I'm saying that, personally, I see no reason why even a lay Christian - who is born again and filled with the Spirit - shouldn't be able to hold a service of ordination/communion. We are all children of God, temples of his Holy Spirit, priests and members of the body of Christ. If we are remaining in the vine, we are in Jesus and he is in us. If I am filled with his Spirit, I am no less holy, loved, accepted by and serving God than a bishop in elaborate robes.
Does God only hear one prayer and not another?
Does he say, "I'm not sending my Spirit to that person because they have to be able to prove that their ancestors were at Pentecost and received the Spirit from the 12"?
Does a Christian need to have theological qualifications before they can pray for another person to be saved/healed/filled with the Spirit/speak in tongues, or that God will commission and bless that person to serve him?
I am guessing, and believe, that the answer is 'no'. So why do we say, "unless you have been confirmed/ordained by a bishop who's part of the apostolic succession, or receive communion from someone wearing a dog collar, it's not real/valid"? What would happen in a country where people without the Gospel were led to Christ by missionaries and did not have formal churches? Would the missionary say, "as soon as we can get a bishop over here you can receive the Spirit and be confirmed, and then you will be able to take communion. And by the way, if any of you want to start a church, you'll have to fly over to one of our theological colleges, learn to do it properly and then be ordained according to our tradition"?
Jesus Christ, who holds ALL authority, lives in each of his children by his Spirit - why is this not enough?