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SSPX appeals excommunication decree: what canon law allows

SSPX appeals excommunication decree: what canon law allows
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The Society of St. Pius X filed a formal canonical appeal on July 13 against its excommunication by the Holy See, announced July 2. The penalties remain in effect during the appeal process. Aleteia spoke with a canon lawyer about what this procedure means and what comes next.

What happened

On July 2, 2026, the Vatican issued a decree of excommunication against the Society of St. Pius X, the traditionalist group founded by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre in 1970. The SSPX has operated in an irregular canonical status for decades, celebrating the Traditional Latin Mass without Vatican approval and ordaining priests without papal mandate.

Eleven days later, the SSPX announced it had filed a recourse — the canonical term for an administrative appeal — challenging the decree. Canonist Pierre Chaffard-Luçon explained to I.Media that while this appeal is procedurally legitimate, it does not suspend the excommunication penalties. Members of the SSPX remain excommunicated while the Vatican reviews their objections.

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Why this matters

The SSPX has existed in canonical limbo since 1988, when Archbishop Lefebvre illicitly ordained four bishops without papal approval, triggering automatic excommunications. Pope Benedict XVI lifted those excommunications in 2009, and Pope Francis granted SSPX priests limited faculties to hear confessions. This new decree represents a hardening of the Vatican’s stance after decades of attempted reconciliation.

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The canonical appeal process allows the SSPX to formally contest the grounds for excommunication, but canon law is clear: penalties imposed by decree remain binding unless explicitly suspended by a competent authority. The SSPX’s filing does not restore its members to communion with Rome. It opens a legal review, not a pastoral negotiation.

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For Catholic readers

The SSPX situation is complex, spanning liturgy, ecclesiology, and obedience to papal authority. If you encounter traditionalist Catholics affected by this decree, the Catechism’s teaching on unity remains the guide: “The sole Church of Christ… subsists in the Catholic Church, which is governed by the successor of Peter” (CCC 816). Pray for reconciliation and for all who seek the fullness of communion.

Sources:
1. Aleteia — canonist interview on SSPX appeal

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