It seems the succession of the Orthodox Church went the way of Hymenaeus and Alexander...
No, they still have valid ordination.
Any believer in Christ can administer communion and baptism, the only two valid ordinances in scripture.
All are the priesthood of believers.
This also means that the believers in Christ make up the succession, not a godless church building led by godless church leaders as we see in many Orthodox and RC churches.
That’s not how the church in the scripture was run.
Baptist churches and Protestant churches generally run on democratic principles, where the people can vote a pastor in or out, which is totally unscriptural. The Church in scripture we see people like Titus and Timothy apostolically appointed in their churches and were authorised to teach and reprove with all Authority. And through the laying on of hands appoint others.
“Do not be too quick in the laying on of hands and thereby share in the sins of others. Keep yourself pure. “ 1Timothy 5:22
Only those who Timothy could thoroughly vouch for should be ordained by the laying on of hands. Otherwise he has to account for ordaining unsound men.
The Church in scripture wasn’t a democracy, Baptist and Protestant churches aren’t governed like the early Church which clearly shows Apostolic succession.
Once Protestantism rejected the ancient Apostolic succession, they became traditions of men with only human authority ( democratic vote of the people ), not Apostolic appointments with Divine authority through the laying on of hands.
Protestantism founded countless unscriptural democratic traditions of men, that are absolutely hostile to the scripturally and divinely appointed authority figures through the laying on of hands.
Could you vote out Timothy or Titus and argue with them on doctrine and vote on doctrine. No, they have Divinely appointed Authority over you by the laying on of hands and they could condemn you in this life and the next.
You argue with Timothy and Titus you were arguing with the Apostles and Christ.
That’s why a thread about a certain Baptist church recently and it’s governance issues with a popular pastor came to mind. It talked about non competition contracts and non detraction contracts and payment contracts, all enforced by secular authorities.
Voting and the popularity of the charismatic pastor.
This all smacks of a completely human institution and tradition. Do you see these issues arising in Timothy and Titus churches, no.
“Teach and reprove with all Authority, let no man despise you”
These were top down Apostolic and divinely ordained appointments through the laying on of hands. Not human contracts and human enforcement to secular authorities. Nor was it about popularity and democratic grass roots voting of the people.
If Timothy and Titus weren’t popular, tough luck, if you didn’t like what they were teaching, tough luck.