David Bawden


David Allen Bawden, who takes the name "Pope Michael", is an American citizen and a conclavist claimant to the papacy. He stated in 2009 that he had approximately 30 "solid" followers.
Bawden was elected by a group of six laypeople, which included himself and his parents, who had come to believe 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.

Background

In 1975, Bawden and his family began to follow the Society of St. Pius X. Bawden attended the SSPX seminary in Écône, Switzerland, and Saint Joseph's Priory in Armada, Michigan, but was dismissed from the seminary in 1978.

Claim to the papacy

Bawden believes that all the popes since the death of Pope Pius XII on October 9, 1958, are modernists, heretics, and apostates, and that, therefore, their elections are invalid. He considers them to have incurred latae sententiae, or automatic, excommunication, not so much for violating Pope Pius X's laws, as the laws of God.
Bawden says he was elected to the papacy in 1990, in a papal conclave attended by five other people, including his parents. It appears he tried to contact more people to take part.

Media appearances

In 2010, independent filmmaker Adam Fairholm created a feature-length documentary, Pope Michael.
Bawden was the subject in a chapter of the 2004 book What's the Matter with Kansas? by American journalist and historian Thomas Frank.

Holy orders

Bawden was ordained a priest and then consecrated a bishop on December 11, 2011, by an episcopus vagans, Bishop Robert Biarnesen of the Duarte-Costa and Old Catholic episcopal lineages. Therefore he says he is able to validly confect Catholic sacraments, offer the Mass, ordain other men to the priesthood, and consecrate them as bishops.