Caphiric Church

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Caphiric Catholic Church
Caphirium Ecclesia Catholica
ClassificationCatholic
OrientationCaphiric Catholicism
ScriptureBible
PolityEpiscopal
StructureCommunion
PopeGregory XVII
Patriarch of Venceia
and All Sarpedon
Abp. Jenius Gaius
RegionCaphiria
LanguageCaphiric Latin and Latin
HeadquartersSaint Paugenia's Cathedral
FounderJesus Christ, according to sacred tradition
ReunionCatholic Church (2017)
Separated fromCatholic Church (1615)
Members~700 million
Missionaries10 million

The Caphiric Catholic Church, formerly and commonly known as the Imperial Church of Caphiria, is a particular church in full communion with the Pope and the worldwide Catholic Church. It is by far the largest particular church, with over one billion congregants, and the only one to worship in the Caphiric rite. It is the established church and was the de facto state religion of the Imperium of Caphiria for over three centuries. The primate of the church is the Patriarch of Venceia and All Sarpedon.

Caphiria played a major role in the second wave of Christian proselytization during the Middle Ages. Imperator Marius Oratonius was baptized into the Catholic Church in 1079, and all Caphiria would be nominally Christianized by the end of the 12th century. Caphiria's significant territorial expansion during the Late Middle Ages was officially sanctioned by the Pope, who granted to the Imperators the title "Protector of Christendom." While the Popes were increasingly assertive of their temporal and spiritual authority in Levantia during this time, the Caphiric Church was left alone, as the Papacy depended on the tithes and prestige afforded by the Sarpedonian bishoprics. The relationship between the Popes and the Imperators began to break down due to the emerging Protestant Revolt in the early 16th century. Caphiria was insulated from the struggle, but theological tensions with the Urceopolitan church had long simmered beneath the surface, and the Imperators took advantage of ecclesiastical division and the Pope's focus on crushing Protestantism to increase imperial authority. The Caphiric church's position was further weakened by the growth of classicism in Caphiria, which called for a Christianity that conformed to ancient Caphirian virtues and would restore the religious positions enjoyed by the Imperator during the Principate. The triumph of the Counter-reformation and the resulting growth of Urcean influence in Levantia and over the Church further strained relations. Beginning in the early 1550s, Caphiria began to protestant refugees. The first official step towards schism was in 1560 when clergy were required to make an oath of loyalty to the Imperator, and the process was completed in with the Great Schism of 1615, when Pius XII took the title pontifex maximus by acclimation of the Caphirian bishops. For many years after the Schism, pro-Levantine Catholic factions continued to challenge the leadership of the new Caphiric Church. These factions, and the people that supported the Levantine Church still, were known as Traditionalists and were heavily persecuted and executed under heresy laws. This period is known as the Months of Bloody Sundays as it was common practice for the Imperator to simply execute any people who were not coming to church in protest. Traditionalists were executed under legislation that punished anyone judged guilty of heresy against the Caphiric Church. Ultimately, the Caphiric Church went through a series of reformations (The Reformations of 1627), and the church was renamed the Imperial Catholic Church. The Church embraced the Caphiric Pyramid and Venceism among other dogmas during this period. While it remains essentially Catholic, these reformations contributed to distinct, partially protestantized, theological and liturgical expressions in the Caphiric Church.

Beginning in the late 2000s, the detente between Urcea and Caphiria led to a renewed ecumenical dialogue between the Caphirian and Levantine churches. in 2017, the Eight Points Agreement was signed by the Imperator and Pope, facilitating the restoration of full communion and the preservation of the Caphiric church's autonomy and spiritual patrimony. The Agreement also formally erected the Caphiric Church as a particular church within Catholicism with its own set of canon law and only unique liturgical rite.

Virtually all of Caphiric Catholics live within the Imperium of Caphiria, or former Caphirian territories. Full participation in the sacramental life of each church is available to all communicant members. Due to the historical link to Caphiria, some member churches are known as "Caphiric Catholic," such as the Caphiric Church of Zaclaria.

Governance

Patriarchate

Diocesan administration

Monastic orders

Within the Caphiric Church, monasticism is generally prohibited with a few notable exceptions. Monastic orders were common in Caphiria prior to the schism, but with the schism their lands were seized and the monks within were pressed into service as military chaplains and other similar duties. The orders were not reestablished following the end of the schism.

Doctrine

Trinity

Nature of Christ

Church

consists of all believers

Justification

good works, private masses

Judgement

Free Will and Predestination

Law and Gospel

Theology of the Cross

Communion of Saints

Mary

Sacraments

The Caphiric church teaches that the sacraments are efficacious signs of grace instituted by Jesus Christ in the New Covenant for the succor of his Church on earth. The numbering of the sacraments was controversial in the early post-Reformation church. Ritualists argued that there were seven sacraments (though within this group, there were divisions on whether all sacraments were equal), while pietists, more closely aligned with the theology of the Levantine Reformation, argued that only the Eucharist and Baptism were sacraments. The ritualist party was eventually victorious with the support of the imperial government and eventually reached a compromise on the division of the sacraments into ecclesiastical sacraments: Confirmation, Extreme Unction, Ordination, and Matrimony, which they saw as instituted by the Church, and evangelical sacraments: Baptism, the Eucharist, and Penance, which they saw as instituted clearly by Jesus Christ in Sacred Scripture. The Caphiric Church has always taught that only presbyters ordained in the line of the Apostles can administer valid sacraments and that sacraments are valid ex opere operato, regardless of the spiritual state of the presbyter administering them.

The Caphiric understanding of the ecclesiastical sacraments as "instituted by the Church" was a source of controversy during the negotiations leading up to the Eight Points Agreement. Some within the Catholic and Caphiric churches contended that this meant that such sacraments were without inherent efficacy and were in opposition to the Catholic doctrine that all sacraments were established by Christ. The understanding reached affirmed that the ecclesiastical sacraments were established by Christ, and had inherent efficacy, but that the Caphiric church could teach that this establishment by Christ was through the Church and not personal. The Caphiric Church also continues to emphasize the special character of the evangelical sacraments as imparting direct, personal grace that is necessary for salvation.

Evangelical sacraments

Ecclesiastical sacraments

Melchisedechianism

Worship and Practice

Liturgy

sacrificial aspect of the mass

Devotions

Disciplines

Texts

Scripture

The Credo

The Credo - the statement of orthodox faith within the mass as formulated by early Church councils - remains in use in the Caphiric Church and is repeated at each liturgy. During the schismatic era, various minor alterations were made to the creed. The most dramatic was the alteration of the conclusion of the creed, which added an additional paragraph known as the "Imperial Credo" after the profession of belief in the Holy Spirit but before that of profession of belief in the Church. This language was included to coincide with adoption of the Caphiric Pyramid as church dogma in 1810, but remained in the creed after its removal from church teaching. The pre-2017 Caphiric credo is reproduced below in Ænglish, with schismatic additions in italics.

I believe in one God,
the Father almighty,
maker of heaven and earth,
of all things visible and invisible.
I believe in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the Only Begotten Son of God,
born of the Father before all ages.
God from God, Light from Light,
true God from true God,
begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father;
through him all things were made.
For us men and for our salvation
he came down from heaven,
and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary,
and became man.
For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate,
he suffered death and was buried,
and rose again on the third day
in accordance with the Scriptures.
He ascended into heaven
and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory
to judge the living and the dead
and his kingdom will have no end.
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life,
who proceeds from the Father and the Son,
who with the Father and the Son is adored and glorified,
who has spoken through the prophets and through the authority on earth.
I believe in the sacred responsibility of the Imperator,
Who from the Father receives power and dominion,
From the son Grace,
And from the Holy Spirit wisdom.
I believe in one, holy, imperial, catholic and apostolic Church.
I confess one Baptism for the forgiveness of sins
and I look forward to the resurrection of the dead
and the life of the world to come. Amen.

Writings of the Latter Fathers

In addition to the writings of the Church Fathers that are held in esteem throughout Catholicism, a series of writings from the generation of the time of the schism, as well as from the time immediately before it, are revered by Caphiric Catholics. These texts, known as the Writings of the Latter Fathers, dealt with Catholicism in Caphiria and its relationship to the contemporary world of the 16th and 17th centuries. The texts include treatises refuting certain elements of Protestantism while leaving the door open for others, as well as condemnations of the errors of Islam and ultramontanism. Many of these texts were prohibited or refuted by orthodox Catholic authorities and writers at the time, but since the schism many of these texts have been allowed. Most of them have been reconciled with orthodox belief, though a handful of writers - the strictest adherents of Venceism - have been removed from scholarly and spiritual circulation.

Worship books

Culture

Calendar and Major feasts

The liturgical calendar of the church bears a close resemblance to the Levantine General Calendar, from which it diverged following the Schism of 1615. After the reunion with Urceopolis, the existing calendar has been provisionally maintained, with modifications to be made should the cause of any post-split saint on the Caphirian calendar be found lacking. Structurally, the only major difference between the Levantine and Caphirian calendars is the use of the term feria. In the Caphirian calendar, as a result of the reforms carried out following the schism, a feria (plural: feriae) refers to Sundays and feast days (as the term was used in the pagan era). In the Levantine calendar, a feria is a weekday without a feast.

Several feasts enjoy significantly more prominence in the Caphiric world than they do in the rest of Christendom: Martinmas, Saint George's Day, and Michaelmas are all public holidays and are the most important public holidays outside of Christmas, Easter, and All Saints. All three commemorate military saints, a reflection of the high degree of militarization in Caphirian society. Michaelmas is the primary armed forces day in Caphiria and is marked each year by a military parade in Venceia. Martinmas is a remembrance day for all Caphirian war dead, while Saint George's Day is a commemoration of Caphiria's various historical military triumphs.

Cults

Architecture

Most Caphiric churches eschew the traditional basilica or long cruciform designs common in churches in Levantia, instead opting for "short" cruciform designs, making most of the body of the church essentially a square. The basic layout of a Caphiric church is not essentially different than that of the rest of the Occidental Catholic Church, with a location for the lay faithful to stand, an elevator altar typically facing eastward, and a tabernacle for retaining the consecrated bread. Several key differences exist within the worship space, however. Large and ornate rood screens are present in nearly every Caphiric church, and the rood screens in many cases nearly entirely obscure the view of the sanctuary, bordering on being a templon, though Caphiric canon law dictates that the tabernacle must be visible. Pews are extremely uncommon in most Caphiric churches despite becoming the norm in Levantia, and accordingly the Caphiric Rite liturgy has looser, but still defined, rubrics for participation by lay people. In their place, most Caphiric churches have benches, typically of stone or marble, lining the interior walls of the church building, and during most parts of the liturgy the elderly, children, and others may remain seated as the need presents itself.

Art

Music

Clergy

Terminology

Education

Marriage

Dress

Priestly magisterial duties

All clerics within the Caphiric Church are invested with a minor magistracy of Caphiria upon their ordination, symbolizing their responsibility to the State but also their role as a "minister of public good". The magistracies vary based on the level of the cleric, with most priests being invested as pro-aediles, though rarely some are invested instead as nominal decemvirs or other positions.

Social Teaching and Role

Economics and social justice

Services

The Family

Abortion and Birth control

Oecumene

Missionary work

Ecumenical dialogue and teaching

Interfaith dialogue and teaching