Canonum De Ius Rex
Canons of Sovereign Law

one heaven iconII.   Sovereign

2.1 Sovereign Claim

Article 22 - Apostolic Succession

Canon 5532 (link)

Apostolic Succession in terms of Sovereignty is a form of Sovereign Claim whereby one claims leadership and rule by being the successor of a claimed unbroken chain of leaders back to some Divine Savior. Thus the powers are not claimed to be resident within the blood of the candidate, but in the office itself.

Canon 5533 (link)

Apostolic Succession is the most common claim to sovereignty in selecting leaders and rule over societies where titles of nobility are banned, such as the leader of a nation who possesses power not merely from being elected leader but in the “apostolic succession” of office from the first leader to the present leader.

Canon 5534 (link)

The most infamous and false claim of Apostolic Succession is by the Roman Death Cult in maintaining the lie first introduced by the Carolingians upon creating the Catholic Church in Paris in 741 CE ; That an unbroken line of Vicarius Christ (Vicars of Chirst) had existed since the first disciples of Esus.