David Allen Bawden (September 22, 1959 – August 2, 2022),[1] who took the name Pope Michael I, was an American conclavist claimant to the papacy. Bawden believed that the Catholic Church had apostatized from the Catholic faith since Vatican II, and that there had been no legitimate popes elected since the death of Pope Pius XII in 1958. In 1990 he was elected pope by a group of six laypeople, including himself and his parents. In 2011, he was ordained a priest and consecrated a bishop by an Independent Catholic bishop.
Early life and education
Bawden was born in 1959 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, to Clara (née Barton) and Kennett Bawden.[1][2][3] He attended elementary school and high school in Oklahoma City.[2] He had one brother.[3]
After the election, Bawden continued living at home with his parents.[3] In 1993, they relocated to Delia, Kansas.[5] His father died in 1995.[13] Bawden established a presence on the internet as an alternative claimant to the papacy;[14] in 2009 he stated that he had approximately 30 "solid followers".[15] He supported himself through donations and by republishing out-of-print religious literature.[6] In 2010, the independent filmmaker Adam Fairholm released a feature-length documentary about him, Pope Michael.[16]
Bawden announced that he had been ordained a priest and then consecrated a bishop on December 11, 2011, by an Independent Catholicepiscopus vagans, Bishop Robert Biarnesen of the Duarte-Costa and Old Catholicepiscopal lineages.[17][18] Bawden said that he was able to validly celebrate Catholic sacraments, offer the Mass, ordain other men to the priesthood, and consecrate them as bishops, since he believed that the Duarte-Costa and Old Catholic lineages were recognized as valid by the Catholic Church.[19]
In a 2022 interview released posthumously, Bawden said that his church had grown to more than 100 members.[20]
On July 10, 2022, his church's Twitter account posted that Bawden had to have emergency surgery and was in a coma.[21] Bawden died on August 2, 2022, in Kansas City, Missouri.[1][22]
On July 29, 2023, some of his followers elected Rogelio Martinez, a bishop from the Philippines, as his successor. He took the name Michael II.[23]
^ abcBawden, David; Asadi, Torang (September 2, 2010). Pope Michael Oral History. Religious Studies Department, University of Kansas. Archived from the original on September 7, 2015. Retrieved August 3, 2022.