Episcopal succession

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mardukm

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I thought CAF had a Canon Forum, but it doesn’t, so I’ll ask this here.

In any eparchy, the distinction between a co-adjutor bishop and an auxiliary bishop is that the co-adjutor has “the right of succession.”

Does “the right of succession” mean that if the proper ordinary dies, the co-adjutor bishop AUTOMATICALLY becomes the new proper ordinary of the eparchy? There is no process of election?

Blessings,
Marduk
 
I thought CAF had a Canon Forum, but it doesn’t, so I’ll ask this here.

In any eparchy, the distinction between a co-adjutor bishop and an auxiliary bishop is that the co-adjutor has “the right of succession.”

Does “the right of succession” mean that if the proper ordinary dies, the co-adjutor bishop AUTOMATICALLY becomes the new proper ordinary of the eparchy? There is no process of election?

Blessings,
Marduk
Pretty much. The Co-adjutor has already been elected, but for whatever reasons, the old bishop isn’t retired, dead, disobedient, nor otherwise facing immediate removal, and a continuity is strongly desired. Usually, such appointments in the Roman Church are for fairly orthodox and orthopraxic bishops about to retire, so that the new bishop has a year or two to learn the ins and outs of a particular diocese.

Note that a coadjutor is, in Roman praxis, commemorated with the outgoing bishop, while an auxiliary is only commemorated if present or the local exarch.
 
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