alberto Jose Gonzales, Bishop of Ribeirao
Preto and Dom Benedict Pablo Alves de Souza, Diocesan Bishop of the
Holy Spirit.
Political and Social Influence
In the 1930’s, he was one of the great articulators
of Catholic Electoral Union, where Catholics also defended the
catholic vote against the politicians. It intended of this to form
and to preserve the Christian principle in the Laws and Acts of the
Politicians, as for example, the creation of a rule of law for the
divorce, that it is an act denied the poor persons for the Roman
Catholic Church, but widely supported for the Bible. In 1932, on the
occasion of the Constitutionalist Revolution, Dom Carlos Duarte
Costa formed a “Diocesan Battalion of the Hunters ", generally known
as the "Battalion of the Bishop" to fight on the side of the
Constitutionalist Troops. For this, he collected deep between the
fiduciary offices, he sold his pectoral gold cross with amethyst and
precious gems, and a farm of the Diocese, demonstrating his deep
love of the cause of freedom and to the democratic institutions.
Such acts caused great national repercussions; it had who supported
it, therefore being Dom Carioca Carlos, he raised the Sao Paulo flag
and he made many more compatriots; but he also had those who
disapproved, and were envious of his popularity, as he, acting as a
true Moses, was searching for all the methods and ways of freedom
for the Brazilian people.
Ecclesiastical Renovation and Persecution
In 1936, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa made his second
"ad-limina" visit to Rome, to visit Pope Pius XI, in the Vatican. He
presented him various requests for the clergy of his diocese and,
consequently, for the clergy of Brazil. He requested permission for
the maintenance of the largest seminary in his diocese, the
celebration of the Holy Mass and the administration of the
sacraments in the vernacular language or either, in Portuguese, the
permission for clergy to marry, and the abolition of auricular
confession, replacing it with general or communitarian confession,
distribution of the Holy Communion to the laity under both species
of the consecrated Bread and Wine, the institution of the Permanent
Diaconate for the married laypeople, the celebration of the Holy
Mass "Versus Populi", or either, facing the people, with the
Sacrario detras of the Altar, the organization of a Council of
Advice, constituted of Bishops to govern the Church, together with
the Pope, the participation of the laypersons in the administration
of the Word, of the Eucharistic and the Evangelization. These
requests made by Bishop Duarte Costa were not accepted by the Pope
of that time, but years later, Pope John XXIII placed some in
practice through Vatican Council II. Some claims have been made that
Dom Carlos Duarte Costa was regarded poorly by the Roman Curia of
the Vatican. After twelve years leading the Diocese of Botucatu, Dom
Carlos was obliged to renounce due the two great problems: his
involvement in the differing political position from the Roman
Church, and what he considered the poor administration of the
property of the Diocese, that he placed at the disposal of the poor,
disobeying the Pope.
Due to the construction of the new Cathedral, of the Orphanage and
the College, in addition to other projects, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa
initiated the sale of some property of the Diocese, to be able to
erase the debt, with the purpose to support, and to help the hungry
poor persons of the time. The benefits of his shining administration
are still standing in the Sao Paulo city of Botucatu, as a testimony
of his capacity and determination.
Political Pressure and Forced Resignation
President Getulio Vargas, infuriated with Dom Carlos
Duarte Costa, for his having convinced a battalion of soldiers from
the Constitutional Troops to join him in his struggle against the
corruption of the government, President Vargas asked the Holy See
for the removal of Dom Carlos Duarte Costa from the Diocese of
Botucatu.
The Vatican could not do it directly, so the Apostolic Nuncio in
Brazil entered into an agreement with the Secretary of the Diocese
of Botucatu to obtain the resignation of Dom Carlos Duarte Costa, as
Diocesan Bishop of Botucatu. This evil and perverse secretary, in
the daily documents and reports that Dom Carlos Duarte Costa always
had to sign, placed the resignation letter within a series of
documents, which Dom Carlos Duarte Costa signed as a result of the
deception.
The Diocesan of Botucatu informed the Holy See that Dom Carlos
Duarte Costa had signed the document mistakenly without reading it.
This occurred in early 1937. The Holy See renounced claims that it
was a forgery, based on the statements of the secretary of the
Diocese, and the resignation was accepted by Pope Pious XI on
October 6, 1937. After the acceptance of the resignation, Dom Carlos
was appointed Titular Bishop of Maura, an extinct Diocese.
Titular
Bishop of Maura
After his "forced resignation", Dom Carlos Duarte
Costa, definitively abandoned the life of rich capitalism, imposed
by the Vatican, and went to live humbly, in the city of Rio De
Janeiro as Bishop Emeritus de Botucatu, with title of titular Bishop
of Maura, where he obtained the determined support of his protector,
Cardinal Dom Sebastiao Leme da Silveira Cintra, who granted
permission to him to keep the particular Chapel, with the Blessed
Sacrament in its residence, as well as presiding over marriage, to
celebrate festive and solemn masses and to manage the Sacrament of
the Chrism in the parishes where he was invited by the respective
vicars.
At this time he established the Messenger magazine "Nossos", a
vehicle to spread the devotion to Our Holy Mother. Dom Carlos Duarte
Costa, always courageous, he analyzed all the human problems, of the
necessary goods, of the degeneration of the Church of Rome.
Divergence from the Roman Church
What Dom Carlos had carried through in Botucatu, he
was to start alone. Speaking against the domination that oppressed
the poor Brazilian people and mainly the sacrifices of the work
force, he renounced the luxury and material products obtained
through their oppressed labor. Dom Carlos Duarte Costa intensified
his politic work and was critical of the efforts of the Roman
Catholic Church.
Dom Carlos Duarte Costa had formed a variety of attitudes against
the politics of the Roman Catholic Church. In 1944, Dom Carlos
Duarte Costa wrote the preface of the book "the Soviet Power",
written by Rev. Hewlett Johnson, the dean of Canterbury, of the
Anglican Church. Such an act had very positives repercussions in all
the country: How a Catholic Bishop could defend a Protestant Bishop?
He criticized the periodicals and the Encyclicals from the Pope,
specifically, Rerum Novarum of Pope Leo XIII and Quadragesimo Ano of
Pope Pius XI and Divina Redemptoris, he denounced the Roman Catholic
priests of German and Italian nationality, residing in Brazil, as
agents in the service of German Nazism and Italian Fascism and as
guilty of the destruction of the Brazilian warships for German
submarines.
Dom Carlos Duarte Costa went very well in Rio de Janeiro, under the
protection of Archbishop Cardinal Dom Sebastiao Leme da Silveira
Cintra, but with the death of his protector and friend, was
nominated as Archbishop of Rio De Janeiro, Dom Jayme de Barros
Camara. The Cardinal persecuted him, and pursued it to the extreme
cutting all the Episcopal exemptions to him that had been granted by
his predecessor, in the Archdiocese of Rio De Janeiro.
On July 10, 1944, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa was forbidden to preach
the Gospel and to hear the confessions of the faithful, the result
of a decision pronounced by the Ecclesiastical Chamber in
retaliation for the pronouncements of the Bishop of Maura against
the dogmas and doctrines of subjugation taught by the Roman Catholic
Church.
Excommunication
On June 06, 1944, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa, by the
order of the government, facilitated by the Apostolic Nuncio joining
the Brazilian fascists, was imprisoned and led to Belo Horizonte -
MG, where he was accused of being a communist sympathizer, and
remained imprisoned until 06 September 1944, when the order against
the Brazilian Association of the Press was lifted, the government of
Mexico and the United Nations, intervened together to the Brazilian
Government through its intermediaries of their embassies in favor of
Dom Carlos Duarte Costa.
Several warnings had been given to Dom Carlos Duarte Costa, from the
Roman Apostolic administration. But the more he was warned, more he
defended the Christian faith, the laborers, the existing native land
against the fascists and Nazis in the Church and its hierarchy.
Without any hope of the submission of Dom Carlos Duarte Costa, the
Vatican, enraged, laid against Dom Carlos Duarte Costa, Bishop of
Maura, the penalty of excommunication on July 02, 1945.
The
Founding of ICAB
When he learned of the excommunication, Dom Carlos
Duarte Costa, responded, establishing the Brazilian Catholic
Apostolic National Church (ICAB) on July 6, 1945. The extract of the
statutes of the new Church was published in Federal official
gazette, page 12, 637, July 25, 1945. The Brazilian Catholic
Apostolic Church was registered in book No 2 of the Civil Societies,
under Number 107.966 of the Book A, Number 04.
On August 18, 1945, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa published in the press
of the world, his wonderful "Manifesto to the Nation", where he
criticizes the Roman Catholic Church and he spoke of his established
Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church.
Although Dom Carlos Duarte Costa, already had left the Roman
Catholic Church, and was no longer a member, acting as a bishop of
that church in any way, on July 24, 1946, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa,
was declared, "excommunicado vitando", that is, excommunicated to
the severest degree that exists, to prevent Roman Catholics from
having anything to do with him whatsoever. This excommunication for
his “schismatic audacity” was to make him “return to the unity of
the true Church.”
Persecution against ICAB
When Dom Carlos Duarte Costa established ICAB, he
used the same vestments, insignia and the same rites of the Roman
Catholic Church, therefore, the cardinals of Sao Paulo and Rio De
Janeiro had appealed to the Minister of Justice and the President of
the Brazilian Republic.
On September 27, 1948, the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church was
closed, by virtue of legal action of the Courts of the Republic, Dr.
Haroldo Teixeira Valladao, July 07, 1948, published the decision in
the official Federal gazette of September 25, of the same year.
On 30 of November 1948, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa entered in the
Federal Court of Appeals, and with a Writ of Mandamus, petitioned
for the Judges Carpenter Luiz and Benjamin, requiring the reopening
of ICAB.
The Brazilian Government, through their intermediary of the Minister
of Justice, Dr. Agamenon Magalhaes, on September 22, 1948, said,
"…it is not intention of the Government to submit the heads, or
fiduciary offices of the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church to any
constraint in its freedom of worship, while it uses vestments,
insignia, badges and different rites than that of the Roman Catholic
Church”.
Reopening the Churches, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa, instituted in ICAB,
Rites, vestments, proper insignias, and gray cassocks for the
Priests. He also instituted gray soutanes, for the bishops grey
soutanes with red cinctures, to obey the order of the Minister of
Justice, Dr. Agamenon Magalhaes, in order not to be confused with
the Roman Church.
The Church Becomes Global
Dom Carlos Duarte Costa sent missionaries to other
countries to establish Catholic Apostolic National Churches there.
Some of these early missionaries were able to establish missions,
while others were pursued, hunted, and even tortured and imprisoned.
In spite of persecution by governments, at the behest of other
Churches, the concept of the Catholic Apostolic National Church took
root. The International Communion resulting from that lifelong
pursuit is the, "Igrejas Católicas Apostólicas Nacionais". In
English, it is called the "Worldwide Communion of Catholic Apostolic
National Churches", or simply, the ICAN Communion.
In
Death, Exalted to the Altars
Dom Carlos Duarte Costa guided, directed and
governed the Brazilian Church with a firm hand for 16 years, until
he fell asleep in Christ, in Rio De Janeiro March 26, 1961, on Palm
Sunday. At that time, Dom Carlos Duarte Costa, at 73 years age, had
50 Priests and 37 Bishops. The death of Dom Carlos Duarte Costa
moved all of the Brazilian people, mainly in the City of Rio De
Janeiro. Igreja-Mae and Couto Street of fiduciary offices had been
overcrowded with people. The people wanted to see their Shepherd. It
was a burial worthy of a Bishop who was very much loved by the
people. The coffin with the mortal remains of Dom Carlos Duarte
Costa proceeded down Igreja-Mae, on Couto No 54 Street, where Dom
Carlos Duarte Costa was entombed with all the honors of a Pontiff,
in the presence of the Bishops of ICAB.
The life of Dom Carlos Duarte Costa was irrepressibly evangelical,
being distinguished for his absolute chastity, devotion the Holy
Virgin Maria and the Eucharistic, where he passed several hours
daily, in worship of the most august Sacrament of the Altar.
Therefore, all who have had appealed to the Triune God, through his
intercession, had been blessed with favors and miracles. Due to
everything he had done, he was granted the honor of the altars by
the national episcopate on July 4 – 6, 1970, on the Street of the
Couto, n 54, Penha Quarter, in Rio De Janeiro, with the title of
“Saint Carlos of Brazil