Apostolic Succession and the Worlwide Anglican Church
To understand how Bishop George Alexander McGuire secured a lineage linking him to Eastern
Orthodoxy, Oriental Orthodoxy, and Rome, we have to look at the fascinating, colorful, and controversial figure
who consecrated him: Archbishop Joseph René Vilatte.
When McGuire broke from the white-dominated Episcopal Church to form the African Orthodox
Church (AOC) in 1921, he faced a massive hurdle. He
wanted his church to be fully independent and Black-led, but he also insisted on having valid
Apostolic Succession—the
unbroken chain of bishops laying hands on bishops tracing all the way back to the original
Apostles.
He
approached the Russian and Greek Orthodox churches in America, but they demanded full administrative control
over his Black congregation, which McGuire refused. Instead,
he negotiated with Vilatte, the Metropolitan of the American
Catholic Church,
who consecrated McGuire as a bishop on September
28, 1921,
in Chicago. 
Through Vilatte, McGuire inherited a complex, multi-branch lineage of "valid but
irregular" orders that weaves through several historic traditions:
1. The Eastern / Oriental Orthodox Connection (The See of Antioch)
The strongest canonical claim in McGuire's lineage comes from the Syriac Orthodox Church of Antioch (an Oriental Orthodox body).
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In 1892, Joseph René Vilatte traveled to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka).
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Under an official Patriarchal Bull issued by
Ignatius Peter III
, the Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch, Vilatte was consecrated as an Archbishop for
America.
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The consecration was performed by
Mar Julius I
(Antonio Francisco Xavier Alvares), an Archbishop of the Syriac Orthodox Church.
Because the See of Antioch traces its succession directly to the Apostle Peter, this gave
Vilatte—and subsequently Bishop McGuire—a direct, documented lineage linking the African Orthodox Church to
historic Middle Eastern and Asian Orthodoxy. Early
editions of the AOC’s magazine, The
Negro Churchman,
regularly printed genealogical charts tracing McGuire’s lineage straight back to the ancient Patriarchate of
Antioch to prove their legitimacy.
2. The Connection to Bishops "In Communion with Rome"
The link to Rome via Vilatte’s lineage is more indirect, coming through historic European
split-offs and Vilatte's personal ecclesiastical maneuvering, rather than an official, direct blessing from the
Pope.
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The Old Catholic Succession: Before heading to the Orthodox, Vilatte had been
ordained a priest by the Old Catholic Church in Switzerland. The Old Catholic Church was made up of
European Roman Catholic bishops, priests, and parishes that broke away from Rome in 1870 over the dogma
of Papal Infallibility. Because they were originally Roman Catholic, they possessed undisputed Roman
Catholic holy orders. Rome considers Old Catholic sacraments and orders "valid but illicit" (meaning
they are real, but performed outside the permission of the Pope).
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Vilatte’s Reconciliation with Rome:
Vilatte was a deeply volatile figure who shifted alignments constantly. He was excommunicated by Rome twice,
but later in life—from 1925 until his death in 1929—he formally renounced his independent actions and
was reconciled to the Roman Catholic Church, dying in a French monastery. While
his independent consecrations (like McGuire's in 1921) were done outside Rome's authority, Roman
Catholic sacramental theology generally dictates that validly ordained bishops carry an indelible mark,
meaning the orders they pass on remain sacramentally "real" even if
illicit.
The Historical Takeaway: By having Joseph René Vilatte lay hands on him, Bishop
McGuire bypassed the racist roadblocks of the Western denominations of his day. He successfully stitched
together an independent Black church that technically held lines of succession rooted in the ancient Orthodox See of Antioch, laced with the liturgical validity of Rome's historic European lineages.
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