Thread: Purgatory: Pope announces plans for Anglicans to convert in groups Board: Limbo / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
From Damian Thompson (a horrid blog, but he seemed to get there first)
quote:
The Vatican has announced that Pope Benedict is setting up special provision for Anglicans, including married clergy, who want to convert to Rome together, preserving aspects of Anglican liturgy. They will be given their own pastoral supervision, according to this press release from the Vatican:

“In this Apostolic Constitution the Holy Father has introduced a canonical structure that provides for such corporate reunion by establishing Personal Ordinariates which will allow former Anglicans to enter full communion with the Catholic Church while preserving elements of the distinctive Anglican spiritual and liturgical patrimony.”



[ 06. May 2010, 19:07: Message edited by: Barnabas62 ]
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
Interesting story, cor. What intrigued me was the para in the link which you left out.

Are there thousands of disaffected Anglicans (I mean disaffected in that particular direction)? I suppose the Pope would not have done this without some evidence that there are significant numbers who might welcome such and opportunity. There may be some on board, I suppose, but I'm not asking them to come out.

The other side of this is the question of whether Lambeth was consulted/informed in advance. Any news about that yet?
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
B62, I left out that last paragraph because Damian's blog is so tendentious -- though compared to his commenters he's a model of sweet reason.

A press conference started in London at 10 am UK time involving Abp Nichols (Westminster) and the Archbishop of Canterbury. I haven't seen any report of what was said. So Lambeth was involved in some way, if not consulted in advance.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
Thanks, cor - fair point about the blog and commenters!

Re your Lambeth news, my curiosity tastebuds have just started salivating ...
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
The press release says former Anglicans, so I presume the Pope means Continuing Anglicans. Who strictly speaking are not really Lambeth's concern any more than the Methodists are.

Lambeth might conceivably welcome the move, as a way of calling the bluff of Continuing Anglicans. I am rather suspicious of groups who claim to be maintaining the "Catholic" tradition and yet put themselves outside of any "Catholic" structure*. If the Pope is allowing them to retain aspects of Anglican liturgy, then ISTM their last reservations towards union with Rome must evaporate.

* Quotes round "Catholic" because I mean "Catholic according to their own definitions of the term".
 
Posted by Anthropax (# 11234) on :
 
Joint Press Release from the Archbishops
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
Just about to link it, but Anthropax got there first. Looks good. Some clear signs pointing to mutual co-operation and understanding.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
Fr Aquilina has various statements on this.

Thurible
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
I think something along these lines has been expected ever since the announcement about the TAC discussions. So yes, it does seem to be primarily a response to activity by continuing anglicans.

But its significance goes well beyond that to affect parts of Anglicanism directly. Those parts of FiF which seem to be hovering on the brink of departure - have they been asked to wait for this announcement? Where does B16's forthcoming visit to Britain fit into all this? Will this interest people outside the papalist wing of FiF? Just some questions that spring to mind -
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
I still find myself asking why this is necessary. If people genuinely want to become Catholics, rather than simply not be Anglicans, what is their problem with joining already-existing communities of Roman Catholics?

[ 20. October 2009, 10:45: Message edited by: Divine Outlaw Dwarf ]
 
Posted by Anthropax (# 11234) on :
 
I think the part about Anglican liturgical patrimony means an appeal to those beyond A-Pism, as most Anglo-Papalists I know simply use one form or another of the Roman rite - although I imagine that's only in England - so an attempt to reach out to those in other parts of the world, not just one little island
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
What I have seen pass for 'Anglican patrimony' amongst non-English traditionalist Anglicans is some sort of mixture of pre-Vatican II RC worship with the BCP. It is hardly an ancient tradition; just a fall-out from 20th century Anglo-Catholicism. These groups are in a completely disimilar position from, for example, the Eastern groups who formed uniate bodies.

Pastoral provision has been made already for Anglican Use amongst those attached to it. I don't see why anything more robust is needed. To put it bluntly: when I was an Anglican, I got the feeling that most reluctance about joining mainstream RC ecclesial structures on the part of A-Cs was along the lines of 'I don't want to go to those nasty churches full of foreigners and polyester vestments'. Doesn't seem a very good reason for creating a prelature.
 
Posted by Max. (# 5846) on :
 
I've asked this on both my facebook and my twitter and I'm going to ask it here:

What will the Traditional Anglicans do when 20 years down the road, the Vatican decides to ordain women to the priesthood?

In response to Anglicans joining RC Churches with nasty vestments and buildings, all I can say is that the sacristy cupboard in my house chapel has some lovely fiddleback chasubles and spade stoles (including a rose set and a black set) as well as rainbow stoles and ethnic stoles with tassels hanging down the back.
It's all about variety! [Big Grin]


Max.

[ 20. October 2009, 10:58: Message edited by: Max. ]
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
Form the Holy and Continuing Catholic Apostolic Church of Our Lady of the Fiddleback and St King Charles Stuart the Martyr (Croydon).
 
Posted by Isaac David (# 4671) on :
 
More details from the Vatican here.
 
Posted by Sacred London (# 15220) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Max.:
What will the Traditional Anglicans do when 20 years down the road, the Vatican decides to ordain women to the priesthood?


I do not think 'Traditional Anglicans' (of the catholic persuasion) deny that women can be priests, rather that the Church of England as a branch of the Church catholic (as they would understand it to be) lacks the authority to take such a decision on its own. I don't think it would be inconsistent with this position for them to welcome women into the Catholic priesthood in '20 years time'.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
I think that's a very silly question anyway. It's like asking a former Anglican "what would you do if the Pope infallibly declared Mary to be co-Redempteix and Mediatrix of all grace?" In other words, you are setting up a litmus test as to whether they accept the authority of the Pope or not, based upon an imponderable unlikelihood.

I think the point of this new step is to widen the Pastoral Provision to which DOD refers. At the moment that is confined to the United States, but this now makes that provision universal.

This is a similar move to the Pope's Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum, and his lifting of the excommunications on the SSPX. I don't just mean a lurch in a conservative direction, but more of a gesture of inclusion. On the one hand these have all been rather conservative actions politically, but on the other they have been ecclesially very very liberal because they have introduced a diversity into the Western Rite which had hitherto operated on the lines of strict uniformity.

This may well have been prompted by TAC - but I wonder how FiF will respond. It seems like they could have a "Third Province" in union with Rome rather than Canterbury - if they but asked for it!

[ 20. October 2009, 11:39: Message edited by: Triple Tiara ]
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Max.:
I've asked this on both my facebook and my twitter and I'm going to ask it here:

What will the Traditional Anglicans do when 20 years down the road, the Vatican decides to ordain women to the priesthood?

In response to Anglicans joining RC Churches with nasty vestments and buildings, all I can say is that the sacristy cupboard in my house chapel has some lovely fiddleback chasubles and spade stoles (including a rose set and a black set) as well as rainbow stoles and ethnic stoles with tassels hanging down the back.
It's all about variety! [Big Grin]


Max.

What Sacred london said re- the ordination of women in the RCC.

As for fiddlebacks, they are never 'lovely'. They are as bad fashion is mini skirts lave and flared trousers (I have only ever worn the third of those three!).
 
Posted by angelicum (# 13515) on :
 
A distant acquaintance of mine who was at the press conference in London suggested that those coming in are likely to be the Damian Thompson of the Anglican communion in the sense that they had little respect for the office of Bishop and a war-like mentality. Would those familiar with the groups in question suggest that this was a fair assessment?
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
I think that's a very silly question anyway. It's like asking a former Anglican "what would you do if the Pope infallibly declared Mary to be co-Redemptice and Mediatrix of all grace?" In other words, you are setting up a litmus test as to whether they accept the authority of the Pope or not, based upon an imponderable unlikelihood.

I would welcome the Holy Father defining Our Lady as co-Redemptice and Mediatrix of all graces - I ave a paper on the desirability of this to the Ecumenical Society of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Interestingly, the RC Bishop in attendance argued against it while the former Master of the Guardians of (Anglican) Walsingham thought it would be a good thing.

[ 20. October 2009, 12:00: Message edited by: leo ]
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
I take the point TT. I suppose I'm just concerned that 'inclusion' be a two way affair. If I am incorporated into the catholica, my borthers and sisters should act generously towards me, but so should I towards them. It seems a legitimate question to ask why people wish to join the Catholic Church but not to join the wonderful and diverse Catholic communities which already exist.

It is also hardly a secret that there are major problems with the culture of a lot of conservative Anglo-Catholic groupings: a seige-mentality, an aggressive hostility to a (frequently imagined) ubiquitous liberalism, a liturgical prissiness tied up in an occasionally sinister way with a peculiar subculture, and so on. It seems in order for Catholics to worry about these groups being corporately received into the Church. And, less selfishly, I just think it is a shame that individuals within these groups are being denied the opportunity for growth and conversion which goes with individual reception. I remember quite vividly sitting at Mass* after my own reception when some minor liturgical 'error' was made. I felt the part of me which had been conditioned by A-Cism leap into action and say 'that's wrong'. But almost immediately a new instinct pushed it aside and said, 'It doesn't matter. God's Church doesn't stand or fall with the position of the priest's hands'. And I felt at home.

*Not presided at by anyone connected with the Ship!
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
Well, I agree with you entirely. It's what my gut reaction is towards this move. It was my gut reaction to the SSPX overtures. To give a theological foundation to my gut reaction: should not those who have skirted the margins of communion within another Church be brought more closely into the practice of FULL communion in the Catholic Church, rather than be allowed to skirt the margins once again. Which is exactly what you are saying.

On the other hand, this is not simply a accommodation on all their terms. It is an exercise in creating space, something the Catholic Church is very good at doing. If this is made a much wider provision, then perhaps all that talk of "united not absorbed" will have born fruition.

I think it will also call the bluff of many of the huff-puffers. Now there is nowhere left to run simply because they want to make whoopee and be crazies. Here is the door: come in if you wish to follow your logic. And that's a massive challenge now to FiF as well.
 
Posted by Michael Astley (# 5638) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
And, less selfishly, I just think it is a shame that individuals within these groups are being denied the opportunity for growth and conversion which goes with individual reception. I remember quite vividly sitting at Mass* after my own reception when some minor liturgical 'error' was made. I felt the part of me which had been conditioned by A-Cism leap into action and say 'that's wrong'. But almost immediately a new instinct pushed it aside and said, 'It doesn't matter. God's Church doesn't stand or fall with the position of the priest's hands'. And I felt at home.

Isn't that interesting! Only a couple of weeks ago, I had a similar conversation about parishes converting en masse to Orthodoxy in the Western Rite. I'm pleased to read this and that I'm not alone in this concern.

Whatever happens, inculturation is part of conversion too, and I'm sure there is a Catholic "spirit" that is more difficult to acquire for people who are stuck in ex-Anglican ghettos. I hope that this is considered properly and they are looked after.

[ 20. October 2009, 12:22: Message edited by: Michael Astley ]
 
Posted by angelicum (# 13515) on :
 
http://www.forwardinfaith.com/artman/publish/article_493.shtml
quote:
It has been the frequently expressed hope and fervent desire of Anglican Catholics to be enabled by some means to enter into full communion with the See of Peter whilst retaining in its integrity every aspect of their Anglican inheritance which is not at variance with the teaching of the Catholic Church.

We rejoice that the Holy Father intends now to set up structures within the Church which respond to this heartfelt longing. Forward in Faith has always been committed to seeking unity in truth and so warmly welcomes these initiatives as a decisive moment in the history of the Catholic Movement in the Church of England. Ut unum sint!


 
Posted by trouty (# 13497) on :
 
What about the practical side of this? If a FiF church decides to go into this new set up, who is going to bear the costs of it? I don't think the Cof E will or should and I doubt that the RCC will want to either.
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
I share TT and DOD's worries. I think a lot of Anglicans think that the differences between Anglicanism and the RCC are relatively minor. And for some Anglo-Papalist this might be true in terms of doctrine. But, at least from my experience in the US, the differences in ecclesial and ecclesiastical culture are huge (ranging from parish size to the exercise of authority to attitudes toward liturgy), and many former Anglicans find life in the Catholic Church something of shock to the system. But that's the reality of Catholicism and it's probably best to face up to it sooner rather than later.

One question I have is whether the Pastoral Provision parishes in the US will want to join one of these persona prelatures, or whether, after a couple decades as parishes of a Catholic diocese they now feel at home and will want to stay.
 
Posted by Anthropax (# 11234) on :
 
I wonder about the use of Local Ecumenical Partnerships in this - there must be plenty of places with a large Anglo-Catholic Church building, and a good proportion of people who would convert- sensitivity by both bishops could let there be a lot less heart-ache, and maintenance cost could be split, freeing up cash for mission.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
The Bishops of Ebbsfleet and Richborough on the former's website:

quote:
This is not a time for sudden decisions or general public discussion. We call for a time of quiet prayer and discernment. The coming season of Advent and the celebration of the mystery of the Incarnation at Christmas, seem to us to provide a good opportunity for this quiet prayer and discernment to take place, as well as some pastoral discussions. Some Anglicans in the Catholic tradition understandably will want to stay within the Anglican Communion. Others will wish to make individual arrangements as their conscience directs. A further group of Anglicans, we think, will begin to form a caravan, rather like the People of Israel crossing the desert in search of the Promised Land. As bishops we would want to reassure people that, whatever decisions people, priests and parishes make, they will find peace and blessing in following what they discern to be God's will for them. We have chosen 22nd February, The Feast of The Chair of Peter, to be an appropriate day for priests and people to make an initial decision as to whether they wish to respond positively to and explore further the initiative of the Apostolic Constitution. Many, understandably, will need a much longer period of discernment and we would counsel against over-hasty reactions of whatever kind.
Thurible
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anthropax:
I wonder about the use of Local Ecumenical Partnerships in this - there must be plenty of places with a large Anglo-Catholic Church building, and a good proportion of people who would convert- sensitivity by both bishops could let there be a lot less heart-ache, and maintenance cost could be split, freeing up cash for mission.

This is a very good point. In England I don't think it would be incorrect to consider that 95% of churches of architectural merit are currently Anglican. A lot of them were not subject to the wreckovations that so may RC churches were subject to in the 1960s as well. It would be a great tragedy if some of the finest anglo-catholic churches were to be left empty and decaying while their less distinguished catholic counterparts were packed.

If in the hypothetical situation where the vast body of anglo-catholics did cross over (and I think in fact that is unlikely) what sort of church will the Church of England be? Presumably something akin to the Methodists with a few rather enfeebled affirming parishes tacked on.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
The worries about bringing an antithetical culture over are worth considering I'm sure. It's no secret that we (i.e. Anglicans) have some characters with odd ideas, not to mention extremists. But a moment's perusal of the letters following Damian Thompson's blog would appear to indicate that they will have their work cut out if they want to maintain their chief bad-boy status if they become Catholics. (Not of course that such folk are the sole domain of A-Cism).

However, I did know several people who went over at the last exodus (OOWP). I think most of the noisy ones found themselves unwelcome and headed back to Canterbury, though I understand that the rest integrated without any undue problem. Is there any reason to think that the same may not apply again? I realise the parallels are not exact, but they are close enough I think.
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
As to the degree of consultation, here is comment from Fr Aqulina (emphasis added):
quote:
The Italian vaticanologist Andrea Tornielli has written his thoughts about the unilateral decision of the Holy See to receive Anglicans in full communion with the See of Peter. He says that the Archbishop of Canterbury was not privy of this up to two days ago. He says that the Holy Father has changed the old policy of receiving people individually and now he is open to receive whole communities. Ordination to the priesthood will be offered to those whom the Church believes to be called. There is no provision for first generation married bishops. As is the custom of the Church, East and West, episcopacy will be celibate. The (married) Anglican bishops will be invited to work as priests.
On a different theme: it seems clear that married Anglican priests can now be received and become married Catholic priests. But under the pastoral provision, as I understand it, one cannot marry again once ordained -- just as a married candidate for the permanent diaconate vows that he will not remarry if his wife dies. Presumably an unmarried Anglican priest who becomes a Catholic priest under this new provision will thereby commit himself to lifelong celibacy.

I think the Orthodox discipline is similar: a cleric can be married before ordination, but once ordained can no longer marry.
 
Posted by Call me Numpty (# 3012) on :
 
I think it's great. Hopefully, the FiF types will go to Rome and leave FCA-UK to the Con-Evos. Much better.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
You wish, CmN!

(FCA-UK???)
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anthropax:
Joint Press Release from the Archbishops

When I saw that link I assumed it mean Archbishops of Canterbury and York. But actually its Canterbury and Westminster. Very carefully prepared beforehand - and Rowan Williams seems to have signed up to it.

Well, I guess it lets him & General Synod off great big hook next year. I mean the problem that the concessions to those who iobject to the ordination of women already go beyond what a large number of Anglicans will tolerate but not far enough for FiF, which has left the bishops stuck in the middle getting pelted from three sides.

I suspect that the revised provision that Pete and others have hinted at here that is intended to be stronger than a "Code of Practice" but less than a "Third Province" becomes a lot easier to set up with this in place.

Anyone who rejects the ordination of women and really wants to stay in the CofE now has to deal with the CofE as it is. No more fantasies about a "Third Province".


quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
Fr Aquilina has various statements on this.

Including, apparently from the Vatican:

quote:

The forthcoming Apostolic Constitution provides a reasonable and even necessary response to a world-wide phenomenon, by offering a single canonical model for the universal Church which is adaptable to various local situations and equitable to former Anglicans in its universal application. It provides for the ordination as Catholic priests of married former Anglican clergy. Historical and ecumenical reasons preclude the ordination of married men as bishops in both the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. The Constitution therefore stipulates that the Ordinary can be either a priest or an unmarried bishop.

Which implies to me that someone in Rome is thinking about doing the same thing for some other groups. Lutherans I suppose (in some ways the present Pope seems nearer in doctrine to Martin Luther than he does to the Popes of the 18th or 19th century). Maybe even others. Making the RCC into a sort of federal institution, an alliance of churches. How very Anglican! Though no doubt still tightly controlled from the centre, which is not very Anglican.

Maybe we should follow the Archbishop's advice and not try to speculate in detail on how this will work out in practice, or how many people will avail themselves of it. But as a general pronciple I imagine that the Vatican does not want to blur the boundaries between who is "in" and who is "out". Personally I would prefer it if that is exactly what happened, but I'd be surprised if that was their intention. (Though there is the whole Brother Roger thing) And there is a risk (or from my POV an opportunity) of such blurring happening if some congregations more or less move over as a lump. Like most Anglican chruches, FiF parishes have tended to have a very open attitude to who can take communion or not. Which might cause some tensions.

Also this is interesting:

quote:

In the years since the Council, some Anglicans have abandoned the tradition of conferring Holy Orders only on men by calling women to the priesthood and the episcopacy. More recently, some segments of the Anglican Communion have departed from the common biblical teaching on human sexuality - already clearly stated in the ARCIC document "Life in Christ" - by the ordination of openly homosexual clergy and the blessing of homosexual partnerships.

It talks about the ordinatin of openly homosexual priests as having "departed from the common biblical teaching". But ordaining women is only abandoning a tradition. I bet some of those Roman Catholics who want to ordain women will be reading between these lines like mad.
 
Posted by Call me Numpty (# 3012) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
You wish, CmN!

(FCA-UK???)

The Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans UK
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
Of course, I'm delighted. But I doubt that I will see anything come of it locally.

My concern over the so-called "nasty subculture" of ACism in the C of E or the SSC is minimal. Perhaps that is because I am partial to that subculture, with the exception of reputed camp mockery of religion that goes on behind closed doors, to which I was never given entre to begin with anyway.

As to whether Anglo-Catholics will play nice with their bishops, this is a big issue, but perhaps not in the way that most on the board think. If the English ACs are more or less willing to be docile to their PEVs, then mutatis mutandis, there should not be problems with these new-fangled "Personal Ordinaries." The same is true with any PECUSA clergy that might come our way. Morally speaking, they probably should be thoroughly disloyal to the Episcopal Bishops of Washington, New York, Pennsylvania, etc. but yet they are not.

However, I have little to no confidence in our American continuing Anglican clergy who, for the most part, have been little more than independent contractors and incorrigible besides. (It doesn't help that the majority of continuing Anglican bishops are either wicked or incompetent...an even greater problem.) The Vatican is going to be exceptionally careful about who will be ordained to the Episcopate and, in turn, the Ordinaries will have to be VERY CHOOSY about who they will ordain.

The Catholic scene in my diocese has Polish apostolates, Nigerian apostolates, an Ethiopian congregation, an Etririan cogregation, a French congregation, a Croation congregation, a bunch of Hispanic-oriented ones, several Greek Catholic congregations that are part of eparchies other than the Latin bishop, and congregations under the purview of the Military Ordinariate. (The American Polish apostolates, by the way, have often had an observer from the Polish episcopate providing some sort of oversight in addition to that of the local ordinary.) If we can do all these things, then there is no reason why, in of itself, there can't be an Anglicanish Ordinary, provided the right people are ordained.

[ 20. October 2009, 14:25: Message edited by: Shadowhund ]
 
Posted by Adeodatus (# 4992) on :
 
At least Pope Benedict has acknowledged that Anglicans have a spiritual and liturgical patrimony. It's considerably more than many of his predecessors have done.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
You would need to go back a bit for that assertion to be true. Beyond the past 5 popes at least.
 
Posted by Stoker (# 11939) on :
 
Who gives a toss what man made religion and rules people follow or align themselves with?

What's important is what their hearts believe and submission to the authority of scripture.

1 Corinthians Chapter 1:

I appeal to you, brothers, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree with one another so that there may be no divisions among you and that you may be perfectly united in mind and thought. My brothers, some from Chloe's household have informed me that there are quarrels among you. What I mean is this: One of you says, "I follow Paul"; another, "I follow Apollos"; another, "I follow Cephas"; still another, "I follow Christ."
Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Were you baptized into the name of Paul? I am thankful that I did not baptize any of you except Crispus and Gaius, so no one can say that you were baptized into my name. (Yes, I also baptized the household of Stephanas; beyond that, I don't remember if I baptized anyone else.) For Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel—not with words of human wisdom, lest the cross of Christ be emptied of its power.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
Well, there is one cultural difference that seems significant. Catholic bishops have a way of shushing clergy who are too outspoken for the bishop's comfort level. This would be resented by many AC clergy who like to publicly bang on about whatever topic is pissing them off at the moment. We have our share of rude priests like Father Euteneuer of Human Life International who are always seeming to be talking out of turn, but they are an exception.

[ 20. October 2009, 15:21: Message edited by: Shadowhund ]
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FCB:
I think a lot of Anglicans think that the differences between Anglicanism and the RCC are relatively minor. And for some Anglo-Papalist this might be true in terms of doctrine. But, at least from my experience in the US, the differences in ecclesial and ecclesiastical culture are huge (ranging from parish size to the exercise of authority to attitudes toward liturgy), and many former Anglicans find life in the Catholic Church something of shock to the system. But that's the reality of Catholicism and it's probably best to face up to it sooner rather than later.

Possibly a lot of Catholics think the differences are minor too. As a non-papalist (at least in the usual sense) anglo-catholic I don't deny there are substantial differences. FCB is right about the cultural ones too; and ISTM that in this area most MOTR Anglicans and Catholics are much closer to each other than either are to the F-i-F style Anglicans.

I don't think that those members of the C of E (Forward in Faith or not) who are thinking about crossing the Tiber should count their chickens about taking their church buildings with them. While inevitably some of these will become redundant in an Anglican context, and therefore a transfer of ownership should not be a problem, the fact remains that they are parish churches and belong to the whole parish. Even assuming that a majority of a congregation want to change allegiance (and that's a big assumption), the parish is much wider than the congregation and the C of E will want to assure continued pastoral care for the 90% of the population who rarely darken the doors of the church. This might mean amalgation with a neighbouring parish, but might well mean instead the appointment of a new priest to care for the remnant of the congregation and to serve the parish.

I'd love to see the figures, but I doubt if there are any churches where 100% of the PCC, let alone the general congregation, has signed up for the F in F agenda. And that's their agenda as existing, not an active proposal to seek papal oversight.
 
Posted by Michael Astley (# 5638) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cor ad cor loquitur:
I think the Orthodox discipline is similar: a cleric can be married before ordination, but once ordained can no longer marry.

That's right, cor. Readers (and, where they are still ordained, Chanters and Acolytes), may marry, and this is welcomed if they are to be ordained to higher orders, but a man may not marry after ordination to the subdiaconate.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
The press release says former Anglicans, so I presume the Pope means Continuing Anglicans. Who strictly speaking are not really Lambeth's concern any more than the Methodists are.

Lambeth might conceivably welcome the move, as a way of calling the bluff of Continuing Anglicans. I am rather suspicious of groups who claim to be maintaining the "Catholic" tradition and yet put themselves outside of any "Catholic" structure*. If the Pope is allowing them to retain aspects of Anglican liturgy, then ISTM their last reservations towards union with Rome must evaporate.

* Quotes round "Catholic" because I mean "Catholic according to their own definitions of the term".

Well...not exactly.

There are lots of flavors of Continuing Anglican, and even some of the very high-churchy types aren't all that interested in communion with Rome, because it will always be on Rome's terms. And there is good reason to be skeptical of the RCC's commitment to an ongoing Anglican Use as anything more than a stopgap rite to ease the transition to Latin Rite Catholicism.

The Traditional Anglican Communion appears to be gung-ho with regard to reunification, but this can be deceptive; it's mostly the clergy that are moving this forward. Many of the laity will resist a move to Rome; in fact, a couple of their parishes joined our gang recently because they didn't want to be part of the Tiber expedition. And of course, opinions vary among the Continuum from "Sure, let's reunify" to "Never will I become a Papist!".

I suspect that most of the jurisdictions that arose out of the St Louis Affirmation & the Denver consecrations will be more or less content to remain as they are, and to focus their energies on strengthening their bonds with each other rather than being swallowed up in a big church that doesn't appear to have a clue what to do with them.
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
If in the hypothetical situation where the vast body of anglo-catholics did cross over (and I think in fact that is unlikely) what sort of church will the Church of England be? Presumably something akin to the Methodists with a few rather enfeebled affirming parishes tacked on.

Why, how many rebel Anglo-Catholics do you imagine there are? I'm assuming that no parish would go over to Rome unless it had already signed Resolution C, and there aren't too many of those.

I can't find any total statistics, but looking at individual dioceses:

Gloucester comprises 327 parishes of which 1 is ABC
Guildford: 165 parishes, 4 ABC
Hereford: 356 parishes, 0 ABC
Leicester: 237 parishes, 3 ABC
Lichfield: 427 parishes, 26 ABC
Lincoln: 514 parishes, 15 ABC
Liverpool: 250 parishes, 3 ABC

etc etc. (Figures from the FiF registry and from the respective diocesan websites.)
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Angloid - I think you are right about not keeping church buildings. One of the docs. I read this morning from the Catholic side specifically stated it wasn't going to include buildings, so that would make it from both sides.

re your later point -
quote:
I'd love to see the figures, but I doubt if there are any churches where 100% of the PCC, let alone the general congregation, has signed up for the F in F agenda. And that's their agenda as existing, not an active proposal to seek papal oversight.
I suspect there may well be churches where all the PCC is signed up, but I'm sure you are probably right about the congregation. FiF congregations - outside obvious "shrines" - can be quite diverse. But that goes the other way too. There are likely a whole raft of people in non-FiF parishes who may find these developments of interest.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I think visions of a mass exodus from the Church of England are rather too hopeful. As much schadenfreude as that would give certain shipmates, I think both extremes of the doctrinal spectrum need to realize that the vast majority of people aren't invested enough in the issues to actually leave the Church over it.

Zach
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
I'm afraid this is the sort of thing that makes me want to reach for my bowler hat and Lambeg drum. Quite illogical I know (because quite honestly if I were in the CofE rather than CinW I would be more than happy to see the back of dodgy characters like Ebbsfleet) and indeed uncharitable to those whom I should regard as fellow Christians continuing on their journey of faith. But there you are.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Is it a "Journey of faith" when the central pillar of that journey is glee at destroying a Christian fellowship for the sake of another sect?

Zach
 
Posted by uncletoby (# 13067) on :
 
Andrew Brown has commented on this on the Guardian website, under the perhaps over-the-top headline The end of the Anglican Communion.

[ 20. October 2009, 16:39: Message edited by: uncletoby ]
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
A couple of interesting bits from Andrew Brown's piece:
quote:
this establishes a tradition of married Roman Catholic clergy in the west...

If the former Anglicans can train up successors who will also be able to have wives, the Roman Catholic church may have found a way to escape the prospect of a largely gay priesthood to which the doctrine of compulsory celibacy appeared to condemn them. It is ironic that Anglican efforts to deal honestly with the problem of sexuality should have provided the Catholics with the excuse they needed to strike this decisive blow.

and Damian Thompson adds that
quote:
...there is even the possibility that married Anglican laymen could be accepted for ordination on a case-by-case basis – a remarkable concession.
though where he gets this last conclusion I don't know; he has a long history of announcing substance-free "facts" and "inside information".
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
Pastoral provision has been made already for Anglican Use amongst those attached to it. I don't see why anything more robust is needed.

I is sometimes alleged that some U.S. Bishops have resisted the establishement of Anglican Use parishes in their dioceses. The new provision would free potential Anglican Use communitites from that kind of resistance. Also, as far as I know the present Pastoral Provision only applies to the U.S. I think the new provision would apply worldwide.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
I suppose that a bishop could forbid an Anglican ordinary from operating in his diocese like he can the prelate of Opus Dei. Few forbid the latter these days.

Cardinal Mahony declined to permit St. Mary of the Angels parish in Hollywood, CA, to join the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. If the parish now wants to join the Catholic Church, it will be interesting to see whether he will try to block the parish again.

[ 20. October 2009, 18:09: Message edited by: Shadowhund ]
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Shadowhund:
I suppose that a bishop could forbid an Anglican ordinary from operating in his diocese like he can the prelate of Opus Dei. Few forbid the latter these days.

Cardinal Mahony declined to permit St. Mary of the Angels parish in Hollywood, CA, to join the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. If the parish now wants to join the Catholic Church, it will be interesting to see whether he will try to block the parish again.

That maneuver always struck me as a rather extreme way to ensure that there would be no kneeling in his diocese.
 
Posted by Bishops Finger (# 5430) on :
 
We are an FiF parish, signed up to all 3 Resolutions (A, B and C). The PCC earlier this year decided to continue with the Resolutions, despite the fact that at least half of us on the said PCC are either OK with the OOW or else aren't bothered either way! The thinking behind this was a desire not to do anything hasty before we know the outcome of the moves currently afoot in Synod.

Should satisfactory provision be made for alternative episcopal oversight (which I hope will be the case), I can't see anyone leaving us. OTOH, if it isn't, then I envisage perhaps half-a-dozen (some of them 'movers and shakers') crossing the Tiber. What I can't see is a general fleeing to Rome for shelter and an abandonment of our poor little parish. Mind you, of course I can't know what people may think, do or say - but I hope and pray that no-one will leave unless they feel it's the only thing they can do.

Ian J.
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cor ad cor loquitur:
A couple of interesting bits from Andrew Brown's piece:
quote:
this establishes a tradition of married Roman Catholic clergy in the west...

If the former Anglicans can train up successors who will also be able to have wives, the Roman Catholic church may have found a way to escape the prospect of a largely gay priesthood to which the doctrine of compulsory celibacy appeared to condemn them. It is ironic that Anglican efforts to deal honestly with the problem of sexuality should have provided the Catholics with the excuse they needed to strike this decisive blow.

and Damian Thompson adds that
quote:
...there is even the possibility that married Anglican laymen could be accepted for ordination on a case-by-case basis – a remarkable concession.
though where he gets this last conclusion I don't know; he has a long history of announcing substance-free "facts" and "inside information".

There were married priests in the Latin Rite before now. Only a handful, but they do exist. One is a former United Church of Canada Minister (that's a very long swim indeed).

Whatever arguments may be put forth for clerical celibacy, consistency is not one of them.
 
Posted by fisher (# 9080) on :
 
quote:
From Andrew Brown's piece:
quote:
The real long term significance of this announcement is the talk about seminaries ...If the former Anglicans can train up successors who will also be able to have wives...

Do people who understand these things know if there's any basis for his 'if', beyond fanciful speculation?

[ 20. October 2009, 19:30: Message edited by: fisher ]
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
I think that the straightforward implication of this announcement is that the women bishops legislation will change radically. Supporters will be far less inclined to make the concessions that the conservative catholics have been asking for. They'll just say take Benny's Tiber jet.

It won't have escaped notice that 22nd Feb is 10 days after General Synod. If Synod decides to overturn the revision committee proposals to provide for those opposed, and to make it back into a code of practice or simple measure, there's a clear exit door.

And then we'll have a very different CofE.
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Shadowhund:
I suppose that a bishop could forbid an Anglican ordinary from operating in his diocese like he can the prelate of Opus Dei. Few forbid the latter these days.

I guess it depends on what the new provision looks like. I think one of the reasons for this new provision is an awareness of difficulties under the present Pastoral Provision and I think they would want to avoid a situation where the regular Latin Rite bishop can interfere with an Anglican Use ordinary tending to a new Anglican Use community. Someone elsewhere brough up comparisons to the Archdiocese for the Military Services. Maybe the new provision will be similar to it works.

I'm sympathetic to what Divine Outlaw Dwarf, Triple Tiara, FCB and Angloid have said, particularly about certain attitudes among certain Anglo-Catholics that might come over. Occasionally I'll read something that makes me think "What, we're not good enough for them?". But I'm cautiously optimistic that people will mellow out.

quote:
Cardinal Mahony declined to permit St. Mary of the Angels parish in Hollywood, CA, to join the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. If the parish now wants to join the Catholic Church, it will be interesting to see whether he will try to block the parish again.
That parish is currently a member of the TAC (Traditional Anglican Communion) which has been in talks with the Vatican about union. It will be really interesting to see what happens with them. My guess is that if the new provision enables the TAC to unite as a body with Rome they might wait to move along with the TAC but I really don't know. It's not a secret that they wanted to be received into the Catholic Church so I think that's a case where many or most parishioners would be sympathetic to union.

Re: kneeling

quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
That maneuver always struck me as a rather extreme way to ensure that there would be no kneeling in his diocese.

There has always been keenling in the Archdiocese. Cardinal Manoney declined reception of St. Marys back in the 1980’s. Throughout the 80’s and 90’s and early 2000’s people knelt not just for the Eucharistic Prayer but also after the Agnus Dei like people are used to doing everywhere else in the U.S. It was only in the past several years that the Cardinal announced that people should remain standing after throughout Communion. In my parish it was only the current pastor who decided to implement this and people still kneel once they’ve received communion. At other parishes people sit or kneel once the Communion procession begins (frustrating my current pastor when we receive a lot of visitors at Mass). In the Archdiocese everyone continues to kneel during the Eucharistic Prayer. There may be exceptions but those are not typical parishes or situations (like outdoor Masses celebrated on pavement, etc.).
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:

And then we'll have a very different CofE.

I can see that we might have a very different Diocese of London, or even Willesden Episcopal Area. Bearing in mind the figures quoted by Ricardus, showing the tiny number of F in F parishes in some dioceses, how much difference will it make to the C of E as a whole?

Even allowing for some members of non-FiF parishes swimming the Tiber (and there will be some), they are, almost by definition, among the minority of active laity. Good, faithful people no doubt, who we'd hate to lose: but I can't see a significant proportion of those in the pews leaving. (Bishop's Finger suggests as much, even though his parish is ABC).

And lest my reaction or that of others to those leaving is seen as 'good riddance', nothing could be further from my thoughts. After all, they won't be leaving the Church, or abandoning the Gospel. They will hopefully find a more fruitful soil for their future spiritual growth, and who would begrudge anybody that?
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
They'll just say take Benny's Tiber jet.

Jet? I thought they had to swim for it?

What about +Ebbsfleet on a jet ski?
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:

And then we'll have a very different CofE.

I can see that we might have a very different Diocese of London, or even Willesden Episcopal Area. Bearing in mind the figures quoted by Ricardus, showing the tiny number of F in F parishes in some dioceses, how much difference will it make to the C of E as a whole?
I don't think many ordinary laity will go.

But quite a few of the Catholic Group / FiF friends in General Synod have to go, or have to explain why they aren't going. How many of them will leave / step down at Synod re-election time in summer 2010? And if they carry on, why?

If the hardline Catholic group falls from say 60 to say 20 what impact will that have on the polity of the CofE on other issues? Even if the CofE in the pews only shifts by a percent or two.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
Freejack: I take your point. I'm afraid General Synod and ecclesiastical politics generally pass me by, and its significance had never occurred to me. I suspect the same is true of 99% of ordinary punters.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
Well I've never been on a Synod, but I guessed that is what +Pete (who has been on many synods) was hinting at.

As far as I can tell the Catholic synod group are quite well organised and have had a reasonable number of key committee posts etc. in the past and are good at forming 34% blocking minorities etc. But they need to have a certain number of people and a certain raison d'etre to make it credible.

And if you look at the residual arithmetic, the open/charo evos look stronger than the liberal anglo-caths from 2015 onwards. (Another reason why some pro-women bishop anglo-catholics are worried about the consequences of their actions.) Not that any group would be 51%, but certainly you would have a '40% evo vote'. Again, even if not that much changes in the parishes on the ground.

Of course FiF leaders could stay in the CofE and make the best of it, at least for another five years. But the current Papal window of opportunity may not stay open for that long.
 
Posted by Bishops Finger (# 5430) on :
 
What worries me is the chance that, if no satisfactory alternative episcopal oversight is provided, we'll lose some valuable and excellent priests. Frankly, the church can ill afford that.

Ian J.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
How is it going to work out when English Catholic priests are told they can't marry, while the pseudo-Anglicans can?

Zach
 
Posted by Ye Olde Motherboarde (# 54) on :
 
I almost fell off my chair when I read this article....

CNN's account of the event

I think if will all "shake out" because God made this happen. HE doesn't do anything without a reason. Sometimes we don't see that reason, but believe me, if this isn't a miracle, I don't know what is.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
What's a miracle about the pope grasping at a few more butts in his pews?

Zach
 
Posted by LA Dave (# 1397) on :
 
Thanks for setting Father Weber straight, Pancho, regarding that kneeling thing.

My impression from reading the TEC media and blogs is that the Pope's announcement is not considered that big a deal in the US. There are, apparently, only seven "Anglican use" parishes in the entire country. I hardly think that removing objections from local Catholic bishops will lead to the establishment of that many more. Anglo-Catholicism, American-style, is not Anglo-Papalist.
 
Posted by Cardinal Pole Vault (# 4193) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
What's a miracle about the pope grasping at a few more butts in his pews?

Zach

Eww! No one wants the pope grasping at their butt!
 
Posted by Resurgam (# 14891) on :
 
quote:
But under the pastoral provision, as I understand it, one cannot marry again once ordained -- just as a married candidate for the permanent diaconate vows that he will not remarry if his wife dies. Presumably an unmarried Anglican priest who becomes a Catholic priest under this new provision will thereby commit himself to lifelong celibacy.
[/QB]

On the bright side, things should be looking up for the often-neglected clergy wives whose husbands move over. If he doesn't look to her care and feeding, he'll be condemned to a celibate widowerhood.
[Biased]
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LA Dave:
Anglo-Catholicism, American-style, is not Anglo-Papalist.

There also seem to be some interesting doctrinal idiosyncracies in some A-C places; things that Rome would not tolerate so much.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
How is it going to work out when English Catholic priests are told they can't marry, while the ... Anglicans can?
It will probably work a lot like it does with the Eastern Catholic churches who maintain a married priesthood alongside the celibate - Respect the traditions of local churches, and don't switch particular churches to circumvent the disciplines of your own.
 
Posted by Max_Power (# 13547) on :
 
What I found the most intriguing piece of the puzzle was/is the joint declaration signed by the Archbishops of Winchester and Canterbury. I wonder if +RW is perhaps, with a sigh and a shrug, letting the ACs go, or is he perhaps extending to them a 'double-dog-dare'? In other words, is he calling their collective bluff? Doing so would effectively allow him to get on with the programme and tell everyone who remains to just suck it up.

Kent
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
How is it going to work out when English Catholic priests are told they can't marry, while the ... Anglicans can?
It will probably work a lot like it does with the Eastern Catholic churches who maintain a married priesthood alongside the celibate - Respect the traditions of local churches, and don't switch particular churches to circumvent the disciplines of your own.
In a generation, the line between these pseudo-Anglicans and the Catholics will be blurrier than hell. What then?

Zach
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Max_Power:
What I found the most intriguing piece of the puzzle was/is the joint declaration signed by the Archbishops of Winchester and Canterbury. I wonder if +RW is perhaps, with a sigh and a shrug, letting the ACs go, or is he perhaps extending to them a 'double-dog-dare'? In other words, is he calling their collective bluff? Doing so would effectively allow him to get on with the programme and tell everyone who remains to just suck it up.

Kent

I think Archbishop of Canterbury simply realized that there was really nothing he could do about it.

Zach
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
What then?
Build a mylar balloon and claim a bishop of small stature has been accidentally carried away in it to divert attention. Barring that...

A generation ago, who would have foreseen allowance of the Anglican Use or the re-birth of the TLM, etc. A generation ahead is hard to predict. Fear is not a reason not to do the right thing.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
What then?
Build a mylar balloon and claim a bishop of small stature has been accidentally carried away in it to divert attention. Barring that...

A generation ago, who would have foreseen allowance of the Anglican Use or the re-birth of the TLM, etc. A generation ahead is hard to predict. Fear is not a reason not to do the right thing.

I really don't agree that setting up a Pretender Anglican Church is the "right" thing.

Zach
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
History is so rich with irony.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
What irony is that, Alt?

Zach
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
What irony is that, Alt?

Zach

I'm not sure if this is the irony that Alt intended, but for many RCs Anglicanism is a Pretend Catholic church.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
I'm not sure if this is the irony that Alt intended, but for many RCs Anglicanism is a Pretend Catholic church.
I figured. How DARE we pretend to be followers of Christ?! Isn't it a smack in the face to the Church of Rome that we think our orders and sacraments are valid?

Zach
 
Posted by moveable_type (# 9673) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
Originally posted by Max_Power:
What I found the most intriguing piece of the puzzle was/is the joint declaration signed by the Archbishops of Winchester and Canterbury. I wonder if +RW is perhaps, with a sigh and a shrug, letting the ACs go, or is he perhaps extending to them a 'double-dog-dare'? In other words, is he calling their collective bluff? Doing so would effectively allow him to get on with the programme and tell everyone who remains to just suck it up.

Kent

I think Archbishop of Canterbury simply realized that there was really nothing he could do about it.

Zach

For the ABoC, it undermines a difficult faction, as pointed out upthread. A more interesting question is why anybody thinks he can negotiate for Anglicans outside England - perhaps, like the Israelis, Rome just wanted somebody to negotiate with.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by moveable_type:
For the ABoC, it undermines a difficult faction, as pointed out upthread. A more interesting question is why anybody thinks he can negotiate for Anglicans outside England - perhaps, like the Israelis, Rome just wanted somebody to negotiate with. [/QB]

I wouldn't call what the Bishop of Rome is doing negotiation. More like kicking your enemies while they're down.

Zach
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
I'm not sure if this is the irony that Alt intended, but for many RCs Anglicanism is a Pretend Catholic church.
I figured. How DARE we pretend to be followers of Christ?! Isn't it a smack in the face to the Church of Rome that we think our orders and sacraments are valid?

Zach

Obviously, I don't agree with the RCC on that point. But at the same time, the anti-Catholic rhetoric on blogs like Thinking Anglicans is over the top. A lot of the stories on this announcement are painting it as some kind of attempt at mass sheep-stealing; if this is all it takes to convince Anglo-Catholics to leave their churches, then they were already gone.

I think it has as much to do with the TAC pestering Rome for a provision as anything else.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
The irony is it seems history has come somewhat full circle.

I'm not sure what makes one a "real" Anglican versus a pretend Anglican (I'm not an Anglican, but I play one on TV, etc.) I have a hard time believing being a real Anglican means being under the oversight of a specific bishop or a member of a specific church. Many (I would assume "real" Anglicans), are neither under the direct administration of the Archbishop of Canterbury or members of the Church of England (it certainly isn't about the 39 articles or some style of churchmanship). It would seem to me what is distinctive about them, and "really" Anglican is fidelity to the Prayer Book. In that sense I don't see why one can't be a "real" Anglican in direct communion with Rome.

Perhaps there were some Cardinals who felt this was a good time to give some people at Lambeth a kick in the balls, but I doubt it. I think they probably did this reluctantly, and perhaps among many unwillingly.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Full circle in what way, Alt? The only thing the Anglicans have done is believe in their own validity.

And who is it really that is twisting Rome's arm here?

Zach
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
Would the exodus of traditionalist Catholics from the CofE make the CofE more liberal or more conservative?

On one hand, at least in the short-term, this would further entrench the evangelical ascendancy in the CofE. On the other hand, the CofE might feel more emboldened to support liberal changes in its social policy now that conservative Anglo-catholics have left.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
There is really no way to tell right now, AB. The Roman Church itself hasn't decided how this will go down yet. Hopefully the pope's sense of integrity will kick in, and the demands that the pseudo-Anglicans actually be Catholic all the way will deter most of them from leaving.

Zach

[ 21. October 2009, 02:22: Message edited by: Zach82 ]
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
There is really no way to tell right now, AB. The Roman Church itself hasn't decided how this will go down yet. Hopefully the pope's sense of integrity will kick in, and the demands that the pseudo-Anglicans actually be Catholic all the way will deter most of them from leaving.

Zach

I very much doubt that Anglican converts are going to get any breaks on doctrinal assent. Discipline, sure--reception of married priests and retention of some Anglican features of worship are already part of the plan. But anybody who joins the RCC in whatever rite has to recognize the authority of the Magisterium.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Keep in mind, these people have been perfectly free to convert this whole time. Since they haven't done so, it seems to me that they want to be Catholic without really having to convert. They just finally have a pope that is willing to let them have their cake and eat it too.

Zach
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
I may have to eat my words when the Apostolic Constitution actually appears, but I would be shocked if it allowed married men who are not already Anglican clergy to be ordained.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
In a way, I agree. If being Roman Catholic is what's important, then it should be worth sitting through warbly guitar masses. And it seems uncharacteristic of Rome not to counsel the converts to offer it up to the Blessed Mother for the souls in Purgatory.

Which is part of what makes me suspect that this is part of cutting a deal with the TAC.
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
If the Catholic Church accepts a variation of the 1662 BCP as a legitimate rite, I can hear Cramner's body roll over in the grave. He after all, died while declaring that the Pope was not a good person*.

*The biggest understatement of the century.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anglican_Brat:
If the Catholic Church accepts a variation of the 1662 BCP as a legitimate rite, I can hear Cramner's body roll over in the grave. He after all, died while declaring that the Pope was not a good person*.

*The biggest understatement of the century.

Cranmer actually died declaring "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit... I see the heavens open and Jesus standing at the right hand of God."

Maybe that's one of those ironies Alt was talking about. The Church of Rome officially sanctioning a liturgy written by a man it burned at the stake!

Zach
 
Posted by Grammatica (# 13248) on :
 
Like Plunkitt of Tammany Hall, Pope Benedict can say: "I seen my opportunities and I took 'em."
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anglican_Brat:
If the Catholic Church accepts a variation of the 1662 BCP as a legitimate rite, I can hear Cramner's body roll over in the grave. He after all, died while declaring that the Pope was not a good person*.

*The biggest understatement of the century.

Indications are that the rite will be the Book of Divine Worship. The Mass is basically the 1979 BCP rite (in traditional and contemporary-language flavors), with the BCP canon removed and the Gregorian canon substituted. I've seen some wild fantasizing online about the Knott Missal being authorized and what-not, but I'll believe that when I see it.
 
Posted by daviddrinkell (# 8854) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
Originally posted by Anglican_Brat:
If the Catholic Church accepts a variation of the 1662 BCP as a legitimate rite, I can hear Cramner's body roll over in the grave. He after all, died while declaring that the Pope was not a good person*.

*The biggest understatement of the century.

Cranmer actually died declaring "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit... I see the heavens open and Jesus standing at the right hand of God."

Maybe that's one of those ironies Alt was talking about. The Church of Rome officially sanctioning a liturgy written by a man it burned at the stake!

Zach

Most liturgists like to quote Hippolytus as one of their earliest sources - but don't state whether his liturgy was drawn up before or after he was excommunicated for heresy. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by caercybi06 (# 15105) on :
 
There seems to be a touch of hypocrsy here .On 1 hand ex Anglicans can retain their married clergy but there are RCs who are being disiciplined for thinking out loud about a married clergy or worse female priests .
And I doubt that too many of the right wing of the Anglican family will want to bend the knee to the Pope . As to retaining buildings
here in Canada the diocese thus the Bishop owns all buildings not the congregation . There have been cases where people were told you can keep your buildings , but when the split happens they are out of luck.
So overall I think this whole idea is a bad one . If you are going to join the RCC then take instruction in said church. Otherwise forget it. [Angel]
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
There is no doubt that Pope Benedict is committed to ecumenism. That ecumenism has always been the traditional Roman Catholic form of ecumenism: return to Rome and accept the Magisterium in full.

If people ever doubted that or thought their personal opinion on reunion counted with the Vatican they were misleading themselves.

Father Webber is quite correct, much of the recent arrangement, which will be presented in full detail later, was a result of the representations made to Rome by the TAC.

There was talk at one stage of the TAC being accepted as a personal prelature. Whether this was really seriously considered by the Vatican I have no idea. The current Primate of the TAC being a twice divorced exCatholic priest would certainly have put paid to his chance of becoming a priest, let alone a bishop.

There appear to be both Catholics and Anglicans disappointed with what has happened. Unfortunately for them, they were way outside what was happening. Venting steam will do no good: the state of play has changed.

The conversations with the TAC (initiated by the TAC); the clear statements made by the Vatican representatives at Lambeth; the current difficulties in the Anglican Communion and the likelihood of women bishops in the Church of England soon obviously made the Pope think he needed to act now.

The Pope has acted perfectly correctly according to his lights and Roman Catholic teaching.

I think we remaining Anglicans have to look to ourselves and work from there. Nothing else will do much good.
 
Posted by multipara (# 2918) on :
 
Hardly an irony, young Zach.

After all Joan of Arc was burned as a sorcerer and heretic and was eventually canonised.

I just wonder what all these disaffected Anglicans think they are getting into...they mght be in for a rude shock after all that FiF Anglo-Catholicism.

And yes, it does stick in my craw that married clergy from the Anglican and (some) Orthodox traditions are welcomed with open arms, and the local lads are expected to burn rather than to marry ( those who are that way inclined).

m
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
So many details of what is being offered will only come with the published text of the Apostolic Constitution, so I don't want hazard too many guesses here.

However, it seems abundantly clear to me that this deal is for the most part for the TAC who submitted themselves a couple of years back to Rome in full acceptance of the Magisterium, asking for a corporate reception. Since then, of course, and long before too, the "mainstream" solid Anglo-Papalists and some tentative camp-followers have been asking for much the same kind of deal. Their end goal, however much they got sidelined by the cosy status quo (which got less and less cosy as time went on), was always full reunion as a body with the Holy See.

I can understand that desire - even though I submitted personally some time ago, after being an A-P for all of my adult life, and am heartily glad I did. That was definitely the right move for me. But other A-Ps who have been nurtured in the Catholic faith (and this is true whatever one may think of the validity of orders and whatever) in their own parishes and organisations, and have strong attachments to their own clergy and fellow parishioners as living ecclesiastical communities, with their own histories of witnessing to the faith, already have a corporate Catholic identity which it seems perfectly healthy and reasonable to want to keep hold of as much as possible through the transition. Provided they submit fully to the complete teaching of the Church, I see no reason why some sort of corporate allowance be made for the good of their souls. That's the supreme rule, after all.

Therefore, any notions that this is a cynical attempt at sheep-stealing some Anglicans by allowing them to be pseudo-catholics just to get one over on the Anglican Communion is, well, unfair. The Pope will be in so much trouble over this with his own bishops, if past reactions to such schemes are anything to go by, that this should rather be seen as a heroically generous attempt to Do The Right Thing by shepherdless sheep.

[ 21. October 2009, 09:22: Message edited by: Chesterbelloc ]
 
Posted by Jon G (# 4704) on :
 
Originally posted by Multipara
quote:
those who are that way inclined
Indeed, I believe the present moves are part of a greater project by the Pope to create some boundaries between kosher/non-kosher faith.

Unfortunately, developments in the area of sexuality and gender can not forever be ignored as some kind of liberal plot.

Whether in 20 or 200 years it's going to have to be addressed.
 
Posted by Sacred London (# 15220) on :
 
I think the statment is mainly being read as an invitation to existing 'disaffected' Anglicans or former Anglicans to join the RC church.

Several contributors have reasonably asked why such as these haven't already joined it anyway, and, especially given the 'papalism' of some in liturgy, what the point of an 'Anglican rite' would be.

I wonder whether the papal eye is actually on something he envisages might happen in the future, that is to say, an almost complete 'collapse' of Anglicanism into its constituent parts (evangelical/catholic/liberal/ whatever), and an ecclesial 'realignment' in which the RC church picks up (provides a home for) much larger numbers who wish to remain in a 'liturgical' community.

In other words the creation of an 'Anglican Rite' out of (rather than specifically for ) the currently disaffected is an investment for a envisaged future in which maybe the only place one might be able to hear Evensong or 1662 language will be an Anglican Rite Catholic church.

[ 21. October 2009, 10:11: Message edited by: Sacred London ]
 
Posted by Jon G (# 4704) on :
 
I like what Bishop Alan wrote about all this.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jon G:
I like what Bishop Alan wrote about all this.

I hope I'm not infringing his copyright by quoting this bit:
quote:
you’ll get two sorts of “convert”:

1. people who really should try out and perhaps are called by God to be part of the Roman tradition: Hip, hip, hooray!

2. people who aren’t terribly good at living in any tradition on anything but their own terms.

The second sort of convert will carry on inexorably being as they are, because it’s personaity based and they can’t help it. This may not be good news for your own people. Where, for example, does it leave genuine Roman Catholic clergy who have faithfully and heroicially struggled and somehow managed to live within their Church’s discipline, because they sincerely believed it was necessary, to know that Auntie in Rome is now doing a PostModern family promotion for married Anglicans, but you’re not invited?

[Overused]

Though what has really changed? Individual Anglicans (priests and laity) have been welcomed on those terms already. The 'Continuing Anglicans' (who hardly exist in England anyway, and are not necessarily or mostly pro-papal in the US or elswhere) are the only real groups that might consider the offer. A few C of E priests might take a small remnant of laity with them, and submit as a group. But there aren't going to be any parishes as such that take up the offer.

[ 21. October 2009, 10:52: Message edited by: Angloid ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
Isn't it a smack in the face to the Church of Rome that we think our orders and sacraments are valid?

If, as some people seem to think, this implies almost automatic re-ordination for Anglican priests who want to join the new Apostolic Whatsit then the slap in the face isn't to continuing Anglicans but to those individuals who gave up their ANglican orders and went into the Church of Rome as lay people.

Talk of appointing bishops from among the community of ex-Anglicans seems to me to imply that there is to be a semi-automatic recognition of the orders of the Tiber-swiming Anglican priests. Which would imply that Anglican orders and sacraments aren't so much invalid as incomplete. OK as far as they go, but needing to be topped up by the Pope's magic juice to be really as good as they can be.

There is a process of discernment and formation and training and education that goes into being a Roman Catholic priest, just as there is one for Anglicans (or Lutherans, or Methodists, or Presbyterians or whoever). Is the Vatican really promising to bypass or short-circuit or fast-track that process for Anglicans? If they are, then this is de facto recognition of the Anglican processes of discernment and formation, which looks a lot like de facto recognition of Anglican orders. It would be rather odd to imagine a load of priestless heretical sectarians who were by some miracle almost infallibly capable of discerning who should be a priest in the church of God and who shouldn't. But if the Vatican really isn't promising that, then this is perhaps less than it seems on the surface.

quote:
Originally posted by Anglican_Brat:

On one hand, at least in the short-term, this would further entrench the evangelical ascendancy in the CofE.

Evangelical ascendency? It doesn't look like one from here! Liberal-catholic with charismatic tinges I'd say.

Oh, and what Angloid just said...
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
[Is the Vatican really promising to bypass or short-circuit or fast-track that process for Anglicans? If they are, then this is de facto recognition of the Anglican processes of discernment and formation, which looks a lot like de facto recognition of Anglican orders.

At least since Vatican II it has been standard Catholic teaching that ministers in protestant churches are genuine ministers of Jesus Christ, and their pastoral formation/experience is perfectly "valid." However, they have not received the sacrament of Holy Orders (to which most of them -- including many Anglicans -- would say, "damn right, ordination isn't a sacrament"). So, yes, there is a recognition of their ministry, just not of their priesthood.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by caercybi06:
... but there are RCs who are being disciplined for thinking out loud about a married clergy or worse female priests.

That's not really fair. RCs are at least allowed to talk about married priests!

Sometimes they even get to talk to them. There are a few married priests in the Roman rite of the RCs and always have been (though once upon a time they might have been elderly and vowed celibacy in marriage - it has happened). They've got their by various means, and conversion from Anglicanism is one of them. Also the RCs have always been in communion with Eastern rite churches that have married priests.

If I was being a cynical conspiracy theorist I would say this works to the mutual advantage of the hierarchies of both Rome and the Church of England. Rome, because they get to introduce married priests through the back door without having to publically back down on anything. CofE because they can now draw up their rules for objectors to women bishops knowing that some of the pressure is off.

I assume & hope that the people making the new rules stick to their guns and allow as much space as possible for objectors (short of the almost impossible Third Province or complete independency for the parishes) It would be a shame if anyone takes this as a cue to try to push the objectors out of the CofE entirely by deliberatly making a system to exclude them.

quote:

And I doubt that too many of the right wing of the Anglican family will want to bend the knee to the Pope.

I'm not sure that the phrase "right wing" is very helpful here. In England (it might be different in the USA) a lot of theologically orthodox Anglicans are politically left-wing - both Anglo-Catholics and Evangelicals. And at least some of the theological liberals are politically right-wing.

Also its confusing to the fevered brains of those few of us who have read histories of the 16th and 17th century, because the more extreme Protestants are often called the "left wing of the Reformation" [Smile]

quote:

As to retaining buildings here in Canada the diocese thus the Bishop owns all buildings not the congregation.

In the Church of England, the freehold of most parish churches is held by the incumbent acting as a corporation in trust for the whole parish. And they are inalienable. The legal situation is, to put it mildly, complex. They can be sold off when redundant but there are Dickensian hoops to jump through and it involves the Diocese and the inhabitants of the parish - not just the members of the church.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
Indications are that the rite will be the Book of Divine Worship. The Mass is basically the 1979 BCP rite (in traditional and contemporary-language flavors), with the BCP canon removed and the Gregorian canon substituted. I've seen some wild fantasizing online about the Knott Missal being authorized and what-not, but I'll believe that when I see it.

That would be pretty irrelevant to the vast majority of English FiF types (who are, I am assuming, the main target audience of this move). In their current practice many of them are effectively using the modern Roman rite anyway, and most of the rest are, I suspect, using the CofE's Common Worship pretty straight (it allows for huge local variation). Some will be using modifications of older Roman rites, but I think (with very little evidence) that they will be very small in number.

Only a minority use the Prayer Book any more, probably an even smaller minority than the minority of Evangelicals who do. Some will be attached to the Morning and Evening Prayer BCP services in 1662 (or 1927/28 for a few). As private devotions they are probably used by some RC ex-Anglicans already. I bet it wouldn't take much for them to be authorised in RC churches - is there anything in the Office liturgy in 1927/28 that Roman Catholics ought not to believe or say?

I suspect that most of them would be happy with the words of Novus Ordo and a little latitude in their interpretation of the GIRM. (Like the latitude they used to find in their interpretation of the BCP rubrics) And perhaps a modern-language, or more likely 1928ish cod-language version of the Office. Maybe with a nice little pseudo-Cranmerian Compline added.
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
A few C of E priests might take a small remnant of laity with them, and submit as a group. But there aren't going to be any parishes as such that take up the offer.

I wouldn't be too sure, only time will tell. The thing about this is that it is new. There has been no such provision before in England. In fact the RC hierarchy was somewhat wary of Anglican converts after women's ordination. But it's not just the provision that is new, it is the entire situation.

Whereas in 1992 it was clear that the CoE was going to bend over backwards to accommodate Anglo-catholics, there is a considerable hardening of attitudes now. We're also in a bigger mess than ever in Anglican circles. We are so badly divided that the Roman Catholic Church no longer believes that the only way of talking to Anglicans is to do so officially via the ABC, or ARCIC. Lastly, hopes of full,visible unity have receded entirely and the ARCIC process has been downgraded. I think this initiative will be taken very seriously around the Communion among many Anglicans who believe in the provisionality of our Church, and deplore the ossification of Anglicanism in an effete liberal-catholicism.
 
Posted by uncletoby (# 13067) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
It would be a shame if anyone takes this as a cue to try to push the objectors out of the CofE entirely by deliberatly making a system to exclude them.

This pretty much sums up my feelings. I am not an objector myself, but most of my fellow-parishoners are. I would hate to see parish communities fractured over this.
 
Posted by Choirboy (# 9659) on :
 
I'm somewhat bemused by comments here, mostly but not entirely, I think, from the far side of the pond, worrying about introducing a bunch of ex-Anglicans of a fractious authority-challenged 'nature' into the Catholic Church. As if the Catholic Church had any shortage of that sort as it is.

Perhaps things are smoother over there, but hearing of Damien Thompson and his fans makes me think it is perhaps otherwise. And a glance at websites of similar groups in the U.S. shows Thompson's followers are the tip of the iceberg. I'm thinking here of what I've seen of Una Voca Orange County's website etc.

Such folks will always quote you chapter and verse from some set of rules or the other justifying their statements or actions, but, of course, this sets themselves up as the interpreters of those rules rather than leaving such things to the bishops or Rome.

The 'nature' of these soon to be ex-Anglicans doesn't seem to me to be any different than any number of folks on the other side of the Tiber. The chief difference appears to be that the group of Anglicans is more noticeable because they are larger with respect to Anglicanism or the C of E than the corresponding groups within the Catholic Church are to the larger body. That, and they seem to be a whole lot nicer than many of the 'authentically' Catholic crazies I've come across.

So what is worse - acknowledging all the doctrine but realizing issues of ecclesiastical culture need addressing, or being thoroughly in the fold by brand but insisting the rules mean exactly what you think they mean, railing on about this bishop or that, running around 'spying' on liturgy at places and threatening reports to Rome?

On the other hand, if the latter is all perfectly normal, then you have nothing to worry about from the ex-Anglicans. They will be rather tame by comparison.
 
Posted by angelicum (# 13515) on :
 
I'm not entirely sure I understand what exactly is so wrong with charges of proselytism in this instance. I would say this was an accurate statement. After all the Pope believes that the church of Christ subsists in the Catholic church and that there is a deficiency in the Anglican communion.

If by allowing those who already subscribe to the truths of the faith including the Petrine role, but wish to preserve some corporate expression of their former religious identities which do not in themselves contradict Catholic doctrine, encourages more people to join the Catholic church then from the RC perspective this has to be a good thing.

This is not about setting up pseudo-Anglicans (and in a sense all Anglicans are former Catholics), but rather a corporate re-union with particular communities in the Anglican tradition who have come to a shared understanding of issues which may formerly have been divisive. That has always been the goal of ecumenism from the RC perspective.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
I think this initiative will be taken very seriously around the Communion among many Anglicans who believe in the provisionality of our Church, and deplore the ossification of Anglicanism in an effete liberal-catholicism.

This Anglo-catholic believes very strongly in the provisionality of (any) church, but especially the C of E, would love to see unity with the RCC, but not at the cost of disowning his ordained sisters nor of sweeping yet further under the carpet the issues of gender and sexuality. If that makes me an 'effete liberal-catholic', well, so be it. But I think we might well be a stronger voice in the C of E than that dismissive epithet suggests.

As for my comment about 'parishes' not 'converting': this would only be a feasible concept if you accepted the sectarian view of the C of E and saw 'parish' as meaning the worshipping community rather than a wider geographical community for whom the Church has a responsibility.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Jon G:
[qb] I like what Bishop Alan wrote about all this.

I hope I'm not infringing his copyright by quoting this bit:
quote:
you’ll get two sorts of “convert”:


2. people who aren’t terribly good at living in any tradition on anything but their own terms.

The second sort of convert will carry on inexorably being as they are, because it’s personaity based and they can’t help it. This may not be good news for your own people. Where, for example, does it leave genuine Roman Catholic clergy who have faithfully and heroicially struggled and somehow managed to live within their Church’s discipline, because they sincerely believed it was necessary, to know that Auntie in Rome is now doing a PostModern family promotion for married Anglicans, but you’re not invited?

The Catholic Church can deal just fine with convert number 2, if he is a layman. We are a hospital for sinners after all....we welcome all assholes....so long as you don't bug the confessional or hire PIs to look for moral dirt that one can publicize about the clergy. (Those assholes are usually cradle Catholics, not converts, a certain ex-convert that writes for a Texas newspaper being an exception.) It is the clergy where assholeism is a problem. The Church can refuse to ordain those men, and I hope that our bishops will not lay hands suddenly on any man, as the Bible says.

I'm more and more pleased 24 hours after the annoucement, but I do not think the outcome will be earthshattering. I do not expect a single Anglican Use parish anywhere near my home. There is an active continuing parish near me easily accesible by bus, but it is highly unlikely to come over to Rome however desirable that would be.

[ 21. October 2009, 13:51: Message edited by: Shadowhund ]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Full circle in what way
That there are now Anglicans who believe the only way to preserve the distinctive of their liturgical patrimony and piety is to go under the authority of the Pope. That is deeply ironic, and I'm sure that would not be lost on Cranmer or Campion.
 
Posted by fletcher christian (# 13919) on :
 
Has there been any discussion about the needs of the congregations which such priests as would want to swim the Tiber presumably presently represent and give cure of souls to?
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
If that makes me an 'effete liberal-catholic', well, so be it. But I think we might well be a stronger voice in the C of E than that dismissive epithet suggests.

That's my point, liberal catholicism has a very strong voice for better or worse. Increasingly many liberal catholics reject any concept of provisionality, and have turned their backs on the Anglo-Catholic-driven quest for full, visible unity with the Holy See. (Strictly speaking, that probably makes them liberals who like tat.)

I take your point about parishes.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Choirboy wrote
quote:
I'm somewhat bemused by comments here, mostly but not entirely, I think, from the far side of the pond, worrying about introducing a bunch of ex-Anglicans of a fractious authority-challenged 'nature' into the Catholic Church. As if the Catholic Church had any shortage of that sort as it is.
Well - I agree with this, I think. However, what comes after this in your analysis is more problematic. As about half a dozen of us have pointed out in different ways, your thumbnail sketch only describes part of the constituency. The remainder are not really problematic at all. At least in this way. They are simply parishioners who feel increasingly marginalized. As I pointed out earlier, if the results of the last exodus are anything to go by, there is every chance that after a season, the troublemakers will return to the fold of whatever flavour of Anglicanism they had left.
 
Posted by Horseman Bree (# 5290) on :
 
Mildly interesting suggestion in today's New York Times (scroll down to John Allen's piece)

Try this quote:
quote:
By the way, there’s also nothing preventing the Anglican Communion from creating similar structures to welcome aggrieved Catholics who support all the measures these disaffected Anglicans oppose. Certainly, after today, the Vatican would have no basis to condemn such a move as an ecumenical low blow.


What chance of an opposite flow?
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Methodists, or Presbyterians or whoever). Is the Vatican really promising to bypass or short-circuit or fast-track that process for Anglicans? If they are, then this is de facto recognition of the Anglican processes of discernment and formation, which looks a lot like de facto recognition of Anglican orders.

Perhaps it only recognizes Anglican orders in the past tense: orders that were once valid but today increasingly dubious.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
What chance of an opposite flow?
In the U.S., they have an existing flow now. Does the ECUSA need a prelature for support of the Pauline mass? I doubt it.

[ 21. October 2009, 15:29: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Horseman Bree:
What chance of an opposite flow?

I'm not sure anyone has any firm numbers, but every TEC church I've ever been part of has a sizable group of ex-Romans.

Given the relative sizes of the two churches in the US, I think it likely that numerically there are more leaving Rome than joining her. I would hesitate to suggest it was a larger percentage of the total, however.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
I have read surveys that suggest that in the U.S. Roman Catholics become Episcopalians at a 5 to 1 ratio than in the other direction.

I reckon it's lower in Canada because Catholicism has an even greater ethnic dimension.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Horseman Bree:
What chance of an opposite flow?

quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
In the U.S., they have an existing flow now. Does the ECUSA need a prelature for support of the Pauline mass? I doubt it.

quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
I'm not sure anyone has any firm numbers, but every TEC church I've ever been part of has a sizable group of ex-Romans.

Given the relative sizes of the two churches in the US, I think it likely that numerically there are more leaving Rome than joining her. I would hesitate to suggest it was a larger percentage of the total, however.

My experience in the American Episcopal Church is the same as Organ Builder's. I teach the newcomers and the adult confirmation classes in my parish, and in general about half the people who come to us as adults are former Roman Catholics. It's a sizable number from our point of view, but I doubt the folks in charge of the local Catholic congregations are losing any sleep over the number of alienated Catholics who join Episcopal churches; larger numbers are joining charismatic churches and probably even more are simply dropping out of church attendance entirely.

I don't think there's any point in TEC creating a structure for welcoming former Catholics en masse, for a couple of reasons. First, Catholics don't come to us in groups. They come to us as individuals. We don't have groups of Catholics petitioning us for acceptance of their rites. Second, we've got too much of our identity tied up in our forms of worship. When you become an Episcopalian, you're not submitting to a magisterium -- you're primarily agreeing that you want to worship with us the way we worship.

While of course there are caveats and qualifications to be made to the following statement, overall, I see Anglicanism as being more about practice than about doctrine -- we have no unique primary beliefs, no core tenets that are ours alone, that no other group of Christians doesn't also believe -- whereas Catholicism seems to be very much about doctrine.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
I think there is much more to this than meets the eye.

The Holy Father, some time back (and I don't have a link to prove it - I just remember it), pleased with the C of E to remain intact, while other RC bishops said that a merely negative view about the OOW was not sufficient reason to embrace the RCC.

Howabout if the Pope has made this gesture in an attempt to scare Synod into making proper provision for conscientious objectors to women bishops?
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
I have read surveys that suggest that in the U.S. Roman Catholics become Episcopalians at a 5 to 1 ratio than in the other direction.


Surely that would be what you would expect if there were five times as many RCs as Episcopalians and the movement was balanced. I suspect there are more than 5 times the number of RCs in the USA than episcopalians so if anything it shows that the Episcopal Church is not much of a draw to disenchanted RCs.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
I suppose, leo, that is within the realm of possibility. I'm skeptical, however, because I don't think the Pope thinks about Anglicans as much as Anglicans think about the Pope.

It also seems to me that if that were his motivation there would have been little or no need to keep the ABC out of the loop.

I'm more inclined to think (though not yet completely convinced) that this was in response to the TAC, and the implications for the C of E may never have crossed his mind. I certainly doubt he understood or thought about its implications for the balance of power in Synod for the C of E.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
Apparently there are 66.4 million Roman Catholics in the USA and 2.3 million Episcopalians.

So based on your 1:5 ratio a far higher proportion of Episcopalians are becoming RC that RCs are becoming Episcopalian.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
It doesn't change my point that numerically, Episcopalians get the better end of the deal (including priests and bishops who want to marry.)
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Now that Rome is officially taking married Anglican priests, will it be taking Father Cutie back?

Zach
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
The two churches keep membership records (and therefore numbers of members) in completely different manners. I'm not sure, therefore, that they are directly comparable. I suspect most of those converts to TEC are still on the Roman count.

That said, there is no question the Roman presence in the US far outweighs the Episcopalian presence. In recent years, though, the only thing which kept Roman numbers increasing was the influx of Catholic immigrants--mostly hispanic.

Episcopalians are really no threat to the RCs, and to be honest the RCs aren't really a threat for us. The RCs are losing many more members to various charismatic and pentecostal groups--especially from the hispanic groups which were the backbone of the Catholic church in the Southwest where I grew up.

Given that this option has long been available in the US anyway, I would be surprised if it is ever anything more than a story for a slow news day--as mentioned earlier, Anglo-Papalists are extremely rare in the US.
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
A few questions come to mind.

As I understand things, Anglican clergy who assent to Catholic doctrine and to the authority of the Pope and the magisterium can be ‘fast-tracked’ into Catholic ordination. But what qualifies a clergyman as ‘Anglican’? The Anglican communion, even before the schisms of the last decade, had multiple branches and sub-branches. If you include the entire ‘continuing Anglican’ movement, the tree gets very bushy indeed. Will any cleric who calls himself Anglican be treated as such? The actual Anglican ordination seems largely irrelevant, since the Church doesn't accept it. So if I sign up with the International Traditional Continuing Orthodox Anglican Communion and get myself ordained by a wandering bishop, can I apply as a married priest and get fast-tracked to Catholic ordination?

Setting property issues aside, when Anglican parishes come over to Rome, how will they adapt to a very different model of parish governance and church polity? Parochial church councils (UK) and vestries (USA) are executive bodies, with power to raise funds and a major role in selecting the parish clergy. Parish councils in the Catholic Church are purely advisory. I don’t think there is anything in canon law that requires their existence. A parish priest (pastor) who wants to close down his parish council can do so in an instant; indeed, for traditionalist priests it has become something of a point of honour to dissolve the parish council.

How will the new Anglican-Catholics cope with the liturgical chaos they will find on this side of the Tiber? The Catholic Church has everything from ‘make it up as you go along’ to ‘strictly by the book’, with, in some circles, a ritual mutaween ready to file a video report with Rome if anyone breaks the rules. It is truly ‘here comes everybody’. And this chaos (healthy diversity?) often works within a single parish – the 8 am Mass may be guitars and tambourines, the 10:30 Latin and chant. Maybe this is also the case in Anglican parishes, but given that some of these migrating Anglicans seem to be from the ‘high churc’ faction, I wonder how they will get on.

Finally, it seems to me that both the traditionalist Anglicans and the SSPX – and some tradbloggers have suggested that the SSPXers will be next to be given personal ordinariates – have defined themselves primarily in opposition to other movements. The ‘Affirmation of St Louis’, for example, claims early on that ‘the Anglican Church of Canada and the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, by their unlawful attempts to alter Faith, Order and Morality … have departed from Christ's One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.’

Once these oppositional, enclavist groups come into the wider space of the Catholic Church, what will they have to fight against? If their identities are defined primarily by what they oppose, what happens when there is no longer much to oppose?

At some level I guess all of these are empirical questions and that they will be resolved both by details of the Apostolic Constitution and by events over the next few years.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Howabout if the Pope has made this gesture in an attempt to scare Synod into making proper provision for conscientious objectors to women bishops? [/QUOTE]

If by "proper provision" you mean what they are demanding of the rest if us, I think it works the other way round. This makes that less likely, not more. And I suspect it means women bishops sooner, rather than later.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
The two churches keep membership records (and therefore numbers of members) in completely different manners. I'm not sure, therefore, that they are directly comparable. I suspect most of those converts to TEC are still on the Roman count...

...Episcopalians are really no threat to the RCs, and to be honest the RCs aren't really a threat for us. The RCs are losing many more members to various charismatic and pentecostal groups--especially from the hispanic groups which were the backbone of the Catholic church in the Southwest where I grew up.

The RC's biggest loss is really the same as the Episcopalians - the bucket of "no religion". Even in the midst of Hispanic migration the number of baptized Catholics who attend mass has nosedived from 42% in 1987 to 33% by 2005. (Source: USA Today) If they used the same method of counting members as the Episcopal Church their membership loss would equal ours and exceed many of the mainline Protestant denominations.

Granted, RCs seem to keep their religious identification longer after they cease to practise, but even with call after call from RC bishops to come back, you don't see French, Québecois, Spanish, Italian, Swiss or South Americans streaming back into the church in great numbers. And the same is true for North Americans outside of first and second generation immigrants.

That's why it strikes me as a case of wankery to go after disaffected Anglicans instead of focusing on what is leading many to leave. The church, whether it is liberal or conservative, isn't speaking to increasing numbers people anymore.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cor ad cor loquitur:
How will the new Anglican-Catholics cope with the liturgical chaos they will find on this side of the Tiber? The Catholic Church has everything from ‘make it up as you go along’ to ‘strictly by the book’, with, in some circles, a ritual mutaween ready to file a video report with Rome if anyone breaks the rules. It is truly ‘here comes everybody’. And this chaos (healthy diversity?) often works within a single parish – the 8 am Mass may be guitars and tambourines, the 10:30 Latin and chant. Maybe this is also the case in Anglican parishes, but given that some of these migrating Anglicans seem to be from the ‘high churc’ faction, I wonder how they will get on.

My impression is that the establishment of this Ordinariate will allow those under it to form their own communities of the Anglican Use within the Roman Rite. It won't be just a matter of absorbing them into the nearest RC parish, but bringing their parish (and, where possible, its property) into the Ordinary's jurisdiction. I would guess that if the parish rector or other clergy were received, even without a building they would at least rate their own service in the parish schedule.

quote:

Finally, it seems to me that both the traditionalist Anglicans and the SSPX – and some tradbloggers have suggested that the SSPXers will be next to be given personal ordinariates – have defined themselves primarily in opposition to other movements. The ‘Affirmation of St Louis’, for example, claims early on that ‘the Anglican Church of Canada and the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, by their unlawful attempts to alter Faith, Order and Morality … have departed from Christ's One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.’

Once these oppositional, enclavist groups come into the wider space of the Catholic Church, what will they have to fight against? If their identities are defined primarily by what they oppose, what happens when there is no longer much to oppose?

I think you misinterpret the Affirmation's preamble. Very few of us in the Continuing Churches are concerned with "fighting against" the Episcopal Church or the ACCanada. That paragraph you quoted is an explanation of what led to the circumstance of the Fellowship of Concerned Churchmen meeting in St Louis, and what motivated their decision. It's not a declaration of eternal vendetta against the Episcopalians, and most of us have very little time for anyone who wants to carry on such a vendetta. We left TEC, and their problems aren't our concern except insofar as they inspire some tsking over the morning paper.

That being said, there are those within the Continuing Churches (and, unaccountably, within the Anglican Communion) who are professional malcontents. But these people aren't happy anywhere; nothing lives up to their expectations, and though they might hop to the Anglican Ordinariate when it becomes available, a year later they'll leave for the LCMS or WRO, or some other group that seems like it will offer the blissfully perfect church experience they will never have, because that's what they're like.
 
Posted by fisher (# 9080) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cor ad cor loquitur:
...Once these oppositional, enclavist groups come into the wider space of the Catholic Church, what will they have to fight against? If their identities are defined primarily by what they oppose, what happens when there is no longer much to oppose?...

This may be what you're implying, but presumably from a C/catholic perspective that is one of the ways this could work out quite well.
 
Posted by sonata3 (# 13653) on :
 
I'm surprised that the issue of divorce has not been more often mentioned in this thread. The last time I was member of an Episcopal parish, I would guess that half of the membership (including the priest) were former Catholics (incidentally, I have read that the second largest Christian denomination in the US is "formerly Catholic"). And the primary reason that led many of these former Catholics to convert was divorce, and a reluctance to go through the annullment process. (On the "New Liturgical Movement" blog, one poster suggested blanket annullments for all Anglicans converting, with the rationale that their Anglican understanding of marriage was defective, and therefore the marriage could not have been valid).
But it seems to me that divorce is going to be an issue that will have to be dealt with, if there is to be a wholesale movement to Rome. (Aren't there TAC bishops with divorce in their backgrounds, and hasn't that been a part of the sticking point in their discussions with Rome, or no?)
And, I found the following quote from Bishop Iker (in this morning's WSJ) interesting: "Not all Anglo-Catholics can accept certain teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, nor do they believe that they must first convert to Rome in order to be truly catholic Christians."
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by sonata3:

And, I found the following quote from Bishop Iker (in this morning's WSJ) interesting: "Not all Anglo-Catholics can accept certain teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, nor do they believe that they must first convert to Rome in order to be truly catholic Christians."

It isn't very often that Bishop Iker will say something with which I can agree 100%.

Now, I think I need to go lie down...
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
I'm surprised that the issue of divorce has not been more often mentioned in this thread.
It will be interesting to see. Eastern Catholics had to abandon ecclesiastical divorce and adopt annulments.

Similar to others, and ECUSA parish I attended had a priest (divorced & re-married) who was a former Catholic. There were several others of similar background.

[ 21. October 2009, 19:31: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
There is a cultural difference between the RCC & Anglicanism, even Anglo-papalism and that difference is not papered over by allowing some sort of Anglican rite. The RCC is very different from the inside as opposed to the outside looking in.

Somebody much earlier on in the thread commented on noticing that the priest didn't hold his hands correctly during Mass shortly after his reception into the RCC and realising that it wasn't an issue.
In AC circles what priests and people do liturgically and that includes where when and how often a member of the congregation or a priest makes or doesn't make, the Sign of the Cross, is important because in an Anglican context it makes them classifiable. In an RCC context it is irrelevant.

Anglicans seem to be obsessed with what people do rather than their spiritual health and the Ship seems to reflect that. It's surely a spiritual journey that brings people to the RCC, not the negatives that keep coming up, women clergy, homosexuality etc. If it is not spiritual it won't last...no matter what the TAC's motivation may be.
 
Posted by Mother Julian (# 11978) on :
 
Father Tim Finigan, the well-known English Catholic blogger has posted an interesting article today that seems to draw on well-informed sources:
The hermeneutic of continuity

for example:
quote:
This was not an initiative of the Holy See but of over 50 Anglican Bishops, of whom about half are still in the Anglican Communion
He comments towards the end that this is a matter of authority, not the ordination of women or gays. How glad I am to hear a respected writer emphasising this - it's happens to be my view as well. In response to Max. yesterday, if I should swim the Tiber and twenty years later the Catholic Church decides to ordain women priests, I would be very happy, as the Catholic Church has the authority to do this.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fuzzipeg:
Anglicans seem to be obsessed with what people do rather than their spiritual health and the Ship seems to reflect that.

My italics. I'll let the first part of the generalization pass, but I do wonder how you think an internet bulletin board would be set up to cater to people's spiritual health. My guess would be that it might bear a passing resemblance to the All Saints board, but it certainly wouldn't look anything like Purgatory.

At the moment, this looks like a really cheap shot. I hope that wasn't your intent.
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
Looking at this from outside both churches, I am not sure I see the problem. The Times front page claims amximum of 2000 priest might cross - though they guess a thousand or less - out of 14,000. This being 1000-2000 who are already disaffected, and (like everybody else pretty much) have always professed a desire for the ultimate reunification of the church.

If you keep them, what are you keeping them for ? It would be different if they would be 'abandoned' if they left.

It also seems as if it will make it easier for the church to procede with the direction the majority of members are comfortbale with.

There is one report stating it is wierd that the ABC would do a joint press conference with someone who is effectively declaring him a heretic. But that has always been the position of the RCs toward the Anglicans hasn't it ? Also the 'offically notified' only two days ago suggests to me - unofficially notified quite a while back but to be kept under one's mitre so as not to derail a fait accompli.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
The Bishop of Fulham and Fr Geoffrey Kirk of Forward in Faith began their rsponse to these plans with the following words:

quote:
It has been the frequently expressed hope and fervent desire of Anglican Catholics to be enabled by some means to enter into full communion with the See of Peter whilst retaining in its integrity every aspect of their Anglican inheritance which is not at variance with the teaching of the Catholic Church.
It seems to me that this ecumenical gesture by Pope Benedict XVI will cater for this expressed hope and fervent desire. So where does this leave the General Synod in its struggle to provide for those who can't, in good faith, accept the priesthood of women? I would say its a "get out of jail" card! I was once a strong supporter of the FiF proposal for a Third Province. I have now come to realise that, if the C of E has decided, which it has, by constitutional means to ordain women bishops, it is entitled to say, "this is what the Church of England does. If you can't accept it you will need to find a spiritual home elsewhere."

This Apostolic Constitution answers the needs of both groups, and must radically change the way the Synod deals with this issue. What FiF couldn't get from the C of E it can get from Rome, ie an independent structure, which also answers the long term goals as set out in + Fulham's statement. The C of E has no further need to make any structural provision, even that recently proposed of statutory transfer of jurisdiction. It can safely install a weak code of practice for dissenters in the knowledge that, if they dissent strongly enough, their structural provision lies over the Tiber.
 
Posted by The Man with a Stick (# 12664) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
The Bishop of Fulham and Fr Geoffrey Kirk of Forward in Faith began their rsponse to these plans with the following words:

quote:
It has been the frequently expressed hope and fervent desire of Anglican Catholics to be enabled by some means to enter into full communion with the See of Peter whilst retaining in its integrity every aspect of their Anglican inheritance which is not at variance with the teaching of the Catholic Church.
It seems to me that this ecumenical gesture by Pope Benedict XVI will cater for this expressed hope and fervent desire. So where does this leave the General Synod in its struggle to provide for those who can't, in good faith, accept the priesthood of women? I would say its a "get out of jail" card! I was once a strong supporter of the FiF proposal for a Third Province. I have now come to realise that, if the C of E has decided, which it has, by constitutional means to ordain women bishops, it is entitled to say, "this is what the Church of England does. If you can't accept it you will need to find a spiritual home elsewhere."

This Apostolic Constitution answers the needs of both groups, and must radically change the way the Synod deals with this issue. What FiF couldn't get from the C of E it can get from Rome, ie an independent structure, which also answers the long term goals as set out in + Fulham's statement. The C of E has no further need to make any structural provision, even that recently proposed of statutory transfer of jurisdiction. It can safely install a weak code of practice for dissenters in the knowledge that, if they dissent strongly enough, their structural provision lies over the Tiber.

...which will leave a lot of conservative evangelicals very annoyed, and falling into the arms of FOCA.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
Increasingly many liberal catholics reject any concept of provisionality, and have turned their backs on the Anglo-Catholic-driven quest for full, visible unity with the Holy See. (Strictly speaking, that probably makes them liberals who like tat.)


Except that Liberals are not that Liberal in that Radical Orthodoxy has converted even the most difficult of us, and the Sacramentalists see the value of tat in the way they may also see the value in singing or manual actions, but don't see it as essential.


Sitting in a New Monasticism Symposium the other week the most striking thing about the gathered crowd was the diversity as far as 'traditional' tribalism's are concerned. The old tribalism's are over.

And this is reflected in parish ministry, where many of us have to deal with BCP, Sung Eucharists, Folk All Age, and Charismatic forms of liturgy on a weekly basis. I love them all. If Paul could handle Jerusalem and Antioch then I have to follow his example.

I deeply respect traditionalist Reformed and Catholic friends. I am saddened that many cannot accept Women's orders/ministry. I can understand people heading towards 'Geneva' or Rome. But the cutting edge is this, the Church of England is rediscovering its Reformed Catholic identity.

I am truly sorry if this distances us from Rome. I am saddened that many of my more Evangelical friends find themselves distanced from non-conformists by a deepening understanding of the sacramentalism that is as intrinsic to the historic Christian faith as the Trinity.

But I am delighted that through all these birthing pains the CofE (and Anglicanism perhaps) is rediscovering who God called us to be.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Reality check ....

Many AC clergy live in denial about the resolve of the people to support them and follow out of the CofE in ANY direction. Many AC clergy are also in denial to THEMSELVES about their own resolve especially when the following "hard" facts strike home ....

(1) No buildings
(2) Fewer pilgrims
(3) Insufficient money to be full time stipendiary
(4) Not everyone in middle age with little other marketable skills in a recession are cut out to be teachers or social workers

In short, sacrifice. Not theoretical sacrifice based in impassioned ideals ... but REAL sacrifice, financial hardship, upset wives, loss of status, uncertain landings elsewhere etc. etc.

The Times today ..... 400,000?! Don't make me larf.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think²:
The Times front page claims amximum of 2000 priest might cross - though they guess a thousand or less - out of 14,000.

A thousand? That seems vastly overstated to me. I'd be astonished. One or two hundred is much more likely. Maybe even less.

quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
The C of E has no further need to make any structural provision, even that recently proposed of statutory transfer of jurisdiction.

Complete disagreement here. In charity we should do what we can. The Third Province idea was asking us to do something we can't.

quote:
Originally posted by The Man with a Stick:
...which will leave a lot of conservative evangelicals very annoyed, and falling into the arms of FOCA.

But the whole thing is less important for them. Us evangelicals (whether conservative or otherwise) are used to living with bishops who barely seem Christian to us. Also we tend not to have issues about sacramental validity or taint.
 
Posted by shameless (# 9918) on :
 
It just amazes me all the fear from so many detractors. The paint isn't even dry and all that can be seen are the defects.

Yes, this will take time and effort and the expense of a lot of energy to make the transition. But the RCC has always felt that both the Anglican and Lutheran Churches should be brought back into communion.

I find it very strange in my study of the history of the church that each sovereign power, or country had its' own version of the catholic church. Yes there was and is an English Catholic Church. Don't forget that catholic means universal and universal means encompasing the many variations. We are all one body though many parts.

Shameless
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shameless:
I find it very strange in my study of the history of the church that each sovereign power, or country had its' own version of the catholic church. Yes there was and is an English Catholic Church. Don't forget that catholic means universal and universal means encompasing the many variations. We are all one body though many parts.

Shameless

The Orthodox, IMHO, are much better at this line of thinking than those in communion with Rome. I frequently encounter Orthodox who will say things like, "Eh. The church is the church." (And yes, they know I'm Lutheran, and frankly they don't see why a denomination matters at all, and furrow their brows in a desperate attempt to understand the situation. Their view is often very all-encompassing. It reminds me of that father...or was it an uncle...on My Big Fat Greek Wedding who in his own mind was able to justify anything or anyone in the whole world as Greek.)
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
Man. This is... awkward.

I started out in the Roman Catholic Church in the early 1980s. I wound up Episcopalian though I wondered off and on, especially while wrestling with certain doctrinal issues, if I'd end up coming back to Rome. Some of those issues are ones held in high importance by the "continuing Anglicans," though it still saddens and frustrates me that it was sexual and not Creedal matters which led to their departure.

The RCC that I experienced back in those days was very Vatican II. A new openness to dialogue, etc. Christ Among Us as the CCD book. And so on.

Things seem to me to have changed, especially recently with the current Pope, in the RCC. I perceive a kind of reactionary anger -- bumper stickers that say "The cafeteria is CLOSED!" and things like that. A growing sense that Rome is trying to throw out Vatican II.

I'm very much a doctrinally orthodox Anglican/Episcopalian Christian who almost left over issues like the ordination of women (since convinced of their validity). My views on sexuality are in various older posts (and I don't want to derail this into that). I'm aghast when clergy deny the Incarnation, redemptive death, and Resurrection of Jesus. But the people who left the Episcopal church for "continuing Anglican" churches -- at least the ones I have known personally, and much of what I have read by other people who have left, and, importantly, I do not mean people I know on the Ship -- have seemed to me to be full of shrill anger, not trying to build bridges and have dialogue with those with whom they disagree, but with bitter, venomous invective, full of malice and resentment, even once they've left still talking nonstop about how those horrible liberal people are destroying all that is good.

Honestly, I'm concerned that Rome bringing these people in will not help the former Anglicans to be healthier, and will hurt the RCC -- it sounds like it's bringing in precisely the people who will continue to attack Vatican II and related things. I fear that this is the intent -- that these people are being approached because they seem focused on fighting (and not dialoguing with) those who argue for "liberal innovations" -- in order to shore up the "cafeteria is closed" direction. If this is true, it saddens me.

David
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Martin L

You have been dealing with too many "Greeks" .... OR I'll just assume that was an analogy to an ecumenist ecclesiology which is being severely challenged in Orthodoxy right now. Orthodoxy's position that "the Church is the Church" is identical to Rome's view in ones important respect. It is the whole package. This is not inconsistent with a certain diversity. Don't forget that Orthodoxy has western rites (pretty lousy ones admittedly).
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
What ChastMastr said, pretty much.

Also, picking up on one of the points made by Fr Gregory just back over the page, how will CofE clergy planning to defect cope with a drop in stipend from >£20000 to c.£8000???
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fuzzipeg:

Anglicans seem to be obsessed with what people do rather than their spiritual health and the Ship seems to reflect that. [/QB]

Only Anglicans in your imagination. I have never met an Anglican who was obsessed about how many times the sign of the cross was made.
 
Posted by multipara (# 2918) on :
 
Jeez, I have.

Aumbry, you need to get out more.

m
 
Posted by Foaming Draught (# 9134) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Horseman Bree:
What chance of an opposite flow?

Good question.

FD [Cool]
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by multipara:
Jeez, I have.

Aumbry, you need to get out more.

m

Well I've never met any Anglicans from New South Wales perhaps the heat is affecting them.

(You may be surprised to hear that the majority of Anglican congregants even in anglo-catholic churches in England are not much taken to making the sign of the cross at all. I think you'll find that the sort of old queens who make a big fuss about liturgical choreography are restricted to a tiny number of churches in England).

[ 22. October 2009, 12:06: Message edited by: aumbry ]
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Oh, let's not deny the existence of Anglicans that just want the priest to mumble lots of things while walking back and forth crossing him or herself. But let's not act like they are even a significant minority outside of Eccles and parish worship committees either.

Zach
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shameless:
It just amazes me all the fear from so many detractors. The paint isn't even dry and all that can be seen are the defects.

There is a difference between fear and interest. I haven't really seen a lot of fear on this board--or, to be honest, from most of what I have read from my side of the Atlantic. After all, something similar has been available in the US for several decades now and has failed to gain much traction--some 7 churches, I think? And not all of those have their own building (which isn't that important, but I suspect it does help a congregation establish a psychological sense of permanence needed to convey a special rite to the next generation).

Until there is some clear information about numbers in the UK, interest is bound to continue--though I suspect in ten years time this will just be one more tempest in the teapot.

I heard an interview with a reporter from the National Catholic Review this morning, who feels this will bolster the conservative wing of the RCs. As a result, most of the uneasiness in the US seems to be from the non-conservative RCs--especially those (as ChastMastr has noted) who welcomed Vatican II.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Yes, I don't see much fear here either - quite a lot of interested banter from different viewpoints, attempts to second-guess how things might pan out, etc.

I have just been on a trawl across the intertubes to see what others are saying - and there is indeed some fear and loathing out there. Those who enjoy that sort of thing will know where to find the appropriate flavour.

I think I would diverge mildly from Organ Builder though in pointing out that although there are similarities with the American precedent (soon to be former?), there are also major departures from it, not least of which is the separation of the ordinary from the role of diocesan bishop. How it pans out, time will tell though.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
I think that the problem with divorce and remarriage will be an important element in this.

In the last 40 years divorce has become almost commonplace and most non-roman Catholic churches make accommodation for this.

The Catholic church cannot change its ideas on the indissolubility of christian marriage,even although it has been investigating new possibilities of what exactly 'christian marriage' entails. A number of important clergy,as for example Kardinal Schoenborn of Vienna have questioned the policy of excluding from Communion 're-married' Catholics.

At the end of the day people can ,if need be, accommodate to almost any dogma,but it is more difficult to accommodate to something which is part of one's intimate life style.

It is surely OTT to suggest ,as some have done,that the pope is really trying to bring into the Catholic church Lutherans. Of course in one sense ,yes, the pope would wish to bring all of humanity into visible and full communion with the Catholic church,but German Lutherans anyway have a different way of looking at the Church.It might be possible to get Scandinavian Lutherans to enter the Church,but although Scandinavian Lutherans follow many (sort of) Catholic forms there is little knowledge of Catholicism in these countries,certainly not the interest which one has amongst the Anglo Catholics.

Amongst the Latin clergy celibacy has been compulsory since the 13th century but there have been married Latin Catholic priests,at least as far back as the time of Pius XII who gave permission to a number of convert Scandinavian former Lutheran pastors to become Catholic priests even although they were married.

Although possible former Anglican married priests would be a good thing for showing Catholics the married priests could be a 'good thing' the rationale behind this is really something quite different.

Latin Catholic seminarians know from the beginning what the discipline is.Clergy from other conditions habve a different background where celibacy has not been compulsory.The Catholic church recognises their call from God,even if it does not recognise them as 'Catholic priests' but is willing to confirm within the Catholic church, that call which they received while still putside of full communion with the Catholic church.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
I think I would diverge mildly from Organ Builder though in pointing out that although there are similarities with the American precedent (soon to be former?), there are also major departures from it, not least of which is the separation of the ordinary from the role of diocesan bishop. How it pans out, time will tell though.

That is the wild card, isn't it? Again, I don't see it doing much in the US--Our Anglo-Catholics are not usually Anglo-Papists. I owe my education about differences between US and UK A-Cs to the Ship, so I'll be interested in seeing how it plays out over time.

My suspicion is that the laity--more than the clergy, perhaps--will take a "wait and see" attitude, and most of the them will decide to keep going to St. Adelbert-the-Unsteady-on-the-Heights every Sunday, grit their teeth until everything pans out one way or the other while saying "Yes, Father...", then simply be Roman or Anglican (in an almost-certainly smaller congregation) when the dust settles. Unless someone can convince me that the UK Anglo-Catholics will have any shot at taking the buildings with them, I suspect there will be more priests than laypeople going to Rome.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Foaming Draught:
quote:
Originally posted by Horseman Bree:
What chance of an opposite flow?

Good question.

FD [Cool]

The nascent "The Episcopal Communion" allied with the European Old Catholic Churches is already effectively serving that function. Where, oh where is that picture of Dr. Schori with all of those flags?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:

I heard an interview with a reporter from the National Catholic Review this morning, who feels this will bolster the conservative wing of the RCs. As a result, most of the uneasiness in the US seems to be from the non-conservative RCs--especially those (as ChastMastr has noted) who welcomed Vatican II.

If every Anglo-Catholic in the world joined the RCs they would hardly be 1% of the total number of catholic churchgoers. Its hard to imagine they could turn that ship around in their own!

Hmmm - reality check on that - maybe 70 million Anglican churchgoers in the world. Liturgically catholic Anglicans are perhaps a third of the CofE, effectively all the North Americans, significant minorities of the West Indies and southern hemisphere English-speaking provinces, small minority of the Africans.

Say ten million churchgoers maximum?

And at least half of the British, Australian, NZ< and West Indian ones will be theologially liberal anyway.

Yep, its hard to see why liberal RCs should be worried.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:

Yep, its hard to see why liberal RCs should be worried.

I actually agree with this--in the long run, I simply don't think it stands a chance of making a difference.

Further, in the US a lot of those liturgically-Catholic Anglicans see no need and have no desire to go to Rome. That is as true in ACNA as it is in TEC or the rest of the alphabet soup that exists here (except, obviously, the TAC whose presence here is tiny).

For much of the 19th and 20th century the Episcopal Church had a status not based on its numerical strength. As a result, it's possible some RCs don't realize how small the numbers coming over will be (taken as a percentage of all US Roman Catholics).
 
Posted by St. Punk the Pious (# 683) on :
 
I think it will be interesting to see how property issues resolve themselves. I would hope the CofE would be gracious (and help their money situation) by selling buildings to departing parishes on reasonable terms.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
Is the RCC going to want to shell out millions of pounds for historical landmark buildings that will cost a fortune to maintain? Or even just 19th-century piles that require a lot of upkeep?
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Punk the Pious:
I would hope the CofE would be gracious (and help their money situation) by selling buildings to departing parishes on reasonable terms.

Given the Establishment of the C of E and the Parish system (separate from a Congregation), can this be done without the involvement of Parliament?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Is the RCC going to want to shell out millions of pounds for historical landmark buildings that will cost a fortune to maintain? Or even just 19th-century piles that require a lot of upkeep?

Grade One listed buildings in city centres? Who would be without them? [Biased]

On the other hand the RCs are also closing churches and losing numbers so they have their own redundant buildings.

For example, this magnificent pile. I bet there are loads of Anglo-Catholics in Lancashire who'd love to get their chasubles into that!

[ 22. October 2009, 15:40: Message edited by: ken ]
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Perhaps they could arrange church swaps...
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:

It is surely OTT to suggest ,as some have done,that the pope is really trying to bring into the Catholic church Lutherans. Of course in one sense ,yes, the pope would wish to bring all of humanity into visible and full communion with the Catholic church,but German Lutherans anyway have a different way of looking at the Church.

Not so sure abut that. This is the Pope who, before he was Pope, chaired the meetings that led to the Joint Declaration On The Doctrine Of Justification by the Lutheran World Federation and the Catholic Church which was signed in Augsburg, on October 31 1999. And by all acocounts more or less pushed it through against the opposition or incomprehension of many of the other Catholics - who, unlike Ratzinger, mostly had very little knowledge of Luther or Lutheranism.

From my Protestant point of view, much of what little I have read of the large amount he has written, on theology and also on the nature of Christian ministry, has a more "Protestant" feel to it than just about any other Roman Catholic writings I've read.

He certainly knows more about Lutherans than I do! BUt that wouldn't be hard. You don't see much in the way of Lutheranism here in the UK and what little there is tends to be Scandiwegian, and in full communion with the CofE anyway. (I mean really full communion - the handful of churches in London, mostly either seamen's missions or embassy chapels, participate in our Deanery and Diocesan synods, and their priests sometimes officiate in Anglican services in Anglican parish churches using Anglican liturgy)
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
Now the Swedish Lutherans have approved gay church marriages, I am sure a call for their conservatives to switch must be around the corner.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
I suspect that most anglo-Catholics prefer the fantasy of communion with Rome to the reality. If they don't really believe in their own ecclesial community then I wonder why they have stayed so long. They are the ultimate "cafeteria Catholics," who sit in one restaurant and order off the menu of another.

How many clergy are going to go from a stipend of £22,000 a year to £8,000 a year,

How many of them work in gin and lace middle-class, eclectic parishes and will they want to be sent where they are needed, amongst the poorest communities rather than middle class suburbs.

Maybe we should offer the same sort of thing for Vatican 2 RCs who fear the backward direction to Latin and conservative doctrine – The Anglican Novus Ordo ecclesial community.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:

How many of them work in gin and lace middle-class, eclectic parishes and will they want to be sent where they are needed, amongst the poorest communities rather than middle class suburbs.

You what? I can think of one or two but where all these middle-class ABC parishes?

Thurible
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Things seem to me to have changed, especially recently with the current Pope, in the RCC. I perceive a kind of reactionary anger -- bumper stickers that say "The cafeteria is CLOSED!" and things like that. A growing sense that Rome is trying to throw out Vatican II.
David

What exactly do you mean by "Vatican II"? Do you mean the actual documents of the council, or the so-called "Spirit of Vatican II"?

It appears to me that the Pope is not trying to erase Vatican II, but to implement it according to the letter of its canons. The council was never meant to relegate the Extraordinary Form to the dustbin. Benedict isn't edging out the NO, but making the TLM available to those who want it.

The second Vatican Council was hijacked, at least in the US, by self-absorbed baby-boomers who did their best to Congregationalize the church in the "spirit of Vatican II". The pendulum is swinging back, not least because the young people (in whose name so many of these changes were pushed) are not impressed by the New Grooviness. There's no reason that the maximalism of the TLM and the minimalism of the NO can't exist in the same church, but all of y'all are gonna have to learn how to share and play nice with each other.
 
Posted by St. Punk the Pious (# 683) on :
 
Leo, don't Anglo-Caths have a distinguished history of work amongst the poor?
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
How many of them work in gin and lace middle-class, eclectic parishes and will they want to be sent where they are needed, amongst the poorest communities rather than middle class suburbs.

That doesn't appear to be what this is about at all. The plan seems to be to draw entire parishes (or perhaps an entire church body) into the RCC.

FiF is not the target of this initiative. The RCs have been talking to the TAC about this kind of move for several years. From the TAC's point of view, the sticking points have been : 1) the long-term commitment of the RCC to an Anglican Use and 2) the ability of former Anglicans to retain their own jurisdiction, without meddling by diocesans who don't understand their spirituality and rite. This plan provides for an establishment of an Ordinary in each country in which there is an Anglican Use, and the Anglican Use congregations and clergy will answer only to that Ordinary. Reassignment of former Anglican clergy to Roman Rite parishes has not been mentioned (although that would indeed be a possibility for individual converts who come to the RCC under other circumstances).

Of course, we'll all have to wait to see exactly what the Apostolic Constitution says. It just seems to me that a lot of the speculation flying around is going way beyond the actual content of the press release.
 
Posted by Sarum Sleuth (# 162) on :
 
Originally posted by St Punk the Pious don't Anglo-Caths have a distinguished history of work amongst the poor?

I hope Leo doesn't mind me jumping in on this one!
Yes, some did, but I suspect they were in a minority. Names like Lowder and Stanton immediately spring to mind, and many of the great shrine churches were in poor areas in days gone by. However, it is forgotten that a lot of Anglo-Papalists in particular held extremely right wing views, eg Fr Spencer Jones's defence of Franco and Mussolini. This tendency is still not dead: I can think of a few current Anglo-Catholic blogs which are pretty well to the right politically.

SS
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
Of course, we'll all have to wait to see exactly what the Apostolic Constitution says. It just seems to me that a lot of the speculation flying around is going way beyond the actual content of the press release.

Even from the US I can tell that part of the reason for the speculation is because of the implications for the balance of power in the UK's General Synod--which may or may not have been considered by PBXVI.

I'm not sure the actual text of the Apostolic Constitution will matter for that particular political dance...
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
John Shelton Reed's "Glorious Battle" as well as Pickering's book on Anglo-Catholicism indicates that a subset of the Anglo Catholic movement got their hands dirty with "the poor" a la Lowder, etc. but that they were neither more nor less successfuly with "the poor" than any other well-meaning educated busybodies or the Salvation Army. Yet, a section of "the poor" were quite loyal to ACism against its opponents.

SS is wrong to conflate support for Franco or the european right with a lack of care or concern with "the poor." In fact, the right was quite concerned with social justice for the poor, but did not necessarily agree with the solutions proposed by the Christian socialists or the "Christian" marxists. The "Distributists" of the Chestertons, Belloc, and some of their AC fellow-travellers generally fell along the political right of the 20s-30s, but were not often in opposition to policies favored by big business, Fleet Street, the banks, or Rhodes-style imperial adventurism. The Distributists favored a wide distribution of property, bank-busting, and credit unions. OTOH, they tended to oppose, AFAIK, progressive taxation and social security schemes.

That is not to say that two-bottle orthodoxy "Church and Kingism" high churchmanship lacked prominence in AC circles of either the right or left.

The American scene in ACism was a mixed bag, of which political POV on social justice issues determined mostly by regional differences (IMO) with the Floridian high churchmen quite different from that of the biretta belt, which was in turn quite different from New England. Even there, it was a mixed bag. As a general tendency, the American AC clergy were much further to the left and had a far less conservative temperment socially, theologically, and politically, than the laity. This would, in time, have fateful consequences.

[ 22. October 2009, 17:02: Message edited by: Shadowhund ]
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sarum Sleuth:
Originally posted by St Punk the Pious don't Anglo-Caths have a distinguished history of work amongst the poor?

I hope Leo doesn't mind me jumping in on this one!
Yes, some did, but I suspect they were in a minority. Names like Lowder and Stanton immediately spring to mind, and many of the great shrine churches were in poor areas in days gone by. However, it is forgotten that a lot of Anglo-Papalists in particular held extremely right wing views, eg Fr Spencer Jones's defence of Franco and Mussolini. This tendency is still not dead: I can think of a few current Anglo-Catholic blogs which are pretty well to the right politically.

SS

I don't think they were in the minority. In London for every St Paul's Knightsbridge or St Mary's Primrose Hill there would be a dozen smokey red brick churches in the poorest areas. Some of these churches were hugely successful in the nineteenth century - St John the Divine Vassal Road springs to mind which was the foundation for all sorts of Christian establishments. This pattern was repeated throughout the towns and cities of England.

[ 22. October 2009, 17:07: Message edited by: aumbry ]
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Some of those issues are ones held in high importance by the "continuing Anglicans," though it still saddens and frustrates me that it was sexual and not Creedal matters which led to their departure.

But you miss the point. Those in the Continuing Anglican movement that I know disagree with "sexual matters" because of their faith. So it is not just sexual issues, but sincere doctrinal issues.


quote:
... bumper stickers that say "The cafeteria is CLOSED!"
I want one! Of course, not having a car I'll have to hold it out the window of the bus or over my head in the subway.

quote:
A growing sense that Rome is trying to throw out Vatican II.
Far from it. Rome is trying to correctly implement Vatican II's teachings and throw out those teachings that are not in agreement with Vatican II or I or Trent, etc.

quote:
But the people who left the Episcopal church for "continuing Anglican" churches ... have seemed to me to be full of shrill anger, not trying to build bridges and have dialogue with those with whom they disagree, but with bitter, venomous invective, full of malice and resentment, even once they've left still talking nonstop about how those horrible liberal people are destroying all that is good.
This description does not apply to any member of a Continuing Movement I know. That is not to say that it is not a description of some Continuers. But, many liberal members of TEC could be described this way.
 
Posted by Fëanor (# 14514) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Some of those issues are ones held in high importance by the "continuing Anglicans," though it still saddens and frustrates me that it was sexual and not Creedal matters which led to their departure.

But you miss the point. Those in the Continuing Anglican movement that I know disagree with "sexual matters" because of their faith. So it is not just sexual issues, but sincere doctrinal issues.

While I'm sure this is true for some of the Continuing Anglican Movement, consider, otoh, the ACNA. You have quite a lot of hardline "conservative" Anglo-Catholics (including some Anglo-Papalists) who jumped into bed both with the REC and a number of groups who ordain women. While "doctrinal issues" may be informing their disagreement on sexual matters, it would appear that sexual matters (a cynic might read: homophobia) are the only thing they're not willing to compromise on.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Some of those issues are ones held in high importance by the "continuing Anglicans," though it still saddens and frustrates me that it was sexual and not Creedal matters which led to their departure.

But you miss the point. Those in the Continuing Anglican movement that I know disagree with "sexual matters" because of their faith. So it is not just sexual issues, but sincere doctrinal issues.
No, you missed his point -- he said credal issues, not doctrinal issues. There is nothing about sexuality in the creeds, though of course sexual matters are doctrinal.

quote:
quote:
But the people who left the Episcopal church for "continuing Anglican" churches ... have seemed to me to be full of shrill anger, not trying to build bridges and have dialogue with those with whom they disagree, but with bitter, venomous invective, full of malice and resentment, even once they've left still talking nonstop about how those horrible liberal people are destroying all that is good.
This description does not apply to any member of a Continuing Movement I know. That is not to say that it is not a description of some Continuers. But, many liberal members of TEC could be described this way.
Oh, come on -- we all know there is plenty of invective coming from folks on all sides.

The issue of divorce raised earlier in this thread is interesting -- well, actually, it seems kind of vexed to me. Will the RCC allow divorced and remarried former Anglicans to take communion on the grounds that they weren't properly married in the RCC in the first place? What would that say about the status of those second marriages? Will they ordain divorced priests?
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
I rejoice in the joint declaration on justification signed by the Lutheran world Federation and the Catholic church in 1999.

It reminds us that the difficulties between the historic confessions of Christianity are often not really all that great.

Of course the pope, being German(well really Bavarian !) is likely to know something more about German Lutheranism than the average Englishman,but it doesn't mean that the only reason for the signing of this document was to entice German Lutherans to become Catholics.

These days most German Catholics see little difference between themselves and Lutherans, though I think that a number of Lutherans have grave reservations about Catholics. However ,to my mind,these are more cultural rather than religious.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Oh, come on -- we all know there is plenty of invective coming from folks on all sides.

That was the point I was trying to make. It's not just a portion of the Continuers who are shrill, quite a few on the "Remainders??" are shrill too!
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
In reply to the previous poster about divorce,is it possible for the Catholic church to say that divorced and 'remarried' anglicans were unaware of the Catholic doctrine of sacramental marriage at the time that they contracted a second marriage while their first spouse was still living ? or that they were unaware of any 'sacrament' of marriage at the time that they contracted their first marriage ? Or did the first marriage fulfil all the conditions for a Catholic sacramental marriage ?
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
quote:
Originally posted by leo:

How many of them work in gin and lace middle-class, eclectic parishes and will they want to be sent where they are needed, amongst the poorest communities rather than middle class suburbs.

You what? I can think of one or two but where all these middle-class ABC parishes?

Thurible

I live in one!
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sarum Sleuth:
Originally posted by St Punk the Pious don't Anglo-Caths have a distinguished history of work amongst the poor?

I hope Leo doesn't mind me jumping in on this one!
Yes, some did, but I suspect they were in a minority. Names like Lowder and Stanton immediately spring to mind, and many of the great shrine churches were in poor areas in days gone by. However, it is forgotten that a lot of Anglo-Papalists in particular held extremely right wing views, eg Fr Spencer Jones's defence of Franco and Mussolini. This tendency is still not dead: I can think of a few current Anglo-Catholic blogs which are pretty well to the right politically.

SS

Yes - you have said it for me. Ken Leech, whom i have known for years and with whom I am still in touch, is probably the greatest living expert on our history and he would concur that most A/C priests were tory paternalists who 'helped' the poor or socialites who drank sherry and gin with posh ladies (of both genders).

[ 22. October 2009, 19:06: Message edited by: leo ]
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
I would bet that the option to become Roman priests will NOT be extended to those who have been divorced--but that is obviously pure speculation.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
Eric Mascall, who was hardly low church wrote:

I am an Ultra-Catholic - No 'Anglo-,' I beseech you!
You'll find no trace of heresy in anything I teach you.
The clergyman across the road has whiskers and a bowler,
But I wear buckles on my shoes and sport a feriola.

I teach the children in my school the Penny Catechism,
Explaining how the C. of E.'s in heresy and schism.
The truths of Trent and Vatican I bate not one iota.
I have not met the Rural Dean. I do not pay my quota.

The Bishop's put me under his 'profoundest disapproval'
And, though he cannot bring about my actual removal,
He will not come and visit me or take my confirmations.
Colonial prelates I employ from far-off mission-stations.

The Holy Father I extol in fervid perorations,
The Cardinals in Curia, the Sacred Congregations;
And, though I've not submitted yet, as all my friends expected,
I should have gone last Tuesday week, had not my wife objected.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
I would bet that the option to become Roman priests will NOT be extended to those who have been divorced--but that is obviously pure speculation.

I believe divorced men were not permitted to be ordained under the old Pastoral Provision. This is a major reason why many continuing Anglican clergy will not come over. In fact, one of the Archbishops of an American province has been married at least twice. For that reason, his election was the occasion of a schism in his church several years back. A particularly obnoxious chancellor of another continuing jurisdiction is also a serial bigamist.

[ 22. October 2009, 19:28: Message edited by: Shadowhund ]
 
Posted by Resurgam (# 14891) on :
 
quote:

quote:
... bumper stickers that say "The cafeteria is CLOSED!"
I want one! Of course, not having a car I'll have to hold it out the window of the bus or over my head in the subway.
[Biased]

I have wondered however, if the Catholic Church in the US will simply be getting cafeteria converts. In general, the friends who have left our (Episcopal) parish won't mind the veneration of Mary or prayers for the Pope inserted in their 1928 Prayer Books, but I wonder whether they will conform to the church's teaching when it comes to artificial birth control. (Albeit most of the women I know who have left are beyond childbearing age.)The "splitters" (to quote from "The Life of Brian") have become accustomed to having their own say and doing things their own way.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
There is not even just no point in being a cafeteria convert, it is in fact a crazy idea. If you're going to join the club, you really should buy off on it lock, stock and barrel. I think that goes back to the point (I'm pretty sure somebody made) that if the potential converts really believed the underlying precepts of the RCC, they would live with a hideous Pauline mass now or a while ago instead of holding out for their own liturgy. I would imagine the argument goes something like that.

[ 22. October 2009, 20:28: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
There is not even just no point in being a cafeteria convert, it is in fact a crazy idea. If you're going to join the club, you really should buy off on it lock, stock and barrel.

Why? Lots of people already in the club don't.
 
Posted by The Man with a Stick (# 12664) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
quote:
Originally posted by St. Punk the Pious:
I would hope the CofE would be gracious (and help their money situation) by selling buildings to departing parishes on reasonable terms.

Given the Establishment of the C of E and the Parish system (separate from a Congregation), can this be done without the involvement of Parliament?
Combine two parishes into one (mother/daughter church arrangement), make daughter church redundant, sell/give church to the swimmers. Simples.
 
Posted by fisher (# 9080) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
If every Anglo-Catholic in the world joined the RCs they would hardly be 1% of the total number of catholic churchgoers... Yep, its hard to see why liberal RCs should be worried.

Eventually, this must be right, but I can see it having a disproportionate influence in the shorter term. It looks like one of several recent moves that go out of their way to be more welcoming to groups that have defined themselves by conservative doctrinal positions on controversial issues, but have for one reason or another been separated from the RCC.

I should temporarily put aside my tendency for grumbling about the Vatican and admit that this broad approach has to be right, whatever the details of individual policies. Welcoming in, or back, those that can accept the full RCC teaching but have been separated by non-fundamentals is hard to criticise. But, even if only as a side-effect, these moves have a conservative-leaning flavour beyond the small numbers involved.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
quote:
Originally posted by leo:

How many of them work in gin and lace middle-class, eclectic parishes and will they want to be sent where they are needed, amongst the poorest communities rather than middle class suburbs.

You what? I can think of one or two but where all these middle-class ABC parishes?

Thurible

I live in one!
I know - and yours is one of three that I can think of in the whole of the Ebbsfleet area (Clifton, Stony Stratford and Sarum S, Martin) off the top of my head!

Thurible

[ 22. October 2009, 20:48: Message edited by: Thurible ]
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Man with a Stick:
Combine two parishes into one (mother/daughter church arrangement), make daughter church redundant, sell/give church to the swimmers. Simples.

That sounds pretty easy here on the computer screen--would it create unholy screeching on the ground?
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
I think that goes back to the point (I'm pretty sure somebody made) that if the potential converts really believed the underlying precepts of the RCC, they would live with a hideous Pauline mass now or a while ago instead of holding out for their own liturgy. I would imagine the argument goes something like that.

I would think that if they really believed the underlying precepts of the RCC they'd have simply acknowledged the primacy of the Pope and that their own non-RC orders were invalid all this time -- and, therefore, they'd not be waiting for a bunch of their fellow parishioners to switch over before joining the "one true" Catholic Church. That aspect of all of this baffles me -- if they put themselves under Papal authority, doesn't that include assenting to the idea that they've been in a Sacramentally invalid church all the way up till that moment? [Confused] When someone converts to RC, how have priestly orders been transferred over up till now?

[ 22. October 2009, 21:08: Message edited by: ChastMastr ]
 
Posted by The Man with a Stick (# 12664) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
quote:
Originally posted by The Man with a Stick:
Combine two parishes into one (mother/daughter church arrangement), make daughter church redundant, sell/give church to the swimmers. Simples.

That sounds pretty easy here on the computer screen--would it create unholy screeching on the ground?
Oh yes - in some places certainly. But one would hope that those FiF-type parishes who already have a mother/daughter church arrangement would be able to sort something. Those who wish to swim take the small/less valuable/falling down church with them, and the parish keeps its main parish church.

The one thing that I'm struggling to get my head around in legal terms is the Charity Commission. Unless the transfers were at market value, the CC might stick their oar in by saying the disposal is not in the best interest of the PCC/DBF and so forth.

I just hope some good old fashioned christian charity can be shown in all this. On both sides.

[Edited for shocking grammar...]

[ 22. October 2009, 21:09: Message edited by: The Man with a Stick ]
 
Posted by Anthropax (# 11234) on :
 
I think an LEP building-sharing scheme would be useful in certain parishes - particularly one where the current RC congregation is small, and not attached to their building. They could move in as equal partners, having sold the land of the pevious building. Anglican Church building gets any repairs/new loos etc, the RC's get a nice building, converts, who have found it far easier to go across, and still keep the community feel. The CofE groups together a couple of other Churches, staffed by SSMs/House for Duty, saving a lot of ££, and has the upkeep on a building halved.

That's how I'd do it at least...
 
Posted by Eddy (# 3583) on :
 
I was surprised to read in the paper that there are actually so few Forward in faith members in England, but it seems that its more from Australia the request for unity with Rome has come.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
ChastMastr wrote
quote:
I would think that if they really believed the underlying precepts of the RCC they'd have simply acknowledged the primacy of the Pope and that their own non-RC orders were invalid all this time -- and, therefore, they'd not be waiting for a bunch of their fellow parishioners to switch over before joining the "one true" Catholic Church. That aspect of all of this baffles me -- if they put themselves under Papal authority, doesn't that include assenting to the idea that they've been in a Sacramentally invalid church all the way up till that moment? [Confused] When someone converts to RC, how have priestly orders been transferred over up till now?

That's a rather pass/fail sort of way of looking at it. I'm not sure that those likely to head off would necessarily see it that way. They would probably agree that the sacraments were not sacraments of the Catholic church, but nobody is claiming (these days at least) that they were devoid of efficacy - that is in God's hands. Presumably they would think the opposite, and they have been led to seek the fullness of the church. Or at least something along those lines.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
The issue of divorce raised earlier in this thread is interesting -- well, actually, it seems kind of vexed to me. Will the RCC allow divorced and remarried former Anglicans to take communion on the grounds that they weren't properly married in the RCC in the first place? What would that say about the status of those second marriages? Will they ordain divorced priests?

I'm doubtful that they will allow any of that without decrees of nullity.

A marriage doesn't have to be within the RCC in order to be considered valid. If two Anglicans marry, their marriage is just as real as if one were RC and the other Anglican.

The hitch is that if one of the spouses is RC, then the marriage must be according to the Roman Rite. Dispensations are possible, but if a Roman Catholic disobeys the church and is married by a Protestant clergyman, then that marriage is regarded as invalid until the defect is remedied (by a marriage ceremony conducted by RC clergy according to the RC rite). The reason? Non-RCs aren't under the Church's jurisdiction and are given a break for not knowing better; RCs are supposed to know the score.

Archbishop Hepworth's status is interesting. He is a Roman Catholic priest who left the RC Church and became an Anglican. Since leaving the RCs he has been married at least twice, divorced at least once. According to the RC doctrine of Holy Orders, he doesn't stop being a priest, but I would be surprised if they allow him to function as one until the irregularities in his personal life are dealt with.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
I would think that if they really believed the underlying precepts of the RCC they'd have simply acknowledged the primacy of the Pope and that their own non-RC orders were invalid all this time -- and, therefore, they'd not be waiting for a bunch of their fellow parishioners to switch over before joining the "one true" Catholic Church. That aspect of all of this baffles me -- if they put themselves under Papal authority, doesn't that include assenting to the idea that they've been in a Sacramentally invalid church all the way up till that moment?

Yes, and that's probably the principle issue for people like Bishop Iker. It's like all you did was a big pantomime. It's not an issue for others who come to believe they have lived in some sort of imagination church and find relief in being ordained.

quote:
[Confused] When someone converts to RC, how have priestly orders been transferred over up till now?
Outright ordination for just about everybody I presume, at least from the Anglican world.

quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Why? Lots of people already in the club don't.

I guess for those in the club; they have the excuse of habit, family, tradition, ethnicity, familiarity, etc. But honestly, why would you become a RCC if you didn't assent to doctrine considered non negotiable? Would it be wise to become a convert dissenter? Does that make sense? I'm not talking about becoming a raving fundy either by simply accepting the basic teachings as a convert.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eddy:
I was surprised to read in the paper that there are actually so few Forward in faith members in England, but it seems that its more from Australia the request for unity with Rome has come.

[Paranoid]
Are you confusing two things here? The TAC (a continuing Anglican communion not in communion with Canterbury) has petitioned Rome for union. FiF is the traditionalist catholic pressure group. Uk membership is "around 10,000" (quoted from Church Times). It is the second largest membership body within the CofE after the Mothers Union, though it is not restricted to the CofE and is active in other Anglican communions.
 
Posted by Fr Cuthbert (# 3953) on :
 
Forward in Faith have a few problems I guess. Some ought to move to Rome asap. For others they like being different and going to Rome means they become small fish in a very big pond. Some wont like that.

Then some of the priests will have problems:
so many "irregular" marriages, or gay partners, or they have doubts about papal infalllibility or dislike of Roman discipline...
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
But honestly, why would you become a RCC if you didn't assent to doctrine considered non negotiable? Would it be wise to become a convert dissenter? Does that make sense? I'm not talking about becoming a raving fundy either by simply accepting the basic teachings as a convert.

Resurgam's post, which sparked this exchange, mentioned artificial birth control. I wouldn't have thought that constituted "basic doctrine".

As I understand Catholicism, you are "allowed" to dissent, it's just that the burden of proof is on you to justify your dissent. A convert is probably in a good position to do that, on the assumption that anyone who goes to the trouble of converting will probably have a pretty thorough understanding of Catholic theology and, consequently, where it can be bent.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
What is the point in converting then?
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
Since this is what the TAC has been asking for, I think they will probably be subsumed as soon as the details are worked out. Their presence in the US is miniscule, however, and I gather from this thread they aren't very large in the UK either.

In spite of all our bloviating on this thread (and we've been a lot more restrained than the blogosphere) most Anglicans/Episcopalians/Whatever are Anglican/Episcopalian/Whatever because they want to be. If they wanted to be Catholic, they would be. If they wanted to stay at home on Sunday morning, they would.

Aside from the TAC, I'm skeptical that this new arrangement will gather anyone to Rome who wouldn't have gone there anyway.
 
Posted by Eddy (# 3583) on :
 
Gregory Beyer of NPR has received a message from Vatican City for Anglicans.

You can read it here.

[Biased]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Altough Ricardus I will admit dissenting converts would be better than a know-it-all ready to go back and let their former confessional cohorts know how wrong they are and have been about everything.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
As I understand Catholicism, you are "allowed" to dissent, it's just that the burden of proof is on you to justify your dissent.

Not exactly; you're allowed to dissent from points of doctrine (though not dogma), but you are not allowed to act on that dissent. In other words, you can hold the opinion that there's nothing wrong with artificial birth control, and even make arguments against it in public, but you can't disobey the Church's directives regarding its use.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
Dear Martin L

You have been dealing with too many "Greeks" .... OR I'll just assume that was an analogy to an ecumenist ecclesiology which is being severely challenged in Orthodoxy right now. Orthodoxy's position that "the Church is the Church" is identical to Rome's view in ones important respect. It is the whole package. This is not inconsistent with a certain diversity. Don't forget that Orthodoxy has western rites (pretty lousy ones admittedly).

Yes, I wasn't referring to the official "party line" or to the priests, but rather to the plain old pew people. We have Orthodox of all varieties in my city, which was populated by Eastern Europeans.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Why? Lots of people already in the club don't.

I guess for those in the club; they have the excuse of habit, family, tradition, ethnicity, familiarity, etc. But honestly, why would you become a RCC if you didn't assent to doctrine considered non negotiable? Would it be wise to become a convert dissenter? Does that make sense? I'm not talking about becoming a raving fundy either by simply accepting the basic teachings as a convert.
Depends on what you think "basic teachings" are. Suppose someone is basically on board with the majority of Catholic doctrines and believes that the RCC is the only full and true expression of the faith delivered to the apostles, that the only valid sacraments are those of the RCC, but has no intention of leaving family planning up to the rhythm method -- would it be right for that person to convert? Especially in light of the real practice of most of the Catholics that person knows?

quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
As I understand Catholicism, you are "allowed" to dissent, it's just that the burden of proof is on you to justify your dissent.

Not exactly; you're allowed to dissent from points of doctrine (though not dogma), but you are not allowed to act on that dissent. In other words, you can hold the opinion that there's nothing wrong with artificial birth control, and even make arguments against it in public, but you can't disobey the Church's directives regarding its use.
But you can disobey the church's directives on birth control -- millions of Catholics do every day, with no perceivable consequences.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
But you can disobey the church's directives on birth control -- millions of Catholics do every day, with no perceivable consequences.

All right, substitute "are not supposed to" for "can't". Sheesh.
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
Not exactly; you're allowed to dissent from points of doctrine (though not dogma), but you are not allowed to act on that dissent. In other words, you can hold the opinion that there's nothing wrong with artificial birth control, and even make arguments against it in public, but you can't disobey the Church's directives regarding its use.

This book - published by the Benedictines - disagrees:
quote:
It may well happen that some people, having conscientiously concluded to the possibility of responsible dissent on a particular moral issue, will nonetheless remain hesitatnt as to the prospect of acting on this possibility, and thus they opt for continued observance of the magisterium's authoritative fallible teaching. Such a decision is understandable and to be respected, but it does not present itself as the only moral course of action available to responsible members of the Catholic community.

 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
That said, does anyone else observe a certain irony in the stated denominational affiliations of the posters arguing on this particular tangent?

Alt Wally - Orthodox
Fr Weber - Anglican
RuthW - Anglican
Ricardus - Anglican (OK, I'm as guilty as everyone else in pontificating on what other people's churches teach ...)
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
Not exactly; you're allowed to dissent from points of doctrine (though not dogma), but you are not allowed to act on that dissent. In other words, you can hold the opinion that there's nothing wrong with artificial birth control, and even make arguments against it in public, but you can't disobey the Church's directives regarding its use.

This book - published by the Benedictines - disagrees:
quote:
It may well happen that some people, having conscientiously concluded to the possibility of responsible dissent on a particular moral issue, will nonetheless remain hesitatnt as to the prospect of acting on this possibility, and thus they opt for continued observance of the magisterium's authoritative fallible teaching. Such a decision is understandable and to be respected, but it does not present itself as the only moral course of action available to responsible members of the Catholic community.

I'm not sure that really signifies. Charles Curran published plenty of books (and most of them were published by RC houses, IIRC); it didn't prevent him from being told to shut up and sit down.

I didn't see an imprimatur on the book, but that might just have been because it was a Google preview and the page was left out.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mother Julian:
... if I should swim the Tiber and twenty years later the Catholic Church decides to ordain women priests, I would be very happy, as the Catholic Church has the authority to do this.

There are those who would see that only a General Council of the Whole Church (that means a reunion of East and West and a legitimately called and universally ratified Ecumenical Council) could do this, difficult or 'impossible' as this may seem.

Otherwise the whole Church will still remain divided and in effective schism.
 
Posted by LQ (# 11596) on :
 
AIUI, TAC already doesn't permit the communion of divorced and remarried persons. However, I will be quite saddened no longer to be able to communicate in ACCC parishes once they are bound by Roman rules of closed communion.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
They would probably agree that the sacraments were not sacraments of the Catholic church, but nobody is claiming (these days at least) that they were devoid of efficacy

Actually, at least some are claiming precisely that.

Link...

quote:
...as Catholics, we have access to the very sacraments instituted by Christ and ministered through His one holy priesthood. For this reason, it is never permissible for us to receive Holy Communion or absolution from an Anglican clergyman. Because of the invalidity of the Anglican priesthood, these sacraments are not valid.
That's my understanding of Rome's current position in a nutshell.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Depends on what you think "basic teachings" are.

Yeah, my statement about the basic teachings would certainly be open to a lot of interpretations. In this case I would say maybe what one would find within the catechism would comprise the basic teachings on which there is not room for disagreement or denial.

quote:
Suppose someone is basically on board with the majority of Catholic doctrines and believes that the RCC is the only full and true expression of the faith delivered to the apostles, that the only valid sacraments are those of the RCC, but has no intention of leaving family planning up to the rhythm method -- would it be right for that person to convert? Especially in light of the real practice of most of the Catholics that person knows?
Hopefully any Catholic shipmates will correct me if I misspeak, but IIRC, artificial contraception is considered intrinsically evil in Catholic moral theology; even if the vast majority of the laity essentially ignore the churches teaching. So would it be right to convert when the church says something is evil that you consider benign? That doesn't seem quite right to me. Divorce, which has been brought up in this thread, is another area where there is not room for negotiation and where the church has drawn a clear stance, even if many simply ignore the teachings of their own church.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
That said, does anyone else observe a certain irony in the stated denominational affiliations of the posters arguing on this particular tangent?

Alt Wally - Orthodox
Fr Weber - Anglican
RuthW - Anglican
Ricardus - Anglican (OK, I'm as guilty as everyone else in pontificating on what other people's churches teach ...)

What do you make of it? I'm actually not certain of the irony.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LQ:
AIUI, TAC already doesn't permit the communion of divorced and remarried persons. However, I will be quite saddened no longer to be able to communicate in ACCC parishes once they are bound by Roman rules of closed communion.

Really, because the Primate,++ John Hepworth, is twice divorced, as well as being a former Latin Rite priest. [Confused]
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
I'm not sure that really signifies. Charles Curran published plenty of books (and most of them were published by RC houses, IIRC); it didn't prevent him from being told to shut up and sit down.

Fair enough - I confess I'd never heard of Charles Curran, and was going by the copyright data on the second page.

What I was actually looking for, though, was Newman's letter to the Duke of Norfolk:
quote:
I have already quoted the words which Cardinal Gousset has adduced from the Fourth Lateran; that "He who acts against his conscience loses his soul." This dictum is brought out with singular fulness and force in the moral treatises of theologians. The celebrated school, known as the Salmanticenses, or Carmelites of Salamanca, lays down the broad proposition, that conscience is ever to be obeyed whether it tells truly or erroneously, and that, whether the error is the fault of the person thus erring or not [Note]. They say that this opinion is certain, and refer, as agreeing with them, to St. Thomas, St. Bonaventura, Caietan, Vasquez, Durandus, Navarrus, Corduba, Layman, Escobar, and fourteen others. Two of them even say this opinion is de fide. Of course, if a man is culpable in being in error, which he might have escaped, had he been more in earnest, for that error he is answerable to God, but still he must act according to that error, while he is in it, because he in full sincerity thinks the error to be truth.
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
What do you make of it? I'm actually not certain of the irony.

Maybe irony was the wrong word. It just struck me as odd that none of the people discussing what Catholics can and can't do are actually Catholic. Of course the same applies to myself, so it's not an attack on anyone.
 
Posted by Gee D (# 13815) on :
 
The title to this thread is:
quote:
Thread: Pope announces plans for Anglicans to convert in groups
.

Now I haven't read each and every post, but think I'm the first to suggest that the last 2 words should be en masse.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
quote:
Originally posted by Mother Julian:
... if I should swim the Tiber and twenty years later the Catholic Church decides to ordain women priests, I would be very happy, as the Catholic Church has the authority to do this.

There are those who would see that only a General Council of the Whole Church (that means a reunion of East and West and a legitimately called and universally ratified Ecumenical Council) could do this, difficult or 'impossible' as this may seem.

Otherwise the whole Church will still remain divided and in effective schism.

Actually, the Catholic Church has definitively declared that it does not have the authority to ordain women.

But, also, the Catholic Church does not acknowlegde that any other body of Christians has a greater authority - because the Church "subsists in" the Catholic Church. The Councils of the Catholic Church are properly Œcumenical already, as far as Catholic teaching is concerned.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
They would probably agree that the sacraments were not sacraments of the Catholic church, but nobody is claiming (these days at least) that they were devoid of efficacy

Actually, at least some are claiming precisely that.

Link...

quote:
...as Catholics, we have access to the very sacraments instituted by Christ and ministered through His one holy priesthood. For this reason, it is never permissible for us to receive Holy Communion or absolution from an Anglican clergyman. Because of the invalidity of the Anglican priesthood, these sacraments are not valid.
That's my understanding of Rome's current position in a nutshell.

That's right, ChastMastr - but this does not preclude God's using Anglican sacramental acts as means of efficacious grace. As far as I'm concerned, anyone who says that we can know for sure that God's grace does not operate on Anglicans as they go about their sincere wroship of Him are just crazy people. There is no authentic Catholic teaching to that effect.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Is it ever a good idea to switch denominational allegiance for negative as opposed to positive reasons?
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Matt - I don't think so. If negative reasons are becoming so pressing they are getting to you, then - other things duly considered - that may well be a reason to consider leaving an organization. But joining requires a commitment which is positive.

[ 23. October 2009, 10:21: Message edited by: Honest Ron Bacardi ]
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Alrithgt, I'll rephrase - switching for purely negative reasons? That's what seems to be the case here and I can only envisage it ending in tears...
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Well - if that's what they are planning to do then yes, there will be trouble. I'm not sure they are planning to do that though - has the TAC not been petitioning Rome for some time?

Or do you mean more FiF types?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
FiF, yes; I'm not necessarily convinced about the TAC either - will they all be prepared to swallow the Assumption, the Immaculate Conception, transubstantiation etc all in one gulp?
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
I don't know how homogeneous the TAC is. I've only ever visited one of their churches in my life, and they were already on board with all those things. I've no idea about other parts though so it's difficult to venture an opinion. Perhaps others more in the know could, though.

re FiF - it varies. Some are determinedly Anglican and probably have no immediate interest in departure. Others we already know are itching to go. Which rather suggests that the immediate effect in the CofE will be limited. What this move by Rome will do - or so it seems to me - is to rack up the pressure on the next general synod. If it seems to be a triumphalist "you lot can bugger off now" session, then I would imagine that discontent will spread, and more will start looking at their options. If it is seen as conciliatory by them, then they likely won't. As to what they might interpret as being conciliatory, you'll have to ask them directly I'm afraid!
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
FiF, yes; I'm not necessarily convinced about the TAC either - will they all be prepared to swallow the Assumption, the Immaculate Conception, transubstantiation etc all in one gulp?

I've seen this sort of question so many times. Surely if you can believe in Christ's divinity then none of the above can be that difficult to believe?
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
FiF, yes; I'm not necessarily convinced about the TAC either - will they all be prepared to swallow the Assumption, the Immaculate Conception, transubstantiation etc all in one gulp?

I've seen this sort of question so many times. Surely if you can believe in Christ's divinity then none of the above can be that difficult to believe?
Quite possibly you could believe in these things, in the sense of not writing them off as impossible. The question is, whether you see any grounds for believing them. That may differ from believer to believer and from belief to belief.
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Is it ever a good idea to switch denominational allegiance for negative as opposed to positive reasons?

No. I've dealt with a number of people converting to Catholicism and, particularly if they are coming from Churches that they are unhappy with, I always stress that a negative repulsion from one's current situation is not the same as a positive attraction to Catholicism.

As to the question of the validity of Anglican sacraments: as others have pointed out, lack of validity does not mean the same thing as "worthless." For example, with regard to the Eucharist Catholic theology distinguishes "sacramental" eating from "spiritual" eating of Christ. You need a valid sacrament for sacramental eating. But sacramental eating is simply a means to the end of spiritual eating of Christ (i.e. being united to him in love), and the latter can be had without the former (as in cases of "spiritual communion"), though not, we think, so easily. E. Schillebeeckx, back in the 50s, applied this distinction in his book Christ the Sacrament of the Encounter With God as a way for Catholics to think about the genuine spiritual value of protestant celebrations of the Lord's Supper.

Of course for an Anglican who believes that he has, through the sacrament of Holy Orders, been ordained into the priesthood of the Catholic Church, this is not much help. But for an Anglican who is doubting the validity of his orders, it is a way of seeing that his ministry has not been "fake" or without value. Undoubtedly people have received grace and been united to Christ in love through his ministrations.

[ 23. October 2009, 11:58: Message edited by: FCB ]
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
FiF, yes; I'm not necessarily convinced about the TAC either - will they all be prepared to swallow the Assumption, the Immaculate Conception, transubstantiation etc all in one gulp?

I've seen this sort of question so many times. Surely if you can believe in Christ's divinity then none of the above can be that difficult to believe?
Oh, it's quite possible for a Christian to believe such things, if s/he believes in the divinity of Christ. But that's very different from wanting to believe them or easily accepting them as dogma, which may involve a wholesale reassessment of one's theology, particularly soteriology.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
It was my understanding (possibly erroneous) that TAC had been talking with the Vatican since the early '90s. Under the circumstances, I would expect both clergy and laity have had plenty of time to adjust to the idea of embracing RC dogma. I would guess that most of those unable to do so have already left the TAC.

Will they lose a few more when push comes to shove? Probably. But a large percentage will probably go over, especially if it doesn't make much difference in the services they've been attending.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Is it ever a good idea to switch denominational allegiance for negative as opposed to positive reasons?
Probably not, I would think things would boomerang at some point.

I've found, being a convert, that I can only handle my existence by staying away from other converts (aside from the ones I'm related to that is).
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FCB:
Of course for an Anglican who believes that he has, through the sacrament of Holy Orders, been ordained into the priesthood of the Catholic Church, this is not much help. But for an Anglican who is doubting the validity of his orders, it is a way of seeing that his ministry has not been "fake" or without value.

I think that's the thing -- I don't have the sense that those who have left the Episcopal Church over recent developments are in doubt about their own orders at all, and it seems to me that if things had gone differently, they'd still be staying. So if they're not really doubting their own orders, won't they basically be paying lip service to the idea that they've been invalid all this time? [Confused]
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:
That's right, ChastMastr - but this does not preclude God's using Anglican sacramental acts as means of efficacious grace. As far as I'm concerned, anyone who says that we can know for sure that God's grace does not operate on Anglicans as they go about their sincere wroship of Him are just crazy people. There is no authentic Catholic teaching to that effect.

That's my understanding as well, albeit as regards not only the Roman Catholic Church but also the Anglican and Eastern Orthodox churches, in terms of definitively valid sacraments vs. God's grace.

The issue of the sacraments, though, is still an issue there. If I believed that I wasn't getting valid Communion except at an RC church, I'd have to go right back (I started out RC) and sadly wave goodbye to the Anglican ones right away. I don't get the sense that this is what these potential Anglican converts think at all -- it seems to me to be more, "Hey, these folks don't have the things we were unhappy with in the Anglican churches, therefore let's go there" rather than a genuine belief that they've been missing something all these years.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
That would be my concern likewise.
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
FiF, yes; I'm not necessarily convinced about the TAC either - will they all be prepared to swallow the Assumption, the Immaculate Conception, transubstantiation etc all in one gulp?

From the Primate of the TAC, on their website:
quote:
My fellow bishops have indeed signed the Catechism of the Catholic Church and made a statement about the ministry of the Bishop of Rome, reflecting the words of Pope John Paul II in his letter “Ut Unum Sint”.

They submitted their petition to Rome about 2 years ago. From the above statement it seems they're more than satisfied with the Vatican announcement.

I can see why people are surprised at the announcement but I don't know why they're that surprised. There've been rumblings and rumours about this for a few years. I seem to remember a thread about these rumours on the Ship a while back.
 
Posted by Resurgam (# 14891) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
FiF, yes; I'm not necessarily convinced about the TAC either - will they all be prepared to swallow the Assumption, the Immaculate Conception, transubstantiation etc all in one gulp?

I've seen this sort of question so many times. Surely if you can believe in Christ's divinity then none of the above can be that difficult to believe?
Oh, it's quite possible for a Christian to believe such things, if s/he believes in the divinity of Christ. But that's very different from wanting to believe them or easily accepting them as dogma, which may involve a wholesale reassessment of one's theology, particularly soteriology.
I'm thinking of the people who have left our parish, which is the Southern US Bible belt. Many of them were Baptists before they became Episcopalian, and because the Assumption is an assumption and not explicitly stated in the Bible, I suspect that deep down some of them will feel uneasy about it, the Immaculate Conception, and possibly transubstantiation as well. The atmosphere of fundamentalism is so pervasive here...

Though I just remembered one former member who is now an ex-Baptist-ex-Episcopalian-very happy Roman Catholic. So there's no telling.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
Since this is what the TAC has been asking for, I think they will probably be subsumed as soon as the details are worked out. Their presence in the US is miniscule, however, and I gather from this thread they aren't very large in the UK either.

Its an almost purely US organisation. They don't really exist here at all - if there are any at all they will probably be a few US expats and a perhaps a handful of tat-loving Tory trainspotters. ["tatoraks"?] Whatever they look like in America, over here they have less impact than Jonty Blake and his friends.

In worldwide Anglican church politics, never mind Roman Catholic church politics, TAC is a complete irrelevance. Most people don't know they exist. Well, they hardly do exist, there really aren't that many of them. If we can believe Wikipedia, the entire TAC has about five times as many communicants as our nearest local Roman Catholic parish church does. (Though about fifty times as many priests, which might say something.)

quote:

Aside from the TAC, I'm skeptical that this new arrangement will gather anyone to Rome who wouldn't have gone there anyway.

This thread is basically a response to the claims in the Daily Telegraph that this move was aimed not just at TAC but at current members of the Anglican Communion who object to women bishops. Many of these are members of Forward in Faith - a much larger organisation than TAC, and a much more widely respected one, which is of some significance in Anglican church politics in many dioceses and provinces. The Archbishop's letter seemed to imply that this is the case, as did the responses from some of the English Flying Bishops, and of course FiF's own website.

Now, if its not the case that this is aimed more widely than TAC, if it really is just meant to regularise the position of a few hundred Americans who have one foot in the RCC anyway, then nearly everything that nearly everyone has said on this thread, and on the various blogs we've mentioned, is completely irrelevant to the Vatican announcement.

On the other hand (and this is my inner conspiracy theorist talking) if it was just meant for TAC, why not just handle it locally in the USA? And why involve the Pope personally, other than to rubber-stamp things? And why did Damian Thompson, and some FiF people, hear what turned out to be rather accurate rumours about this over a year ago? And why did English Dominicans ask for people to pray about this as a "secret intention" back before Easter?

And what does the Roman Catholic hierarchy in England do when a few dozen Anglican priests, probably including at least a couple of Bishops, come knocking at their door saying "Oy you! This Apostolate thingy! We want one too!"? Its hard to imagine that someone in the Vatican hasn't already thought of that - especially the Vatican under the current Pope who is probably more knowledgeable about mainstream Protestantism than any Pope since the Reformation.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
That's kind of the sort of thing I had in mind.

[cp with ken]

[ 23. October 2009, 15:57: Message edited by: Matt Black ]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
A few minutes ago I started listening to the audio transcripts of the first three addresses of the FiF National Assembly online. I cancelled the connection after hearing this opener from the Bishop of Beverley ...

"We are Catholics of the Latin rite separated from Rome by an Act of State some 500 years ago ...."

Who is "we"? Even if "we" could be a collective entity might it not be objected that this separation was submitted to and hanging around for 500 years developing a rationale for being Catholics without the Pope is being a tad too self serving ... as is now this remarkable conversion of mind. Of course we haven't got a persecuting monarch now. The fact that most FiF'ers haven't moved to Rome over the last 17 years suggests that comfort has always been preferred to sacrifice. The Pope has been too generous. Let them use Novus Ordo.

[ 23. October 2009, 16:12: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
A few minutes ago I started listening to the audio transcripts of the first three addresses of the FiF National Assembly online. I cancelled the connection after hearing this opener from the Bishop of Beverley ...

"We are Catholics of the Latin rite separated from Rome by an Act of State some 500 years ago ...."

I've just listened to that bit - it's Bishop Andrew (of Ebbsfleet).

Thurible
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
FiF, yes; I'm not necessarily convinced about the TAC either - will they all be prepared to swallow the Assumption, the Immaculate Conception, transubstantiation etc all in one gulp?

As I understand it, TAC clergy has already signed off on the Catholic Catechism. However, as most of us know from experience, the theology of a priest (especially an Anglo-Catholic one) is often significantly higher than many who attend his parish. The Continuing Churches contain not only fussy Anglo-Catholics, but also Prayer Book
Catholics, Old High Churchmen, people whose theology is essentially Reformed but who like liturgical worship, and the ever-present cranks who like to be anywhere there is a potential for drama. Often, the PBCs, OHCs, and Reformed folk will attach themselves to a church that doesn't exactly fit their outlook simply because there's no other game nearby. We had one man at our place (recently left for a teaching position overseas) whose Eucharistic theology was essentially memorialist, and who would grouse every once in a while about the "Roman stuff" in the Missal; this didn't prevent him from regularly attending at our place, though.

I suspect the TAC is similar. Some of the laity will be gung-ho for Rome, some might be able to be convinced, and some will resist it staunchly. A couple of former TAC parishes joined up with our outfit recently because of this very issue.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Nothing to stop them disregarding that 'Act of State' and crossing the Tiber - why don't they?
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LQ:
AIUI, TAC already doesn't permit the communion of divorced and remarried persons. However, I will be quite saddened no longer to be able to communicate in ACCC parishes once they are bound by Roman rules of closed communion.

Me too. My parish church is split 51/49 re the OOW but passed the resolutions to keep their priests and to stay together. A few might join the RCC but the rest will probably be without priests, get subsumed into a wider united benefice and gradually lost its distinctive flavour. (Or, if they take their building with them, the majority will be homeless.)
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
quote:
Originally posted by leo:

How many of them work in gin and lace middle-class, eclectic parishes and will they want to be sent where they are needed, amongst the poorest communities rather than middle class suburbs.

You what? I can think of one or two but where all these middle-class ABC parishes?

Thurible

I live in one!
I know - and yours is one of three that I can think of in the whole of the Ebbsfleet area (Clifton, Stony Stratford and Sarum S, Martin) off the top of my head!

Thurible

I hope you're right because I like the myth of mission to the slums - but I don't know enough about FiF.

However, some FiF churches may be in working class areas but cater almost exclusively for middle class churchgoers - S. Matthew's Sheffiend springs to mind.

I'll wait until the next FiF newspaper and look at the adverts.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
When I hear the FiF leadership articulating a fully fledged Roman ecclesiological and dogmatic position both to their own constituency and to the media then I will be more likely to respect their integrity. "Hanging around to pray about it, not being too hasty" 'n all sounds to me a bit too much like an admission of weakness OR some watching their own backs .... even now, or perhaps especially now. Let's have some decisiveness for a change. "Will ye stay or will ye go?"
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
Since this is what the TAC has been asking for, I think they will probably be subsumed as soon as the details are worked out. Their presence in the US is miniscule, however, and I gather from this thread they aren't very large in the UK either.

Its an almost purely US organisation. They don't really exist here at all - if there are any at all they will probably be a few US expats and a perhaps a handful of tat-loving Tory trainspotters. ["tatoraks"?] Whatever they look like in America, over here they have less impact than Jonty Blake and his friends.

According to that Font of All Knowledge Wikipedia their US branch claims 5200 members. It was my understanding the bulk of the 400,000 members claimed by the group is in Australia.

Of course, it wouldn't be the first time Wikipedia was all wet. Shadowhund could probably give us more info--he seems to have that trainspotter's sort of interest in the various continuing Anglican groups
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
According to that Font of All Knowledge Wikipedia their US branch claims 5200 members. It was my understanding the bulk of the 400,000 members claimed by the group is in Australia.

Of course, it wouldn't be the first time Wikipedia was all wet. Shadowhund could probably give us more info--he seems to have that trainspotter's sort of interest in the various continuing Anglican groups

I don't know if Wikipedia can be blamed for that; it sounds as though they're going by the TAC's own figures. I confess to being somewhat skeptical about 400,000, but maybe someone in Australia who's familiar with their organization there can offer a more informed opinion.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
I looked at The Tablet today, on line so I couldn't read the whole article by Victoria Comb who had phoned FiF under the headline "The Big Deal is about leaving behind the beauty of the church, the robed choir and the lovely old organ - it's not about Petrine Authority".

The Feature Article "New Path to Rome" tends to be opposed to it from an ecumenical point of view.
 
Posted by Gussie (# 12271) on :
 
I enjoyed This contribution to the debate. Pretty much sums up what I think about it from a liberal (Roman) Catholic point of view.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
In an interview with the Chilean daily, “El Mercurio,” the Superior General of the Society of St. Pius X, Bernard Fellay, acknowledged that the Vatican is considering the possibility of converting the Lefebvrist group into a personal prelature as part of the discussions aimed at bringing about reconciliation.
http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/new.php?n=17463
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
I would think that if they really believed the underlying precepts of the RCC they'd have simply acknowledged the primacy of the Pope and that their own non-RC orders were invalid all this time -- and, therefore, they'd not be waiting for a bunch of their fellow parishioners to switch over before joining the "one true" Catholic Church. That aspect of all of this baffles me -- if they put themselves under Papal authority, doesn't that include assenting to the idea that they've been in a Sacramentally invalid church all the way up till that moment?

I think it goes more like this.

Anglo-Catholic priest says to self: 'I have been ordained in the Anglican Church, which is a part of Christ's Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. My ordination and the scaraments I celebrate are valid. (I acknowledge that the Vatican takes a different view of this, but that is down to the unfortunate events of the C16 which are not my fault). Now, the Anglican Church has taken actions which have effectively separated itself from Christ's Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. So my ordination and sacraments which have been valid catholic sacraments (as I understand it) will be no longer. Therefore I will need to move over to the only Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church left. Hello, Pope! That I need to be re-ordained is a bit of bureaucratic detail which is understandable from the Pope's perspective, and needn't impact my previous validity as I understand it.'
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Hooker's Trick:
I think it goes more like this.

Anglo-Catholic priest says to self: 'I have been ordained in the Anglican Church, which is a part of Christ's Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. My ordination and the scaraments I celebrate are valid. (I acknowledge that the Vatican takes a different view of this, but that is down to the unfortunate events of the C16 which are not my fault). Now, the Anglican Church has taken actions which have effectively separated itself from Christ's Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. So my ordination and sacraments which have been valid catholic sacraments (as I understand it) will be no longer. Therefore I will need to move over to the only Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church left. Hello, Pope! That I need to be re-ordained is a bit of bureaucratic detail which is understandable from the Pope's perspective, and needn't impact my previous validity as I understand it.'

In the case of the FiF clergy, that's mostly accurate. As far as the TAC is concerned, not so much.

I would dispute that FiF considers its sacraments invalidated by the fact that female clergy exist. As far as I can see, the problem is ecclesiological; whether a person can remain in communion with people he considers heretics. And of course, if that's the reason, then why did it take so long to decide to leave?

Tangentially : I can't help but feel that the American Anglo-Catholics who are just now leaving, or attempting to secede from, TEC are really just high-church congregationalists. Everything was fine as long as *they* didn't have a woman bishop, or an openly gay bishop; but as soon as it looked like they might have to submit to a female bishop's authority, out they go. If they really had the ecclesiology their theology implies, they would have left with the rest of the Continuers thirty years ago.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
Yes Gussie, excellent piece. What astonished me, and I am not in England, is the virulent and often mindless hatred of religion in general and Catholicism in particular that comes through the comments following. It must be very difficult to follow a religion without ridicule there. Here's The Tablet link www.thetablet.co.uk
 
Posted by Eddy (# 3583) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Nothing to stop them disregarding that 'Act of State' and crossing the Tiber - why don't they?

Because some of them like being grumpy seperatists!

Because some of them couldn't because they are divorced and remarried.

Because some of them have live in boyfriends.

Because some like being big fishes but in RC church would be small ones.

Because some couldnt cope with the style of Rome and want choral music and old churches.

and so on
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
If they really had the ecclesiology their theology implies, they would have left with the rest of the Continuers thirty years ago.
Or allowing the ministration of clergy who have no episcopacy as is the case with the Lutherans in this country (and the MOTR parish near me had an interim Lutheran pastor for a while). What does that say about your ecclesiology?
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Hooker's Trick:
So my ordination and sacraments which have been valid catholic sacraments (as I understand it) will be no longer. Therefore I will need to move over to the only Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church left. Hello, Pope! That I need to be re-ordained is a bit of bureaucratic detail which is understandable from the Pope's perspective, and needn't impact my previous validity as I understand it.'

I haven't encountered that position so far, myself -- and certainly not the idea, among Anglo-Catholics, that one's own ordination can ever be rendered invalid, particularly by the actions of others after one's ordination. I've certainly never heard anyone suggest that their own priesthood is imperiled by the events in the Episcopal church over the last few years.

And even if they believed that, the latter bit -- that their orders have been valid up till now -- sounds utterly counter to Rome's position.

I welcome correction on all of these things if I am mistaken, of course. I may be encountering deeply confused writers on these matters, and the few people I knew in person who have left the Episcopal church over the last few years' developments are not people I'm personally in touch with anymore.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
I agree that HT's logic would be rather illogical for a former Anglican priest ready to undergo a Catholic ordination. If one is convinced in conscience that one's Orders are valid, than to repeat the sacrament would be a sacrilege. It would be different if the convert ordinand, even if he has difficulties understanding why the Church teaches that Anglican Orders are invalid, but nevertheless trusts the Church's judgment in favor of what he, on his own would come to. If he has this trust, then he is not violating his conscience by seeking Catholic ordination, IMO.

The thought process by which one works through these issues are unique to the individual.

At the time I entered the Catholic Church, I thought that Apostolicae Curae was mistakenly decided and that, eventually, higher authority would take a second look. As I was a layman planning to stay a layman, I was not in the same boat as an Anglican convert-minister. Nevertheless, there was the issue of my Anglican confirmation. I was able to honestly receive Confirmation because I thought that my Anglican confirmation was sacramentally invalid for reasons apart from Anglican Orders. (Turns out the reasons why I thought my Anglican confirmation was invalid were somewhat half-baked, ignorance being in this case, a providential grace.)

It took me another 6-7 years subsequent to my reception into full communion with the Church before I, with heavy heart and some consternation, after re-reading the history of the English Reformation, came to the conclusion that Leo XIII was right all along, and the entire Anglo-Catholic apologetic, which I had assumed all along was true, was at best wishful thinking and at worst complete and total horseshit.

[ 23. October 2009, 20:54: Message edited by: Shadowhund ]
 
Posted by Eddy (# 3583) on :
 
Fr Gregory quotes the Bishop of Beverley saying to a Forward in Faith congress

""We are Catholics of the Latin rite separated from Rome by an Act of State some 500 years ago ...."

I bet they all dont believe that, I mean some strong evangelicals are F in F as well - I bet they'd not say they were Catholics of the Latin rite!
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
As I was corrected ... Ebbsfleet, sorry. Although Bp. Nazir Ali was at the Assembly FiF isn't about the Conevo agenda.

What is it that these guys want to preserve from Anglicanism ? ... the modern rites between the churches are much the same, the theology isn't the issue. Perhaps it's simply the sleight of hand (from Rome's point of view) that the constituency can have its own distinct but not separate life. In the end after all it's simply an issue of whether one is or is not in communion with the Holy See and buckle down. From the Anglican side though, it's the sleight of hand that not too much has changed other than that we don't have to worry about those pesky liberals and the keys look quite nice on our letterheads. What is far more important from Rome's point of view is the sea change in ecumenical affairs to the effect that "we are open for business." Nonetheless, not much will happen in the UK I suspect for all the reasons that have already been mentioned. If I was Rowan Cantuar I wouldn't worry too much.
 
Posted by Eddy (# 3583) on :
 
Whereabouts online is the F in F assembly?

I was wondering if the Greek Orthodox or similar churches take in Anglican groups like the Holy Father is saying he will.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
We've been doing it in the UK for nearly 15 years Eddy. The decision was made right at the beginning that we would be planting new Orthodox parishes (using English of course) and that groups (duly prepared) would often be involved, served usually (but not always) by their former pastors. The Assembly sound transcripts are on the FiF web site.

[ 23. October 2009, 22:09: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:
...
But, also, the Catholic Church does not acknowlegde that any other body of Christians has a greater authority - because the Church "subsists in" the Catholic Church. The Councils of the Catholic Church are properly Œcumenical already, as far as Catholic teaching is concerned.

I both understand and disagree with this teaching.

The return of however many Anglicans to Rome, given that England was once fully part of the Western Church, is quite diferent to the possible reunion between East and West.

The understanding of what are valid Ecumenical Councils differs between East and West.

I shall be watching, with considerable interest, what does, or does not, eventuate between Rome and Moscow. Any reunion here will dwarf what is happening now between disaffected Anglicans and Rome.
 
Posted by Gee D (# 13815) on :
 
Fr Weber said:
quote:
I don't know if Wikipedia can be blamed for that; it sounds as though they're going by the TAC's own figures. I confess to being somewhat skeptical about 400,000, but maybe someone in Australia who's familiar with their organization there can offer a more informed opinion.


I don't know of any accurate census, but I suspect that 4,000 would be much closer to the mark, and the real figure is likely to be below that. The one church in Sydney - only a couple of kilometres from where I am sitting - has a regular congregation of 15; and I know of no other TAC church in NSW. There are a few in South Australia and Queensland, but very few.

The major opposition in Australia to ordination of women, and the other contentious ecclesiological issues raised by GAFCON, comes from the Jensenite group in Sydney. Members of that are very unlikely to want to join with Rome. There are exceptions, of course, but there would be little support here for the Forward in Faith stance. Evangelicanism generally outside the Jensenites is quite happy with OOW etc.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Religious statistics are often inflated, Gee D. [Big Grin]

From what I perceive, those who wish to go across to Rome would be from the 'Conservative Anglo-Catholic' side. Evangelicals and liberals wouldn't, so prospective bunfights would in future be between these remnant wings. Nothing new as Conservative A-Cs feel they have been effectively sidelined.

The TAC Primate is based very close to the Bishop of the Murray's HQ and there is a wellknown commonality of interest between them and Conservative A-C bishops, both within and without the Communion, worldwide. The TAC and FIF can be seen as overlapping organisations.
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gee D:
I suspect that 4,000 would be much closer to the mark, and the real figure is likely to be below that. The one church in Sydney - only a couple of kilometres from where I am sitting - has a regular congregation of 15

In that respect reception by Rome might be a benefit to the TAC in that regular Catholics would be able to receive communion at their parishes and join them. Once the smoke clears I can see people drifting into former TAC churches especially if the local Latin Rite parishes are disatisfying in some way. In that situation a church with a regular attendance of 15 could see that number begin to grow.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):

I shall be watching, with considerable interest, what does, or does not, eventuate between Rome and Moscow. Any reunion here will dwarf what is happening now between disaffected Anglicans and Rome.

Are you sitting comfortably? Not likely any time soon. It's a three way tug-of-war, Old Rome, New Rome and Third Rome.

Old and New Rome have a common ground against the Third, they think the way forward is to carve the Christian Churches up between them and to this end the first doesn't object and the second pushes the idea that New is the first among equals for the Orthodox and both push for a return to a mythical first millennium of unity, when the Third didn't exist. (Kiev, however, did exist and so the interest from Moscow to take over control of the Church there).

Old and New continue to piss of the Third by allowing such statements as the New is first among equals among the Orthodox to be included as acknowledged by the participants in the reports of these ecumenical meetings, such as Belgrade 2006.

Hilarion of the MP external relations gets very angsty about all this, and the New's ongoing grab for territory accompanying it (such as Estonia and Ukraine), he said: "Orthodoxy does not have a hierarch, or religious leader, analogous to the Pope. One should not create the illusion that such a hierarch exists."

Meanwhile, Old and New Rome dispute primacy of this mythical first millennium unity, Old claiming that it retains it over the New and New claiming it was given equal status with Old. (Fourth ecumenical possibly, don't recall).

Old pisses off New and Third with its continuing claim to primacy of jurisdiction over the other two at these gatherings.

Hilarion again, gearing himself up for Ravenna (2007). "Historically, the primacy of the Roman bishop in the Christian Church was, from our point of view, a primacy of honour, and not jurisdiction. That is to say, the jurisdiction of the Pope of Rome was never applied to all the churches." "There can be no compromises whatsoever in this matter"

(Re Kiev, there's a reasonable argument to be made that it was given equality of patriarchate by Constantinople at its inception, and this never moved into the Russian hinterland. I haven't seen any of the Ukrainian Churches arguing from this, yet.)


Myrrh
 
Posted by CJS (# 3503) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gee D:
I don't know of any accurate census, but I suspect that 4,000 would be much closer to the mark, and the real figure is likely to be below that. The one church in Sydney - only a couple of kilometres from where I am sitting - has a regular congregation of 15;

I am dying to know which parish in Sydney represents this (by local standards) very exotic breed.

quote:
Evangelicanism generally outside the Jensenites is quite happy with OOW etc.
I presume you mean 'within Australian Anglicanism'; I'm not sure the presbyterians would be entirely happy being labelled Jensenite (him being a bishop and all).
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
Hmmm..

OK - I'm completely outside this and unaffected as I'm Baptist, so as far as my denom history is concerned, we were outside this whole bunfight from the outset, even before Constantine rolled formed the RC denom in the first place. (have a look here )

Would I be right in thinking that what Rome is offering is some kind of ecclesiastical TUPE process for incoming A-C close-to-RC pastors, along with the congos they're responsible for?

Over church buildings etc- it sounds as though there might have to be a Facilities Management structure put in, so buildings etc can transition independently of the congos...

What happens to RA licences, Calamus/CCLI/PRS subs...
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
Some interesting comments from Fr Dwight Longenecker in The Times
quote:
...there are over 125 independent ‘Anglican’ churches. A neat list can be found here with a fascinating selection of names and abbreviations... These churches include some that can be taken seriously: their bishops and clergy are learned and their congregations are growing and their structure is sound. Then there are those that cannot be taken seriously: their clergy are educated online. They have one or two congregations meeting in someone’s basement or garage. Some of the schism churches have been around for over 100 years, others were founded yesterday. Some reacted against Anglicanism because it was too liberal, others because it was not liberal enough.

Amazingly, the Vatican has decided to take the breakaway groups seriously. This does not mean they are going to accept the Right Reverend Phineas D. Snakeoil with his online degree, his mail order miter and crozier and his group of ‘faithful’ old women who meet in his attic in Podunck Tennessee for Solemn High Mass. It does mean, however, that they are willing to talk to the Bishops of the Traditional Anglican Communion ... Even closer to Canterbury, they are willing to talk to the ‘flying bishops’ who have carefully and gently led the traditionalist Anglicans in the Church of England over the last 20 years. ...

What will the Vatican do with all the other eccentric ecclesiastics in the many different ‘continuing Churches’? … The trickiest of all will be the members of the established Anglican Churches who seek to ‘come home to Rome’. The Vatican’s skills will need to be exercised with delicacy and tact for the good of each person and group, but also with a view to the unity of Christ’s whole church.

I think this is a real issue. Will there in fact be 'fast tracking' or will each candidate priest have to go through seminary, exams and scrutiny?

If so, how will the new arrangements be different from the pastoral provision?

Incidentally, to an earlier post, this is why I framed the OP as 'in groups' rather than 'en masse'.

[ 24. October 2009, 13:19: Message edited by: cor ad cor loquitur ]
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
According to yesterday's Church Times, each priest will have to undergo a period of scrutiny and extra training before being ordained.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Is it ever a good idea to switch denominational allegiance for negative as opposed to positive reasons?

I was thinking about this question and I don't think it's possible that in some way a convert is not going to be rejecting something in the tradition they're leaving behind; even if it's just one thing. I do think the positive reasons for moving to something should outweigh negative for leaving something behind; but I don't think it can be all for the positive. I suppose it could be all for the negative though.

[ 24. October 2009, 15:45: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Clavus (# 9427) on :
 
Abp Hepworth of the TAC has just spoken to the Forward in Faith (UK) National Assembly about the plans for the Ordinariate, and says:

'There will be no limit on the ordination of married men.'

If he is right, and if he means (I'm not sure if he does) that married men will be accepted for ordination even if they have not previously been ordained as Anglican priests, then this really is significant.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
No that's wrong. I have listened to the FiF speeches and read other stuff. Existing married priests can be re-ordained, new candidates will have to be celibate.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
According to yesterday's Church Times, each priest will have to undergo a period of scrutiny and extra training before being ordained.

So a bit like being qualified - but needs to be rated to practice? A bit like an air traffic controller?
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
No that's wrong. I have listened to the FiF speeches and read other stuff. Existing married priests can be re-ordained, new candidates will have to be celibate.

Commentators like Damian Thompson assert -- confidently -- that new "Anglican use" candidates, seminarians for instance, will be able to convert, then marry and subsequently be ordained, or that the new personal ordinariates will continue to have married priests after the first generation of converts, just as the Eastern Catholics do. The Apostolic Constitution should clarify this, but it hasn't yet appeared.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by CJS:
quote:
Originally posted by Gee D:
I don't know of any accurate census, but I suspect that 4,000 would be much closer to the mark, and the real figure is likely to be below that. The one church in Sydney - only a couple of kilometres from where I am sitting - has a regular congregation of 15;

I am dying to know which parish in Sydney represents this (by local standards) very exotic breed.

The TAC isn't in communion with Canterbury. The parish referred to is that of St Mary the Virgin, which appears to meet in the chapel of the Lady Davidson Hospital on Sunday mornings.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eddy:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Nothing to stop them disregarding that 'Act of State' and crossing the Tiber - why don't they?

Because some of them like being grumpy seperatists!

Because some of them couldn't because they are divorced and remarried.

Because some of them have live in boyfriends.

Because some like being big fishes but in RC church would be small ones.

Because some couldnt cope with the style of Rome and want choral music and old churches.

and so on

And because some of them would find it hard to cope with a church that actually expects its clergy to obey their ecclesiastical superiors?
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
And because some of them would find it hard to cope with a church that actually expects its clergy to obey their ecclesiastical superiors?

Well, in theory, anyway. The bishops of the USCCB aren't exactly tripping over themselves to follow the recent directives regarding altar girls, ex tempore changes to the liturgical texts, the routine use of extraordinary ministers to distribute Communion, etc. So it appears to me that within the RCC there is quite a bit of precedent for disregarding authority and doing what you please because you're "right".
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
Doesn't this mean that the organisation of Forward in Faith splits?

Surely you have to resign once you are received into the Roman Catholic Church? If many of its key leaders have said they will go now/soon, then FiF will need new leaders who are staying in the CofE.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
Ultimately yes - the PEVs were cautiously saying that we/they should accept the Holy Father's invitation. The Synod members were saying that we/they should wait to see what Synod comes up with in February or July.

I have just spoken to someone fairly high up in FiF who said that the debate and general mood was to go with the PEVs.

That leaves the rest of us Catholics somewhat more isolated than we already feel.

[ 24. October 2009, 19:12: Message edited by: leo ]
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
So we also need new PEVs next year who are committed to the CofE for a five year period or so. Perhaps Reform will finally get a cons.evo. flying bishop to replace one of Ebbsfleet or Richborough? Would only seem fair based on respective strength and might be their price of support in Synod?
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
Listening to the FiF debates, it's clear that they need to make up their minds. Lots of pleas from their lay members for clergy to give leadership. And to take the Synodical task seriously. But I think that the hope of structural provision for catholics against the ordination of women bishops fades minute by minute as more of them get excited by the exit strategy. Can't personally see any attraction whatsoever in being part of the RC church, but very happy for them. If you're offered a gift horse, stop examining the dentistry...

It'd be quite good to know the tactics sooner rather than later; I have a Revision Committee that is taking up rather a lot of my waking moments. If they're off to Rome, I'm not going to continue to bust a gut seeking to make statutory provision for them. If they want to stay, they need to say so clearly and commit.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
There will inevitably be a split in FiF, with the PEV's suggesting that people should be deciding by February 22nd next whether to take the Pope's offer seriously, and other members urging to stay put and see what concessions can be got from Synod in February or July. The latter have nothing to lose because they could always take up the offer later.

Given that, by no means all members of Resolution C parishes will want to swim, and those who do are not likely to be numerically significant enough to form a worshipping community, conversion to Rome will most likely remain an individual thing as it is now.
 
Posted by Resurgam (# 14891) on :
 
(Good gentles, may I ask what a PEV is? I've checked Acronym Finder.com, but their top six choices don't seem to apply: Politique Européenne de Voisinage, Partido Ecologista os Verdes, Potenciales Evocados Visuales (Spanish: Visual Evoked Potentials; brain activity), Prediction Error Variance, Peta Electron Volt, Positive Effect Variegation. [Confused] )
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
Provincial Episcopal Visitors (aka Flying Bishops) who give pastoral care to parishes who are opposed to the ordination of women.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
Pete, would the departure of many FiF (and related) to Rome help the cause of those who support the elevation of women to the episcopacy?

Would it need to be a large number who swim the Tiber, or would even a small number tip the scale in favor?
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
I don't want to think about that. I want to carry on working at keeping traditionalist catholic Anglicans in the CofE if they want to stay. But if they want to go, we'll be the poorer for it, but I'll wish them God speed.

The CofE without them will of course give a much clearer run to the full and equal ministry of women as priests and bishops - something I also long for. We wouldn't have to legislate for what everyone recognises is discriminatory. But the CofE without them will also be poorer for the loss of part of its catholic heritage, and for the loss of credally orthodox and missional people.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
There will inevitably be a split in FiF, with the PEV's suggesting that people should be deciding by February 22nd next whether to take the Pope's offer seriously, and other members urging to stay put and see what concessions can be got from Synod in February or July. The latter have nothing to lose because they could always take up the offer later.

They lose credibility if it just becomes about tactics.

If Father Kirk and +Ebbsfleet really believe that the Holy Father is the Holy Father then what are they waiting for?

How can a priest or bishop who believe in the Roman Catholic Church as they now claim to do so continue to celebrate the sacraments of the heretical church outside?

I think that ++Canterbury should suspend +Ebbsfleet now. I don't see how he can give the requisite oaths of allegiance any longer.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pete173:
It'd be quite good to know the tactics sooner rather than later; I have a Revision Committee that is taking up rather a lot of my waking moments. If they're off to Rome, I'm not going to continue to bust a gut seeking to make statutory provision for them. If they want to stay, they need to say so clearly and commit.

Pete, you are right to feel this way, but it isn't so simple for some FiF people. Many support the long term aim of ARCIC which was to bring the two worshipping communities together under Petrine provision. They will almost certainly go. But there are others, who are Church of England to the core, who just want to be able to worship in the faith they once knew before the goal posts were moved so far. They would be keen to stay and see what Synod can offer them, in the knowledge that they can always go later if adequate provision isn't made.

From your POV, busting your gut to make stautory provision for them will always be a thankless task. Statutory transfer of jurisdiction is discriminatory and quite likely illegal. The mantra " a code of practice will not do" still holds, and you are getting it in the neck from the majority proponents of women bishops for being too generous to FiF. You can't agree to a Third Province which is the only workable solution for FiF. Ultimately you will have to go with the majority, which will be much easier with this proposal from the Vatican on the table.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
I don't want to think about that. I want to carry on working at keeping traditionalist catholic Anglicans in the CofE if they want to stay. But if they want to go, we'll be the poorer for it, but I'll wish them God speed.

I'd agree, and I apologize, for my post ended up much more blunt than I intended. Hopefully there will not be a mass exodus.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:

It'd be quite good to know the tactics sooner rather than later; .. ..If they want to stay, they need to say so clearly and commit.

and ...

quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
But the CofE without them will also be poorer for the loss of part of its catholic heritage, and for the loss of credally orthodox and missional people.

I think that many Anglo-Catholics who are in favour of the ordination of women will agree with both these points. It will mean the end of years of heartache and an opportunity to 'get on with it'. Especially if it means they lose the tag 'liberal' which really doesn't work for those who are 'credally orthodox and missional' in the popular imagination.

One question I do have is what will happen to parish's who have signed resolutions for reasons that are not tied to Catholic ecclesiology. I know a few that really would rather have a man to lead matins. The PEV's have (generously) offered pastoral care for a number of 'central and prayerbook' parishes and I do wonder what will happen to them if an exodus occurs.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:

One question I do have is what will happen to parish's who have signed resolutions for reasons that are not tied to Catholic ecclesiology. I know a few that really would rather have a man to lead matins. The PEV's have (generously) offered pastoral care for a number of 'central and prayerbook' parishes and I do wonder what will happen to them if an exodus occurs.

I don't think there is any future in their position. They might survive a few turns with a favourable patron and churchwardens, but ultimately they will die out.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
...They lose credibility if it just becomes about tactics.

If Father Kirk and +Ebbsfleet really believe that the Holy Father is the Holy Father then what are they waiting for?

How can a priest or bishop who believe in the Roman Catholic Church as they now claim to do so continue to celebrate the sacraments of the heretical church outside?

I think that ++Canterbury should suspend +Ebbsfleet now. I don't see how he can give the requisite oaths of allegiance any longer.

It's not merely about tactics.

It is possible that some have reservations about all options. Not surprising, being human. Leaving for Rome is a big step and the structures into which they will be received have not been set up as yet.

I think ++ Williams, having really been out of the loop almost until he appeared on stage with ++ Nichols, is trying to do the Christian thing and let those who wish to leave do so without bitterness or rancour.

There seems to be some desire to punish those some people, like you, have judged guilty. I think that would be counterproductive in every way.

I think keeping cool heads may be best. Who knows how things will pan out?
 
Posted by Loveheart (# 12249) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
I think that ++Canterbury should suspend +Ebbsfleet now. I don't see how he can give the requisite oaths of allegiance any longer.

Trouble is, that'll just force their hand, and may cause even more to jump ship. But I agree, its been obvious his allegiance has been elsewhere for some time.
 
Posted by Gee D (# 13815) on :
 
CJS, as pointed out, the parish referred to is a TAC one, not part of the Anglican Communion. I was wrong when I said it was the only one in NSW - there's also one at Inverell, of all places. I've no idea of its size. The largest element of the TAC would probably be the Church of the Torres Strait.

Pancho , within 5 km of here, there are large RCC parishes at Wahroonga, St Ives and Pymble. The Cathedral is little further (at least geographically). If they follow the usual Australian pattern, very, very few parishioners would be unhappy with the present liturgy, normal grumblings aside. Each of the 3 is associated with a primary school. It would be strange if more than a dozen overall left to go to the Anglican Rite.

And Sir Pellinore (Retired) , you've been in the lists a lot lately. A bit late now to drop the (Retired), but good to see you back jousting.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
Pete 173, I thought your contribution on BBC Radio 4's Sunday programme was spot on. What I found most interesting was your statement about the ecumenical journey thus far. Many Catholics have long suspected that the Anglican representatives in that dialogue were unrepresentative of the real situation within your communion and were presenting a face of Anglicanism that was designed to suggest that the end point desired by the Anglican Communion was the same as that desired by the Catholic Church, i.e. full corporate union in communion with Rome. As you said so clearly, that is not the end point that many (most?) Anglicans desire. It is as well to be clear about that and, I suspect, will mean that ecumenical efforts will look and feel different on this Lungotevere. In itself, I think that a good thing but there are a lot with much invested in the approach heretofore who will find it all very uncomfortable.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
I'm not sure that this has all that much to do with Anglicanism as Church, other than that the TAC provided a convenient pivot point. I think this has more to do with Anglican liturgy, since BXVI really considers liturgy as the core business of the Church. Basically, BXVI is killing off Trent on liturgy. Yes, not supporting it, killing it. Because what was really important about Trent was not the now so-called "Extraordinary Form" of the Latin rite as such, but that it was imposed on the whole Church in 1570 by Pius V.

Now, BXVI faces a severe practical problem. He has to deal urgently with that "liturgy by committee", which disrupted Catholic traditions worldwide in the 60s and which remains in dire need of a "reform of the reform" before it becomes the swan song of the Church. But unlike most people pushing for a "reform of the reform", he knows that it cannot be reformed by a committee imposing wholesale change on the Church again - because on one hand that would be a reductio ad absurdum of the main critique of the ordinary liturgy, and on the other hand the obedient Catholics of the 50s, which would have swallowed such change, have largely disappeared. So I think BXVI is killing Trent: he is re-introducing liturgical diversity - traditional diversity, not the clown mass side of things - in order to generate a sizable "liturgical gene pool" from which a future unified liturgy of the Church can organically grow again. This is a project of centuries, most likely, but he's making as much of a start as he can.

It's very ironic that his first, and major, strike against Trent was the freeing the "Tridentine mass". There must be a bit of a smile on his face when he considers the celebrations of the SSPX. This is now a second strike, making a third Latin rite widely available. I'm not enough of a liturgy expert to know what other moves he can viably make to increase traditional diversity in liturgy. Perhaps we will see something next concerning the special rites of religious orders, like the Dominicans. Perhaps he can even find some way of bringing Orthodox worship into the Latin world. That would require some genius machinations, but I think the man is a bit of a genius, and I'm sure that he would love to do it...
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
IngoB, some 20+ years ago when I briefly attended a pastoral provision Anglican Use RC parish in Austin, Texas the pastor there told me that RC liturgical scholars were very desirous to have the American 1979 BCP materials for themselves and to introduce these into the RCC; hence, the liturgy of the Pro-Diocese of St Augustine that was based on the 1549-American 1928 BCP wasn't allowed when the group submitted to the Holy See, not just because the group's revised Eucharistic Prayer was still out of step with RC standards, but because RCC liturgists didn't want what they viewed as an archaic liturgical resource coming into the Church; rather, they specifically wanted to get use of and promulgate the resources in the 1979 book. So your notion would seem to have a fairly long history, even though it may only be in the incumbency of the present Holy Father that the notion assumes any real legs.

[ 25. October 2009, 12:01: Message edited by: Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras ]
 
Posted by Horseman Bree (# 5290) on :
 
This just in from today's New York Times. Unsurprisingly, there is a church that might make the long-jump over the Tiber.

But I am somewhat intrigued by this statement:

quote:
Even the parish priest’s title and status are a sign of the conflict. Bishop Moyer is not a bishop in the Episcopal Church, but he uses that title because he was made a bishop in the Traditional Anglican Communion, a conservative splinter group that played a crucial role in persuading the Vatican to welcome the Anglicans.


If he is self-appointed as a bishop (which puts him in the same boat as some of the Pentecostalist independents), can he actually accept the discipline of a system that clearly has a boss? If he really believes in apostolic succession, how could he accept the nomination of bishop without that laying on of the hands?
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
He's had episcopal consecration but not by bishops of TEC or those in communion with Canterbury. He's been consecrated by others in TAC. Of course, from the official RC POV it would be pretensed episcopacy either way.
 
Posted by Pokrov (# 11515) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
I'm not sure that this has all that much to do with Anglicanism as Church, other than that the TAC provided a convenient pivot point. I think this has more to do with Anglican liturgy, since BXVI really considers liturgy as the core business of the Church. Basically, BXVI is killing off Trent on liturgy. Yes, not supporting it, killing it. Because what was really important about Trent was not the now so-called "Extraordinary Form" of the Latin rite as such, but that it was imposed on the whole Church in 1570 by Pius V.

Now, BXVI faces a severe practical problem. He has to deal urgently with that "liturgy by committee", which disrupted Catholic traditions worldwide in the 60s and which remains in dire need of a "reform of the reform" before it becomes the swan song of the Church. But unlike most people pushing for a "reform of the reform", he knows that it cannot be reformed by a committee imposing wholesale change on the Church again - because on one hand that would be a reductio ad absurdum of the main critique of the ordinary liturgy, and on the other hand the obedient Catholics of the 50s, which would have swallowed such change, have largely disappeared. So I think BXVI is killing Trent: he is re-introducing liturgical diversity - traditional diversity, not the clown mass side of things - in order to generate a sizable "liturgical gene pool" from which a future unified liturgy of the Church can organically grow again. This is a project of centuries, most likely, but he's making as much of a start as he can.

It's very ironic that his first, and major, strike against Trent was the freeing the "Tridentine mass". There must be a bit of a smile on his face when he considers the celebrations of the SSPX. This is now a second strike, making a third Latin rite widely available. I'm not enough of a liturgy expert to know what other moves he can viably make to increase traditional diversity in liturgy. Perhaps we will see something next concerning the special rites of religious orders, like the Dominicans. Perhaps he can even find some way of bringing Orthodox worship into the Latin world. That would require some genius machinations, but I think the man is a bit of a genius, and I'm sure that he would love to do it...

Ingo. I agree 100% with this. The RCC, liturgically speaking, sold the family silver long ago and now BXVI is investing in some new antiques. FWIW I think the eastern rite presents the most 'living' of the ancient liturgies and so would be interested to see more import from this.

What this then says about the fact the Western Church sold the heritage down the river whilst the Eastern Church preserved the Faith is ironic indeed... [Biased]

As the RCC must realise, not all that's new is good.
 
Posted by Badger Lady (# 13453) on :
 
Out of interest, would a married priest who crossed from Cantebury to Rome be able to become a bishop of the Roman Catholic church? Would he be able to become a cardinal or any other higher rank in the RC cardinal?
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
I think that there is no provision for married men to become bishops,as there is no tradition in either the Western (mainly rc) church nor in the Eastern (mainly orthodox) of married bishops.

Cardinals technically do not have to be bishops and some were not (even) priests. However a recent pope,(I think Paul VI) decreed that all cardinals should have the rank of archbishop.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
There has been an unpleasant story doing the rounds that the 600 Anglican clergy were hoping to charter flights from Ryan Air to go to Rome. Seems that has fall threw as Michael O'Leary want to deal on the baggage. The problem is that the Anglican deserters carry so much baggage that the cost so they are going to have to hitchhike for Le Harve. Their leaders have said Calais is a bit dangerous because of all the illegal immigrant camps.
The warmth from the lighted candles will keep them comfortable at night on the journey to Rome
 
Posted by rosamundi (# 2495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Badger Lady:
Out of interest, would a married priest who crossed from Cantebury to Rome be able to become a bishop of the Roman Catholic church? Would he be able to become a cardinal or any other higher rank in the RC cardinal?

One of the things I read about this (sorry, I can't remember where) said quite clearly that any married Bishops who joined the RCC would not be ordained Bishop in the Catholic Church, although they may be ordained as a priest.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pokrov:
The RCC, liturgically speaking, sold the family silver long ago and now BXVI is investing in some new antiques. FWIW I think the eastern rite presents the most 'living' of the ancient liturgies and so would be interested to see more import from this.

Orthodox liturgy underwent substantial changes from the 8th to the 14th century, see for example "The Orthodox liturgy: The development of the Eucharistic liturgy in the Byzantine rite" by Hugh Wybrew, it continued changing afterwards, and it has rather familiar problems in the West.

quote:
Originally posted by Pokrov:
What this then says about the fact the Western Church sold the heritage down the river whilst the Eastern Church preserved the Faith is ironic indeed... [Biased] As the RCC must realise, not all that's new is good.

The RCC turned a good reform ideal into a liturgical construction site, underestimating the forces then at work in the world and Church. Major corrections are on the way 50 years later, a mere eye blink in the life of the Church. It took over 300 years for Russian Orthodoxy to lift the anathemas against the Old Believers, who schismed over Russian liturgical reform, but arguably there's been little progress since. Incidentally, I had a laugh about this literature note from Wikipedia: "[Patriarch] Nikon’s correctors made such a lot mistakes in the new editions, which were so absurd and awkward, that it gave ground to maintain that Nikon had said to the head corrector: 'Revise, Arseny, just anyway, if only it doesn’t look as before.'" Now what does that remind me of?!
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Horseman Bree:
If he is self-appointed as a bishop (which puts him in the same boat as some of the Pentecostalist independents), can he actually accept the discipline of a system that clearly has a boss? If he really believes in apostolic succession, how could he accept the nomination of bishop without that laying on of the hands?

As this story makes clear, +Moyer was consecrated by nine bishops in the succession of the apostles. He is not self-appointed, and neither is any TAC prelate.

It took me all of 10 seconds on Google to find this out, by the way.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rosamundi:
quote:
Originally posted by Badger Lady:
Out of interest, would a married priest who crossed from Cantebury to Rome be able to become a bishop of the Roman Catholic church? Would he be able to become a cardinal or any other higher rank in the RC cardinal?

One of the things I read about this (sorry, I can't remember where) said quite clearly that any married Bishops who joined the RCC would not be ordained Bishop in the Catholic Church, although they may be ordained as a priest.
This is currently what happens in the US. Any clergy who become Roman Catholic priests only have a chance of becoming a bishop if they are unmarried. RC bishops cannot be married, per Catholic preference, not scripture. Perhaps one day that will change.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
I don't want to think about that. I want to carry on working at keeping traditionalist catholic Anglicans in the CofE if they want to stay. But if they want to go, we'll be the poorer for it, but I'll wish them God speed.

The CofE without them will of course give a much clearer run to the full and equal ministry of women as priests and bishops - something I also long for. We wouldn't have to legislate for what everyone recognises is discriminatory. But the CofE without them will also be poorer for the loss of part of its catholic heritage, and for the loss of credally orthodox and missional people.

I want to echo the comments made by others, thanking you for your comments on Radio 4's 'Sunday' this morning, especially about the balance in the C of E and the wish not to lose it.

One of my FiF friends said, 'When we go, they'll be gunning for you (AffCathers) next.' That reflects paranoia, I suspect but other catholically-minded Anglicans do feel out on a limb sometimes.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the coiled spring:
There has been an unpleasant story doing the rounds that the 600 Anglican clergy were hoping to charter flights from Ryan Air to go to Rome. Seems that has fall threw as Michael O'Leary want to deal on the baggage. The problem is that the Anglican deserters carry so much baggage that the cost so they are going to have to hitchhike for Le Harve. Their leaders have said Calais is a bit dangerous because of all the illegal immigrant camps.
The warmth from the lighted candles will keep them comfortable at night on the journey to Rome

Silly man - you're talking about some principled and holy people, many of whom are my friends.
 
Posted by rosamundi (# 2495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Martin L:
This is currently what happens in the US. Any clergy who become Roman Catholic priests only have a chance of becoming a bishop if they are unmarried. RC bishops cannot be married, per Catholic preference, not scripture. Perhaps one day that will change.

And the Orthodox are even stricter - their bishops may only be ordained from within the ranks of vowed monks. Celibacy for Bishops is the norm. Is "for the sake of the Kingdom" not scriptural?
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
Could a married priest who is widowed become a bishop?

quote:
some 20+ years ago when I briefly attended a pastoral provision Anglican Use RC parish in Austin, Texas the pastor there told me that RC liturgical scholars were very desirous to have the American 1979 BCP materials for themselves
What about the 79 BCP would the RC liturgical scholars want? I mean what did that BCP have that we Romans did not already have?


quote:
hence, the liturgy of the Pro-Diocese of St Augustine that was based on the 1549-American 1928 BCP wasn't allowed when the group submitted to the Holy See, not just because the group's revised Eucharistic Prayer was still out of step with RC standards
What is/was the liturgy of the Pro-Diocese of St Augustine? How was its Eucharistic Prayer revised? And why was it still out of step with RC standards?

[NOTE to the Hosts: I know these questions stray from the topic; if I should start a new thread, let me know.]
 
Posted by rosamundi (# 2495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
Could a married priest who is widowed become a bishop?

I'm not sure. I know they wouldn't be able to marry again, so I'd have thought there was then no bar to them becoming a Bishop, but I don't know.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
There is no problem with a celibate widower being ordained to the episcopate.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
quote:
Silly man - you're talking about some principled and holy people, many of whom are my friends.
You have holy friends, shock!!!horror!

Would very much like to know if all this nonsense is Scriptual as are really supposed to be so splintered and right all the time.

Just because one is a priest does not make one holy.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
What about the 79 BCP would the RC liturgical scholars want? I mean what did that BCP have that we Romans did not already have?

I suspect it is more about linguistic style than availability of materials. The type of language found in BCP79 sounds more majestic and more traditional than the simplified clauses of the Sacramentary. It is also closer to the original Latin, but that problem will soon be eliminated.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the coiled spring:
Would very much like to know if all this nonsense is Scriptural as are really supposed to be so splintered and right all the time.

Clearly you have not read the New Testament.

quote:
Originally posted by the coiled spring:
Just because one is a priest does not make one holy.

I am painfully aware of this reality. But I am sure that the friends in question are not just priests.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
According to yesterday's Church Times, each priest will have to undergo a period of scrutiny and extra training before being ordained.

So... they will need to be re-ordained, and officially consider their previous ordinations wholly invalid or at least dubious, then? [Confused] If they already believed this, why didn't they convert then, and if they didn't believe this before, have they really decided en masse to change their beliefs about their own ordinations and the Apostolic Succession -- or lack thereof -- of the Anglican churches for the last several hundred years?

Seriously, am I missing something here? [Confused] Because unless the Pope has suddenly declared the Anglican Communion (but only up till the last few years or so) to have truly been sacramentally valid all this time, that seems like the only alternative, and not one which I can see as being acceptable from the position that one's holy orders, sacraments, etc. as an Anglican/Episcopal priest or bishop have been valid all this time. (Which, given some of the issues involved -- such as whether or not ordaining women to the priesthood and especially as bishops will damage future Anglican apostolic succession -- seems kind of weirdly ironic to me. If there was no real apostolic succession all this time in the Anglican Communion to preserve and all...)
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
There is no problem with a celibate widower being ordained to the episcopate.

Cardinal Manning was a widower.


I haven't really got involved in this particular thread. As I'm a Protestant rather than Catholic member of the CofE, I don't see it as such a big issue. In some other ways, I'm perhaps a bit old fashioned, but one feature of that is that I tend to resent hearing the Oxford Movement and its successors described as traditionalists. To me, it is they that were the innovators.


Obviously Rome would like to reverse the events of 1530-60, but this isn't really going to happen without a change in the Roman understanding of what I believe is called the magisterium. Those of us outside 'the Roman obedience' would like there to be ecumenical unity throughout Christendom, but don't believe the phrase 'Roman obedience' or that understanding of the nature of authority is either biblical or patristic.

Indeed, I'd go further and say that we would all have to give up at least one thing we dearly love and feel strongly about to achieve that unity, and for Rome, that seems to me a surrender it would have to make.


Also though, this doesn't seem to have been handled in a very ecumenical way. One gets the impression that it was not just Canterbury but also Westminster that only heard about it at the last minute. By analogy, it would be as though Rowan had suddenly announced without telling the Piskies or the CofS that he was setting up a CofE Presbytery with a flying bishop based in Edinburgh for Church of Scotland ministers who wanted episcopacy but to retain a kirk session at the same time.
 
Posted by otyetsfoma (# 12898) on :
 
The "Anglicans" that appealed for this were not CofE but Continuing Anglicans. I met with some of them in Canada last year and expressed doubts whether it was a good idea. I was assured that no one expected it to happen soon! I think their bishops are keener on the idea than their laity- I certainly hope so.
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
Let's all sing together

And no, this Anglo-catholic is certainly not doing the Vatican Rag.
 
Posted by Badger Lady (# 13453) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rosamundi:
quote:
Originally posted by Badger Lady:
Out of interest, would a married priest who crossed from Cantebury to Rome be able to become a bishop of the Roman Catholic church? Would he be able to become a cardinal or any other higher rank in the RC church?

One of the things I read about this (sorry, I can't remember where) said quite clearly that any married Bishops who joined the RCC would not be ordained Bishop in the Catholic Church, although they may be ordained as a priest.
Thanks Rosamundi (and others). I must say, as an outsider to all this, and not meaning to derogate the issues involved, it does strike me as deeply ironic that the traditionalists who cross the Tiber will be in the same position as women vicars have been in the Anglican church up to now. They can be ordained but cannot aim to any 'higher' things. Perhaps proof, if it were needed, that God has a very nuanced sense of humour... [Two face]
 
Posted by Horseman Bree (# 5290) on :
 
Fr. Weber tells me that 9 bishops laid hands on Bishop Moyer, so that makes it all OK. But if the raising to the episcopate is done by people who who are on the outs with their own church, and the gentleman in question is not accepting the discipline of his church, what is he bishop OF?

Come to that, why are all those bishoply people still bishops in the church they dislike so much? Adolescent rebellion isn't much of an excuse, and it certainly doesn't look good on supposed adults.

ISTM that this proposal by the Holy Father makes life much easier for the Anglicans, who can now say
quote:
“you have been sat to long here for any good you have been doing. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go!.”


Funny how a good Puritan line can be applicable even now!
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Horseman Bree asks
quote:
Fr. Weber tells me that 9 bishops laid hands on Bishop Moyer, so that makes it all OK. But if the raising to the episcopate is done by people who who are on the outs with their own church, and the gentleman in question is not accepting the discipline of his church, what is he bishop OF?
To the best of my knowledge they were bishops in good standing with the TAC, so I'm a bit unsure what you mean here. But if you are referring to his earlier fall-out with Bp.Bennison, then why frame the question in this restricted sense? Change the framing again, so that we ask the same question of all our Anglican bishops. What exactly ARE they bishops of? Whatever the answer to that is, then surely that is the answer to your original question.
 
Posted by angelicum (# 13515) on :
 
Re. the validity of orders and re-ordination, one FiF member put it this way: many of them have been meticulously "proving" their sacramental validity already, ensuring as far as possible that their orders and their sacraments are valid. Some even have the papers tracing the lineage to prove it. What Holy See is asking of them is nothing more than what they are asking of themselves - that they are absolutely certain that their orders are indeed valid, and what Rome suggests is that it may well be best to err on the side of caution and put yourself forward for conditional ordination or in those instances where no lineage can be ascertained, re-ordination. They understand that this will be very much on a case-by-case basis, but hope that the provisions and considerations in this respect will be as generous as the outlined provisions have been so far.
 
Posted by angelicum (# 13515) on :
 
Also, for those who are worried regarding how much of this will affect the RC church as a whole - even if all the ACs were to take up the Tiber, the numbers globally would not add up to that of a major RC archdiocese. It may have small effects on part of the RC church in the UK, given the dimunitive size of the UK RC population, but for the rest of the English speaking RC world, it will pretty much be business as normal.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear Rosamundi

Although Orthodox bishops are USUALLY taken from the monastic ranks this is not NECESSARILY the case. Being unmarried doesn't make one a monk. There are some Orthodox bishops who link to THINK that they are monks for this reason but reality lies elsewhere. Canonically you just have to be celibate - ab initio or after widowhood.
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
But isn't it Rome's perspective that the break from the Church under Henry VIII forever and irrevocably tainted the line of Apostolic succession of England's priests?

That is the basis for Rome's rejection of the legitimacy of Anglican priests. The CofE has always maintained continuity via Apostolic succession. Rome has rebuffed this claim by stating that the legitimacy of apostolic succession is dependent on submission to the Bishop of Rome.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
Shipmates will doubtless be pleased (or perplexed) that the announcement quite caught the attention of the Spanish and, as I type, I have a full two-page spread in the Voz de Galicia (a provincial paper serving the NW of Spain) in front of me, with a potted history of Anglicanism, a straightforward analysis of the presentation by the two archbishops, a column describing the various former Anglican groupings likely addressed by the measure, a discussion of the long-term impact of the move on the future of compulsory celibacy among Latin clerics, and an interview with a progressive theologian in Madrid (Juan José Tamayo) who discussed the longer term and strategic impact it would likely have on Anglicanism.

Idle in Madrid on Friday morning (as one so often is there, given the natives' proclivity to lie abed until 10ish) and waiting for a friend to turn up for morning coffee outside Comillas University (a Jesuit institution), I fell into discussion with two of the priests who looked upon the initiative with enthusiasm-- some of this was (I think) unrealistic, but they talked to me of the importance of bringing in other theological perspectives and bases into the Latin Church's discourse. Most priests had been through a fairly uniform theological and philosophical training, and another way of looking at things would help bring in some balance. Priests with experience of married life would be welcomed by many lay people. I indicated that this was not an automatic solution to all pastoral problems, but they let me know that my credibility was greatly eroded by the presence of a striking young Andalusian writer who was taking me off for hot chocolate.

Mind you, I don't think that any positive reaction in the Spanish church will have much impact on things.

One or two of the more demented shipmates might recall that about two years ago I posted that I had been shown a draft document by a sashed- & piped acquaintance, much of which seems to have appeared in the substance of the announcement. It has been cooking for some while and was designed to: a) deal with the TAC gang in response to their approach to the Scarlet Lady, and b) broaden and solidify the application of the US-only Pastoral Provision. In terms of TAC & other groups, coming into a broader fold with more structure will likely be very good for them, if not an agreeable experience every day. The practical shocks they will experience have been pointed out by shipmates, but working in cooperation with regular Latin rite priests and getting involved in chaplaincy and other fields will draw many of them out of the teapot fights they have been living in for many years. And I think that many of them will end up liking this very much.

It is also clear from the joint glumness exhibited by the Abps of Canterbury and Westminster that they have been left out of the decision-making. But this has been in the oven for so long, I do not know why anybody is surprised about it.
 
Posted by angelicum (# 13515) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anglican_Brat:
the legitimacy of apostolic succession is dependent on submission to the Bishop of Rome.

Not true. The SSPX are considered to have valid orders and they do not formally submit to the Pope. As does the Orthodox Churches.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rosamundi:
And the Orthodox are even stricter - their bishops may only be ordained from within the ranks of vowed monks. Celibacy for Bishops is the norm. Is "for the sake of the Kingdom" not scriptural?

As Priest Gregory says in reply to you, plus, since the expansion of the monastics in the 4-6th centuries they began to be seen as dedicated choices to the office of bishop. From the 6th they gained so much momentum that they instituted a celibate bishopric by default, and, they continue to perpetuate the myth that this is Orthodox, because, of those who know the history, like the control it gives them and don't want to give it up.

There were huge arguments about celibacy in the early centuries, the Orthodox at first managed to keep hold of married states for bishops and priests while in the West celibacy gradually became the norm for both, by the 12th I think. At the moment in the Orthodox Church, a man can marry before ordination, not after.

Myrrh
 
Posted by Just Me (# 14937) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:

One question I do have is what will happen to parish's who have signed resolutions for reasons that are not tied to Catholic ecclesiology. I know a few that really would rather have a man to lead matins. The PEV's have (generously) offered pastoral care for a number of 'central and prayerbook' parishes and I do wonder what will happen to them if an exodus occurs.

Er... what's generous about it? It's their job isn't it? (ie to provide episcopal oversight to a parish that has petitioned the diocesan bishop for such provision). The Act of Synod says they are commissioned to "carry out, or cause to be carried out, for any parish in the province such episcopal duties, in addition to his other duties, as the diocesan bishop concerned may request"

J
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by angelicum:
given the dimunitive size of the UK RC population

About 4.2 million RCs officially, likely quite a bit more (lots of "irregular migrants" in the UK are RC). Sunday mass attendance was even between Catholics and Anglican at about 1 million in 2005, but Catholics growing. (source)
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gee D:

Pancho , within 5 km of here, there are large RCC parishes at Wahroonga, St Ives and Pymble. The Cathedral is little further (at least geographically). If they follow the usual Australian pattern, very, very few parishioners would be unhappy with the present liturgy, normal grumblings aside. Each of the 3 is associated with a primary school. It would be strange if more than a dozen overall left to go to the Anglican Rite.

Gee D , even if people are currently satisfied with their parishes liturgy-wise, a former TAC, now Anglican Use church could attract Catholics simply because it would be an additional Catholic parish in the area where they can attend Mass on Sundays and receive communion. Catholics without an Anglican background may not have a reason to travel out of their way to an ex-TAC parish but if that ex-TAC parish is closer than the others to where they live or work then those Catholics wouldn't have to travel any farther to attend Mass and receive communion. The ex-TAC parish could easily attract Catholics in their surrounding neighborhood simply because they would now be in communion with Rome.

[ 25. October 2009, 23:34: Message edited by: Pancho ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rosamundi:
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
Could a married priest who is widowed become a bishop?

I'm not sure. I know they wouldn't be able to marry again, so I'd have thought there was then no bar to them becoming a Bishop, but I don't know.
Cardinal Manning was widowed IIRC.

And if St Peter was the first Pope, then we've had at least one married Pope [Smile]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
It's not relevant to the OP but personally I believe that Orthodox bishops should be taken from the married clergy as well. As with Rome and priestly celibacy it's a discipline thing not a faith and order issue.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
It's not relevant to the OP but personally I believe that Orthodox bishops should be taken from the married clergy as well. As with Rome and priestly celibacy it's a discipline thing not a faith and order issue.

Yes, sorry to continue with the tangent, last post on it.

Discipline is a euphemism for don't rock our elite standing. The Clergy and Laity in Greek US organised a conference on reintroduction of married bishops, Demetrios attended. Since then they've been subjected to a constistent drip of antagonism from Constantinople, finally coming to a head with Bartholomew who simply ripped up their constitution and when they tried taking him to court the US judges couldn't understand Orthodox anarchos and believed Bartholomew was an actual head of the Church and they were subject to him and his rules. I can't think of any other group of Orthodox as organised, and educated in orthodoxy, as these, and they failed to stop the neo-papism of the EP.

And I can't see the other Orthodox patriarchates giving up their control either. Whatever next? We'd be back to choosing our own bishops..


Myrrh
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Perhaps this article from the National Catholic Reporter's might clarify the matter supposedly under discussion on this thread?

http://ncronline.org/news/what-vaticans-welcome-anglicans-means
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
The thing to watch is really not so much the Anglican side, in my opinion. In addition to my point above about Catholic liturgy, it will be really interesting to see to what extent regular Latin rite Catholics, lay and ordained, can become part of this new rite.

If the movements are left entirely free, this new rite may become 1) a haven for those whom the rad-trads call neo-cons (i.e., people with a love for tradition, who are not hung up about turning back the clock precisely to 1960), 2) a way for married men to become priests. This has some potential to become a major movement within Catholicism. I for one would certainly pay a visit if such a parish was set up in reachable distance to me (unlikely now, but who knows about the future...).
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
My concern is what about your average member?

From what I gather, the congo transfers across if the individual pastor decides to defect/transition to Rome. Wouldn't this be causing problems in the consciences of some of that pastor's congo, in that they might find themselves being asked to pray stuff that goes diametrically against what they'd previously been taught?

One other question I have, which isn't apparent from areas where I've looked.. what *is* the RC hierarchy's view of the Baptist Union etc? Cos I've taken communion in an Anglican joint before - no probs.. (yeah I know this bit's DH)...

What will be the effect on churches working together?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
Perhaps this article from the National Catholic Reporter's might clarify the matter supposedly under discussion on this thread?

http://ncronline.org/news/what-vaticans-welcome-anglicans-means

The article says pretty much what most people have been saying here. The discussion beneath it shows that there are a lot of paranoid loonies everywhere...
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eddy:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Nothing to stop them disregarding that 'Act of State' and crossing the Tiber - why don't they?

Because some of them couldn't because they are divorced and remarried.

Because some of them have live in boyfriends.

Because some like being big fishes but in RC church would be small ones.



I'm not sure though how these three of the reasons you've given are not going to be equally cogent (in the medium-term at least) for not crossing over on the terms currently on offer. I can't really see +++Benny rolling over and letting his tummy be tickled on #1 and #2 for example.
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
Whilst I disagree with Ingo's hypothesis that a central motivation for this Vatican announcement was liturgical, I think he's right that the liturgical issues implied in it are both important and interesting.

For example: if the horrid new "English" translations à la Liturgiam Authenticam are imposed on parishes in the US and UK, I know a good number of Catholic priests and laypeople who will strongly prefer the liturgy in the Book of Divine Worship over the gobbledygook that they will find in their missalettes. Some "Anglican Use" Catholic churches could find themselves very full, very quickly.

These liturgical issues are missing from John Allen's otherwise excellent analysis -- thanks, Sir Pellinore, for the reference.

On the timing of the announcement: the historian David Starkey asserts that this was strategically calculated:
quote:
You can’t fault the Pope’s timing. The Vatican’s announcement last week that it would welcome back disaffected Anglicans after centuries of schism was a calculated move to coincide with the 500th anniversary of Henry VIII’s accession.

The Catholic Church has a profound historic awareness. What better moment to indicate that it believes the English Reformation, which was irrevocably set in motion during Henry’s reign, can — and should — be reversed?

Starkey makes it sound like Jesuitical shrewdness was in operation here; given the usual ineptitude in communication and timing that the Vatican displays (and the press office is run by a Jesuit!) I struggle to believe that the timing was all that carefully planned. But it's an intriguing perspective nonetheless.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
The discussion beneath [the NCR article] shows that there are a lot of paranoid loonies everywhere...

Exactimundissimus.

[ 26. October 2009, 12:26: Message edited by: Chesterbelloc ]
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
.... and you know, they are all out to get us! [Eek!]
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
[

If Father Kirk and +Ebbsfleet really believe that the Holy Father is the Holy Father then what are they waiting for?

How can a priest or bishop who believe in the Roman Catholic Church as they now claim to do so continue to celebrate the sacraments of the heretical church outside?

I think that ++Canterbury should suspend +Ebbsfleet now. I don't see how he can give the requisite oaths of allegiance any longer.

Can anyone clarify reports (referred to in a letter in Friday's Times) that +Ebbsfleet and +Richborough flew to Rome to talk about this without telling ++Rowan? If this is true (and I'm not saying it is) then (i) Rome has been rather discourteous in talking to the monkeys without consulting organ grinder (ii) Ebbsfleet and Richborough have bitten the hand that fed them, big-time.
But as i say, I don't know whether this report is true or not.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
[

If Father Kirk and +Ebbsfleet really believe that the Holy Father is the Holy Father then what are they waiting for?

How can a priest or bishop who believe in the Roman Catholic Church as they now claim to do so continue to celebrate the sacraments of the heretical church outside?

I think that ++Canterbury should suspend +Ebbsfleet now. I don't see how he can give the requisite oaths of allegiance any longer.

Can anyone clarify reports (referred to in a letter in Friday's Times) that +Ebbsfleet and +Richborough flew to Rome to talk about this without telling ++Rowan? If this is true (and I'm not saying it is) then (i) Rome has been rather discourteous in talking to the monkeys without consulting organ grinder (ii) Ebbsfleet and Richborough have bitten the hand that fed them, big-time.
But as i say, I don't know whether this report is true or not.

The report is not true. The Archbishop was fully briefed, both before and after their trip to Rome.
 
Posted by rosamundi (# 2495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alex Cockell:
From what I gather, the congo transfers across if the individual pastor decides to defect/transition to Rome. Wouldn't this be causing problems in the consciences of some of that pastor's congo, in that they might find themselves being asked to pray stuff that goes diametrically against what they'd previously been taught?

Each individual conversion will be a matter for the person concerned. If a priest decides to convert, he won't be dragging his congregation with him willy-nilly. Likewise if one or two, or even the majority, of a particular church's membership decides to come to Rome, those who wish to remain as Anglicans will do so.

There was a recent case where some Anglican All Saints Sisters of the Poor joined the Catholic Church - 10 of the Sisters, and their chaplain, were received, but two of the Sisters remained Anglican. Admittedly, they are slightly unusual in that a congregation of Sisters is a bit different to a congregation of laity, but there were no forced conversions.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anglican_Brat:
But isn't it Rome's perspective that the break from the Church under Henry VIII forever and irrevocably tainted the line of Apostolic succession of England's priests?

As I understand it, Rome's view is that Apostolicae Curae was certainly correct when proclaimed and Anglican Orders are invalid. However, much water has passed under the bridge and some Anglicans since then have had Old Catholic bishops in their episcopal lineage thus raising a doubt as to the invalidity of some Anglican ministers. (This is called the "Dutch Touch.") So the presumption is that Anglican Orders are invalid but a doubt can be raised about the invalidity. In practice, I don't think this has happened often.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
What a degenerate understanding of Apostolic Succession.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
[

If Father Kirk and +Ebbsfleet really believe that the Holy Father is the Holy Father then what are they waiting for?

How can a priest or bishop who believe in the Roman Catholic Church as they now claim to do so continue to celebrate the sacraments of the heretical church outside?

I think that ++Canterbury should suspend +Ebbsfleet now. I don't see how he can give the requisite oaths of allegiance any longer.

Can anyone clarify reports (referred to in a letter in Friday's Times) that +Ebbsfleet and +Richborough flew to Rome to talk about this without telling ++Rowan? If this is true (and I'm not saying it is) then (i) Rome has been rather discourteous in talking to the monkeys without consulting organ grinder (ii) Ebbsfleet and Richborough have bitten the hand that fed them, big-time.
But as i say, I don't know whether this report is true or not.

The report is not true. The Archbishop was fully briefed, both before and after their trip to Rome.
This is good to hear. Disloyalty and ingratitude on the part of the two PEVs, then, but at least not duplicity.

[ 26. October 2009, 13:46: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
What a degenerate understanding of Apostolic Succession.

Indeed, but is New Yorker's understanding, not that of the Catholic Church.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rosamundi:
If a priest decides to convert, he won't be dragging his congregation with him willy-nilly. Likewise if one or two, or even the majority, of a particular church's membership decides to come to Rome, those who wish to remain as Anglicans will do so.

The question is, which group gets to keep the church building itself - the priest and his followers, or the loyal Anglicans?

It seems evident to me that it should be the ones who remain Anglicans.
 
Posted by caercybi06 (# 15105) on :
 
I think that any union like this proposed one is rubbish. Look at all the problems that come with it , what to do with married clergy, with female clergy, and in Canadas case female bishops . How will people used to reciving communion in both kinds take to reciving in just 1 kind ? The 2 churches have evolved away from each other since the split in the 16th century. Lets just say thanks but
no thanks.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:

It seems evident to me that it should be the ones who remain Anglicans.

On what grounds do you reach that conclusion, I wonder?
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by caercybi06:
I think that any union like this proposed one is rubbish. Look at all the problems that come with it , what to do with married clergy, with female clergy, and in Canadas case female bishops . How will people used to reciving communion in both kinds take to reciving in just 1 kind ? The 2 churches have evolved away from each other since the split in the 16th century. Lets just say thanks but
no thanks.

The invitation does not extend to female clergy--except as repentant laity. Romans have been receiving communion in both kinds for years.

Both churches have indeed changed over the years, but parts of the Anglican church are probably closer to Rome right now than the two churches were just before the split in the 16th century.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by caercybi06:
I think that any union like this proposed one is rubbish. Look at all the problems that come with it , what to do with married clergy, with female clergy, and in Canadas case female bishops . How will people used to reciving communion in both kinds take to reciving in just 1 kind ? The 2 churches have evolved away from each other since the split in the 16th century. Lets just say thanks but
no thanks.

I confess that I am unclear as to why female clergy or female bishops would be interested in availing themselves of a provision aimed at those whose main problem with Anglicanism is, er, the ordination of, er, women . . . . . .
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:

It seems evident to me that it should be the ones who remain Anglicans.

On what grounds do you reach that conclusion, I wonder?
Given the Establishment of the English church, it seems clear any division of property will, at the very least, remain in the power of the Anglican church.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:

It seems evident to me that it should be the ones who remain Anglicans.

On what grounds do you reach that conclusion, I wonder?
Given the Establishment of the English church, it seems clear any division of property will, at the very least, remain in the power of the Anglican church.
Sure. But might it not be a good thing - in the case of a parish where a clear majority of the members wished to avail themselves of the Holy See's offer - if the C of E agreed that the property went with them? After all, some might think it a thoroughly Christian thing to do . . .
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by caercybi06:
Look at all the problems that come with it , what to do with married clergy, with female clergy, and in Canadas case female bishops.

I think you are missing the point a little! It is precisely those Anglican clergy who object to women bishops who are likely to take advantage of the offer. Those who are happy with women bishops will stay Protestant. So we end up with priests who object to women bishops in a church without them, and priests who don't mind in a church with them (God willing) Which makes life simpler, not more complicated.

quote:

How will people used to reciving communion in both kinds take to reciving in just 1 kind ?

Why should they? Communion in both kinds is perfectly legal in the Roman church and actually goes on in most places. Presumably any Anglican-liturgy RCs with just carry on with their current practice.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
But might it not be a good thing - in the case of a parish where a clear majority of the members wished to avail themselves of the Holy See's offer - if the C of E agreed that the property went with them? After all, some might think it a thoroughly Christian thing to do . . .

The bottom line is that some parishioners are going to be without a church to go to. I fail to see what's so wrong with the idea that the ones who leave the church should be the ones who are, well, leaving the church...
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
Since ken made the point above that many of the Roman dioceses already have redundant buildings, I would suspect many parishes who wish to leave could be provided accommodations elsewhere in a manner that Rome might prefer--why would they want to add even more marginal congregations in historic (i.e., expensive-to-keep-up) buildings?
 
Posted by Horseman Bree (# 5290) on :
 
And now, from one of the New York Times' faux-conservatives, an interesting suggestion about the reason for the Pope's offer.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
But might it not be a good thing - in the case of a parish where a clear majority of the members wished to avail themselves of the Holy See's offer - if the C of E agreed that the property went with them? After all, some might think it a thoroughly Christian thing to do . . .

The bottom line is that some parishioners are going to be without a church to go to. I fail to see what's so wrong with the idea that the ones who leave the church should be the ones who are, well, leaving the church...
Fair point. But might it not be kinder to them to recognise from the outset that (assuming that they really are a minority) a pile of property will be a millstone around their necks? Better, surely, for them to move to the next C of E parish and be part of something bigger and stronger?

Unless, of course, you'd prefer the scenario where the minority get to keep the buildings, only to have the church declared redundant (so they have no choice but to move on) and sold to Tescrosebury's Supermarkets Plc.

Might not my solution be a more effective Christian witness to a secular world?
 
Posted by rosamundi (# 2495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
The question is, which group gets to keep the church building itself - the priest and his followers, or the loyal Anglicans?

It seems evident to me that it should be the ones who remain Anglicans.

I’d have thought that depended on all sorts of things, such as who owns the church building. If the church is owned by the Anglican Church, or whichever Church the congregation is leaving, and the remaining congregation remains viable then the church building would remain the property of the original Church.

If the number of people converting renders the remaining (non-converting) congregation too small to be viable (and I have no idea at what point this would be reached, either with the Anglicans or TAC), the church could then be put up for sale, in which case it would be bought by whoever can afford it.

If the building is owned by the congregation, then it could get a bit complicated.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:

Might not my solution be a more effective Christian witness to a secular world?

Before speculating too much on how effective a witness your solution would be, I would want to know if you or your congregation would stand to gain by your solution--something I do not know at present, but which I think would be germane to the question.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:

Might not my solution be a more effective Christian witness to a secular world?

Before speculating too much on how effective a witness your solution would be, I would want to know if you or your congregation would stand to gain by your solution--something I do not know at present, but which I think would be germane to the question.
Quite. I guess the answer really is something as simple as 'continuity'. And if most of a worshipping community wish to go, and there is in truth no other real need for the property, then another serious gain would be goodwill all round!

Anything that can be done to avoid what has been happening in one province of the Communion in recent months would be a very good thing indeed!
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Dear FiFi

quote:
I confess that I am unclear as to why female clergy or female bishops would be interested in availing themselves of a provision aimed at those whose main problem with Anglicanism is, er, the ordination of, er, women . . . . . .
Not so simple actually.

It's nice to see the Roman Church catching up with us. [Biased] The Patriarchate of Antioch has managed "group solutions" with filtered existing clergy for at least 30 years on both sides of the Atlantic and in Australia / NZ. During that time in England alone I know of at least two female priests who have surrendered their orders and become Orthodox.

[ 26. October 2009, 15:47: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
Quite. I guess the answer really is something as simple as 'continuity'. And if most of a worshipping community wish to go, and there is in truth no other real need for the property, then another serious gain would be goodwill all round!

Those are some very big "ifs". Given there will already be a split, I am certainly not convinced there will be a serious gain of good will!

quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
Anything that can be done to avoid what has been happening in one province of the Communion in recent months would be a very good thing indeed!

With all due respect, I would suggest that given the discussion in the last few posts it is already happening, albeit in a nascent manner. The difference in England is Establishment. I'm not going to pretend as an American--even one who reads the Ship faithfully--that I understand all that implies.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:
Indeed, but is New Yorker's understanding, not that of the Catholic Church.

I am certainly open to correction. The subject of Anglican Orders has always been complex for me, but I thought I stated Rome's view correctly.

[ 26. October 2009, 15:53: Message edited by: New Yorker ]
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
I suspect Fifi was referring more to the seemingly interminable litigations that seem to accompany departures in the USA, Organ Builder.

The sort of scenario outlined may well be possible in cities and bigger towns, though I am pretty sure that one of the earliest announcements I read specifically excluded buildings. Which is not to say that something could not be negotiated subsequently of course.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
I suspect Fifi was referring more to the seemingly interminable litigations that seem to accompany departures in the USA, Organ Builder.

Quite.

quote:
The sort of scenario outlined may well be possible in cities and bigger towns, though I am pretty sure that one of the earliest announcements I read specifically excluded buildings. Which is not to say that something could not be negotiated subsequently of course.
Quite.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
But might it not be kinder to them to recognise from the outset that (assuming that they really are a minority) a pile of property will be a millstone around their necks? Better, surely, for them to move to the next C of E parish and be part of something bigger and stronger?

The worship life of a community should not depend on economics. People who have been going to the same church for their whole lives - who have been baptised there, confirmed there, and in some cases married there and held funerals for loved ones there - should not be told they can never again worship in that church because they had the affront to stay within the faith that the church has always professed.

Those who deliberately join another worship community are a different matter.

quote:
Might not my solution be a more effective Christian witness to a secular world?
I dount the secular world would notice one way or the other. Though you do point to an interesting conundrum - a CofE church is obligated to offer a church baptism/wedding/funeral to anyone living in the parish. If the parish church is no longer CofE, where are those parishioners to go? Somehow I can't see the RCC being happy to hatch, match or dispatch them all!
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
New Yorker, the issue with Anglican Orders is primarily about the theology of priesthood and the associated issue of the intention of the Church in ordaining someone. Arguments about what that intention is are 'Dead Horse' territory.

The notion that defective (in Catholic terms) intention can be overcome by grafting in a bishop from another body that might have the same intention as the Catholic Church, implies a reductionist (one might even say 'magical') sacramental theology which seems to completely ignore the ecclesial setting within which the sacraments operate.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alex Cockell:
My concern is what about your average member?

From what I gather, the congo transfers across if the individual pastor decides to defect/transition to Rome. Wouldn't this be causing problems in the consciences of some of that pastor's congo, in that they might find themselves being asked to pray stuff that goes diametrically against what they'd previously been taught?

One other question I have, which isn't apparent from areas where I've looked.. what *is* the RC hierarchy's view of the Baptist Union etc? Cos I've taken communion in an Anglican joint before - no probs.. (yeah I know this bit's DH)...

What will be the effect on churches working together?

There's nothing compelling the laity to go to Rome if their rector decides to go. They're free to join another parish, or to file lawsuits to prevent their building being deeded to the RCC or whatever.

The RCC considers Baptists to be Christians without a valid apostolic ministry. The establishment of the Ordinariate will not change the RCC's closed communion policy.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
Yes, I had interpreted Fifi's remarks as pointing to the US--which is why the implications of Establishment will matter in the way the whole thing develops.

Still, the physical fabric of the church--and where it stays or goes--is important in each country for much the same reason. There is a portion of the laity who may well vote to leave rather than displease Father, but plan to continue to worship in the same building with those who will join them no matter who owns it or licenses the priest. No one knows how large that portion is, and it is probably different in every congregation. I have noticed, however, that the reluctance to discuss it is matched only by the reluctance to discount it.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
The article says pretty much what most people have been saying here. The discussion beneath it shows that there are a lot of paranoid loonies everywhere...

I have an old friend who attended seminary at the Athenaeum in Cincinnati. One summer between terms he did some work for the Archdiocese of Cincinnati in one of the suburbs. It required going door-to-door to get a count of Roman Catholics in the city. One day he walked up to a house, rang the bell, and when the lady of the house answered he explained who he was. She was horrified, and had a batshit fit, accusing him of being in league with the Jesuits and planning to round up all the good Protestants, etc. etc. etc. He waited for her to finish her rant, then looked her straight in the eye and said : "Ma'am, you're absolutely right. And now we know where you live." Whereupon he turned around and walked away.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
The worship life of a community should not depend on economics. People who have been going to the same church for their whole lives - who have been baptised there, confirmed there, and in some cases married there and held funerals for loved ones there - should not be told they can never again worship in that church because they had the affront to stay within the faith that the church has always professed.

Those who deliberately join another worship community are a different matter.

No, it shouldn't depend on economics - but it does! If the remnant which is left at St Fred's cannot afford its upkeep, cannot afford to pay their parish share to the diocese, etc, etc, then economics determines that sooner or later the diocese will close it down and that they will have to move elsewhere. Not nice, but that is a fact of life in the C of E. All I'm saying is that where a large majority departs, I cannot help but think I'd rather see them take the building by agreement, rather than watch is being demolished to make way for a car park.

quote:
. . . Though you do point to an interesting conundrum - a CofE church is obligated to offer a church baptism/wedding/funeral to anyone living in the parish. If the parish church is no longer CofE, where are those parishioners to go? Somehow I can't see the RCC being happy to hatch, match or dispatch them all!
No conundrum at all. When St Fred's is closed / demolished / sold / given as a gift to the departing majority, it ceases to be the parish church. Pastoral re-organisation would simply 'move' the parish into one or more adjoining parishes. Those requiring the occasional offices would still go to their parish church (which might be a bit further away or, come to that, a bit nearer).
 
Posted by angelicum (# 13515) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
The worship life of a community should not depend on economics. People who have been going to the same church for their whole lives - who have been baptised there, confirmed there, and in some cases married there and held funerals for loved ones there - should not be told they can never again worship in that church because they had the affront to stay within the faith that the church has always professed.

No one is suggesting that they can't worship there surely? I'm sure the ordinariate will still welcome these people.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
The Swim-meet is not going to be big in England but the CofE might graciously move a few pieces round the board to release a few surplus buildings. That way she can manage the process (sometimes for YEARS believe me!) and it does hasten the departure of the "awkward squad" freeing up Synod to do the decent thing by those who are left. If Anglo-Catholicism still thinks it's a force in the nation anymore then it is even more deluded than I dreamed possible when I was in it.
 
Posted by seasick (# 48) on :
 
Surely if an Anglican building was given to the Catholic Church then what was its (Anglican) parish would become part of the parish of another church, just as when a parish church closes. This won't address the issue of sentimental attachment to the building - especially where there have been many baptisms, weddings, funerals etc. from a family there - but I think that suggestions that parishioners would have no access to an Anglican parish church are a little melodramatic.
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
True Seasick but in the CofE many people have a much stronger tie to THEIR parish church than the Church of England per se (not the parish they live in necessarily but through long association with a particular place ... the CofE gave in to this recently to try and stem its loss of weddings). The building does then become an issue. The pull to Rome would then have to be very strong indeed ... and that's NOT the same as Father doing Romish things ... because he is doing it HERE.

[ 26. October 2009, 16:33: Message edited by: Father Gregory ]
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by angelicum:
No one is suggesting that they can't worship there surely? I'm sure the ordinariate will still welcome these people.

Oh sure - just as long as they convert as well.

Or will the ordinariate be perfectly OK with unconverted Anglicans continuing to avail themselves of the Eucharist there?
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
Although I suspect anyone reading this thread is already reading the "Act of Love" thread, I'm going to link to this post by ken.

He is certainly a brave soul, and for all I know is just pulling these figures out of his ass but he IS the first I have seen willing to hazard a guess about just who might actually leave. If his guess is anywhere near correct, we probably don't need to worry about who gets the buildings.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
I've no idea who will go or when. What is important, though, is that we all accept there will still be a sizable number in the CofE who cannot accept the admission of women to the episcopate and who are desperately praying that Synod will still agree to adequate provision.

For those who were slightly shocked when they walked past the Telegraph in newsagents yesterday, the Bishop of Chichester has clarified his position.

Thurible
 
Posted by Father Gregory (# 310) on :
 
Rome doesn't ask that ANGLICAN priesthood be denied but rather that one should recognise that one's priesthood was not formally Catholic. The clarification is not, therefore, entirely clear.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Father Gregory:
The clarification is not, therefore, entirely clear.

On a tangent, I think I might put this on a big card in my desk drawer and pull it out when needed. This phrase describes a lot of the "clarifications" I get.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
But, Trisagion, isn't what I stated the reason some Anglican priests have been ordained conditionally by Rome?
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
I hope that no one would consider it an insult if I were to suggest that the RC hierarchy doesn't operate with perfect consistent or uniformity and that Grahmam Leonard's conditional ordination may reflect a couple of things: a kindness extended to a very distinguished and sympathetic churchman, and the actual existance of different shadings or gradations of opinions about Anglican Orders, whereby as New Yorker stated, there can be some room for question about validity, I would say based on a total context of developments, rather than just the "Dutch Touch" alone (I doubt that these days the RCC could any longer regard Old Catholic orders as valid from an RC standpoint, due to developments in the OCC over the last 25 or 30 years).

Perhaps it's too much of a tangent for this thread, but it would be interesting to discuss the pros and cons of ordinations sub conditione for Anglican clerical converts, particularly as seen from the RC POV.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
Perhaps it's too much of a tangent for this thread, but it would be interesting to discuss the pros and cons of ordinations sub conditione for Anglican clerical converts, particularly as seen from the RC POV.

I would be very interested in reading such a thread and contributing to whatever limited degree I can.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
Although I suspect anyone reading this thread is already reading the "Act of Love" thread, I'm going to link to this post by ken.

Terribly flattered by the line but I feel honour-bound to say that in that post I used these phrases:

"No-one knows"
"I suspect "
"likely to be"
"I would guess"
"on very little hard evidence"
"I guess"

Tentative much?

[Cool]
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Sounds about right to me too, ken.

I'll leave you to apply it to whichever bit you think it fits best...
[Biased]
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
I did acknowledge that it was a guess...

Still, it's more than anyone else has had the chutzpah to do.
 
Posted by rosamundi (# 2495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
quote:
Originally posted by angelicum:
No one is suggesting that they can't worship there surely? I'm sure the ordinariate will still welcome these people.

Oh sure - just as long as they convert as well.

Or will the ordinariate be perfectly OK with unconverted Anglicans continuing to avail themselves of the Eucharist there?

I'm sure people with more Canon law than me will be able to advise if there is a problem with a church building being shared.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
Perhaps this article from the National Catholic Reporter's might clarify the matter supposedly under discussion on this thread?

http://ncronline.org/news/what-vaticans-welcome-anglicans-means

The article says pretty much what most people have been saying here. The discussion beneath it shows that there are a lot of paranoid loonies everywhere...
I'm not sure that anyone on this thread, which has continued for some time and has had some long, tenuous and irrelevant posts, has ever summed up what is actually happening so thoroughly, concisely and authoratively.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
So... er... it hasn't yet been made clear what the status of ordaining or re-ordaining former Anglican clergy will be if they become RC under the new rules?

[Help]
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
Ah, I found a link...

quote:
"It is difficult … to make precise comment upon this until one has seen the actual text of what the pope is going to say," said the Rev. Robert Wright, professor of ecclesiastical history at General Theological Seminary in New York, in a telephone interview. "So far, all we have is a vague sort of press release. It leaves open a lot of questions. Does it mean that they are prepared to recognize the Anglican orders of priests who convert or not? … Anglican orders were called invalid in 1896 by a papal bull. Does this mean this invalidation is going to be lifted?"
Okay, so if a Professor of Ecclesiastical History at GTS doesn't know the answer yet, I suppose it really hasn't been spelled out yet.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Ah, I found a link...

quote:
"It is difficult … to make precise comment upon this until one has seen the actual text of what the pope is going to say," said the Rev. Robert Wright, professor of ecclesiastical history at General Theological Seminary in New York, in a telephone interview. "So far, all we have is a vague sort of press release. It leaves open a lot of questions. Does it mean that they are prepared to recognize the Anglican orders of priests who convert or not? … Anglican orders were called invalid in 1896 by a papal bull. Does this mean this invalidation is going to be lifted?"
Okay, so if a Professor of Ecclesiastical History at GTS doesn't know the answer yet, I suppose it really hasn't been spelled out yet.
In a word 'Yes' but I'm not sure he'll be first to hear. [Killing me]
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
I don't get the joke. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rosamundi:
I'm sure people with more Canon law than me will be able to advise if there is a problem with a church building being shared.

There is no problem with a church building being shared in Canon Law of either church in these circumstances or others.

We have had threads passim on the Milton Keynes pleasure-drome [new build multi-ecumenical], St Andrew's Shared Church, Cippenham, Slough [CofE / RC rebuild], and St Stephen's, Gloucester Road, London [post 1994 CofE / RC church sharing.]

The St Stephen's example is the best template I can think of, engineered by previous +London and ++Westminster. The previous Vicar and half the congregation converted continued to use the old CofE building for RC eucharist, as an authorised RC mass centre within Our Lady of Victories, Kensington as tenants of the new PCC of St Stephen's with the consent of the new PinC at St Stephen's. All very friendly until eventually the RC tenants left a few years later.

So it can work. But legally in an ordinary CofE parish it is always the remaining CofE that retains the building, even if the entire old PCC leave - the bishop just makes a new appointment of a PinC and the PCC is reassembled according to the CW Measure and CRR within a few months.

The CofE might even sell-off a building that it no longer needs, but that would not be quick if it were the only church in a parish or benefice, as the parish would have to merged in a pastoral scheme as well as the Commissioners selling off a church, so it would be two years plus with goodwill.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Ah, I found a link...

quote:
"It is difficult … to make precise comment upon this until one has seen the actual text of what the pope is going to say," said the Rev. Robert Wright, professor of ecclesiastical history at General Theological Seminary in New York, in a telephone interview. "So far, all we have is a vague sort of press release. It leaves open a lot of questions. Does it mean that they are prepared to recognize the Anglican orders of priests who convert or not? … Anglican orders were called invalid in 1896 by a papal bull. Does this mean this invalidation is going to be lifted?"
Okay, so if a Professor of Ecclesiastical History at GTS doesn't know the answer yet, I suppose it really hasn't been spelled out yet.
In a word 'Yes' but I'm not sure he'll be first to hear. [Killing me]
The Vatican was extremely careful who was included in the information loop and when.

Virtually everything regarding the new ordinariates is work in progress.

The Vatican would not have anyone from GTS in the loop I fear.

Most of what is said is at least secondhand and much conjecture.

I thought the particular correspondent I linked from NCR might be as close to the source as anyone. Obviously the opinionati here ...

I think I'd like to quit now. [Help]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
it hasn't yet been made clear what the status of ordaining or re-ordaining former Anglican clergy will be if they become RC under the new rules?
I don't think the new ones will reverse the old ones in regards to this. Dollars to donuts it will be ordination.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
I couldn't determine from your link what the decision would be on the whole validity-of-ordination issue, but I've been busy (well, okay, overwhelmed is a better word) and my noggin isn't working as clearly as it might otherwise... [Hot and Hormonal]

For me this is a somewhat... well, not critical issue, as I wasn't planning on going back to Rome any time soon, but since not many years ago I was wrestling with such issues, and have known various folks who also were, the whole situation definitely has my attention. I just can't understand, from the kind of Anglo-Catholic point of view that I have experienced, the desire to go to Rome if one must accept that one's whole previous Anglican sacramental experience (including ordination) has been, basically, "dressing up and playing 'church'" -- and unless Rome is going to throw out some pretty strict doctrines it's held for some time about who's in and who's out of sacramentality, then it seems to me that this would be the case. I would think that the sort of staunch Anglo-Catholic crowd I've known who would leave the Anglican Communion would be happier to be a smaller "continuing Anglican" group. firm in their conviction of Apostolic Succession and their doctrines, than join Rome and basically declare that all the time they were fighting ECUSA's hierarchy on the ordination of women, etc., they weren't real priests or bishops anyway. So I'm utterly baffled at the welcome reception Rome's offer seems to be getting -- but since I'm not exactly on good terms with the folks I've known with that point of view, I can't easily ask, and the websites for their churches just don't seem to be addressing these matters at all.

[Help]
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
'dressing up and playing church' are your words,CM, and not those of the Catholic church.

The Catholic church cannot in normal circu,stances accept Anglican ordination as Catholic ordination,but it accepts the 'vocation' of the Anglican clergy ,that they have been called by God to minister to their Anmglican congregations adn that is one of the reasons why the Catholic church is prepared ,in some way to 'fast-track these men to Catholic ordination.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
If there is a mass exodus from the Anglican church to the Vatican, how do we know if it is God's hand guiding. If it is God's calling does that mean the Anglican church is doomed to spend eternity in the burning pits of hell because of it's sinful and lusting ways and He is leading His children into a place of safety.

If God is calling, why do those being called needed to take their baggage with them and want holy positions. Do we need a position in a church to serve God.

It is not like have a job in one company and moving to another having same position or even a more exalted one. If it is what God wants, there could be chance that you are being called to be the lowest of the low and not standing in a spotlight.

Surely when one is called by God we have to make sacrifices, and as has been described on this thread how holy some are, that should not be a problem.

As a claim has been made that many want to nip across to Rome because of ordination of gay priests and gay bishops, would be interested in knowing what percentage of R.C. priests are gay.

Trust me as i have just had a kipper for breakfast
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
That's irrelevant, isn't it. As Latin Rite RCC priests have to take a vow of celibacy sexual orientation isn't an issue.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
But the CofE without them will also be poorer for the loss of part of its catholic heritage, and for the loss of credally orthodox and missional people.

This announcement by the Pope must focus the minds of the Revision Committee, the General Synod and the Church of England as a whole. The C of E would be much poorer in the way pete173 describes. There are only two courses of action which have any integrity. FiF has said this all along, and ++Rowan has always recognised that a structural solution is the best way forward.

The Church can either pass a one clause measure which makes no provision for dissenters. That would carry the integrity of taking full possession of its decision to ordain women bishops. The other is to provide a framework acceptable to the dissenters which will allow them to remain in the C of E in good conscience. There is no point in members of the Revision Committee beating its brains out in trying to find a compromise which will satify no one and will fail to achieve the objective.

A time honoured place for both integrities was promised in 1992. Rome has provided an escape. The Church of England must make good its earlier promise or admit that it has moved on and the promise no longer matters. A fudge, like a Code of Practice, will not do.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
So, is there any kind of consensus as to whether this will make the CofE more or less liberal/evangelical?
 
Posted by multipara (# 2918) on :
 
If it all happens...

Maybe more liberal and more evangelical considering that if there is a lemming-like Tiber-swim ( and dear God, Im would say approach with caution) it might make the remaining Catholics appear to be more liberal in the matter of the OoW and the realistic acceptance of gay clergy) and also might dilate the Evangelical poo, so to speak.

Who knows? last of all my good self,being just another recalcitrant papist and all...

m
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
If a Reformed/Presbyterian/Baptist pastor were to decide tht his/her true spiritual home is really in the episcopal church and that he/she wised to continue to minister within this new community,what would happen ?

Presumably he/she would have to talk to the bishop about this desire to minister within the episcopal community.

He/she might say : I really like the liturgical services of the episcopal church,but I am not sure about your eucharistic theology,the bishop might say 'Well ,you'll find all sorts of shades of opinion here.Don't worry about that !

He/she might say What is your opinion or divorce and remarriage ? What is your opinion on gay rights ?
Possibly the bishop would say ;Well,you'll find all shades of opinion here.

He/she might then say : Good,when can I start to attend to the cure of souls ?

Here I think,and please correct me if I am wrong ,the bishop would say :Well,you cannot start to have the cure of souls ,to celebrate the eucharist,until you have received episcopal ordination. whatever else you may or may not believe you absolutely must have episcopal ordination.

Then the former Reformed/Presbyterian/Baptist pastor might say : But I have been working as a pastor for many years,I have regularly celebrated the Lord's supper and preached the Word of God.

What would the bishop then say ?

I hope that he wouldn't say :Well you have just been play acting and for us you really need to dress up and not dress down.

I think he would say,please correct me if I am wrong: We recognise your vocation and your ministry but if you want to be a member of the Episcopal church you simply have to have been ordained and commissioned by a bishop of an Episcopal community.

What is the difference in the Catholic church saying virtually the same thing to those who wish to minister in its name ?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Except it's not just saying that (the ecclesiastical discipline/'order' point): it's also talking about sacramental invalidity. However, presumably the Church of England would also be concerned about that vis a vis Bappoes and Presbies, so I guess your point still stands!
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
quote:
That's irrelevant, isn't it. As Latin Rite RCC priests have to take a vow of celibacy sexual orientation isn't an issue.
Is there any proof of this when there are reports of mateys and priests having a leg over and producing off spring.

One needs to be realistic that a priest or a matey gets a stiffy they can justify it being a gift from God and place where ever they feel guided.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
WTF?
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
In the matter of 'stiffies' people can justify almost anything..that is to say that they can justify it to themselves.

The Church,here on earth ,is not a perfect society.We all have difficulties in keeping the various commandments and disciplines, not only of the Church but sometimes the civil law.

It doesn't help to use the language of the gutter press when talking about people's sexual feelings and urges.

For some people the demands of their sexuality conflict with the teaching of the Catholic Church. For the right reasons or sometimes for the wrong reasons some people simply cannot accept the teachings of the church. In my (limited) experience most of those who have abandoned the Catholic church have not done so because they cannot accept the doctrine of the Immaculate conception,but because of difficulties to do with interpersonal relationships ( of which 'stiffies' may be a part,but are they the be all and end all of intimate interpersonal relationships)

That some people transgress the teachings of the church,but still hope to remain within the church is a serious problem but it should not be made fun of -or am I being too stiff about this ?
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
So, is there any kind of consensus as to whether this will make the CofE more or less liberal/evangelical?

Depends what you mean by those terms.

The departure of the 'traditionalists' will give the New Anglo-Catholics space to stretch their wings and fly. Affirming Catholicism has already had a makeover, and by getting involved in Fresh Expressions the NAC have made remarkable allies.

The Conservative Evangelicals will have lost an ally they were never really comfortable with. Just as FiF over time increasingly separated themselves and offended those who would have been their natural sympathisers I imagine the Con Evo's will do the same. Indeed they seem to be on that path already.

The Charismatic Evangelicals are undergoing some interesting stuff of their own. Firstly they are moving away from a 'Leaders and Wives' culture to 'Men and Women in Leadership', about 20 odd years after everyone else. Secondly they are re-engaging with what it means to be Anglican. Thirdly there are questions about how they engage with issues of sexuality pastorally. I think the New Wine bubble is less and less secure these days.

Open Evangelicalism has received a bit of a boost recently. The fact that the whole US based Emergent thing has headed in that direction, and begun to explore liturgy and sacraments is a real encouragement to the Open's.

Liberalism is something of a spent force in the Church of England. No-one knows what it means any more. If however it means mainstream sensible biblical scholarship then most of the CofE is pretty liberal. If you mean the vast majority of small churches that are central in tradition and struggling ... well it looks pretty bleak unless they can get good local leadership and functioning PCC's.

I think the Church of England is probably heading in a more mission focussed direction. In a way it will be more Catholic, more Evangelical and more Liberal than the past.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
So, is there any kind of consensus as to whether this will make the CofE more or less liberal/evangelical?

More liberal and more evangelical. Probably more young as well. But not by very much initially because not that many will go immediately. But some things make other things possible.

For instance a third of FiF going next year make women bishops much more likely. (General Synod HoL vote would increase from say 66% to 70%.)

That makes talks with the methodists more serious as an option. Which makes social gospel stuff more at the forefront. The younger evangelicals in the CofE are as in to fairtrade etc. as the liberals.

But in the short term, there would be a group of evo clergy (from open to charismatic, but perhaps not the most conservative) who would be the biggest clergy group in HoC in Synod, with AffCath only the second largest.

That would no doubt affect the business of Synod, the theological colleges, the appointment of bishops and much else besides.

I would expect that most of the CofE priests who go will either be retired or with one post left in them, and will take reduced CofE pension at 55+ to top up their RC stipend. A lot of priests want to die Catholic. So that would lower the age of clergy.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
If a Reformed/Presbyterian/Baptist pastor were to decide tht his/her true spiritual home is really in the episcopal church and that he/she wised to continue to minister within this new community,what would happen ?

.............

He/she might then say : Good,when can I start to attend to the cure of souls ?

Here I think,and please correct me if I am wrong ,the bishop would say :Well,you cannot start to have the cure of souls ,to celebrate the eucharist,until you have received episcopal ordination. whatever else you may or may not believe you absolutely must have episcopal ordination.

Then the former Reformed/Presbyterian/Baptist pastor might say : But I have been working as a pastor for many years,I have regularly celebrated the Lord's supper and preached the Word of God.

What would the bishop then say ?

I hope that he wouldn't say :Well you have just been play acting and for us you really need to dress up and not dress down.

I think he would say,please correct me if I am wrong: We recognise your vocation and your ministry but if you want to be a member of the Episcopal church you simply have to have been ordained and commissioned by a bishop of an Episcopal community.

What is the difference in the Catholic church saying virtually the same thing to those who wish to minister in its name ?

Because that view isn't applicable to the RCC whose reasons for not considering Anglican ordinations valid are specific, the actual form, the words of ordination used, make the ordination valid or invalid.

This is from a pdf page arguing that the new rite of Ordination instituted by Paul VI is invalid for the same reasons the Anglican was defined invalid:

quote:
10. The New Rite of Ordination

In his famous Bull, Apostolicae Curae, Sept. 13, 1896, Pope Leo XIII solemnly declared that
Anglican Ordinations are invalid. This means that the Anglican sect doesn’t have valid priests or bishops.


Pope Leo XIII, Apostolicae Curae, Sept. 13, 1896: “… of Our own motion and certain
knowledge We pronounce and declare that Ordinations carried out according to the
Anglican rite have been and are absolutely null and utterly void.”4


In making this solemn pronouncement, it must be understood that Pope Leo XIII was not making
Anglican Ordinations invalid, but rather he was declaring that they were invalid due to defects in the rite. But what were those defects or problems which Leo XIII saw with the Anglican Rite, which contributed to its invalidity?


Pope Leo XIII, Apostolicae Curae, Sept. 13, 1896: “When anyone has rightly and seriously
made use of the due form and the matter requisite for effecting or conferring the
sacrament he is considered by that very fact to do what the Church does. On this principle rests the doctrine that a sacrament is truly conferred by the ministry of one who is a heretic or unbaptized, provided the Catholic rite be employed.[*] On the other hand, if the rite be changed, with the manifest intention of introducing another rite not approved by the Church, and of rejecting what the Church does, and what by the institution of Christ belongs to the nature of the sacrament, then it is clear that not only is the necessary intention wanting to the sacrament, but that the intention is
adverse to and destructive of the sacrament.”5

[*] This refers to the baptism into the RCC by non-RCC even by those not themselves baptised, even if Atheist, as long as it conforms to the practice of the RCC for this the baptism is valid.


Myrrh
 
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
Liberalism is something of a spent force in the Church of England.

Only if you think it's another party alongside the others you've listed. Doesn't the fact that there is this diversity within the Church demonstrate liberalism in action?

There is also the possibility that those who reject the factional allegiances that evangelical and catholic strands tend to value may be less attached to regular worship. Such people may still see value in and would identify with the national church if given the chance.

I suspect its more that theological liberalism is an unspent force, both in the country and in the Church, an unseen, mostly silent majority. But if the institution only promotes a 'missional' mentality derived from theological conservatism and a half-acknowledged desire to reverse the decline in numbers, it's no surprise there's little opportunity for non-worshippers to participate and little visibility for their perspective.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Myhrr Wouldn't anglicans say that any ordination which a Reformed/Presbyterian/Baptist may have had,was not an ordination which allowed that person to function as an anglican priest and to undertake the cure of souls in an anglican context?

I think that anglicans will occasionally allow non episcopally ordained clerics to take services (as opposed to participate in them) in anglican churches.Some anglicans,but presumably not all, would not accept on a regular basis the eucharistic ministrations of a non episcopally ordained cleric.

Perhaps some Anglican who knows more about this could let us know.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
I think we just reordain, don't we? I certainly knew one curate who was an ex-URC minister in the 90s who was reordained, and met a Baptist minister in training for the CofE ministry in about the same time who was expecting reordination.
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
Yeah, we do. I wish we didn't, and that we just admitted Baptist and URC and Methodists who come over into the ordained ministry of the CofE. Perhaps that'll change one day and we'll stop staring over the Tiber and look the other way.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
Only if you think it's another party alongside the others you've listed. Doesn't the fact that there is this diversity within the Church demonstrate liberalism in action?

My big thing is post-tribalism. I work across party lines in my post. It is very exciting.

I only included the Liberals as a party because lots of people talk about 'the Liberals' in the church when I am not convinced they exist. What people mean is: 'More liberal than me on a particular issue'.

In terms of scripture, theology and pastoral care a huge chunk of the church is 'Liberal', including most Evangelicals and Anglo-Catholic's. We are widely read and draw from a wide range of theological sources.

What doesn't exist is a powerful Liberal lobby or agenda. There is no club for Liberals. Just as there is no club for Centrals. I would not object if there was. I would love to see more growing dynamic faith communities inspired by Radical Theology. It certainly inspired me, but back into a sort of Radical Orthodoxy. Which is quite ironic and humbling.

But as motivation Liberalism isn't as strong as some people would like to suggest. Many do not stand for Inclusivity because it is Liberal, but because they see it as a Kingdom issue.

quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
There is also the possibility that those who reject the factional allegiances that evangelical and catholic strands tend to value may be less attached to regular worship. Such people may still see value in and would identify with the national church if given the chance.

I am very aware of these people. They read the Daily Mail and like to be visited.

quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
I suspect its more that theological liberalism is an unspent force, both in the country and in the Church, an unseen, mostly silent majority. But if the institution only promotes a 'missional' mentality derived from theological conservatism and a half-acknowledged desire to reverse the decline in numbers, it's no surprise there's little opportunity for non-worshippers to participate and little visibility for their perspective.

I do wish I could agree. I really do. But I am not convinced any more. I believe passionately in religion, that is, faith practised. But I also believe in starting where people are and acknowledging their own faith journey.

Christianity like football is a team sport. You can't do it on your own isolated from any sort of community of faith. And no the Daily Mail does not count.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Forthview

quote:
Wouldn't anglicans say that any ordination which a Reformed/Presbyterian/Baptist may have had,was not an ordination which allowed that person to function as an anglican priest and to undertake the cure of souls in an anglican context?

I think that anglicans will occasionally allow non episcopally ordained clerics to take services (as opposed to participate in them) in anglican churches.Some anglicans,but presumably not all, would not accept on a regular basis the eucharistic ministrations of a non episcopally ordained cleric.

The reasoning seems amazingly similar to the stance of the RCC. An exception in all of this is the one you noted; the ECUSA entered a pact of full communion with the major Lutheran body in this country. There is an allowance in it to for non episcopal ordinations in exceptional circumstances. In addition I believe there is joint celebration of the Eucharist and I know from first hand experience there is eucharistic presidency by Lutheran ministers in ECUSA parishes. Conceivably, and most probably, the last examples by ministers without ordination at the hands of a bishop. It seems inevitably this will lead to a further relaxation of rules in terms of ordination and in my own opinion simply confirms the Protestant character of the ECUSA.

The point of whether or not somebody accepts these ministrations is moot to me (though I know the "it doesn't happen here" congregational mentality is used as a bulwark against this kind of thing). A theology of communion, i.e. a "catholic" theology, means you share the faith of those in communion with you.

[ 27. October 2009, 14:58: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
What doesn't exist is a powerful Liberal lobby or agenda.

True. But some of us are working on it.
quote:
as motivation Liberalism isn't as strong as some people would like to suggest.
You're probably right. But it's still the key defining characteristic of the fabric of the Church of England, because it allows the diversity of stuff that does strongly motivate people to be expressed. Anyone who sees the C of E as more than simply a means to further a sectarian cause relies on that liberal ethos. Maybe that needs more recognition.
quote:
I am very aware of these people. They read the Daily Mail and like to be visited.
Isn't that more a reflection of the kind of people who pester clergy than a measure of potentially church-disposed non-worshippers? Guardian readers might not feel the need to impose on you in quite the same way, for example. Or might express their interest contructively in ways worship-oriented parishes know nothing about.
quote:
Christianity like football is a team sport. You can't do it on your own isolated from any sort of community of faith.
Christianity is nothing like a team sport! That some groups within the Church might see it that way is a reflection of the breadth of the religion. It's at least equally a description of those who integrate its expression into their everyday lives yet rarely darken a worship club building's doors. At least, not when the team is playing at home.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Except it's not just saying that (the ecclesiastical discipline/'order' point): it's also talking about sacramental invalidity. However, presumably the Church of England would also be concerned about that vis a vis Bappoes and Presbies, so I guess your point still stands!

Yes, exactly; whether it's put in gentler words or not, the issue I'm concerned about has to do with doctrines of sacramental validity.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
Whatever else comes out of this, the one thing I'm fairly certain of is that the Pope will NOT do anything which could be construed as recognizing Anglican orders to be or ever to have been sacramentally valid in the manner Anglo-Catholics have desired for years. I think it has been plain for decades that that horse will never leave the stable.

Another century might bring a lot of changes, but I won't be around to see them.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
True. But some of us are working on it

And 'Affirming Liberalism' too I see

I am very affirming of liberals my self as you know. It is part of my spiritual DNA. :-) I am excited to see what Liberals can bring to the table in terms of discipleship and mission.

I would agree with you that a form of Liberalism is a significant part of being 'Reformed Catholic'.

But all the Churches I know which are Liberal and growing are also evangelistic, centered in the tradition, and confessionally creedal, even if the individual is free to interpret as they wish. Indeed you might argue that they are actually Reformed Catholic ...

If the Liberals want a stronger voice in the Church then they need to demonstrate how they are part of Christ's plan 'to build my church'. I am not sure 'being the Church for people who don't go' will work unless some people actually do go in the first place.
 
Posted by teddybear (# 7842) on :
 
Regarding ordination. I think one thing that might possibly be done, in order to avoid alienating those who are certain they have valid orders, is for Rome to refuse to say either way about the validity of orders and conditionally re-ordain everyone, unless they prove without a shadow of a doubt to have valid orders according to Roman standards. For example, if someone had been ordained by an Orthodox or Old Catholic bishop there would be no reason for even conditional ordination.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
That's exactly the thing -- the people I've known who have left the Episcopal church have been precisely the ones who have been most firm and dogmatic about issues regarding ordination and its validity -- not only in their beliefs about women not being able to be priests at all, but in their convictions about the continuity of Anglican Apostolic Succession.

I just don't see how they'd be so eager to abandon the latter.

Is there anyone posting or reading here who is considering going to Rome in this situation -- who believes that Anglican ordinations have been valid but wishes to enter the RCC anyway? Can you fill us in on how this works for you?
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
Yeah, we do. I wish we didn't, and that we just admitted Baptist and URC and Methodists who come over into the ordained ministry of the CofE. Perhaps that'll change one day and we'll stop staring over the Tiber and look the other way.

But it isn't quite the stumbling block on the protestant side that it is on the catholic side. There obviously has to be a process / service of reception. Given that not all free churches use the same language etc. for priest / presbyter and deacon then that reception has to be of a different type to that of converting lutherans / catholics / orthodoxen. As for some of the house church pastors their ordination could compose just about anything even if their calling and manifest gifts are very real.

I wouldn't have a problem say with conditional ordination for methodist presbyters or deacons. That is the sort of sensible step the CofE might be able to make if x% of FiF depart or withdraw into a clique.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
For example, if someone had been ordained by an Orthodox or Old Catholic bishop there would be no reason for even conditional ordination.
IIRC, it was the documentary proof that Graham Leonard supplied regarding Old Catholic (as opposed to Anglican) involvement in his consecration that led to his conditional ordination. So to Rome, even in that highly unique case, there was a reason.

Orthodox orders (and sacraments) are a different story.

quote:
That is the sort of sensible step the CofE might be able to make if x% of FiF depart or withdraw into a clique.
It would also push it further along in having a fully Protestant ecclesiology.

[ 27. October 2009, 18:18: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
The thing to watch is really not so much the Anglican side, in my opinion. In addition to my point above about Catholic liturgy, it will be really interesting to see to what extent regular Latin rite Catholics, lay and ordained, can become part of this new rite.

Someone asked the pastor of Our Lady of the Atonement on his blog if one had to be a convert to join an Anglican Use parish. He answered:
quote:
...that issue was raised at the time our parish was established, and it was determined that since the new Code of Canon Law no longer required a person to fulfill his obligation at his territorial parish, but could be a member of any other Catholic parish, the same would be true for us. It's not as though ours is a different Rite, so there are no other canonical questions to be settled. So the short answer it -- no, you don't need to be a convert to be a registered parishioner in an Anglican Use parish.

So if the new ordinariates are like the existing Anglican Use in the U.S. a regular Latin Rite layperson could join an ordinariate's parishes just like any other Catholic parish. I assume it would be different for ordained Catholics.

The question was asked after the pastor wrote a history of his Anglican Use parish. You can read it at this link.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:

quote:
That is the sort of sensible step the CofE might be able to make if x% of FiF depart or withdraw into a clique.
It would also push it further along in having a fully Protestant ecclesiology.
...which wouldn't be an issue for the bulk of those who would remain. It might or might not be something the Pope would consider a "good thing", however--it might well be a unforeseen and undesirable consequence in his view.

It seems clear that Pope Benedict XVI is working to mend those cracks which can be mended--although I doubt he would have much success with the larger fractures even if he were twenty years younger. I think it is quite possible this really was intended to be just about the TAC. It wouldn't be the first time his actions and words led to unintended chaos in areas he had not considered.

For that reason, I'm not as convinced as Sir Pellinore that a Catholic reporter would have the best idea how this will play out in the Anglican world.
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
If one puts aside and forgets about all the arguments about the nature of orders, it makes obvious sense that whatever role you held in your former denomination, if you change denomination, you go through whatever process is normal in that denomination before you exercise any official role.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
It might or might not be something the Pope would consider a "good thing", however--it might well be a unforeseen and undesirable consequence in his view.

I think what we're talking about is really inevitable, no matter what Rome does. In the end I think few will take up Rome on its offer for various reasons. I do think the deconstruction of the catholic consciousness of the Anglican world will continue unabated either way as a new order arises in its place.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
Yeah, we do. I wish we didn't, and that we just admitted Baptist and URC and Methodists who come over into the ordained ministry of the CofE. Perhaps that'll change one day and we'll stop staring over the Tiber and look the other way.

On Sunday past I heard + Peter and + John Broadhurst on Radio 4 discussing the Pope's initiative. + John made the point that it is the culmination of ARCIC. + Peter said he had never seen ARCIC in that light. The position of FiF and the supporters of ARCIC is about something much greater than women's ordination. It is a question of ecclesiology. When Walter Cardinal Kasper addressed the General Synod, he said that the Church of England must decide if it sees itself as part of the undivided Church of the first millennium, or does it self-identify as a church of the Reformation. This is the crux of the issue.

The oow is very much a secondary issue, in that if the Magisterium were ever to allow women to be priests, all people having fidelity to Rome would accept it. Pete173 clearly sees himself as a bishop in a Reformation church, whose ecumenism is towards Methodists, URC and Baptists. + John sees himself as a bishop in the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church who has not the competance to agree to ordain women outside the framework of the One Church. In the past, the catholic/protestant split in the C of E has held together in uneasy tension, with the prods always in an overwhelming majority.

The present position with Synod and the revision committee makes it that the game is over for catholic Anglicans who believe that the threefold order or bishops, priests and deacons, and the reciting of the historic creeds of the undivided Church, makes the C of E part of that Church.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
The present position with Synod and the revision committee makes it that the game is over for catholic Anglicans who believe that the threefold order or bishops, priests and deacons, and the reciting of the historic creeds of the undivided Church, makes the C of E part of that Church.

Yikes (from my point of view)! So... you mean the C of E is formally abandoning that, or...?
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
I don't think anything is being formally abandoned. The compromise is falling apart. This is a good summary.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:

The present position with Synod and the revision committee makes it that the game is over for catholic Anglicans who believe that the threefold order or bishops, priests and deacons, and the reciting of the historic creeds of the undivided Church, makes the C of E part of that Church.

This is nothing to do with credal orthodoxy, on which +Pete and +John would agree in the main, and indeed a majority of Synod and the Revision Committee.

I thought you left the CofE for Judaism?
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
ChastMastr wrote:

quote:
Is there anyone posting or reading here who is considering going to Rome in this situation -- who believes that Anglican ordinations have been valid but wishes to enter the RCC anyway? Can you fill us in on how this works for you?
I was at the FiF assembly over the weekend as a delegate.

I hadn't seriously considered going to Rome before last week's events (although my objections to it had been largely dissipated or at least changed in nature by things I have read on this Ship and by personal acquaintances here and elsewhere) but the thought is crossing my mind now.

Where my belief in the validity of Anglican ordination comes into this (it's founded not on a rigorously Catholic view of things) I have no idea as yet. I am currently waiting and seeing and praying and thinking, as are so many.

Fortunately, I am a layman.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:

The CofE might even sell-off a building that it no longer needs, but that would not be quick if it were the only church in a parish or benefice, as the parish would have to merged in a pastoral scheme as well as the Commissioners selling off a church, so it would be two years plus with goodwill.

And a lot longer than that without. Parish reorganisations can take decades.

quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:

For instance a third of FiF going next year make women bishops much more likely.

Probably inevitable.

quote:


That makes talks with the methodists more serious as an option. Which makes social gospel stuff more at the forefront. The younger evangelicals in the CofE are as in to fairtrade etc. as the liberals.

Only if by "younger" you mean "under the age of sixty-five"! Fairtrade was all the rage in St John's & Cranmer Hall in the 1970s.

quote:


But in the short term, there would be a group of evo clergy (from open to charismatic, but perhaps not the most conservative) who would be the biggest clergy group in HoC in Synod, with AffCath only the second largest.

Not sure about that. Maybe its being used to Southwark and Brighton but the Liberal Catholic ascendency looks pretty unassailable here.

I still worry that we might see a disproportionate departure of priests, leading to a lack of people who know how to conduct the kind of liturgy that some of the abandoned parishes might expect.

quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
When Walter Cardinal Kasper addressed the General Synod, he said that the Church of England must decide if it sees itself as part of the undivided Church of the first millennium, or does it self-identify as a church of the Reformation.

100% both. If the Cardinal thinks they are mutually exlusive, that's his problem.


quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
The present position with Synod and the revision committee makes it that the game is over for catholic Anglicans who believe that the threefold order or bishops, priests and deacons, and the reciting of the historic creeds of the undivided Church, makes the C of E part of that Church.

Yikes (from my point of view)! So... you mean the C of E is formally abandoning that, or...? [/QB][/QUOTE]

No, the CofE has no intention of anabdoning that. Any claim that it is dong so is simple scaremongering.

I think that the difference between Bishops Broadhurst and Broadbent on this issue is that Pete (like me) would I think recognise the the three-fold ordering of ministry in the Lutherans, and the Presbyterians, and the Methodists, (as those denominations do themselves). Methodists don't have men with pointy hats and palaces with "bishop" in their job title, but they do practice the ministry of oversight.

quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
I don't think anything is being formally abandoned. The compromise is falling apart. This is a good summary.

It looks a lot like a blank web-page stuffed with dodgy links to me [Frown] Any chance of a summary for those of us the site won't load for?
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
It looks a lot like a blank web-page stuffed with dodgy links to me [Frown] Any chance of a summary for those of us the site won't load for?

Sure, I'm not certain why it's not rendering correctly. It's an opinion piece in a newspaper here in the states.

quote:
David Lewis Stokes: On the pope’s outreach to Episcopalians

01:00 AM EDT on Tuesday, October 27, 2009

DAVID LEWIS STOKES

IN EARLY JUNE 1999 I was deposed as a priest in the Episcopal Church. By the month’s end my family and I were received into the Roman Catholic Church. And four years later, I was ordained a priest under what is called the Pastoral Provision.

At that time I made the resolve neither to write about my conversion nor to engage in religious skirmishes on the op-ed page. Knowing that “informed public discourse” is an oxymoron, I had no desire to give offense to a church whose spirituality I loved (and still love) and whose people I had been privileged to serve.

Nor did I have any desire to travel the circuit of professional convert and recite my “story” as something of an over-rehearsed party-piece. Moreover, I have become increasingly allergic to a certain sub-culture that would turn the Roman Catholic Church into an neo-conservative ideology impervious to nuance and devoid of humility. (I confess that I did consent to one newspaper interview and a cable-TV program. But I did so with great reluctance and have lived to regret both.)

But the recent announcement by Rome of an apostolic constitution by which Anglicans — parishes, pastors and people — will be incorporated into the Catholic Church and still retain their ecclesial identity demands comment. Or I should say that the reporting of this news demands comment. For the foundational issue that has roiled the Anglican Communion (especially the Episcopal Church) for three decades continues to be obscured by the simplistic spin to which journalists, theological naifs, are inclined.

The basic issue has never been women priests nor even the ordination of practicing homosexuals. These two issues, as serious and divisive as they may be, are simply the more newsworthy symptoms of a pathology that has gone in and out of remission for some 400 years, and that was fated to return with a fatal virulence upon the demise of British culture.

The basic issue that has eroded the Anglican Communion is what has been eating away at its foundations for 400 years: how ecclesiastical authority is to be understood. Since the 16th Century, two very different understandings of authority have engaged in a tug-of-war within the Church of England and the larger Anglican Communion.

One understanding is that the church is determined and shaped by Catholic tradition. Anglicans committed to this understanding of authority have sought to be faithful to that which has been believed by Christians everywhere and at all times. And while these Anglicans would admit that a correct discernment of Catholic tradition is often difficult, they have always considered their church bound by this tradition.

The second understanding of authority, while often respectful of Catholic tradition, proceeds from the Protestant principle of private judgment. This understanding may (and often does) appeal to Scripture and the Holy Spirit. And as long as it was rooted in a coherent culture, this understanding seemed to possess a theological coherence of sorts. But when it is torn from the soil of a coherent culture, as has occurred over the last century, the roots of this understanding are seen to be what they always were: the occasional opinions of whatever happened to be the prevailing majority.

The first understanding of church authority is that Christian revelation presents us with an objective truth to be pursued. The second understanding believes that if there ever was a Christian revelation, it presents us only with an approximation of whatever God may (or may not) be. That such a house divided has managed to stand for 400 years is an odd testament, I suppose, to the power of British culture. But an ethos can hide incoherence for only so long.

And it is this incoherence that Pope Benedict XVI now seeks to address. Benedict is acknowledging nothing less than the integrity of those Anglicans who have always understood themselves rooted in the Catholic tradition. And, at the same time, he seeks to provide them with a structure by which they may be incorporated into the universal church, without having to jettison a rich devotional patrimony.

To reduce the Vatican’s proposal to ecclesiastical sheep-stealing is of course stupid. And to explain it away as providing a fire escape for those who have “difficulty” with women priests and gay bishops would be condescending if it wasn’t so simple-minded. But given that objective truth has long since ceased to be a concern for many (Anglicans and others), it isn’t surprising that Benedict’s proposal would be viewed simply in terms of one ecclesial corporation engaging in a hostile take-over of another.

Will there be a mass exodus from the Church of England? Probably not. The few Englishmen who continue to attend their local parish church do so more as a way of staving off the cultural chaos that now ravages English society than out of any confessional commitment. If anything, the pope’s proposal may inadvertently accelerate Anglicanism’s drift to becoming a global equivalent of the Metropolitan Church.

What of the impact on America? I suspect that its impact will be minimal. Within a mere two centuries Americans have become genetically predisposed to the Protestant principle of private judgment — including many “conservative” Episcopalians and, paradoxically enough, a large number of Roman Catholics. Besides, with each passing generation, ethnic Catholic parishes, marginal to begin with, have been absorbed by the larger church or closed. Moreover, it’s hard to imagine the Anglican Book of Common Prayer stemming the flood of liturgical mediocrity any time soon.

But the impact of Pope Benedict’s proposal is really beside the point. Truth has never been about numbers, and victories are always pyrrhic. It is enough for many of us that those Anglicans who have labored long after the Catholic tradition have at last been recognized by the church that most completely instantiates this tradition.

The Rev. David Lewis Stokes, a Catholic priest and formerly an Episcopal one, is an associate professor of theology at Providence College.

Source

I have seen comments elsewhere that this whole issue is over sexuality, and I agree with the author of this piece that it isn't. It is about authority and ecclesiology. It's a side issue, but I also agree with the author's distaste with a good deal of the convert culture that surrounds the RCC in the U.S.; at least of a certain ideological bent a la the Grodi crowd.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
...

I still worry that we might see a disproportionate departure of priests, leading to a lack of people who know how to conduct the kind of liturgy that some of the abandoned parishes might expect.

...

A disproportionate departure of a certain sort of hyperconservative Anglo-Catholic ceremonial specialists is exactly what some people fear most.

If it does take place I suspect that sort of extreme Anglo-Catholicism might well die out.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Thanks.

Hardly worth bothering to read though.

The man is obviously very ignorant of Britain, or very bigoted (or possibly both)

This:
quote:

The basic issue has never been women priests nor even the ordination of practicing homosexuals. These two issues, as serious and divisive as they may be, are simply the more newsworthy symptoms of a pathology that has gone in and out of remission for some 400 years, and that was fated to return with a fatal virulence upon the demise of British culture.

is simply regurgitated neo-con drivel. "the demise of British culture." eh? Because of all those gays and women and blacks and Muslims I suppose. I pity the poor parish that had this nasty, bitter man imposed on it as their priest.

and this:

quote:

The first understanding of church authority is that Christian revelation presents us with an objective truth to be pursued. The second understanding believes that if there ever was a Christian revelation, it presents us only with an approximation of whatever God may (or may not) be.

Is a plain lie, casting false witness on his Protesant neighbours. It is rather the other way round. Protestantism (done properly) is based firmly on the objective revealed word of God, not human traditions.

If this little shite is typical of the kind of people who might go to Rome, good riddance to bad rubbish.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Not sure about that. Maybe its being used to Southwark and Brighton but the Liberal Catholic ascendency looks pretty unassailable here.

I think it is you being used to Southwark norms. Even within the big smoke, life looks very different in the Kensington or Willesden areas norf of the river say. There are plenty of other diocese where liberal catholicism has never taken root.

Even in Brighton, there are signs of change. St Peter's re-opens this week, with a little bit of help from the Kensington area!
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
"the demise of British culture." eh? Because of all those gays and women and blacks and Muslims I suppose. I pity the poor parish that had this nasty, bitter man imposed on it as their priest.

Wow. I just sped past that line and vaguely imagined he meant something about the demise of sun-never-sets-on-the-Empire British colonialist culture... perhaps even with the implication that a certain type of non-spiritual, cultural "Christianity" (churchianity?) was rightly vanishing, allowing people's real beliefs to come through as the cultural pretenses faded away. Or, er, something like that. I think your analysis is right here...

[Hot and Hormonal] [Hot and Hormonal] [Hot and Hormonal]

David
see prior statement about my recently distracted grey matter above; I must work harder on reading for comprehension...
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Will there be a mass exodus from the Church of England? Probably not. The few Englishmen who continue to attend their local parish church do so more as a way of staving off the cultural chaos that now ravages English society than out of any confessional commitment.
... is my favourite section from this highly educated theologian.
 
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
I am excited to see what Liberals can bring to the table in terms of discipleship and mission.

If you define 'Liberals' in terms of what they cannot authentically deliver, you're hardly going to see much to get excited about. Although that seems pretty much the view implicit in most of the Fresh Expressions stuff I've seen.
quote:
all the Churches I know which are Liberal and growing are also evangelistic, centered in the tradition, and confessionally creedal, even if the individual is free to interpret as they wish.
I don't see anything theologically liberal there. There's no empirical reality by which to compare interpretations for correctness, so it's only ever a matter of degree of variation. Even those happy to trot out a party line may undertstand what they say entirely differently. It makes no sense (unless you have an empire to control) for a faith-related institution to make membership depend on willingness to say a particular form of words.
quote:
If the Liberals want a stronger voice in the Church then they need to demonstrate how they are part of Christ's plan 'to build my church'. I am not sure 'being the Church for people who don't go' will work unless some people actually do go in the first place.
Yeah, well, if you assume Church is what you happen to prefer and ignore the possibility that such a model might be outdated, you automatically exclude those who find it irrelevant. But I guess that's Radical Orthodoxy.

The disappointing thing about Benedict's offer is that it's only a real option for conservative anglo-catholics. I see there's no way round that (you have to feel pretty strongly for the benefits to outweigh the disruption) but if those who like the idea of one (big C) Catholic Church institution all threw in their lot with the Vatican, the Church of England might have to think a bit more clearly about what it's for. It's obviously not going to happen over this, but I can't help thinking something like it would be better than the kind of mutally assured stagnation we seem to have now.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
Yeah, we do. I wish we didn't, and that we just admitted Baptist and URC and Methodists who come over into the ordained ministry of the CofE. Perhaps that'll change one day and we'll stop staring over the Tiber and look the other way.

Having been the other way it is much better in the, er, middle.

I am very glad that when I came into the Church of England an Apostle laid hands on me, and Another Apostle laid hands on me when I was Ordained!
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
Myhrr Wouldn't anglicans say that any ordination which a Reformed/Presbyterian/Baptist may have had,was not an ordination which allowed that person to function as an anglican priest and to undertake the cure of souls in an anglican context?

..
Perhaps some Anglican who knows more about this could let us know.

The answers came back yes. I don't know what reasons the Anglican's give for not considering these ordinations 'valid', but the argument for the Anglicans wishing to join the RCC specifically returns to the orginal Bull which deemed Anglican ordinations invalid because of the words of ordination. It's a long while since I looked at this so I don't remember exactly what the difference was, but validity depends on the actual words used and by succession. The succession was lost because the right words weren't used. Since the words used were changed by the RCC in 1948 one could argue that the actual wording was not important and the Bull therefore a misjudgment and irrelevant, since it's clearly reformable and not infallible.

As far as I know, the Old Catholics are deemed to have valid orders. Another solution might be to have one such in an Anglican, Anglo-Catholic or whatever Ordination and include in it a validation backwards to all previous ordinations.

They're still using the pre1948 formula so could also effectively argue none of the present RCC are validly ordained and need to come to them to sort it out.

Some German Old Catholics are ordaining women.


Myrrh
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Freejack:
quote:

I thought you left the CofE for Judaism?
I embrace certain Jewish theological ideas. But I'm not a Jew. I've no intention of being circumcised or giving up bacon sandwiches! I also embrace many Anglican, Catholic and Orthodox ideas. I'm a spiritual misfit!

quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Yikes (from my point of view)! So... you mean the C of E is formally abandoning that, or...?

I'm not suggesting that the Church of England is about to give up its creeds. Just that the understanding of what it means to pray for "One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church" is very different between Catholic Anglicans and Protestant Anglicans, and that the consensus which has held them together for 400 years has now completely broken down.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
I am excited to see what Liberals can bring to the table in terms of discipleship and mission.

If you define 'Liberals' in terms of what they cannot authentically deliver, you're hardly going to see much to get excited about. Although that seems pretty much the view implicit in most of the Fresh Expressions stuff I've seen.
I think something like Living the Questions brings a lot to the table in terms of Discipleship and Mission from a US focus. I would love to see something more culturally British in the same vein. Unlike others I see no intrinsic problem with progressive or radical theology. Even non-Realism brings something to the table in terms of Discipleship or Mission.

quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
quote:
all the Churches I know which are Liberal and growing are also evangelistic, centered in the tradition, and confessionally creedal, even if the individual is free to interpret as they wish.
I don't see anything theologically liberal there. There's no empirical reality by which to compare interpretations for correctness, so it's only ever a matter of degree of variation. Even those happy to trot out a party line may undertstand what they say entirely differently. It makes no sense (unless you have an empire to control) for a faith-related institution to make membership depend on willingness to say a particular form of words.
Then what is Liberal Christianity? Perhaps it is my post-modernity, but I would see engagement with a particular set of faith narratives as having meaning and value beyond classical faith as a mark of Liberal Christianity. Not saying 'we don't believe in the resurrection', but saying 'this is what the story of the resurrection means to us'. The Church I mentioned was a center for spirituality and attracted people from a wide range of faith backgrounds who were interested in exploring the Christian tradition. No-one made them say the creed, but it is clearly part of the Christian narratives and to be Christians requires an engagement with it even if it interpreted as metaphor.

quote:
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
quote:
If the Liberals want a stronger voice in the Church then they need to demonstrate how they are part of Christ's plan 'to build my church'. I am not sure 'being the Church for people who don't go' will work unless some people actually do go in the first place.
Yeah, well, if you assume Church is what you happen to prefer and ignore the possibility that such a model might be outdated, you automatically exclude those who find it irrelevant. But I guess that's Radical Orthodoxy.

So the Liberalism you are now suggesting is post-church? I do not deny that the Church needs to be reformed, it always does. But what is the point of being part of a Modern Church-person's Union if you don't believe or wish to participate in the central christian narrative of the church?

Or is your project closer to the way some people butcher the nice bits out of Taoism or Zen, import them to the west, and ignore or the bits of those religions they don't like?

Sorry Dave, I don't mean to get at you. I am honestly interested as a critical friend to liberalism who owes much to the safety net of radical and progressive theology.
 
Posted by Dave Marshall (# 7533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
I see no intrinsic problem with progressive or radical theology. Even non-Realism brings something to the table in terms of Discipleship or Mission.

What I'm getting at is that both discipleship and mission have at least connotations of something prescriptive. They assume there is a right way to live (discipleship) and a kingdom to build (mission) that the Church is uniquely equipped to teach and deliver. That's an inherently conservative position; a typical liberal alternative might be that we're all in this together, the Church has no justification for privileging its perspective over others.

A liberal Church might be listening and exploring and debating and connecting its thinking to the society and cultures within which it operates, inviting participation and encouraging the implementation of what seems the right thing to do. But the idea of imposing a tradition-based vision in the ways that discipleship and mission suggest is not something I think would be considered.
quote:
I would see engagement with a particular set of faith narratives as having meaning and value beyond classical faith as a mark of Liberal Christianity. Not saying 'we don't believe in the resurrection', but saying 'this is what the story of the resurrection means to us'.
That's certainly how many MCU people would see it. But they seem to be those who are still active (and therefore I assume at least comfortablish) within worship-oriented church. I've found (like most of the UK) this does not work for me (and I am familiar with it). This practice/discipline of group worship of a Divine Other does not relate to who I understand the real God to be. The What makes a world view Christian? thread might explain a bit more where I'm coming from.
quote:
So the Liberalism you are now suggesting is post-church? I do not deny that the Church needs to be reformed, it always does. But what is the point of being part of a Modern Church-person's Union if you don't believe or wish to participate in the central christian narrative of the church?
I don't think the real value in the Church has ever been the narrative. That's only a wrapper for the priorities and attitudes (values for short) that are illustrated in the life and person of Jesus. For me it's those values that are the essence of 'Christian'. They're what connect with reality as we experience it and have the creative potential. The rest is culture and context; where's the eternal value in that?
quote:
Sorry Dave, I don't mean to get at you.
That's OK. I appreciate the interest. [Smile]

[ 28. October 2009, 13:20: Message edited by: Dave Marshall ]
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
[QUOTE]I am very glad that when I came into the Church of England an Apostle laid hands on me, and Another Apostle laid hands on me when I was Ordained!

And I just wonder how you know (apart from the assertion of the denominations concerned) that those who laid hands on you were apostolic (which I do believe) and those who led the church(es) you were in previously weren't. Tactile succession (historically broken anyway) is a rather feeble way of discerning this curious idea of "validity", don't you think?
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
And I just wonder how you know (apart from the assertion of the denominations concerned) that those who laid hands on you were apostolic (which I do believe) and those who led the church(es) you were in previously weren't. Tactile succession (historically broken anyway) is a rather feeble way of discerning this curious idea of "validity", don't you think?

I don't believe that those who led the churches I was in previously were not Apostolic. Although they had never laid hands on me, which is what happened when I was confirmed as an Anglican. Seeing a Bishop take time to carefully pray individually for each candidate at a recent confirmation was a reminder of how flat the CofE is compared to some other church movements where the apostles are so distant.

For me, it is not the tactile succession itself that strengthens the idea of the apostolic, but the model of representative ministry. As apostolic ministers we all represent the ongoing apostolicity of the church catholic.

Like you I do not deny that the sacraments and ministry order work outside that order, but I do believe that a fullness is found within that order.

Having said that I do believe that their is a special gift passed on through tactile succession. Must be the pentecostal in me? The idea of apostolic succession is quite common there.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
I'm curious about the notion of Liberal Catholic stuff and what it entails, but I don't want to derail the thread asking about it here -- is there a pre-existing thread devoted to it?
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
NB Take care with your capital letters here- Liberal Catholic (a denomination or church with Theosophist roots) is not the same as liberal Catholic (mainstream Catholic* Christians who consider themselves to be liberal)!

*or maybe small-c catholic? I mean, at least, both ACs and RCs, anyway.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
Ah! (Who's NB?) Which is the concept under discussion (albeit tangential to the main topic) here then?
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Ah! (Who's NB?) Which is the concept under discussion (albeit tangential to the main topic) here then?

'liberal catholic' can mean a lot of different things to different people.

To some it means 'liberals who like dressing up and doing catholic stuff'.

To others it means 'catholic's who are liberal about aspects of their catholicism'

I suspect like the term 'Liberal Evangelical' it is rather broken.
 
Posted by Resurgam (# 14891) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
(Who's NB?)

[NB= Nota Bene --Latin for "note well" ]
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Ah! (Who's NB?) Which is the concept under discussion (albeit tangential to the main topic) here then?

'liberal catholic' can mean a lot of different things to different people.

To some it means 'liberals who like dressing up and doing catholic stuff'.

To others it means 'catholic's who are liberal about aspects of their catholicism'

I suspect like the term 'Liberal Evangelical' it is rather broken.

And then there would be liberal politically or liberal theologically -- and what that would mean... in the US it is often assumed that "liberal" or "conservative" politics and theology go hand in hand, but this is fortunately not assumed in the UK.

Erm, sorry, I should not derail the thread. [Hot and Hormonal] Although there may be some overlap come to think of it -- at least in my personal experience, the departing Anglicans who have been leaving the Episcopal Church have tended to also be more conservative politically too. I imagine this need not be the case in the UK?

(And this brings up the whole array of issues of Rome, the Anglican Communion, and various countries' politics, etc. -- all of which deserves its own thread...)
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Is there anyone posting or reading here who is considering going to Rome in this situation -- who believes that Anglican ordinations have been valid but wishes to enter the RCC anyway? Can you fill us in on how this works for you?

I've been thinking of going to Rome but I'm not sure. Personally I don't think validity matters very much (which may be one reason not to go to Rome).

ISTM that modern RC theology, by saying a sacrament can both efficacious and invalid, has made the concept of "validity" so abstract as to be meaningless.

If I ask a Catholic (be it the Roman or Anglo- variety) "What's wrong with invalid sacraments if they still work?", the usual answer is "They're not being performed in the way Christ intended". But no church is carrying out its duties in the way Christ intended - that's the point of Original Sin. So why single out validity as the deal-breaker?

[ 28. October 2009, 21:25: Message edited by: Ricardus ]
 
Posted by Mother Julian (# 11978) on :
 
Originally posted by Chastmastr
quote:
Is there anyone posting or reading here who is considering going to Rome in this situation -- who believes that Anglican ordinations have been valid but wishes to enter the RCC anyway? Can you fill us in on how this works for you?
The papal declaration that Anglican orders are invalid was made in the 19th century - since then there have been changes, some Anglican bishops have included Old Catholic bishops in their consecration. There are ways of arguing that current Anglican ordinations are valid even if they may not have been in the 19th century. In any case, God's grace is not confined to the rules and declarations of the Church, and along with Ricardus, I believe there can be efficacy without validity, which does tend to reduce the meaning and importance of validity.

Christian growth develops our beliefs - they never stand alone but are formed and develop in a particular ecclesial and social context. I currently believe Anglican ordinations to be valid, but accept there is an argument they are invalid. If I swim the Tiber, I will already believe through my own human understanding 99% of the teachings of the Church. The rest I will take on faith, trusting in the magisterium of the Church and hoping that I can also come to believe them with my human understanding as I grow as a Roman Catholic. I think this is both an honest and a reasonable position to hold.

As to politics and religion, like many Catholics, whether Roman or Anglo, I combine socialist, green and liberal political views along with Catholic orthodox religious beliefs - for me, they are two sides of one coin, and how I try to live an integrated life. Clearly, other political views are available and are genuinely held, but a personal blind spot of mine is that I can't see how ...
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
I am slightly hesitant about posting this, because of past experience on the SoF in discussing the RC attitude to Anglican Orders. It is a subject about which Anglicans are naturally sensitive and offended, and can lead to rancour. But there is a lot of misinformation floating about in this thread.

The argument of "tactile succession" is one often put forward by Anglicans, as if that were the key Catholic objection. It is not. Inserting a stray Old Catholic hand for a "Dutch touch" does not address what the Catholic contention about Anglican Orders is. Indeed Apostolicae Curae itself argued against the idea that all that mattered was the laying on of hands: "the imposition of hands, which, indeed, by itself signifies nothing definite, and is equally used for several Orders and for Confiirmation".

Neither is it true that it is only since Apostolicae Curae that this has been an issue. In fact Leo XIII was careful to lay out how it had always been the Catholic Church's judgement that there were defects in the Anglican Ordinal, so that Cardinal Pole was sent as a Legate and he ordained absolutely (not conditionally) those ordained using the Edwardine Ordinal. This continued to be the Catholic Church's practice.

The judgement rested on what is termed a defect in form and intention. In other words, the intention clearly articulated in the Anglican Ordinal was quite different from what the Catholic Church intended in ordination. The Anglican Ordinal, in line with Reformed theology, struck out any reference to those things which for the Catholic Church constitute ordination. What it replaced them with was very clearly, and intentionally, the idea of the threefold ministry as a ministry of the Word rather than of priesthood.

This was expressed also by the prorectio instrumentorum, or giving of the symbols of Office. In the Catholic Rite that would include both vesture and the Chalice and Paten. The Anglican Ordinal removed both of these, and substitued them with the giving of the Bible. This was the intention of the Ordinal, not a mere accident.

From 1550 to 1662 there was not even a mention of the words priest or bishop in the service of ordination. 1550 simply used the formula "Receive the Holy Ghost" and "Take the Holy Ghost", without saying for what. 1662 added the words "for the Office and work of a priest" and "for the Office and work of a bishop". This must be what Myrrh is referring to. But the objection is not based simply on a change in wording - formulae change. But the change effected by the Anglican Ordinal was to remove any Catholic intention, and this was done deliberately.

The famous 19C English RC scholar John Lingard said that the order used for the ordination of a bishop could equally be used for the admission of a parish clerk. Or as I once argued here, for the blessing of a new school headmaster. There was nothing to indicate that a bishop was being ordained for the Catholic Church.

That 1662 and later ordinals changed the formulae somewhat. But as Pope Leo wrote:
quote:
This form had, indeed, afterwards added to it the words "for the office and work of a priest," etc.; but this rather shows that the Anglicans themselves perceived that the first form was defective and inadequate. But even if this addition could give to the form its due signification, it was introduced too late, as a century had already elapsed since the adoption of the Edwardine Ordinal, for, as the Hierarchy had become extinct, there remained no power of ordaining.
It is worth noting that Apostolicae Curae was written in response to a suggestion of corporate re-union of Anglicans with the Catholic Church. A situation which is not dissimilar from the current one. But then as now the judgement remains the same: from a perspective of conferring Catholic Orders, the Anglican Church gave up both the form and intention of doing so. Thus Pope Leo wrote:

quote:
In this way, the native character or spirit as it is called of the Ordinal clearly manifests itself. Hence, if, vitiated in its origin, it was wholly insufficient to confer Orders, it was impossible that, in the course of time, it would become sufficient, since no change had taken place. In vain those who, from the time of Charles I, have attempted to hold some kind of sacrifice or of priesthood, have made additions to the Ordinal. In vain also has been the contention of that small section of the Anglican body formed in recent times that the said Ordinal can be understood and interpreted in a sound and orthodox sense. Such efforts, we affirm, have been, and are, made in vain, and for this reason, that any words in the Anglican Ordinal, as it now is, which lend themselves to ambiguity, cannot be taken in the same sense as they possess in the Catholic rite. For once a new rite has been initiated in which, as we have seen, the Sacrament of Order is adulterated or denied, and from which all idea of consecration and sacrifice has been rejected, the formula, "Receive the Holy Ghost", no longer holds good, because the Spirit is infused into the soul with the grace of the Sacrament, and so the words "for the office and work of a priest or bishop", and the like no longer hold good, but remain as words without the reality which Christ instituted.
That judgement still holds. So those now converting will need to be ordained in the Catholic Church if they wish to exercise a priestly ministry.
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
ISTM that modern RC theology, by saying a sacrament can both efficacious and invalid, has made the concept of "validity" so abstract as to be meaningless.

I'm not sure exactly what you mean. An invalid sacrament isn't a type of sacrament (one that, despite being "invalid," can still be "efficacious"); it isn't a sacrament at all. To say that a ritual might be invalid sacramentally but still be an occasion of grace is pretty much the same as saying that reading Graham Greene's The Power and the Glory or listening to Allegri's Miserere are not sacraments, but that they can still be occasions of God's grace. Grace is not restricted to the sacraments. So the ministry of an Anglican priest might be an occasion of grace, even if (in RC eyes) he did not validly receive the sacrament of orders.

[ 29. October 2009, 01:11: Message edited by: FCB ]
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
I am slightly hesitant about posting this, because of past experience on the SoF in discussing the RC attitude to Anglican Orders. It is a subject about which Anglicans are naturally sensitive and offended, and can lead to rancour.

No rancour from me; we disagree, of course, about these matters, but I understand the issues from a very similar position regarding the sacramental validity of the Lutherans, Methodists, and others, and this does go into the precise concerns I've been asking about. If we all agreed on these matters we'd be in the same church; which is, indeed, my concern -- that the groups involved really don't generally believe in the Pope as the Pope, rather than just the Bishop of Rome or the like -- so are they actually seeking to come to Rome for the wrong reasons, etc.?

Indeed, one reason I've not been happy with the Episcopal/Lutheran Concordat is the exact same principle involved here -- and I've said many times before that it's worse for the Lutherans -- since the Lutherans don't believe their previous ordinations were invalid, making them ordain future clergy with at least one Episcopal bishop involved (so that future Lutheran clergy will have Apostolic Succession as we Episcopalians believe in it) is something they should rightly reject, according to their own ecclesiology.

Sometimes I think we're all trying too hard to rush too fast into formal communion with each other, rather than working and praying together in areas in which we have common ground, with respectful inter-faith dialogue, but not glossing over the real differences in belief and more that, for now here on Earth but hopefully not in Heaven, divide us.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
My understanding (as the kind of Anglo-Catholic I am, anyway) of sacraments and their validity is that they are definitely valid when consecrated by a priest or bishop in Apostolic Succession (which includes those in the Anglican, Orthodox, and Roman Catholic churches), and when they are not consecrated by someone in that Succession, they are not definitely valid -- but that we should not limit what God may choose to do through His Grace, so in a given case, He may choose to make the bread and wine into a real vehicle of actual, sacramental grace -- a real Eucharist -- even when no sacramentally valid priest is present -- but that we should not presume upon that. It's not certain, from this perspective, the way that an ordained-in-Apostolic-Succession priest's consecration of bread and wine is.

Re things being valid/efficacious/etc., is this the sort of thing you're talking about?

[ 29. October 2009, 01:39: Message edited by: ChastMastr ]
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
I'd be more inclined to say that, absent the proper minister, it's not the sacrament, but may still be an occasion of grace.It Catholic sacramental theology, it is always possible to have the ultimate grace at which the sacrament aims without having the sacramental reality.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Indeed, one reason I've not been happy with the Episcopal/Lutheran Concordat is the exact same principle involved here -- and I've said many times before that it's worse for the Lutherans -- since the Lutherans don't believe their previous ordinations were invalid, making them ordain future clergy with at least one Episcopal bishop involved (so that future Lutheran clergy will have Apostolic Succession as we Episcopalians believe in it) is something they should rightly reject, according to their own ecclesiology.
I believe that agreement allows for exceptions for ordinations without involvement of a bishop. Lutheran ministers have also I would assume presided over the celebration of the Eucharist in Episcopal parishes who as part of their ordination had no episcopal involvement.

I don't know that the agreement between the UMC and the ECUSA for full communion had any stipulations at all in regards to ordinations as outlined here. It also allows for the use of grape juice of all things.
 
Posted by uffda (# 14310) on :
 
First off, I would like to thank Triple T for a really well written defense of a Roman Catholic understanding of Holy Orders. Its clarity can only help advance the conversation.

The Roman Catholic Church has certainly offered other Christians a consistent understanding of ordained ministry as a sacrificial priesthood. And, if I understand Triple T correctly, that consistency is expressed in the idea of apostolic succession. The laying on of hands without the consistent understanding of what the priesthood is, leaves room for doubt and invalidity.

As I have written in previous posts on other threads, the Lutheran understanding of ordained ministry is different from the Roman Catholic one. In fact, it is based on a rejection of the sacrificial priesthood. The confection of the Sacrament of Holy Eucharist is not based on any power to change the elements, but on a faithful recounting of Christ's promise to be present in, with, and under, the bread and wine. This has been a consistent teaching within Lutheranism over the centuries.

The purpose of the ecumenical movement, as I have always understood it, and particularly in the model of bilateral dialogue, is for churches to come to a better understanding of what is actually taught and believed by each body of believers; to discover those places where the beliefs of the other had been caricatured or misunderstood; and then, to explore the possibiity of finding new approaches or new language to draw divided churches past old impasses to a deeper unity.

I wonder if our Anglican sisters and brothers would say their church's understanding of ordained ministry has also been consistent. From my perspective on the outside looking in, it seems to me that Anglicanism tries to hold together a rather wide range of viewpoints about the nature of ordained ministry. I think that the reason the ordination of women is such a difficult issue for some Anglicans is because there are multiple understandings of ministry held together by culture and tradition. Those who see the Anglican priest and bishop in terms of a sacrificial priesthood, (most closely aligned with the RCC) will find themselves necessarily having to reject the Ordination of Women as inconsistent with tradition. While those who see the Anglican priest and bishop as ministers of the Word (closer to the Reformation
sense) will see the ordination of women as a legitimate development of tradition.

What for me is problematic about the Pope's offer to Anglicans is the sense in which it implicitly rejects the goal of bilateral dialogue
particularly in seeming to say there is no way round the classic impasse over ordination. The only way is to come back to Rome, accept re-ordination, and become "valid" according to our Roman Catholic understanding.

The Anglican Communion seems to me to be in a vulnerable spot at this moment in history, yet, knowing that God often takes the long view when working his will out on earth, I'm left feeling that the Pope's offer has somehow interrupted the long and difficult process of self-understanding that Anglicans are working through.

As someone who has left one church to become part of another, I completely respect those who feel their conscience calling them to make a similar journey. What bothers me is the hybrid nature of these "personal ordinariates".If someone believes that the Roman Catholic Church is the correct church, let them be a Roman Catholic, and not some kind of Catholic with elements of the Anglian "tradition" tossed in.

The impact on the wider ecumenical movement is also a matter of concern. If we are not able to view the life and ministry of each other's churches as faithful and effective in their own ways,then perhaps Pope Benedict's way will be the only offer on the table for Christian Unity.

[ 29. October 2009, 03:21: Message edited by: uffda ]
 
Posted by uffda (# 14310) on :
 
Regarding Alt Wally's post.

The Lutheran-Episcopal agreement is a perfect example of the goal of a bilateral dialogue: finding new ways to go beyond old impasses.

The agreement was carefully crafted in this way:
Lutherans were able to accept the laying on of hands by an Episcopal Bishop,to come into Apostolic Sucession as Episcopalians understand it, because Episcopalians were able to modify their ordinal to accept the ministry of Lutheran pastors immediately, even though not all of them would be in the Apostolic succession right away. This arrangement avoided the notion that Episcopalians were conferring validity on Lutherans. We had come through bilateral dialogue to recognize each other's churches as Apostolic, the laying on of hands was then seen as "a sign, though not a guarantee" of Apostolicity.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
I think uffda's post encapsulates well how significant the shift was for the Episcopal Church in moving away from what would traditionally be considered the "catholic" understanding of holy orders. This inevitably has led in my experience to a change in the understanding of the sacrament itself, often shifting from substance to sign.

quote:
If someone believes that the Roman Catholic Church is the correct church, let them be a Roman Catholic, and not some kind of Catholic with elements of the Anglian "tradition" tossed in.
Similar arguments have been made against the traditions of the Eastern Catholics. If they were real Catholics, etc...

One of the greatest attributes of Catholicism is its diversity and universality. It surely has room for multiple liturgical rites, and I personally don't see why there isn't room for additional ones such as an Anglican use. I think the Pope in his wisdom recognizes this.

[ 29. October 2009, 03:49: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
An excellent post, uffda, but I would disagree with this one bit --

quote:
Originally posted by uffda:
Those who see the Anglican priest and bishop in terms of a sacrificial priesthood, (most closely aligned with the RCC) will find themselves necessarily having to reject the Ordination of Women ...

-- but that is definitely Dead Horses territory and I don't want to derail the thread by focusing on that here.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
I think uffda's post encapsulates well how significant the shift was for the Episcopal Church in moving away from what would traditionally be considered the "catholic" understanding of holy orders. This inevitably has led in my experience to a change in the understanding of the sacrament itself, often shifting from substance to sign.

If you mean ordaining women, for at least some in the CofE that went along with a move in the other direction. For reasons that are probably off-topic here.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FCB:
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
ISTM that modern RC theology, by saying a sacrament can both efficacious and invalid, has made the concept of "validity" so abstract as to be meaningless.

I'm not sure exactly what you mean. An invalid sacrament isn't a type of sacrament (one that, despite being "invalid," can still be "efficacious"); it isn't a sacrament at all. To say that a ritual might be invalid sacramentally but still be an occasion of grace is pretty much the same as saying that reading Graham Greene's The Power and the Glory or listening to Allegri's Miserere are not sacraments, but that they can still be occasions of God's grace. Grace is not restricted to the sacraments. So the ministry of an Anglican priest might be an occasion of grace, even if (in RC eyes) he did not validly receive the sacrament of orders.
FB, are you saying that an Anglican Eucharist is equivalent to reading a good book in terms of the grace it affords?

Thurible
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
quote:
FB, are you saying that an Anglican Eucharist is equivalent to reading a good book in terms of the grace it affords?
Now who is being a naughty boy, surely any Eucharist/Lord's Supper/Mass/etc should be Christ centered and not be denomination thingy.

If this holy clergy do decided to trot off to Rome, may I humble suggest that the empty property be used to provided homes for the needy of the parish as a sign of the Anglican love for others
 
Posted by Ricardus (# 8757) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FCB:
quote:
Originally posted by Ricardus:
ISTM that modern RC theology, by saying a sacrament can both efficacious and invalid, has made the concept of "validity" so abstract as to be meaningless.

I'm not sure exactly what you mean. An invalid sacrament isn't a type of sacrament (one that, despite being "invalid," can still be "efficacious"); it isn't a sacrament at all.
I stand corrected, but that seems to me merely to shift the locus of abstraction from "validity" to "sacrament".

Assuming Apostolicae Curae is correct, an Anglican Eucharist is still a physical thing through which God effects divine grace. The only respect in which it is deficient is the lack of apostolic succession. But all churches are deficient in some respect.
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
FB, are you saying that an Anglican Eucharist is equivalent to reading a good book in terms of the grace it affords?

I suppose, in a sense, I am. But you should know that I'm a Catholic today because (among other things) I read The Power and the Glory. So when I say "an occasion of grace" I don't mean simply "something that gives you a good feeling" but rather "something that unites you to God." But if novel reading seems too trivial, then perhaps I might compare it to praying the rosary or reading Scripture. They are great good things and means of salvation for many; they are just not (as RCs understand it) sacraments.

[ 29. October 2009, 12:24: Message edited by: FCB ]
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
Thanks for that. Does that not make Anglo-Catholics guilty of idolatory?

Thurible
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
I edited but forgot to post it!

Thanks for that. Does that not make Anglo-Catholics guilty of idolatory?

One of the things that will prevent many A-Cs, whether ordained or no, poping (through the Apostolic Constitution or otherwise) is, to my mind, the fact that they would be denying either their previous sacerdotal ministry or the fact that they had received such.

I am not criticising your view - it is the view of the Catholic Church and makes perfect sense within that community's self-understanding.

What I'm trying to understand, though, is whether those who do not regard Anglican priests as being priests within the Church of God regard their sacraments [sic.] as being misguided but sincere prayers which are simply guilty of misunderstanding what's actually going on or, alternatively, the "blasphemous fables" that some Protestants would accuse them of so being.

Thurible

[ 29. October 2009, 13:38: Message edited by: Thurible ]
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:



The famous 19C English RC scholar John Lingard said that the order used for the ordination of a bishop could equally be used for the admission of a parish clerk. Or as I once argued here, for the blessing of a new school headmaster. There was nothing to indicate that a bishop was being ordained for the Catholic Church.

Yes, this is what I meant, but as the Abyssinian case has never been ruled against (despite the gloss Patrizi put on it which is mere supposition), Leo's decision that the words being absent during that initial period nullified the succession anyway because the words were introduced too late, have no force. He can't argue from form.

see Patrizi here


quote:
..But then as now the judgement remains the same: from a perspective of conferring Catholic Orders, the Anglican Church gave up both the form and intention of doing so. Thus Pope Leo wrote:

quote:
In this way, the native character or spirit as it is called of the Ordinal clearly manifests itself. Hence, if, vitiated in its origin, it was wholly insufficient to confer Orders, it was impossible that, in the course of time, it would become sufficient, since no change had taken place. In vain those who, from the time of Charles I, have attempted to hold some kind of sacrifice or of priesthood, have made additions to the Ordinal. In vain also has been the contention of that small section of the Anglican body formed in recent times that the said Ordinal can be understood and interpreted in a sound and orthodox sense. Such efforts, we affirm, have been, and are, made in vain, and for this reason, that any words in the Anglican Ordinal, as it now is, which lend themselves to ambiguity, cannot be taken in the same sense as they possess in the Catholic rite. For once a new rite has been initiated in which, as we have seen, the Sacrament of Order is adulterated or denied, and from which all idea of consecration and sacrifice has been rejected, the formula, "Receive the Holy Ghost", no longer holds good, because the Spirit is infused into the soul with the grace of the Sacrament, and so the words "for the office and work of a priest or bishop", and the like no longer hold good, but remain as words without the reality which Christ instituted.
That judgement still holds. So those now converting will need to be ordained in the Catholic Church if they wish to exercise a priestly ministry.
Leo's on firmer ground here as the intention was not to have the same kind of priesthood (I'm taking it this is correct, i.e. that Anglicans would agree with him here). But, his reason that his is the priesthood Christ initiated is not proved. (Whatever the gloss put on this in ecumenical dialogue by and with the Orthodox to pretend we have the same priesthood) Christ instituted the form and intent of the royal sacrificial priesthood (see Peter) in the Church, baptism still now as then being the ordination into this priesthood for the Orthodox.

The divide into a separate priesthood of some apart from the rest, known in the West as the divide between clergy and laity (see Schmemann on Clergy and Laity), is an innovation/different development (*) and so suffers from the same inadequacy of intent re the Orthodox as the Anglican intent suffers re the RCC, and so, is not in and of itself an absolute definition of priesthood neither in the variety of Christian Churches nor in any idea of a "One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church".

Take it from there..

Myrrh

(*) My thoughts are that the concept of the Royal Priesthood was somehow lost in Rome in the times of concentrated persecution.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
I edited but forgot to post it!

Thanks for that. Does that not make Anglo-Catholics guilty of idolatory?

One of the things that will prevent many A-Cs, whether ordained or no, poping (through the Apostolic Constitution or otherwise) is, to my mind, the fact that they would be denying either their previous sacerdotal ministry or the fact that they had received such.

I am not criticising your view - it is the view of the Catholic Church and makes perfect sense within that community's self-understanding.

What I'm trying to understand, though, is whether those who do not regard Anglican priests as being priests within the Church of God regard their sacraments [sic.] as being misguided but sincere prayers which are simply guilty of misunderstanding what's actually going on or, alternatively, the "blasphemous fables" that some Protestants would accuse them of so being.

Thurible

Anglican orders is an issue that each individual clergyman will have to work out for himself. I gave an example of how a layman (myself) worked it out, very imperfectly, but somehow managed to put it all together at the end.

I would not globablly describe latter-day Anglicans as idolatrous or sacriligious. (I might well say that about Cranmer, Ridley, Hooper, and Latimer, and perhaps even Parker himself though he is a more sympathetic human being than the first four.) As for whether Christ himself visits the altars of Anglican clergy, he does not need mine or the Pope's permission to do so if he chooses. As I see it, we are bound to the sacraments, but God is not so bound...see the Parable of the Generous Employer. There is no Catholic doctrine of the Real Absence.
 
Posted by Clavus (# 9427) on :
 
This is waht the RC Church has said in the past:

quote:
• Prayer at the ordination of a former Anglican minister to the Catholic presbyterate.
This prayer was ordered to be said by the CDF. It is said before the Litany and not, it should be noted, the ordination prayer itself.
Oratio ad gratias agendas pro ministerio ab electo in Communione anglicana expleto
Deinde mones surgunt. Epsicopus, deposita mitra, stans manibus iunctis versus ad electum dicit:
N., the Holy Catholic Church recognizes that not a few of the sacred actions of the Christian religion as carried out in communities separated from her can truly engender a life of grace and can rightly be described as providing access to the community of salvation. And so we now pray.
Et omnes, per aliquod temporis spatium, silentio orant. Deinde, manus extensis, Episcopus orat dicens:
Almighty Father, we give you thanks for the x years
of faithful ministry of your servant N. in the Anglican Communion [vel: in the Church of England],
whose fruitfulness for salvation has been derived
from the very fullness of grace and truth
entrusted to the Catholic Church.
As your servant has been received into full communion
and now seeks to be ordained to the presbyterate in the Catholic Church,
we beseech you to bring to fruition that for which we now pray.
Through Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Populus acclamat:
Amen.


 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
From 1550 to 1662 there was not even a mention of the words priest or bishop in the service of ordination. 1550 simply used the formula "Receive the Holy Ghost" and "Take the Holy Ghost", without saying for what.

Not the whole [picture.

In 1550, candidates for the diaconate were told: It perteyneth to the office of a Deacon [in the Churche where he shalbe appoynted,]* to assiste the Prieste in devine service, and speciallye when he ministreth the holye Communion, and [to]* helpe him in distribucion thereof, and to reade holye scriptures and Homelies in the congregacion, and [to]* instructe the youth in the Cathechisme, to Baptise and [to]* preache yf he be [commaunded]† by the Bisshop. And further more, it is his office [where provision is so made]* to searche for the sicke, poore, and impotente people of the parishe, and to intimate theyr estates, names, and places where thei dwel to the Curate, that by his exhortacion they maye bee relieved by the parishe or other convenient almose [alms]: wil you do this gladly and wyllingly?

Presbyteral candidates were asked: Will you then geve your faythfull dylygence alwayes, so to mynister the doctryne and Sacramentes, and the discipline of Christ, as the lord hath commaunded, and as thys realme hath received the same, accordyng to the commaunde mentes of God, so that you may teache the people committed to youre cure and charge, with al diligence to kepe and observe the same?

Then, at the laying on of hands, the prayer/invocation was: RECEIVE the holy goste, whose synnes thou doest forgeve, they are forgeven: and whose sinnes thou doest retaine, thei are retained: and be thou a faithful despensor of the word of god, and of his holy Sacramentes. In the name of the father, and of the sonne, and of the holy gost. Amen.

Later: TAKE thou aucthoritie to preache the word of god, and to minister the holy Sacramentes in thys congregacion[, where thou shalt be so appointed]*.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Shadowhund:
I would not globablly describe latter-day Anglicans as idolatrous or sacriligious. (I might well say that about Cranmer, Ridley, Hooper, and Latimer, and perhaps even Parker himself though he is a more sympathetic human being than the first four.) .

Maybe you might earn the right to insult those martyrs if you yourself were burned at the stake by a bloodthirsty foreign tyrant in the name of religion.
 
Posted by k-mann (# 8490) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Max.:
I've asked this on both my facebook and my twitter and I'm going to ask it here:

What will the Traditional Anglicans do when 20 years down the road, the Vatican decides to ordain women to the priesthood?

This question assumes that the Catholic Church's ecclesiology is of the same pick-and-choose type as some protestant churches. The Catholic Churh will never ordain women to the priesthood.

Of course, they could eventually ordain women as deacons...
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by k-mann:
quote:
Originally posted by Max.:
I've asked this on both my facebook and my twitter and I'm going to ask it here:

What will the Traditional Anglicans do when 20 years down the road, the Vatican decides to ordain women to the priesthood?

This question assumes that the Catholic Church's ecclesiology is of the same pick-and-choose type as some protestant churches. The Catholic Churh will never ordain women to the priesthood.
All it takes is one pope...
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Martin L:
All it takes is one pope...

Infallibility, but its own definition, cannot be exercised in a way to overturn the tradition of the church. It can only confirm it. John Paul II himself said he did not have the power to change the the church's stance on the ordination of women.

quote:
If you mean ordaining women, for at least some in the CofE that went along with a move in the other direction. For reasons that are probably off-topic here.
No, I meant there could be shifts in how the other sacraments are viewed and understood. I have seen this in my own experience.
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
John Paul II himself said he did not have the power to change the the church's stance on the ordination of women.

That statement can be read here: Ordinatio Sacerdotalis
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
Was told yesterday that some of those holy martyrs of Anglican church who went over to Rome in the !990 over women becoming priest have been sneaking back through the back door. Does anybody know what how many of returned to the warmth and comfort of the C of E?
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
My understanding (as the kind of Anglo-Catholic I am, anyway) of sacraments and their validity is that they are definitely valid when consecrated by a priest or bishop in Apostolic Succession (which includes those in the Anglican, Orthodox, and Roman Catholic churches)...

This is the 'Three Branch' theory so beloved of a certain type of Anglo-Catholic of yore.

Sadly, the two other 'branches' never accepted it.

I suspect many of the strongest upholders of this theory went across to the TAC which has already accepted the Magisterum in toto.

Anyone who goes across to Rome from the Anglican Church has to do this. One of the most difficult things coming to Rome will mean for many Anglo-Catholics, clerical and lay, is that they will no longer be able to 'slightly differ from Rome', a very Anglican thing, particularly for the sort of A-C priest who is used to being a minipope in his own parish.

It seems to me that it hasn't fully dawned on some people - including yourself - that the concessions made to those who wish to go across are not concessions on matters of Faith and Morals. These remain the same for all present and future Catholics.

It is extremely difficult for those of us who subscribe to a relativist tradition to realise how things are in an absolute tradition.

As far as Catholics are concerned, when the crunch comes, it is the Pope who makes the final decision on matters of Faith and Morals binding all the faithful.

One of the things we Anglophones fail to realise is that Latins - and the Roman Catholic Church is very Southern European - regard us as incredibly contentious and unable to accept discipline.

I understand your need to be heard, but, after very politely hearing you the Catholic Church will say 'No'.
 
Posted by Loveheart (# 12249) on :
 
I realise this is a tangent, but if a RC priest becomes an Anglican priest, what ceremony does he go through? Is it just a straightforward reception into the C of E?
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):


One of the things we Anglophones fail to realise is that Latins - and the Roman Catholic Church is very Southern European - regard us as incredibly contentious and unable to accept discipline.

Isn't it truer to say that the Latin attitude is 'let's have lots of rules but not be too worried about the occasional transgression', whereas the northern European one is 'let's only have a few rules but make sure we keep to them'?* The problem now is a northern European Pope administering a Latin system.

* For example, there is no speed limit on German roads.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Loveheart:
I realise this is a tangent, but if a RC priest becomes an Anglican priest, what ceremony does he go through? Is it just a straightforward reception into the C of E?

I assume so, yes. (The interesting thing, of course, is that one must be episcopally confirmed to excercise licensed ministry in the CofE. I'm not sure if Catholics, and Orthodox, are exempted from this requirement.)

Thurible
 
Posted by multipara (# 2918) on :
 
I doubt if one would get past first base for priesthood as an RC if one were not confirmed...

Just by the by, I recall reading in the SSPX District of Australia and NZ that a couple of Indian candidates at their seminary in Goulburn( southern NSW )were given conditonal confirmation as the SSPX clergy had doubts about the validity of their (Nervous Order) confirmations back in Mumbai...

m
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by multipara:
I doubt if one would get past first base for priesthood as an RC if one were not confirmed...


But one can be presbyterally confirmed in the Catholic Church, can't one?

Thurible
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
But isn't the oil of chrism episcopally blessed, and the presbyteral confirmation done on behalf of the bishop in person? (Just thinking about it, is this not the same justification for the priest presiding at Mass?)
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
And IIRC it's only on special occasions, like the Easter Vigil, where adults are received into full communion with Rome.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
This is the 'Three Branch' theory so beloved of a certain type of Anglo-Catholic of yore.

Sadly, the two other 'branches' never accepted it.


No. They have erred. The visible Church of Christ is a congregation of faithful people, in the which the pure Word of God is preached, and the Sacraments be duly ministered according to Christ’s ordinance in all those things that of necessity are requisite to the same.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
But isn't the oil of chrism episcopally blessed, and the presbyteral confirmation done on behalf of the bishop in person? (Just thinking about it, is this not the same justification for the priest presiding at Mass?)

I suppose so. I was just wondering how tight the 'episcopally confirmed' was.

Thurible
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
With all this fancy words etc coming from man where is God's needs being meet. All the infantile nonsense floating about concerns what man wants and show complete control freaky going on.

Surely it is best to be where God desires us and not what we want.

Now might be a good time to stop all the verbal diarrhoea and head damage and let God have His way with us.

All that is happens is questios being raised if any are really men of God
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Loveheart:
I realise this is a tangent, but if a RC priest becomes an Anglican priest, what ceremony does he go through? Is it just a straightforward reception into the C of E?

A friend of mine had to spend one term at a theological college and then, when he got a parish, an induction (just like any priest gets when s/he starts as a vicar of a new parish).
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
Did he serve as a curate or as priest-in-charge, leo?

Thurible
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
Isn't it truer to say that the Latin attitude is 'let's have lots of rules but not be too worried about the occasional transgression', whereas the northern European one is 'let's only have a few rules but make sure we keep to them'? The problem now is a northern European Pope administering a Latin system.

This seems right, except I think Benedict's attitude is far more "Latin" than you give him credit for. I haven't seen or felt anything like a clampdown since he has become Pope.

In any case, this is one thing that non-Catholics often miss: for all its rules and pronouncements, Rome is in actual practice a "big tent" church (e.g. Hans Kung and Rosemary Radford Reuther are both RCs in good standing). Of course, the down side of the "in principle/in practice" distinction is that those in power can always arbitrarily decide to put the principle into practice, as a way of singling out particular individuals. But for me, at the end of the day I prefer to have lots of principles loosely enforced than few principles strictly enforced. YMMV.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pancho:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
John Paul II himself said he did not have the power to change the the church's stance on the ordination of women.

That statement can be read here: Ordinatio Sacerdotalis
Nonsense, he fibbed. CCC882 is the claim for supreme power to act unhindered over the universal Church. He could if he'd wanted to.

The RCC have already instituted a development of doctrine theory to cater for all the changes they've made in the last century.

And women are already being ordained in the Roman Catholic Church, validly.


Roman Catholic Women Priests


Myrrh
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Nonsense, he fibbed. CCC882 is the claim for supreme power to act unhindered over the universal Church. He could if he'd wanted to.

He did not fib. He was talking from the traditional Catholic point of view, which sees the pope as the foremost guardian and guarantor of the faith on earth till Christ returns. CCC882 is not about saying that the pope can do whatever he pleases, it is about saying that nothing and nobody else in the Church can hinder the pope in fulfilling his role as the foremost guardian and guarantor of the faith. You can critique the whole setup by saying that the laws in fact allow the pope to do whatever he pleases. The Catholic answer is of course papal infallibility - namely that if the pope tried to act out his powers other than as the foremost guardian and guarantor of the faith, then the Holy Spirit would stop him. Now, maybe you don't believe in that. Fine. But JPII did. I do, too. It may be a false belief, according to you, but you cannot call statements based on false beliefs a lie - since there is then no intention of speaking falsehood.

quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
And women are already being ordained in the Roman Catholic Church, validly
Roman Catholic Women Priests

It is just so sad that you keep spreading FUD about the RCC. What is in it for you?
That only men would be ordained in the RCC was not in question for about 1,500 years before that. In the times of the Church Fathers things get a bit murky, with the same vague sources getting different interpretations. But anyway, your claim about valid women ordinations now in the RCC is not even wrong.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
But anyway, your claim about valid women ordinations now in the RCC is not even wrong.

Sorry to be obtuse this afternoon, but don't you mean the claim is wrong? Or perhapsh not even correct?

[ 30. October 2009, 16:46: Message edited by: New Yorker ]
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
Did he serve as a curate or as priest-in-charge, leo?

Thurible

Vicar will freehold.
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
Myrrh,
IngoB gave a better response than I ever could.

quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:

And women are already being ordained in the Roman Catholic Church, validly.
Roman Catholic Women Priests

You should probably read the following story: Vatican decrees excommunication for participation in 'ordination' of women .

The excommunicated members of Womenpriest are not examples of validly ordained priests in the Church. None of them would be allowed to serve at the altar in a Catholic church.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
Sadly, the two other 'branches' never accepted it.

Sadly, yes, but that's part of our doctrinal differences. It doesn't mean I don't believe it's true.

quote:
Anyone who goes across to Rome from the Anglican Church has to do this.
Yep, that's been my understanding of the situation. Which is why I don't understand the desire to go across from that point of view.

quote:
It seems to me that it hasn't fully dawned on some people - including yourself - that the concessions made to those who wish to go across are not concessions on matters of Faith and Morals. These remain the same for all present and future Catholics.

I don't understand what you mean by "including yourself" here. We are in agreement about Rome's point of view on these matters, which is why I keep being baffled, and possibly a bit disturbed, by the way the offer is being received.

quote:

It is extremely difficult for those of us who subscribe to a relativist tradition to realise how things are in an absolute tradition.

I imagine it might be; not being a relativist, I don't know from experience...

quote:
One of the things we Anglophones fail to realise is that Latins - and the Roman Catholic Church is very Southern European - regard us as incredibly contentious and unable to accept discipline.
I don't know about the English-speaking aspect of it, but I would agree that the Episcopal Church in the US certainly seems that way in my observation. But I've been used to that since becoming a Christian.

quote:
I understand your need to be heard, but, after very politely hearing you the Catholic Church will say 'No'.
I'm not sure what you mean here. I don't think I have a particular need to heard... did you think I was one of the people leaving the Episcopal Church? [Confused]
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
Did he serve as a curate or as priest-in-charge, leo?

Thurible

Vicar will freehold.
sorry - for 'will' read 'with'
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
Sorry to be obtuse this afternoon, but don't you mean the claim is wrong? Or perhapsh not even correct?

No, Myrrh on anything RC is quite generally not even wrong.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
No, Myrrh on anything RC is quite generally not even wrong.

A phrase with which I was not familiar.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
Sadly, the two other 'branches' never accepted it.

Sadly, yes, but that's part of our doctrinal differences. It doesn't mean I don't believe it's true.

...

The 'Three Branch' theory is not Anglican 'doctrine'. It was a belief held by a number of Anglo-Catholics to self-justify.

Justifying Anglican belief and sacraments is best IMO done from within the Anglican tradition itself otherwise you end up with absurdities like the 'Three Branch' theory which many Anglicans would not accept. I find Edward Green's statement much more Anglican than the 'Three Branch' theory.

Latins and Northerners? Well, it is significant the Pope is German. I think my point was that the Catholic Church inherited the legal framework and mindset of Imperial Rome.

I know you weren't about to go across, CM, but trying to understand those who do.

When I talk of 'relativist' and 'absolute' I mean that, with the rise of critical biblical scholarship since the midnineteenth century, Anglicans and members of other churches which came out of the Reformation have moved away from feeling they have to believe literally in what were once considered core Christian beliefs. We are talking here of matters such as the Virgin Birth; the Incarnation and the Resurrection.

Some Anglicans still hold to these beliefs and it is they who take issue with the liberals.

The Catholic and Orthodox Churches require members to subscribe to these beliefs.

I would understand you, CM, to be what I call a relativist.

I fear this is not a terribly good post but it is the best I am capable of.

It may well raise many questions which I fear I do not have the expertise to answer.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
He did not fib. He was talking from the traditional Catholic point of view, which sees the pope as the foremost guardian and guarantor of the faith on earth till Christ returns. CCC882 is not about saying that the pope can do whatever he pleases, it is about saying that nothing and nobody else in the Church can hinder the pope in fulfilling his role as the foremost guardian and guarantor of the faith. You can critique the whole setup by saying that the laws in fact allow the pope to do whatever he pleases. The Catholic answer is of course papal infallibility - namely that if the pope tried to act out his powers other than as the foremost guardian and guarantor of the faith, then the Holy Spirit would stop him. Now, maybe you don't believe in that. Fine. But JPII did. I do, too. It may be a false belief, according to you, but you cannot call statements based on false beliefs a lie - since there is then no intention of speaking falsehood.

This isn't about the gloss put on it however sincere, and I'm not arguing about the sincerity of your belief, this is about the wording.

This claims that the pope's supreme power over the universal Church is unhindered.

It either is or it isn't. (*)

If it is always a power he can exercise unhindered then it is a lie to say there are any restrictions.

You may believe, and some might hope, that the Holy Spirit stops the pope from making errors, but since pontifications from the chair have shown a consistent violent and bloody immorality through centuries of practise, then either the Holy Spirit is lax in his duties or some have a different idea of her guidance.

Luke 9:55-57 (New King James Version)
55 But He turned and rebuked them, and said, “You do not know what manner of spirit you are of. 56 For the Son of Man did not come to destroy men’s lives but to save them.” And they went to another village. (*)

So, the exercise of this supreme power is unhindered, definitively denying the power of the Holy Spirit to any but the pope. Therefore the pope exercises supreme unhindered power over the Holy Spirit. In contradiction to Pentecost, where it is clear the power of the Holy Spirit descended equally upon all and therefore definitively available to all.

So, the exercise of this supreme power is unhindered, even over Christ. Making Christ of questionable worth to us when He says He is there Himself whenever two or three are gathered in His name, since the papal claim is we must together with Christ look to the pope for supreme ruling.

Why the Anglo Catholics want to go to this is beyond my ken.


quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
It is just so sad that you keep spreading FUD about the RCC. What is in it for you?

Whatever FUD is, just doing my bit.


quote:
...That only men would be ordained in the RCC was not in question for about 1,500 years before that. In the times of the Church Fathers things get a bit murky, with the same vague sources getting different interpretations. But anyway, your claim about valid women ordinations now in the RCC is not even wrong.
Oddly right, then?

Well, there's valid and licit and I think the claims for validity are non existent because a) as you say above, they are built on an innovation and limited tradition, and b) because of the linear nature of succession in the RCC a validly ordained bishop can do as he please and still maintain the line of succession. Which takes us back to Anglican successions and their validity.


Myrrh

(*)
quote:
There was hardly a country in Europe which Gregory did not try to annex to Rome. All the kingdoms of Spain belonged to the Papacy, he said; and other monarchs who had innocently accepted "blessed banners" found that their kingdoms were subject to Rome and owed vassalage in men and money, He claimed Hungary. He threatened to annex France. The United States of Europe, under the control of the Papacy, was Gregory's supreme ideal. Not that he had the least idea of pacifying Europe, on the modern plan. He set swords flying, and flung out threats of war, on the slightest provocation. Armies were the Lord's appointed instruments for making kings "obedient." He claimed the right to interfere in any concern, secular or spiritual, of any country of Europe. "If the Pope is supreme in spiritual things," he naively said, "he had all the greater right to intervene in the smaller matters which are called temporal." And, ignorant as Gregory was, he must have had some knowledge of the fact that his most active assistants — such as Bishop Bonitho, Bishop Anselm, and Cardinal Deusdedit — used and perpetrated forgeries in establishing his credentials.

Popes and the Church

That of course is the 'two swords' doctrine.

M.
 
Posted by Quam Dilecta (# 12541) on :
 
Angloid has written wisely about Latin vs. Anglo-Saxon attitudes. The difference can be seen most starkly in legal systems: Roman Law begins with legislation; Common Law is based on accumulated precedents. In Roman thinking, (whether that of the ancient republic, the subseqent empire, or the Roman Catholic Church) the rules cannot change, but exceptions can be made. In the Common Law tradition, the rules are empirically derived and can be bent over time to reflect actual behavior.

Adherents of the Common-Law approach often accuse the Roman side of harshness (for defending the integrity of the law) and of hypocrisy (for allowing occasional dispensations), while those on the Roman side are apt to call proponents of the Common-Law approach muddle-headed and sentimental.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
[The 'Three Branch' theory is not Anglican 'doctrine'. It was a belief held by a number of Anglo-Catholics to self-justify.

I must take issue with your statement here -- I certainly believe it because I think it is true, and the others I have known who believe it appear, IMO, to be doing so in all intellectual honesty, and not to "self-justify."

I have not accused you of intellectual dishonesty and would appreciate the same courtesy.


quote:
Justifying Anglican belief and sacraments is best IMO done from within the Anglican tradition itself otherwise you end up with absurdities like the 'Three Branch' theory
Obviously I don't think it's absurd at all.

quote:
which many Anglicans would not accept.
Then I would disagree with them.

quote:
When I talk of 'relativist' and 'absolute' I mean that, with the rise of critical biblical scholarship since the midnineteenth century, Anglicans and members of other churches which came out of the Reformation have moved away from feeling they have to believe literally in what were once considered core Christian beliefs. We are talking here of matters such as the Virgin Birth; the Incarnation and the Resurrection.

Some Anglicans still hold to these beliefs and it is they who take issue with the liberals.

I'd be one of those people who take issue with them myself, yes. It's often been frustrating believing in more core Christian beliefs than most of the priests I have met, which is why at one point I considered going back to Rome.

quote:
The Catholic and Orthodox Churches require members to subscribe to these beliefs.

Technically, so do we; it's right there in the Baptism and Confirmation ritual in the BCP.

quote:
I would understand you, CM, to be what I call a relativist.
I'm not quite sure how, but regardless, I hope you don't mean that pejoratively.

quote:
I fear this is not a terribly good post but it is the best I am capable of.
Yikes! I hope you are not ill or something; I'm not trying to be nasty -- just clear about these things.

quote:
It may well raise many questions which I fear I do not have the expertise to answer.
Not sure what questions those would be...

David
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
So, the exercise of this supreme power is unhindered, even over Christ. Making Christ of questionable worth to us when He says He is there Himself whenever two or three are gathered in His name, since the papal claim is we must together with Christ look to the pope for supreme ruling.

I've... never, ever heard anything to suggest that the Popes have any power over Jesus Himself, nor that Jesus looks to the Papacy for ruling. Not when I was studying my catechism before being baptized Roman Catholic, not from any priest, nor anything I have read or heard since joining the Episcopal Church, nor anything I have ever read in any historical or church document going back all through the history of the Christian Church. It sounds like the sort of thing some anti-Catholic Protestants would claim RCs believe based on the words "infallibility of the Pope" but apart from what that doctrine actually consists of as ever taught by the RCC. In all seriousness, where did you hear this? [Confused]
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Whatever FUD is, just doing my bit.

It's a well-known tactic. Look, I have very little doubt that some demon is egging you on to do "your bit". That's not what I asked though. I asked "What is in it for you?" I think you will find your hands and heart quite empty in spite of all your efforts...
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
And IIRC it's only on special occasions, like the Easter Vigil, where adults are received into full communion with Rome.

Maybe if you do RCIA. I didn't.

I was received into the Church at Michaelmas in a private house chapel. I received Confirmation in the same place next Candlemas at the hands of the same cleric, the former parish priest of the parish in which the house is located. [My fellow former-Anglicans sometimes jest that should we be visited by a congenial bishop we could get him to do me "properly". ;-) ]
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
That's very odd and a breach of the canonical requirements. When a candidate is received into full communion - whatever the date - the priest is required at the same time to confer upon them the sacrament of confirmation.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
quote:
That's very odd and a breach of the canonical requirements. When a candidate is received into full communion - whatever the date - the priest is required at the same time to confer upon them the sacrament of confirmation.

Is this comething Christ gave us
 
Posted by Emma Louise (# 3571) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
No, Myrrh on anything RC is quite generally not even wrong.

A phrase with which I was not familiar.
That's a new one on me too! You learn something every day on the ship...
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
Methinks the Pope's real motive in this is to convert the Anglican Choirs of England such as King's College of Cambridge in order to teach Roman Catholics how to sing properly. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
I once heard the choir of Lichfield (anglican) cathedral singing at Mass in the (rc) cathedral of Strasbourg. I had no idea when I went into the cathdral who was singing but thought it was a very 'anglican' sound.

Most of the choir members received Communion.I wonder if this was an 'anglican use'Mass ?
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
You mean like this, Anglican_Brat? [Biased]
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
That's very odd and a breach of the canonical requirements. When a candidate is received into full communion - whatever the date - the priest is required at the same time to confer upon them the sacrament of confirmation.

I was just baptized after months of first CCD and then private study with a very nice nun (because I asked so many questions the lay person couldn't answer; she pretty much helped me find the books I needed, this being before the Internet or even decent local bookshops where I was). But then I had not been baptized before, so that may have been the reason.
 
Posted by Bishops Finger (# 5430) on :
 
Being in a rather Hellish mood this morning, I am very tempted to apply Pauli's remark 'That's not right. It's not even wrong.' to the opponents of women bishops..........

Ian J.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
I've... never, ever heard anything to suggest that...
That should tell you something.
 
Posted by Quam Dilecta (# 12541) on :
 
In response to Forthview's note about the members of a CofE choir receiving communion in Strasbourg Cathedral, it is my understanding that the RC bishops in France have generously granted permission for baptised Christians who believe in the Real Presence to receive the sacrament when they are visiting France and unable to receive the sacrament in thier own churches. It is very likely that their hosts informed the singers about this provision before the mass.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the coiled spring:
quote:
That's very odd and a breach of the canonical requirements. When a candidate is received into full communion - whatever the date - the priest is required at the same time to confer upon them the sacrament of confirmation.

Is this comething Christ gave us
Yes it is: Matthew 16:19 "I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever you bind on earth shall have been bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall have been loosed in heaven."
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
I've... never, ever heard anything to suggest that the Popes have any power over Jesus Himself, nor that Jesus looks to the Papacy for ruling. Not when I was studying my catechism before being baptized Roman Catholic, not from any priest, nor anything I have read or heard since joining the Episcopal Church, nor anything I have ever read in any historical or church document going back all through the history of the Christian Church. It sounds like the sort of thing some anti-Catholic Protestants would claim RCs believe based on the words "infallibility of the Pope" but apart from what that doctrine actually consists of as ever taught by the RCC. In all seriousness, where did you hear this? [Confused]

You've missed that I'm analysing the actual words used - IngoB has put in a link to CCC882. It's a statement about the papacy that has been fine tuned to say exactly what it says. I recall there was a huge kerfuffle about the word 'subsist' a few years ago, there's no ambiguity here in CCC882, it means what it says. The pope has assumed and teaches a superiority over the rest of the members of the Church in claiming he alone has perfect dibs on the Holy Spirit, which IngoB finds comforting and I find against the teachings of Christ. CCC882 is the statement about this and I've simply deconstructed it to show how this claim makes nonsense of Christ's teaching.

Myrrh

IngoB - I wrote:

quote:
Oddly right, then?

Well, there's valid and licit and I think the claims for validity are non existent because a) as you say above, they are built on an innovation and limited tradition, and b) because of the linear nature of succession in the RCC a validly ordained bishop can do as he please and still maintain the line of succession. Which takes us back to Anglican successions and their validity.

Apologies, this belonged in thought to the references you gave, so better read: I think the claims for what is valid or not are non existent, etc.

As with the reply to the Anglicans re valid priesthood, what the RCC think as priesthood is not an absolute. Here, those in the RCC ordaining women to the priesthood from valid succession have merely taken it out of the control of pope and magisterium, as did the Anglicans when they left. Illicit according to that control, but it cannot be ruled invalid.

These links have more on the women currently in the priesthood who have upped and done it, and the those still arguing from within the RC Church, much history and arguments on the subject, worth a good read.


Roman Catholic Women Priests

WomenPriestsdotorg


When Pope John Paul II wrote "Priestly ordination, which hands on the office entrusted by Christ to his Apostles of teaching, sanctifying and governing the faithful, has in the Catholic Church from the beginning always been reserved to men alone" in his Apostolic Letter, Ordinatio Sacerdotalis, he is not speaking the truth. Out of ignorance maybe, but the knowledge of the early Church hasn't been lost entirely, note the image of "Bishop Theodora in Women’s Episcopal Succession" and explanation on the first link.

And of course, always to be remembered here in Ireland, our own dear sweet Brigid, ordained bishop.

quote:
Originally posted by IngoB:
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Whatever FUD is, just doing my bit.

It's a well-known tactic. Look, I have very little doubt that some demon is egging you on to do "your bit". That's not what I asked though. I asked "What is in it for you?" I think you will find your hands and heart quite empty in spite of all your efforts...
What you think 'a little demon' might well be correct, I don't know 'what's egging me on', but if it is I'm glad of him, he made me look at my own Church first. Painful though it was. Perhaps just supporting, from the easy sideline, the braver as the likes of Ludmila Javorova who "regards herself as someone who has to offer her life in this cause: “In battle the first line always falls, so that the second line can get through.” (second link for her story).


Put not your trust in men and princes..


Myrrh
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
Apart from demons, and FUD, isn't this diving right on down into Dead Horses territory rather than Anglo-Papal relations at this point? [Confused]
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
That's very odd and a breach of the canonical requirements. When a candidate is received into full communion - whatever the date - the priest is required at the same time to confer upon them the sacrament of confirmation.

If you say so, Father. But the priest in question was in a position to know the relevant rules and I would be astonished to hear he'd disregarded them. I was received acccording to the new rite within the context of an usus antiquior Mass of the quasi-parochial community to which I belong. The officiant was the parish priest of the parish within which we operate.

Sorry for the further derailment, folks. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
Apart from demons, and FUD, isn't this diving right on down into Dead Horses territory rather than Anglo-Papal relations at this point? [Confused]

It still is about this. One of the points I've been making is that Anglican succession, as it comes from the linear model of succession of the RCC, is valid.

And so, the RCC is wrong to say it is invalid as it can only be called illicit in respect of RCC organisation. The women priests is another example of this.

The Anglicans never lost succession.

If the Anglo-Catholics want to 'return' because they don't like the way the Anglicans are going they will be going back to the claims of papacy, CCC882, and there is no guarantee that all the things they dislike aren't going to happen anyway in the process of "development of doctrine", which is the new doctrine from the infallible magisterium teaching authority to explain changes in the RCC.

What they should be considering, istm, is first whether or not they agree with the papal claims to supreme unhindered power over the universal Church, because it denies the power of the Holy Spirit equally to its members.

If they don't agree with this claim they'd be better off working out some arrangement with the Anglican community if they want whatever benefits there are in being part of a larger organisation, or going their own way.


Myrrh
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
That's very odd and a breach of the canonical requirements. When a candidate is received into full communion - whatever the date - the priest is required at the same time to confer upon them the sacrament of confirmation.

If you say so, Father. But the priest in question was in a position to know the relevant rules and I would be astonished to hear he'd disregarded them. I was received acccording to the new rite within the context of an usus antiquior Mass of the quasi-parochial community to which I belong. The officiant was the parish priest of the parish within which we operate.

Sorry for the further derailment, folks. [Hot and Hormonal]

Well, I do say so Chesterbelloc. Of course you have no reason to trust my word, especially since you would be astonished to trust me against your own priest. So I will need to quote Chapter and verse to you, which I have no difficulty in doing.

quote:
The Rite of Reception into the Full Communion of the Catholic Church respects the traditional sequence of confirmation before eucharist. When the Bishop, whose office it is to receive adult Christians into the full Communion of the Catholic Church (RCIA no.481) entrusts the celebration of the rite to a presbyter, the priest receives from the law itself (Canon 883:2)* the faculty to confirm the candidate for reception and is obliged to use it (Canon 885:2)^; he may not be prohibited from exercising it. The confirmation of such candidates for reception should not be deferred, nor should they be admitted to the Eucharist until they are confirmed. A diocesan bishop who is desirous of confirming those received into full communion should reserve the rite of reception to himself.

* Can. 883 The following possess the faculty of administering confirmation by the law itself:
§2. as regards the person in question, the presbyter who by virtue of office or mandate of the diocesan bishop baptizes one who is no longer an infant or admits one already baptized into the full communion of the Catholic Church;

^Can. 885 §1. The diocesan bishop is obliged to take care that the sacrament of confirmation is conferred on subjects who properly and reasonably seek it.
§2. A presbyter who possesses this faculty must use it for the sake of those in whose favor the faculty was granted.


That is a from the National Statutes of the Catechumenate, confirmed by the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments on 26 June 1988 (Prot. 1191/66). It is in the back of the Ritual The Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults, which I presume is what you mean by the "new rite". It simply expands upon what is already explicit in the Rite itself. For Confirmation is part of the Rite itself and there is no option given there to administer Confirmation at a later date.
 
Posted by Low Treason (# 11924) on :
 
Pardon me, folks...
*wrests the thread back on topic with herculaean effort*

In Tuesday's Guardian Hans Küng has suggested that any Anglicans who take advantage of Benny's generous offer "will never be more than second-class priests in the Roman church, ... [because] other Catholics are not meant to take part in their liturgical celebrations".

There does seem to be some signs that what is intended is a sort of ecclesiastical apartheid here. The ex-anglicans would be separated from the main body of the RC church, with their own priests and congregations kept firmly in their own churches with their old liturgical usage*. Would other Catholics be free to join them? Would the ex-anglican priests be allowed to minister to those outside their immediate flock?

I suspect maybe not.

However, it is all quite academic, as I very much doubt any complete congregation feels strongly enough to cross the Tiber lock, stock and barrel, together with clergy. Even in the highest and spikiest A-C

As to the church building, one FiFer is quoted in this week's Church Times as saying that "we must now apply ourselves to the task of securing our buildings and our assets.... If whole congregations are to enter a new Ordinariate..issues of finance and bricks and mortar will have... to be tackled".

Its not going to happen. If (say) the whole staff of a branch of Tesco decided to resign to work for Sainsbury's they would not expect to take the store with them. The bricks and mortar of a church do not belong to the congregation; they belong to the Church of England.

So the question is this: If Anglican clergy decide to become R/C, they can continue to celebrate in their 'traditional use' - which will I suspect be something which fairly closely resembles the Novus Ordo. They will have a small, probably negligable following from their former parish, no building, no assets. The CoE is certainly not going to be handing out any sort of dowry. According to Dr Küng, whose opinion makes sense to me at least, they will be set apart from the rest of the Church, in their own little nest of aspic. What on earth do they expect to do?
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
The only way that I can see those who are already Catholics being kept away from possible 'anglican use' Catholics would be by the obligation to come to the financial support of one's own parish.

Catholics easily go from one church building to another in order to attend Mass.In most areas there is a list of different Mass times within a given area.I can't see that any one would be forbidden from attending any church or rite which was in full communion with the Holy See.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
Kung's article is a poisonous piece of rhetoric riddled with errors from start to finish. Which is a scandal for someone who claims to be an academic. It's just one more piece of weaponry he seems to believe he has against the Pope - but it's a load of bunkum. Just three things:

First, this was not on the Pope's initiative. I wonder how often that will need to be stated. He did not send envoys to sniff out conservative Anglicans in the dead of night to say "come over to the dark side". He was responding to rather persistent appeals from some Anglicans.

Secondly, full communion means precisely that: full communion. When I visit churches of the Byzantine Rite, I am in full communion, I can concelebrate, I can receive Holy Communion. Likewise those of other rites can do the same with the Roman Rite: Ukrainian Rite Catholics are entirely free to receive Holy Communion in any Catholic Church. The same will be true of those in an Anglican Use.

Thirdly, the coralling into a separate corner is not the only thing on offer to Anglicans. If they do not wish to be in an Anglican "ghetto" then they are entirely free to join the wider RC Church. The Pope has in no way limited the reception of Anglicans to this provision. It's for those who have asked for it.


I wonder where this death of ecumenism has come about. I have not heard of any cancellation of all the other ecumenical endeavours which have been going on. ARCIC and all those other bilateral discussions still seem to be in place. Mind you, I also wonder where these wonderful fruits of a well tested and fruitful dialogue that Kung seems to believe in are to be found. We are no nearer to full communion with each other than we ever were.

[Disappointed]
 
Posted by Carys (# 78) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
First, this was not on the Pope's initiative. I wonder how often that will need to be stated. He did not send envoys to sniff out conservative Anglicans in the dead of night to say "come over to the dark side". He was responding to rather persistent appeals from some Anglicans.

Or ex-Anglicans even, as the main thrust comes from a 'continuing body' that was not I believe in communion with Canterbury. AIUI, but I might have got confused.

Carys
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Carys:
Or ex-Anglicans even, as the main thrust comes from a 'continuing body' that was not I believe in communion with Canterbury. AIUI, but I might have got confused.

I thought those Anglicans in the Continuing Movement were in fact Anglicans just not in communion with Canterbury?
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
From the Hans Kung link above, he says:
quote:
As I wrote in 1967, "a resumption of ecclesial community between the Catholic church and the Anglican church" would be possible, when "the Church of England, on the one side, shall be given the guarantee that its current autochthonous and autonomous church order under the Primate of Canterbury will be preserved fully" and when, "on the other side, the Church of England shall recognise the existence of a pastoral primacy of Petrine ministry as the supreme authority for mediation and arbitration between the churches." "In this way," I expressed my hopes then, "out of the Roman imperium might emerge a Catholic commonwealth."

But Pope Benedict is set upon restoring the Roman imperium. He makes no concessions to the Anglican communion. On the contrary, he wants to preserve the medieval, centralistic Roman system for all ages – even if this makes impossible the reconciliation of the Christian churches in fundamental questions.

Kung's suggestion that a 'pastoral primacy' is the answer here errs in that it is still the mindset he calls medieval. It's growth began in the early centuries concommitant with the claims for primacy in old Rome which were as one pastoral and territorial.

Why would the Anglicans want to revert back to this? Can the one be separated from the other? How does the claim for infallibility not fall into the sphere of the pastoral? How can the pastoral not be included in the territorial since Kung is giving the right of supreme authority in arbitration to it?

He's still stuck in the medieval mindset himself.

Orthodox principle is that only Christ is the Head of the Church full stop. The development in the last century or so of the EP publicing himself as the 'spiritual head of the Orthodox' is a corruption, called neo-papism. Unfortunately, the only Orthodox speaking out against this are the Russian who have themselves created a 'patriarch+synod' neo-papism so they together with the other patriarchal Churches who are not speaking out against this can't be an example of the pre-medieval mindset.

Istm, the Anglican community alone of these three in the 'trinity+eucharist+apostolic succession' claim are closest to the earlier pre-primacy organisation of bishops in relationship to each other.

Myrrh
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Carys:
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
First, this was not on the Pope's initiative. I wonder how often that will need to be stated. He did not send envoys to sniff out conservative Anglicans in the dead of night to say "come over to the dark side". He was responding to rather persistent appeals from some Anglicans.

Or ex-Anglicans even, as the main thrust comes from a 'continuing body' that was not I believe in communion with Canterbury. AIUI, but I might have got confused.

Carys

That's what I thought. But having been alerted to its existence by this thread, I listened to some of the stuff on this page, which suggests otherwise. The PEVs are very open about the fact that they were part of these discussions, with the full knowledge of the Abp of Canterbury. Their speeches are quite revealing I believe.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
This might help.

Statement by FiF in response to news from the Revision Committee
Oct 9, 2009



FiF reacts to Statement from Rome Oct 20, 2009


Statement from Rome


Myrrh
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
TT - Anglo-Catholics converting to the RCC will be in a different class of ghetto to the others, IIRC.

They will be 'ordained' in the RCC. No Melkite or Ukrainian Uniate I've ever heard considers the CCC to be binding on them, it's limited to the 'Latin' Church, i.e. the Diocese of the Bishop of Rome which is the RCC. Things may have changed.


Myrrh
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):

Justifying Anglican belief and sacraments is best IMO done from within the Anglican tradition itself otherwise you end up with absurdities like the 'Three Branch' theory which many Anglicans would not accept. I find Edward Green's statement much more Anglican than the 'Three Branch' theory.

The two are not mutually exclusive. Although I see the third branch as wider, and also deficient.

Methodism and Lutheranism are also part.

The Reformation was and is necessary. We may have gone too far in parts, and not far enough in others. In respect to Rome, it is also a reformed Catholic church in some aspects.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
[The 'Three Branch' theory is not Anglican 'doctrine'. It was a belief held by a number of Anglo-Catholics to self-justify.

I must take issue with your statement here -- I certainly believe it because I think it is true, and the others I have known who believe it appear, IMO, to be doing so in all intellectual honesty, and not to "self-justify."

...

My post was not about 'you' or 'me'.

When the Church of England was formed I believe it was as a comprehensive national church.

It has, traditionally, been held that you can understand the XXXIX Articles from different points of view.

The idea of what I (or anyone else) believes is true being equated with 'Anglican doctrine' scares the willies out of me.

You were not, I believe, amongst the original A-C proponents of the 'Three Branch' theory which I do believe they used to justify their own stance.

I fear we were not communicating on this issue so any further critique from me of your position would, I fear, be to no purpose.

There have been many noncommunications on SOF.

I sincerely wish you well, but I'm out of here.
 
Posted by Low Treason (# 11924) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
quote:
Originally posted by Carys:
Or ex-Anglicans even, as the main thrust comes from a 'continuing body' that was not I believe in communion with Canterbury. AIUI, but I might have got confused.

I thought those Anglicans in the Continuing Movement were in fact Anglicans just not in communion with Canterbury?
Surely an 'Anglican' is someone who is in communion with Canterbury. It is the Canterbury link which defines the anglicanism.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Quam dilecta - I should not have pretended to express surprise that the choir of the anglican cathedral at Lichfield were offered communion in the (rc) cathedral of Strasbourg,even although this was over 20 years ago.

Not only in France,but anywhere in the world a baptized Christian who is desirous of receiving Communion,can receive this ,exceptionally, in a Catholic church,if :
they cannot reach a pastor of their own religious community and
if they share the Catholic understanding of what the Eucharist is.

It would,for example ,be unusual for an anglican in England,not to be able to reach an anglican church,so there is not much need for this amongst Anglicans in England.

The French bishops (and other clergy) tend to interpret this provision very generously.

The plenary sessions of the French bishops'conference are taking [place in Lourdes this week. In the past,(I don't know about this time) some of the delegates were Reformed christians who were invited to participate in Communion.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Low Treason:
Surely an 'Anglican' is someone who is in communion with Canterbury. It is the Canterbury link which defines the anglicanism.

Perhaps not any more? Surely the members of the Continuing Churches are Anglican? They have the BCP and all the other patrimony of Anglicanism. Maybe, to be clear, one should say that they are "of the Anglican tradition?" Or, maybe they are Anglican and those who remain in the Episcopal Church and CofE, etc are no longer Anglican since they have abaondoned the faith - at least from the Continuers point of view.

As for the side issue of RC's giving communion to non-RCs I don't like it. It implies a unity that is just not there.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:

As for the side issue of RC's giving communion to non-RCs I don't like it. It implies a unity that is just not there.

You might not like it, mate, but at least in the examples quoted it is in line with RCC official discipline. What that says about unity is for discussion elsewhere.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
Some of the excuses for giving communion to Protestants, like at weddings and funerals, are quite flimsy and not the sort of exceptional circumstance that Rome's guidelines had in mind. That said, the one occasion that I have personal knowledge of where a priest gave communion and the anointing of the sick to a non-Catholic was more than justified. In the continuing Anglican church of which I was once a member, the priest was literally too much of a lazy, fat ass to visit one of the parishioners in the hospital who was recovering from a serious heart bypass operation. Some of his Catholic friends intervened and got the local Catholic pastor to give him the sacraments.

Incredibly, this fat lazy ass priest was later ordained a Catholic priest...but outside the United States far away from where his shortcomings were well-known!
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
When I talk of 'relativist' and 'absolute' I mean that, with the rise of critical biblical scholarship since the midnineteenth century, Anglicans and members of other churches which came out of the Reformation have moved away from feeling they have to believe literally in what were once considered core Christian beliefs. We are talking here of matters such as the Virgin Birth; the Incarnation and the Resurrection.

Plenty of us haven't "moved away". But they tend to be the Protestants least likely to want organisational unity with Rome.

If your introduction to Anglicanism was on the evangelical side of things you are used to Anglo-Catholics being disparaged as liberals. Well, to be honest, Roman Catholics as well...

quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
quote:
Originally posted by Low Treason:
Surely an 'Anglican' is someone who is in communion with Canterbury. It is the Canterbury link which defines the anglicanism.

Perhaps not any more? Surely the members of the Continuing Churches are Anglican?

Maybe. But these continuing "Anglicans" are part of a local spat within ECUSA which is in some ways a pretty different kind of thing to most of the rest of the worldwide Anglican Communion anyway.

quote:

They have the BCP and all the other patrimony of Anglicanism. Maybe, to be clear, one should say that they are "of the Anglican tradition?"

That might work if we had to find a sentence to describe them that has the word "Anglican" in it. But it also applies to the Methodists, who also "have the BCP and all the other patrimony of Anglicanism". And there are a lot more of them and most of them are probably nearer to the look and feel of worldwide Anglicanism than your "continuing" churches are. Though in the UK (I am not so sure about other countries) Methodists tend to be more liberal than Anglicans.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
Is there any truth in that what Paul wrote, concerning if we eat the Bread we are one body. Or has this become a lie thanks to man changing things to suit his own ideas.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
But it also applies to the Methodists, who also "have the BCP and all the other patrimony of Anglicanism".

The Methodists... have... the BCP?? [Confused]

Is this only in the UK? I genuinely didn't know this...
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
When I talk of 'relativist' and 'absolute' I mean that, with the rise of critical biblical scholarship since the midnineteenth century, Anglicans and members of other churches which came out of the Reformation have moved away from feeling they have to believe literally in what were once considered core Christian beliefs. We are talking here of matters such as the Virgin Birth; the Incarnation and the Resurrection.

Plenty of us haven't "moved away". But they tend to be the Protestants least likely to want organisational unity with Rome.
I'm puzzled by this (well, mainly Sir P's comment rather than Ken's response, but that's puzzling too.) In what sense have the doctrines mentioned ever been regarded as 'literally' true except in the way that people talk about it 'literally raining cats and dogs'? They are divine mysteries, surely, for which human language is inadequate. To regard them as 'literally' true in the same sense that my computer is literally on the desk (I nearly said 'standing' on the desk, but that is a metaphor) is to trivialise them.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ChastMastr:
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
But it also applies to the Methodists, who also "have the BCP and all the other patrimony of Anglicanism".

The Methodists... have... the BCP?? [Confused]

Is this only in the UK? I genuinely didn't know this...

Seasick and others please comment, but AIUI the official Communion rite (insofar as the Methodist Church has an official liturgy) used to be the 1662 BCP rite with only very minor alterations. I doubt if the modern service book is very different from any of the officially Anglican variants of the BCP.

But I'm speaking of course of England (and Wales?).
 
Posted by Unjust Stuart (# 13953) on :
 
quote:
Surely an 'Anglican' is someone who is in communion with Canterbury. It is the Canterbury link which defines the anglicanism.
...substitute "Catholic" for "Anglican" and "Rome" for Canterbury. Discuss for five hundred years.
 
Posted by seasick (# 48) on :
 
Most of Methodist liturgy owes a debt to the BCP of 1662. Methodism comes in two broad categories depending whether it finds its origin in the British Church or the American Church. For the American Church the liturgy comes from John Wesley's abridgement of the Prayer Book and for the British Church, it comes from the Prayer Book itself. From my year in the States, I know that some of the UMC liturgy is still clearly connected to its BCP heritage, with a great deal of influence from the liturgical movement, now, of course. In Great Britain, the usual communion liturgy until 1975 was that of the 1936 Book of Offices which was very close indeed to the 1662 service. The 1936 service was retained in the 75 book as an alternative, but, AIUI, very little used. The main rite then was in the modern western structure. Since then we have had a further book in which the 1936 service is no longer included. That book would indeed look largely familiar to the modern Anglican tradition of liturgy. There are still many texts that come to us from the Prayer Book though (notably collects). In UK Methodism we never de-authorise things so those older books are still just as much authorised liturgy as they ever were, although they are obviously not used as much these days. Hinde St Methodist Church in London still maintain a weekly Eucharist according to the 1936 service; I'm not sure if anyone else still uses it.

[The Methodist Church here is of Great Britain so the authorised liturgy is the same in England, Wales and Scotland. The Methodist Church in Ireland is autonomous, though closely related.]

[ 02. November 2009, 16:22: Message edited by: seasick ]
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
Kung's article is a poisonous piece of rhetoric riddled with errors from start to finish. Which is a scandal for someone who claims to be an academic. It's just one more piece of weaponry he seems to believe he has against the Pope - but it's a load of bunkum.

Hans Kung is just upset because the grand vision of the Roman Congregational Church that he was pushing (back in the salad days of the late 1970s) now looks like it will never happen. Cry me a river, Haensel... [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Low Treason:
Surely an 'Anglican' is someone who is in communion with Canterbury. It is the Canterbury link which defines the anglicanism.

Once everything else is made optional, I suppose that's all that's left.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
Once everything else is made optional, I suppose that's all that's left.

No, I would say the most "catholic" element of the ECUSA now is the idea that the bishop controls the property and buildings.

[ 02. November 2009, 16:38: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
In what sense have the doctrines mentioned ever been regarded as 'literally' true [...]? They are divine mysteries, surely, for which human language is inadequate.

Um, in the sense that Christ was literally born of an actual never-had-sexual-intercourse virgin, and that He bodily rose from the grave in which he was laid? What's not "literal" about that? They've pretty much always and to date been the usual understanding of these doctrines. The mystery is how (and how wonderfully) they happened and what an utter change they make to everything.
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
To regard them as 'literally' true in the same sense that my computer is literally on the desk (I nearly said 'standing' on the desk, but that is a metaphor) is to trivialise them.

On the contrary. To make of them mythic metaphors is to trivialise them - by denying their plain, stark and astonishing truth.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Low Treason:
Surely an 'Anglican' is someone who is in communion with Canterbury. It is the Canterbury link which defines the anglicanism.

That is where the problem is, we should be in communion with Christ not a man-made institution like Canterbury/Rome/ or any of the other grouping which takes away focus from God.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Should Anglicans who might want to come into full communion with the Holy See choose to use the proposed 'anglican use' they would not be the only ones within the Latin rite church to do so.

Within the ecclesiastical province of Milan a good number of parishes use the Ambrosian rite instead of the Roman rite.They are not considered to be 'set in aspic'

Incidentally in certain parts of the south of Italy there are also some parishes which use the Greek Catholic rite instead of the Roman rite.These are not Eastern Europeans but the descendants of Albanians who came to Italy almost 1000 years ago and who have continued to use the Greek rites(including some married priests).

I also wonder by what standards one can classify the church in Italy as dead.

For many Italians a 'practicing'Catholic is one who goes to Mass at Christmas and Easter.Last Christmas it was announced that 72% of the population had assisted at Mass. If that is the benchmark then the church is not dead.

If one wants to judge it by the fervour or practice of those who go to church,then there are many parishes which have thriving communities.To take only one parish which I know quite well - parrocchia di S.Agostino,Ventimiglia there are 3 Masses each day which attract at least 150 people,not counting those who visit the church at other times of the day.There is a good choir and if you look at the website for the diocese of Ventimiglia-San Remo you'll find a comprehensive list of activities which attract a good number of people.
Of course there are many more who could be involved,but the Church is certainly not dead.
I have nothing against the Tridentine rite -in fact I love it - but I don't think that wholesale re-adoption of the Tridentine rite would greatly increase the numbers of those regularly attending church and seriously trying to live out the christian life.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
Heck, apart from all the issues under discussion here, wherever there are two or three gathered in Jesus' name, the church is not "dead"...
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Low Treason:
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
quote:
Originally posted by Carys:
Or ex-Anglicans even, as the main thrust comes from a 'continuing body' that was not I believe in communion with Canterbury. AIUI, but I might have got confused.

I thought those Anglicans in the Continuing Movement were in fact Anglicans just not in communion with Canterbury?
Surely an 'Anglican' is someone who is in communion with Canterbury. It is the Canterbury link which defines the anglicanism.
Of course, Rome is not bound by that definition nor should she be bound. That said, Rome should be VERY CAREFUL about who is permitted to be ordained in these new Ordinariates, especially from continuing Anglican backgrounds. Rome and the local ordinaries have not always been so careful in the past.

[ 02. November 2009, 21:34: Message edited by: Shadowhund ]
 
Posted by Oremus (# 13853) on :
 
Yes Rome should be very careful - some of these A/Cs will make us look like protestants -LOL.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Oremus:
Yes Rome should be very careful - some of these A/Cs will make us look like protestants -LOL.

I think what Shadowhund is trying to say is that some of the continuing Anglican clergy shouldn't be ordained to the RC priesthood under any circumstance.

Sadly, he is correct; there are some phenomenally bad apples in that barrel, for sure.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
When I talk of 'relativist' and 'absolute' I mean that, with the rise of critical biblical scholarship since the midnineteenth century, Anglicans and members of other churches which came out of the Reformation have moved away from feeling they have to believe literally in what were once considered core Christian beliefs. We are talking here of matters such as the Virgin Birth; the Incarnation and the Resurrection.

Plenty of us haven't "moved away". But they tend to be the Protestants least likely to want organisational unity with Rome.

If your introduction to Anglicanism was on the evangelical side of things you are used to Anglo-Catholics being disparaged as liberals. Well, to be honest, Roman Catholics as well...

...

One of the reasons I have never subscribed to the 'Three Branch' theory is because I find it makes nonsense of Anglicanism as a comprehensive church which can include both the High and Low Church perspectives.

The phrase 'Anglo-Catholic' seems to cover a wide range of stances. It was interesting ChastMastr had to obtain a definition of 'liberal Anglo-Catholic' from Edward Green and then made a statement about 'doctrine' he believed because of 'the sort of Anglo-Catholic I am'. At this point any querying of the 'doctrine' seemed to imply a personal attack.

To become involved with his microcritique of my post - which I found to contain some rather strange suggestions - seemed futile.

I understand both Angloid's questioning of 'literal truth' and Chesterbelloc's rebuttal of him.

We will continue to differ amongst ourselves.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
Shadowhund writes:
quote:
Rome and the local ordinaries have not always been so careful in the past.
Indeed, they haven't always been so careful in their own dioceses! I fear that a few of my Latin friends should never have gotten porrected, and I can think of one Byzantine Catholic eparchate here which could use a good housecleaning among its clergy. However, the point is fair: continuing Anglican theological training has been iffy and there are ordinands who have had little more than supervised reading. I have met an odd duck or two.

Currently the local RCs, taking in clergy from other churches, run them through comprehensive interviews (involving their wives, when they be married), checking out their seminary courseload, the time elapsed, etc, and then setting them on a 1-3 year remedial training schedule. The ones with whom I have spoke had to suck up much more philosophy than they knew existed, as well as the expected moral theology & canon law. They tended to be able to out-argue their liturgical profs, but that may have been the individuals involved. I expect that the new absorbees will go through a similar procedure: as the Canadian numbers coming in from ACCC are not likely to be more than a few dozen (some will prefer to continue on, I would imagine), this should be a manageable procedure.

These days, the RCs run their ordinands through a raft of psychological tests to keep out Undesireables of varying types. I would imagine that somehow interviews with the new applicants will be searching- I know of two who will almost certainly not make it, but I have been proven wrong in the past.

My anglophone Latin contacts are a bit bemused by this -- those of Irish provenance not really enthusiastic--, but the francophones seem quite pleased. One Latin administrative cleric I know is desperately hoping that he can get a few young priests that he can borrow for parishes, their shortage being serious and getting worse. Our local (Ottawa) separating parishes are run by folk celebrating the joys of the XXXIX and who identify heresy, ungodliness, sodomy, and chasubles as being closely connected, so I see no interest from their side (with one possible exception) and had to tell my contact so.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
quote:
Originally posted by Oremus:
Yes Rome should be very careful - some of these A/Cs will make us look like protestants -LOL.

I think what Shadowhund is trying to say is that some of the continuing Anglican clergy shouldn't be ordained to the RC priesthood under any circumstance.

Sadly, he is correct; there are some phenomenally bad apples in that barrel, for sure.

Yes, that is exactly what I meant. Some of the TAC clergy were thinking that they were going to be admitted to full communion (and ordained) as they were. I was relieved to see that a jerry-rigged ordinariate structure was being created that would prevent that.
 
Posted by LQ (# 11596) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
Our local (Ottawa) separating parishes are run by folk celebrating the joys of the XXXIX and who identify heresy, ungodliness, sodomy, and chasubles as being closely connected, so I see no interest from their side (with one possible exception) and had to tell my contact so.

OTOH, I'll miss being able to visit the Cathedral of the Annunciation as a communicant if TAC goes over.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LQ:
OTOH, I'll miss being able to visit the Cathedral of the Annunciation as a communicant if TAC goes over.

Why, would the cathedral itself be transferred to the RCC?
 
Posted by John Holding (# 158) on :
 
The Cathedral of the Annunciation in question is part of the Anglican Catholic CHurch (I think that's the right name), the group that left the Anglican Church of Canada over the ordination of women. It is incidently a defender of the Canadian BCP of 1959/62 as opposed to the evil modern language rits used by the ACC. They are of course not in communion with Canterbury, and never have been, despite the fact that their sceond bishop was a member of the Community of the Resurrection from Mirfield.

When its people left, they of course took no buildings with them...their first Bishop actually left on the eve of Palm Sunday, leaving the local AC shrine in the hands of a former Lutheran minister (a good man, but at that point he'd only been an anglican for a few months) and a 16 year old MC for the whole of the HOly Week and Easter seasons.

I was unaware that the group in question was part of the TAC. I should have thought, otherwise, that they were highly unlikely to take advantage of the Pope's invitation.

John
 
Posted by otyetsfoma (# 12898) on :
 
You write as if Father Carmino deliberately abandonned his parish: the fact is that despite previous assurances of a right to disagree he was ousted by a kangaroo court of the diocesan Archdeacon Len Baird and Archbishop Bill Davis, who asked how much time he needed to vacate his rectory; and were dismayed to find he owned his own house. He did not abandon:he was pushed.
 
Posted by otyetsfoma (# 12898) on :
 
Forgive the double posting. You're right about their unwillingness to go Romeward: Carmino de Catanzaro was close to Orthodoxy. He did scholarly translation work for St Vladimir Press, and the OCA allowed him the use of their building when they had nowhere else to go.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Read this today. Stereotypes, misinformation. Somebody is feeling threatened.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
"[the RCC] does not permit gay clergy (even though until recently pedophilia was secretly tolerated?)"

Wow.

Thurible
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
The Bishop of Arizona (for it is he) quoth:

quote:
Is the idea "If you hate gay people and women, then come join us" one Benedict really wants to support?
Oh, FFS.

If I were in his diocese, I'd be even keener on doing what I'm thinking of doing anyway.

What Alt Wally said, apart from that.

quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Read this today. Stereotypes, misinformation. Somebody is feeling threatened.


 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
Eh. It's a way of boosting morale by appealing to a supposed outside threat. Perhaps I could return the favor by saying, with some justice, that the Episcopal Bishop of Arizona's advertising pitch is: "if your God is your anus or vagina, then The Episcopal Church is just the place for you!"

'Tis sad, though, what has happened to that diocese over the years. Joseph Harte was an Anglo-Catholic and a member of the Board of the old Evangelical and Catholic Mission. Icabod.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
The Bishop of Arizona's punctuation is so whimsical it is difficult to know precisely what he means.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Shadowhund wrote
quote:
"if your God is your anus or vagina, then The Episcopal Church is just the place for you!"
Shadowhund - do you actually have some backup for this assertion, or is it just a free-floating insult? Either way, I hardly see how it contributes to the discussion.

Perhaps rather more pertinently, I fail to see how the bishop's assertions match the Episcopal church's own membership statistics, which show that Arizona is losing communicant members at the rate of 2.6% per annum (stats. here). If Arizona has that many Catholics joining them, then where on earth has everyone else been leaving for? Orthodoxy? Protestant denoms.?

[ 05. November 2009, 16:13: Message edited by: Honest Ron Bacardi ]
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
[QB] Shadowhund wrote [QUOTE] "if your God is your anus or vagina, then The Episcopal Church is just the place for you!"

Shadowhund - do you actually have some backup for this assertion, or is it just a free-floating insult? Either way, I hardly see how it contributes to the discussion.

My rhetoric is no more overblown than the Episcopal Bishop of Arizona, which was the point. Too bad I didn't add, a la Luther, "sodomite captivity of the Episcopalians." If you don't like that sort of rhetoric from your bishops, write them and complain. Otherwise, tough noogies.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
The bishop isn't posting on this thread. So however silly and insulting his words are, there's no call for your posts to emulate his maunderings.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Hmmm. Let's take a look at that offending paragraph.
quote:
But is the building up of a church on the basis of hatred consistent with Jesus' message?
Of course not. Who said it was?

quote:
Is the idea "If you hate gay people and women, then come join us" one Benedict really wants to support?
I seriously doubt it. But where did this come from, exactly? There's a pattern emerging here...

quote:
Or is this gesture likely to become, as I suspect, a tremendous embarrassment to present and future generations of Roman Catholics?
So the guy is a fully paid-up whig on some travelator to la-la land, where all is beautiful all the time, in the future of course.

Shadowhund, the guy is a culture-warrior. He demonstrates many of the traits in that very blog post, e.g. the demonization of others, the construction of an alternative reality which can be populated by one's enemies, who one hates so very much, the authoritarian temperament, the uncritical swallowing of the myth of progress*, the laundry-list of approved causes... Thank you Lord that I am not like them.

And guess what? Here you come with the same stuff except from the other corner. Has it occurred to you that the world might by now have tired of all this puritanical silliness? For puritanical it assuredly all is - purifying the church is what it is all about.

Perhaps if B16's words and actions were analysed more realistically, rather than being forced onto the Procrustean bed of American socio-political norms, then we might get somewhere. At least, that was my hope when this thread started up.

(* - in his case. For conservatives, replace with the myth of the golden age.)
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
RuthW, that is not your call.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
You tried to justify your insulting words here by saying you were simply matching those of someone who is not posting here, so your justification fails. I'm not making a judgement call; I'm taking apart your reasoning.
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Read this today. Stereotypes, misinformation. Somebody is feeling threatened.

I'm usually pretty thick-skinned on Catholic stuff. I figure, "we're a big target and we have been know to strut and swagger, so any criticism we get is more or less something we asked for." But this made me want to smack the good bishop upside the head.

Then I took a deep breath and decided that the charitable interpretation is that he is a bishop of little brain and so cannot be held responsible for his words.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
That, and he's getting a due beating below in the comments box, the insufferable arse.

[ 05. November 2009, 18:26: Message edited by: Chesterbelloc ]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FCB:
But this made me want to smack the good bishop upside the head.

Well yes, it wasn't just some basic nativist style trope; as thurible noted in the part he quoted, Bishop Kirk had to get a shot in below the belt.

Tsk, Tsk.

[ 05. November 2009, 19:15: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
then where on earth has everyone else been leaving for? Orthodoxy? Protestant denoms.?

Presumably where most people end up who leave churches, in Arizona and elsewhere: the sofa and Sunday papers.
 
Posted by welsh anglican (# 11566) on :
 
I haven't said anything for such a long time on here BUT
for goodness sake! We fought for a reformation in the 16th century. If you think the Vicar of Rome can offer you more than the Archbishop of Canterbury then go. Leave us remaining Anglicans to welcome those beloved of Christ.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by welsh anglican:
I haven't said anything for such a long time on here BUT
for goodness sake! We fought for a reformation in the 16th century. If you think the Vicar of Rome can offer you more than the Archbishop of Canterbury then go. Leave us remaining Anglicans to welcome those beloved of Christ.

A few points :

1. He's the Bishop of Rome, not its Vicar.

2. How many of those principles, over which so much blood was shed during the Reformation, are still thought by Anglicans to be important?

3. Are you suggesting that Roman Catholics are not beloved of Christ?
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Are there any monasteries around to dissolve and expropriate?
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
As the actual details of how these Anglicans will be received are fleshed out I think many waverers may hold back.

So much venom has been expressed about the business from some quarters that I fear it has been blown completely out of proportion.

Normal service(s) will continue. [Votive]
 
Posted by Choirboy (# 9659) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Hooker's Trick:
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
then where on earth has everyone else been leaving for? Orthodoxy? Protestant denoms.?

Presumably where most people end up who leave churches, in Arizona and elsewhere: the sofa and Sunday papers.
The sofa, perhaps, but surely not the Sunday papers or the newspaper industry would be going gangbusters.
 
Posted by ChastMastr (# 716) on :
 
Hmmm, might some of the attrition being older parishioners dying off without being replaced by their offspring?

(Getting sort of off-topic, but that occurred to me...)
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
quote:
Originally posted by welsh anglican:
I haven't said anything for such a long time on here BUT
for goodness sake! We fought for a reformation in the 16th century. If you think the Vicar of Rome can offer you more than the Archbishop of Canterbury then go. Leave us remaining Anglicans to welcome those beloved of Christ.

A few points :

1. He's the Bishop of Rome, not its Vicar.

2. How many of those principles, over which so much blood was shed during the Reformation, are still thought by Anglicans to be important?

3. Are you suggesting that Roman Catholics are not beloved of Christ?

There are plenty of Anglicans who balk at making belief in Transubstantiation, a theory derived more from Aristotle than from the Gospel writers, a mandatory doctrine in which one's eternal salvation is in peril if one does not accept it fuly.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Maybe a Catholic theologian could explain this better, but I thought that transubstantiation was expressed in Aristotelian terms, not that one was actually required to subscribe to Aristotelian thought. Presumably that which is being described is amenable to other descriptive forms.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
AB I should leave those who are roman catholics to worry about their eternal salvation being in peril if they do not accept transubstantiation.

I can assure you that no Roman Catholic would consider your eternal salvation to be in peril if you do not accept this doctrine. It may of course be in peril for other reasons,but that must be,as in everyone's case, between God and you.

The word 'transubstantiation' is a word which tries to cover in human language something which is difficult for us to comprehend.
 
Posted by FCB (# 1495) on :
 
When the term "transubstantiation" arose, the only works of Aristotle that were known in the West were his Categories; it was only much later that anyone read his Physics or Metaphysics, so there is nothing particularly "Aristotelian" about even the term transubstantiation. All it involves is the affirmation that the one can distinguish between something is and how it appears (in the way I might affirm that I am the same person even if I lose 20 lbs or grow six inches).

Aquinas, of course, later tried to neaten this up and make it conform to Aristotle's thought, but no one is required to affirm Aquinas's particular construal of transubstantiation.

I have had this come up with a number of Catholic-minded Anglicans: they see transubstantiation as a real sticking point. For the life of me, I can't really see why, particularly if one believes that what is on the altar after the consecration is not bread and wine but the body and blood of Christ. What exactly is it about the doctrine that proves so difficult to Anglicans who might be inclined in a Romeward direction?

[ 06. November 2009, 12:00: Message edited by: FCB ]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
There are plenty of Anglicans who balk at making belief in Transubstantiation
I would hope so, having myself once witnessed at an Episcopal Church the unconsumed contents of the chalice unceremoniously dumped on the grass.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
The Bishop of Monmouth has this to say.

One of the clergy in his diocese comments thusly.

Thurible
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
There are plenty of Anglicans who balk at making belief in Transubstantiation
I would hope so, having myself once witnessed at an Episcopal Church the unconsumed contents of the chalice unceremoniously dumped on the grass.
Where, exactly, do you think the remaining particles go when a sacrarium is used?
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
If you go and dig up the sacrarium after three days, you will find they are not there anymore [Biased]

[ 06. November 2009, 15:26: Message edited by: Triple Tiara ]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
Where, exactly, do you think the remaining particles go when a sacrarium is used?

I think we may be talking about something different. I ran across
this (pdf) which makes me think what I witnessed was not unique.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
At the risk of appearing Eccles-ish, you do know what a sacrarium is, don't you? And you do know that RCs use them too? And you do know where anything that goes down it ends up?

So if the church is small and doesn't have a sacrarium, how is pouring it on the ground different when it comes directly from the chalice instead of being funneled to the ground after being poured into something that looks like a sink but isn't?
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Organ Builder, I think the difference is between consuming all that can possibly be consumed, rinsing and pouring; and just pouring out what is leftover. Does that make sense?
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
An article from the Catholic Herald talking of how the offer has been 400 years in the making.

Thurible
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
AW, I've always seen the consumption of anything that wasn't deliberately planned for Reservation, but that is probably because I prefer the higher-candle congregations.

Still, I'm not sure I would care to make my judgments on the reverence of others based on quantity, since it is my understanding that the Completeness of the Sacrament is in every portion. So (if we move from the wine to the bread for a moment...) a respectful manner of disposing of one host--or one crumb--would still be a respectful manner for disposing of a whole bakery's worth (though I can't imagine why that would ever be a necessity).
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Organ Builder

quote:
AW, I've always seen the consumption of anything that wasn't deliberately planned for Reservation, but that is probably because I prefer the higher-candle congregations.
I was used to both reservation and benediction before attending the un-named parish. I was surprised not only by this practice (i.e. the grass), but by the somewhat Zwinglian views I ran across in conversation with others about communion. The same parish later had a Lutheran pastor as an interim minister.

For my own part, I could come to no other conclusion that this difference in approach to the sacrament was not catholic. Not just at that parish, but in any joined to it in sacramental union, since that is the foundation of a "catholic" church. It was an ecclesological problem in my mind without resolution. In other words I couldn't be in one parish where the sacrament was reserved and adored, and go down the street where the altar servers are essntially just dumping the same stuff out. Everybody deals with these things in their own way though.

Transubstantion is something I of course accept, and it is not only consistent with the gospels (John of course in particular), but with the church fathers and therefore the tradition of the church itself.

quote:
Still, I'm not sure I would care to make my judgments on the reverence of others based on quantity, since it is my understanding that the Completeness of the Sacrament is in every portion
But we don't allow just stuffing everything down the sacrarium. So it enters the equation.

----

The article Thurible posted is interesting. I noticed this quote

quote:
What would the Anglican Church do if 400,000 Methodists asked to come into the Church of England while being allowed to keep their distinctive traditions? My guess is that it would be churlish to refuse, and they would be warmly welcomed, despite the possible risks.
I believe in this thread it has been suggested that this would be a good thing, and if necessary to do so without re-ordaining anyone. I believe Dom Gregory Dix said that if something like that ever happened, it would essentially prove that Leo XIII was basically correct.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
One of the clergy in his diocese comments thusly.

Thurible

From Thurible's link, I loved this:

quote:
To make a certain number of churches in Wales available for the use of a personal ordinariate would make a great deal of sense – financially certainly, but also in terms of the future of inter-church relationships in Wales: a generous response from the Church in Wales itself would help dispel the perception that damage has been done to ecumenical relationships (not only by the recent announcement itself, but also by the developments which made the offer necessary) and it would inevitably result in a reciprocal generosity of approach on the part of those who wish to leave and also the wider community of the Catholic Church which they would be joining. It would be ecumenical credit in the bank and a truly charitable response to those Christian brothers and sisters who are unable to accept the changes brought about in Anglicanism in recent years.
I have to ask, what's the point of "ecumenical credit in the bank," especially when all of the credit seems to be one-sided? Getting the Vatican to concede anything is next to impossible. (And I don't count the ordinariate option as a concession; it's already something they do with the Eastern Rite churches.]

Pardon my unusual candor, but if the pope wants more churches in Wales, he can sell a ring or two.

[ 06. November 2009, 20:27: Message edited by: Martin L ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:

quote:
What would the Anglican Church do if 400,000 Methodists asked to come into the Church of England while being allowed to keep their distinctive traditions? My guess is that it would be churlish to refuse, and they would be warmly welcomed, despite the possible risks.
I believe in this thread it has been suggested that this would be a good thing, and if necessary to do so without re-ordaining anyone. I believe Dom Gregory Dix said that if something like that ever happened, it would essentially prove that Leo XIII was basically correct.
That seems almost incomprehensible to me. That ordained Protestant elders are priests in the Church of God makes sense. But to claim that some Anglicans are, but the rest of the Anglicans and the Methodists and Presbyterians aren't, because they do things the way the Church of Rome does, even whole that Church says they don't - well its somewhere between absurd and superstitious.

If Dix believed that Anglican orders are valid, which I assume he must have, it seems strange to think that he might have found them retrospectively invalidated by association with Methodism. Church unity rippling back in time to cause church disunity four hundred years earlier. Sounds like a good plot for an SF novel, but not very like believable ecclesology.
 
Posted by caercybi06 (# 15105) on :
 
In the anglican Church of Canada "any uncomsumed wine or bread shalkl be consumed by the clergy present in a reverent & devout manner" thats a paraphrase of one the rubric in the BCP 1962
[Angel]
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
Uh, to wit, the Anglican Church of Canada and the United Church of Canada contemplated exactly that in the 1970's. We United Churchers are Methodist (and Presbie and Congregationalist) but in the end the Anglicans backed out. The Anglicans felt that something "distinctively Anglican" would be lost if they merged with us, though the proposed Basis of Union did provide for Episcopal governance.

To be fair the UCCan is a third larger than the Anglicans, so the numbers were different.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:

quote:
What would the Anglican Church do if 400,000 Methodists asked to come into the Church of England while being allowed to keep their distinctive traditions? My guess is that it would be churlish to refuse, and they would be warmly welcomed, despite the possible risks.
I believe in this thread it has been suggested that this would be a good thing, and if necessary to do so without re-ordaining anyone. I believe Dom Gregory Dix said that if something like that ever happened, it would essentially prove that Leo XIII was basically correct.
That seems almost incomprehensible to me. That ordained Protestant elders are priests in the Church of God makes sense. But to claim that some Anglicans are, but the rest of the Anglicans and the Methodists and Presbyterians aren't, because they do things the way the Church of Rome does, even whole that Church says they don't - well its somewhere between absurd and superstitious.

If Dix believed that Anglican orders are valid, which I assume he must have, it seems strange to think that he might have found them retrospectively invalidated by association with Methodism. Church unity rippling back in time to cause church disunity four hundred years earlier. Sounds like a good plot for an SF novel, but not very like believable ecclesology.

I'm glad you said that, Ken. If Dix did believe that, then he must have been extremely and uncharacteristically muddle headed on this issue. Ordinations are either what they purport to be or not (and from years on the Ship, I suspect that Ken and I would disagree at a fundamental level about how to answer that question). The Catholic Church's position is quite clear and the reception of a large number of ministers who are then ordained as Catholic priests merely indicates that the Catholic Church is following its own lights. It is neither supporting nor confuting evidence for the correctness of those lights.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Pardon my unusual candour,says Martin L.,but if the pope wants some more churches in Wales,he should sell a ring or two.

I wouldn't call that candour,I would call it stupidity.

Martin l. seems to have a good understanding of Catholic rites and music as well as administration.He has a good understanding of Lutheranism and I learn a lot from him.

But I cannot understand what makes him think that the pope's offer to 'diaffected anglicans' is so he can get some church buildings 'free' in Wales.Even if that were the case he might have to sell more rings to maintain them.

I know little about the Catholic church in Wales and even less about the Anglican church in Wales,but to me this statement is a cheap and bigoted jibe which is not worthy of Martin L.

Now what if Obama were to sell off the White
House, he could then buy Afghanistan and solve the problems of that region - a good idea ?
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
Who is eligible to be the Ordinary - in England?

Of the CofE bishops who might go (PEV or otherwise) who is single and acceptable to Rome and the transferring constituency?

Or would Rome consecrate a priest who converted in the post-1994 period who has experience in both the CofE and ordinary Roman Catholic life?

Or would the Ordinary be a senior priest as no-one is eligible to be bishop? (Doesn't sound as convincing to me.)

I get the impression that Ebbsfleet and Richborough will go soon (but they are both married?). Beverley and Fulham wait a bit. Likewise Chichester and Horsham don't need to go while in office. I don't know of many others.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
This is what happens when you post at 1.30am whilst knackered:

quote:
I wrote:
That ordained Protestant elders are priests in the Church of God makes sense. But to claim that some Anglicans are, but the rest of the Anglicans and the Methodists and Presbyterians aren't, because they do things the way the Church of Rome does, even whole that Church says they don't - well its somewhere between absurd and superstitious.

quote:
I would have done better to write:
That ordained Protestant elders are priests in the Church of God makes sense. (whether it is true or not, it is a statement that means something)

But to claim that some of the Anglicans are priests (because they do things the way the Church of Rome does, even though that Church says they don't), but that the rest of the Anglicans and all the Methodists and Presbyterians aren't priests - well its somewhere between absurd and superstitious.

And - adding to my rantlet - the reason I think its superstitious is because it makes ordination a matter of form rather than content.

[ 07. November 2009, 11:35: Message edited by: ken ]
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
That ordained Protestant elders are priests in the Church of God makes sense. (whether it is true or not, it is a statement that means something)

Absolutely.

quote:
But to claim that some of the Anglicans are priests (because they do things the way the Church of Rome does, even though that Church....
and very large proportions of their own churches

quote:
....says they don't), but that the rest of the Anglicans and all the Methodists and Presbyterians aren't priests - well its somewhere between absurd and superstitious.
To which you might add that it's also indicative of a mechanistic and reductionist sacramental theology, which gives the lie to protestations by those who would seem to take this view of being of one mind with the Catholic Church.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
If Dix believed that Anglican orders are valid, which I assume he must have, it seems strange to think that he might have found them retrospectively invalidated by association with Methodism.
I don't think retrospective invalidation was what he was getting at. I think his point was that at such a time that the Church of England changed its understanding of what's constitutes ordination and sacred ministry to be in line with accepting of a fully Protestant understanding of same, the position of Leo would be validated. It would cease to be a catholic church, or at least a via media, in any meaningful sense.

[ 07. November 2009, 11:58: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
That should read

"changed its understanding of what constitutes ordination and sacred ministry to be in line with or accepting of a fully Protestant understanding"

Third try on that.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
In which case Dix had clearly fallen for the great Anglo-Catholic delusion about what the faith of the Church of England had been for most of the period from the sixteenth century until the middle of the nineteenth.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
If Dix believed that Anglican orders are valid, which I assume he must have, it seems strange to think that he might have found them retrospectively invalidated by association with Methodism.
I don't think retrospective invalidation was what he was getting at. I think his point was that at such a time that the Church of England changed its understanding of what's constitutes ordination and sacred ministry to be in line with accepting of a fully Protestant understanding of same, the position of Leo would be validated. It would cease to be a catholic church, or at least a via media, in any meaningful sense.
Doesn't this rather assume that the Methodist understanding of what its presbyters are and do, is a 'fully Protestant understanding'? While I am sure that there are few if any Methodist ministers whose understanding of the priesthood would be the same as that of SSPX, I would have thought that there are many gradations between that and a 'fully protestant understanding' of ministry which is basically to say that ordination makes no difference.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
Much like understandings of the real presence I don't see why understandings of ordination have to be strictly 'protestant' or 'catholic'?.

Of course the former understanding in some churches seems to be that leadership is something that is intrinsic to a person that they are born with. As opposed to something people carry as representatives. Methodists I trained with certainly talked in the latter terms.

Surely it is time that western sacramental church moved beyond defining itself in reference to Rome, be it Methodist, Lutheran or Anglican. Of course the only designator to describe such churches is reformed catholic, which takes us back to square one.

In terms of Episcopacy I think that all churches including Rome need to truly rediscover the nature of Apostolic ministry and from that a renewal of Presbyterial and Diaconal ministry.

[ 07. November 2009, 13:49: Message edited by: Edward Green ]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Doesn't this rather assume that the Methodist understanding of what its presbyters are and do, is a 'fully Protestant understanding'?
Angloid, you are right in correcting me. There is no single understanding of ordination or any of the other sacraments. So not a full Protestant understanding, but simply a Protestant understanding states the case correctly.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
Pardon my unusual candour,says Martin L.,but if the pope wants some more churches in Wales,he should sell a ring or two.

I wouldn't call that candour,I would call it stupidity.

Martin l. seems to have a good understanding of Catholic rites and music as well as administration.He has a good understanding of Lutheranism and I learn a lot from him.

But I cannot understand what makes him think that the pope's offer to 'diaffected anglicans' is so he can get some church buildings 'free' in Wales.Even if that were the case he might have to sell more rings to maintain them.

I know little about the Catholic church in Wales and even less about the Anglican church in Wales,but to me this statement is a cheap and bigoted jibe which is not worthy of Martin L.

Now what if Obama were to sell off the White
House, he could then buy Afghanistan and solve the problems of that region - a good idea ?

Forthview, I was referring to something stated in a link provided earlier upthread.

I don't think the pope wanted anything to do with the church buildings in Wales. Somebody, on a linked blog, had suggested that the Church in Wales donating some underused churches for the purposes of use by Anglicans converting to Catholicism would be "ecumenical credit in the bank." I merely thought that statement was laughable. We constantly dance around the issue of ecumenism on these threads, but for Protestants ecumenism means retaining our autonomy and being able to share in the Christian life and sacraments together (something which is easily achievable), but for the Catholic Church the fact is that ecumenism means submission to the pope, something we Protestants understand as an unnecessary human contrivance. For us, this is like dealing with a stubborn brother or sister, who will concede nothing and expects us to concede everything. This doesn't mean dialogue should ever be cut off altogether, but it means no easy goal is in sight.

As for my comment about the rings, I must admit I was feeling to be in an unusually snarky mood, and I do apologize. My comment was entirely tongue-in-cheek, not serious. I did find it rather pushy for the blogger to suggest that, on top of springing the conversion plans with little or no warning on Anglican leadership committed to ecumenical dialogue, it should be expected that Anglicans would want to answer in kind with a gesture of ecumenical friendship.

I guess I hope they do donate some churches for the purpose. It would show a truly Christian act of compassion--one in which nothing has been received, is given, or expected in return.

[ 07. November 2009, 22:34: Message edited by: Martin L ]
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
Would the converting FiF CofE clergy accept the same ordinary as for the Traditional Anglican Communion in England? Do they get on? Do they have the same partrimony? Or would there be two Ordinaries?
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
Would the converting FiF CofE clergy accept the same ordinary as for the Traditional Anglican Communion in England? Do they get on? Do they have the same partrimony? Or would there be two Ordinaries?

From what I understand the ordinariats will be for all Anglicans who wish to come across to them.

The TAC was, I believe, once looking for a personal prelacy. That isn't happening.

I would've thought going across to Rome would be just that. I do not see the Vatican sponsoring one TAC and one FIF ordinariat in any locality. Enough (some would say more than enough) concessions have been made. Rome will not sponsor Anglican factionism within itself. That would be ludicrous.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Martin L - I think we have to keep going on the dialogue.We,imperfect beings,find it so difficult to finds the right words some times.

What for some is described as some by 'coming into full communion of faith' is described by others as 'submission to the pope'

What some see as a generous recognition of the strength of anglican patrimony is seen by others as an underhand attempt to gain new followers and territory .

I fully understand your impatience with the stubbornness of the Catholic Church and with what may seem as a patronising attitude,when it says, as it does,that we are all in some way,members of the Church,but refuses the Sacraments to those who are not in full communion.

The arguments for an against this go on and we must keep up the dialogue until we find agreement.

If we keep our focus on Jesus Christ and what we think He tells us,then we are on the right road.It is with Him that we must try to be in communion,rather than with the pope.

Not all that long ago,Catholics and non Catholics would not have worshipped together.Catholics would not have participated in 'Protestant' services and Protestants would not have wanted to approach the altar for Communion in a popish church.That has changed,and that is a positive step - well I think so.Non catholic churches can in some ways move forward more quickly than the Catholicchurch which has the weight of tradition behind it as well as a well nigh universal presence ,all of which has to be taken into account.

Please forgive us if we are not able so easily as you to move forward so quickly,but let us keep on learning about each other.

Selling rings is only a drop in the ocean, and it would make no more sense to dispose of the Vatican than it would make sense of Americans to dispose of the White House.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
Would the converting FiF CofE clergy accept the same ordinary as for the Traditional Anglican Communion in England? Do they get on? Do they have the same partrimony? Or would there be two Ordinaries?

The logic of the announcement (since we still haven't seen the Constitution) would be that there would be one jurisdiction for the RC(A)s. I imagine that they would have to learn to get on, whether or not that might be the inclination of any of them-- I suspect that TAC, having finally achieved much of what they wanted, and the Tibercrossing FiFers, having finally made the leap, will not quibble overmuch. Given that the English Latin hierarchy is not terribly thrilled about having one Anglican ordinariate, I can't see them putting up with two.

As far as passing on a few empty(ish) churches to the RC(A)s, I can't see that it would hurt anybody and would be a nice gesture. Some clarity and humility in signage would be the appropriate response.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
If it happens that some FiF congregations in England do make the transition corporately, will they then be expected to conform to the liturgical norms of the 'ordinariate'? It seems to me that many of them will, ironically, experience Anglican liturgy for the first time when they become Roman Catholic.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
But wouldn't the case for such currently NO-using parishes be that they would for the first time - from their POV - be able to use a liturgy in the Anglican tradition that is a liturgy authorised by the Holy See and hence "legitamised"?
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
But wouldn't the case for such currently NO-using parishes be that they would for the first time - from their POV - be able to use a liturgy in the Anglican tradition that is a liturgy authorised by the Holy See and hence "legitamised"?

Hah! The Church of SS Gilbert and Sullivan I see. [Killing me]
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
A good point, L.Sv.K. I think one of the main objections that FiF parishes have to current Comic Worship rites is the wonky (in their view) eucharistic prayers. If that gets addressed along with other lesser quibbles, it it surely must be, then they may be quite happy. Eventually.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
Would the converting FiF CofE clergy accept the same ordinary as for the Traditional Anglican Communion in England? Do they get on?

I'd imagine that those few of FiF who know anything about TAC assume it to be an American sect and have no idea that there might be any of them here.

There are probably about as many people in the congregations of FiF and ABC churches within walking distance of where I am now as there are in all of TAC in the USA. TAC in England probably has fewer congregants than just one of those parishes. Their website lists about twenty churches but most of them seem to be occasional or monthly meetings, presumably in the house of an ex-CofE priest. Only five or six offer weekly Sunday services.
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
ken scripsit:

quote:
I'd imagine that those few of FiF who know anything about TAC assume it to be an American sect and have no idea that there might be any of them here.

Actually, the TAC advertise in New Directions, so anyone who reads it will be aware that they have a presence here, but not of how small it is.
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
The name currently appearing the blogosphere as a potential episcopal ordinary is that of + Robert Mercer, who is a TAC bishop who manages also to be a monk of the Community of the Resurrection, and IIRC lives in Canada. Presumably if there is to be only one global Ordinariate, the holder of that office will be a flying bishop in the truest sense of the word.

AFAIK all the current PEVs are married and therefore ineligible. I would also expect them to stay on and minister to those of their integrity who are not in a position to take the ferry across the Tiber - indeed, I would be likely to think less highly of them if they didn't.

The only unmarried bishop who would seem to be eligible is + Urwin, currently the Administrator of Walsingham*.

If they're going to consider unmarried priests who might be eligible for episcopal consecration, then the list is rather longer.

I am probably ignorant on these matters and look forward to being corrected.

* and one wonders what is going to happen to that institution - and to a certain house in Oxford. Hmmm?

quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
Who is eligible to be the Ordinary - in England?

Of the CofE bishops who might go (PEV or otherwise) who is single and acceptable to Rome and the transferring constituency?

Or would Rome consecrate a priest who converted in the post-1994 period who has experience in both the CofE and ordinary Roman Catholic life?

Or would the Ordinary be a senior priest as no-one is eligible to be bishop? (Doesn't sound as convincing to me.)

I get the impression that Ebbsfleet and Richborough will go soon (but they are both married?). Beverley and Fulham wait a bit. Likewise Chichester and Horsham don't need to go while in office. I don't know of many others.


 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chiltern_hundred:
The name currently appearing the blogosphere as a potential episcopal ordinary is that of + Robert Mercer, who is a TAC bishop who manages also to be a monk of the Community of the Resurrection, and IIRC lives in Canada. Presumably if there is to be only one global Ordinariate, the holder of that office will be a flying bishop in the truest sense of the word.

AFAIK all the current PEVs are married and therefore ineligible. I would also expect them to stay on and minister to those of their integrity who are not in a position to take the ferry across the Tiber - indeed, I would be likely to think less highly of them if they didn't.


I gather your PEV and PEOs are the same? [Confused]

Much of the strength of the TAC seems to lie in Australia, including the Primate and his closest Anglican collaborator, the current Bishop of the Murray (both conveniently live almost next door to each other in suburban Adelaide). The Primate will be ineligible for ecclesiastical office. + Murray is close to retirement age, I believe.

We had a character similar to + Mercer, the now TAC Bishop David Chislett, who could've provided alternative episcopal oversight in the Brisbane archdiocese, had he not jumped the gun and been consecrated for the TAC whilst attempting to retain his Brisbane parish.

Is + Mercer actually licensed anywhere in the Anglican Church in Canada? What is his status with the CR?

As far as I can see, there would be no easily remediable canon law hurdle for a suitable Latin Rite bishop to be given control of an ordinariat or a suitable Latin Rite priest to be consecrated for this purpose.

A worldwide ordinariat IMO will not be instituted.

I suspect, once the ordinariats are fully established, we will see what happens. Til then? [Confused]

[ 08. November 2009, 23:44: Message edited by: Sir Pellinore (ret'd) ]
 
Posted by John Holding (# 158) on :
 
So far as I know, +Mercer is not licensed in the Anglican Church of Canada. He came over here to be the bishop in the Anglican Catholic CHurch, which had split from the Anglican Church of Canada over the ordination of women and modern language liturgy. He succeeded the man who actually led the breakaway for several years.

I never did understand how he squared a continuing role in the C of E, which I believe he has, with being bishop of a breakaway. Normally one would have looked to the CofE to take steps, but then, one knows how much one can rely on the CofE to enforce any set of rules.

John
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
I actually wonder whether + Mercer is in good standing with the CofE and is licensed anywhere in England.
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
His wiki page says he was Bishop of Matabeleland in Zimbabwe, in the Church of the Province of Central Africa from 1977 to 1987. From 1988 to 2005 he was a bishop in the Anglican Catholic Church of Canada, and now resides in England.

Just reading wiki. So it seems he was a regular bishop in the Anglican Communion before entering the Continuum. The page says he retired to England. Dunno what he's doing no.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
This page from the ACC of Canada site shows him as retired and living in Sussex, not Mirfield, where one would imagine a professed CR priest would.

http://anglicancatholic.ca/bishops/housbish.htm

I suspect he holds no licence in the CofE and wonder how regular his status with the Community of the Resurrection is.
 
Posted by Clavus (# 9427) on :
 
The Mirfield 'Who We Are' page still includes him at the bottom in an old black and white photo. He is not listed in Crockford's Clerical Directory or the Chichester Diocesan Directory, so he does not appear to have permission to officiate in the Church of England.
 
Posted by Stranger in a strange land (# 11922) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chiltern_hundred:
...Presumably if there is to be only one global Ordinariate, the holder of that office will be a flying bishop in the truest sense of the word.

AFAIK all the current PEVs are married and therefore ineligible.

The Constitution (published today) provides for Ordinariates within the existing territorial boundaries of Bishops' Confereneces - one or more per conference as required.So no global flying bishops!

There is no requirement for the Ordinary to hold Bishop's orders in the Catholic Church; it specifically discusses married Anglican bishops holding the role of Ordinary and being ordained as Catholic priests. They would stil have jurisdiction and can be given the right to use episcopal symbols of office (in the same way that abbots do).
 
Posted by Manipled Mutineer (# 11514) on :
 
English text of the constitution here and complementary norms here.

In addition to the points of interest noted by Stranger in a Strange Land, the following are worth noting:

(i) on ordination of married men, the constitution provides that "The Ordinary... as a rule ... will admit only celibate men to the order of presbyter. He may also petition the Roman Pontiff, as a derogation from can. 277, §1, for the admission of married men to the order of presbyter on a case by case basis" (italics mine.) This reference the norms expand to state: "In consideration of Anglican ecclesial tradition and practice, the Ordinary may present to the Holy Father a request for the admission of married men to the presbyterate in the Ordinariate, after a process of discernment based on objective criteria and the needs of the Ordinariate. These objective criteria are determined by the Ordinary in consultation with the local Episcopal Conference and must be approved by the Holy See." This would seem to envisage the possibility of future married ordinands.
(ii) on liturgy, the constitution states that "Without excluding liturgical celebrations according to the Roman Rite , the Ordinariate has the faculty to celebrate the Holy Eucharist and the other Sacraments, the Liturgy of the Hours and other liturgical celebrations according to the liturgical books proper to the Anglican tradition, which have been approved by the Holy See," thus suggesting that Roman Rite congregations in Britain can continue to follow this practice. (Again, italics mine.)
(iii) on membership, the norms state that "Those baptized previously as Catholics outside the Ordinariate are not ordinarily eligible for membership, unless they are members of a family belonging to the Ordinariate." That said, this would not prevent lay Latin Rite Catholics habitually attending a personal parish.
 
Posted by Stranger in a strange land (# 11922) on :
 
Thank you for those MM.

A further point that interested me (and which gives the lie to Hans Kung's pernicious little outburst) is the provision for clergy of the Ordinariate to assist in the regular Catholic diocese where they live, and for diocesan priests to assist in the Ordinariate.

It will also be interesting to see how the Bishops' conferences react to the suggestion that they make funds available for the support of clergy in the Ordinariate!
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Clavus:
The Mirfield 'Who We Are' page still includes him at the bottom in an old black and white photo.

Are you suggesting they should have brushed him out of the photo like the missing Trotskyists at Stalin's parades?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Manipled Mutineer:
English text of the constitution here and complementary norms here.

Ta!

I have no idea what a "complementary norm" is - thee documents seem to be written in a language that bears a passing resemblance to English but seems deeply unclear!

III. Without excluding liturgical celebrations according to the Roman Rite, the Ordinariate has the faculty to celebrate the Holy Eucharist and the other Sacraments, the Liturgy of the Hours and other liturgical celebrations according to the liturgical books proper to the Anglican tradition, which have been approved by the Holy See, so as to maintain the liturgical, spiritual and pastoral traditions of the Anglican Communion within the Catholic Church, as a precious gift nourishing the faith of the members of the Ordinariate and as a treasure to be shared.


What does

quote:

The Ordinary has the faculty to incardinate in the Ordinariate former Anglican ministers who have entered into full communion with the Catholic Church, as well as candidates belonging to the Ordinariate and promoted to Holy Orders by him.

mean? It sounds as if it means that the Ordinary can choose to accept Anglican ordinations as valid and allow ex-Anglican priests to functiona s presbyters churches under his jurisdiction. I assume that it doesn't really mean that?

Also

quote:

§1. A married former Anglican Bishop is eligible to be appointed Ordinary. In such a case he is to be ordained a priest in the Catholic Church and then exercises pastoral and sacramental ministry within the Ordinariate with full jurisdictional authority.

§2. A former Anglican Bishop who belongs to the Ordinariate may be called upon to assist the Ordinary in the administration of the Ordinariate.

§3. A former Anglican Bishop who belongs to the Ordinariate may be invited to participate in the meetings of the Bishops’ Conference of the respective territory, with the equivalent status of a retired bishop.

§4. A former Anglican Bishop who belongs to the Ordinariate and who has not been ordained as a bishop in the Catholic Church, may request permission from the Holy See to use the insignia of the episcopal office.

Seems to go further than most people expected. Or at least hold out the possibility of going further. It also looks as if it might lead to a very blurry boundary around who is or is not a Bishop.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
Anglicanorum coetibus - bit of an unfortunate title isn't it? Is the next word in the latin text interruptus?
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
What does

quote:

The Ordinary has the faculty to incardinate in the Ordinariate former Anglican ministers who have entered into full communion with the Catholic Church, as well as candidates belonging to the Ordinariate and promoted to Holy Orders by him.

mean? It sounds as if it means that the Ordinary can choose to accept Anglican ordinations as valid and allow ex-Anglican priests to functiona s presbyters churches under his jurisdiction. I assume that it doesn't really mean that?


I assume it means that those clergy who have previous poped and been anaordained can be incardinated into the Ordinariate rather than having to slum it in the mainstream Church.

Thurible
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
No. It's talking about those who have already exercised a minsitry as Anglican clerics, and also of those who would begin their formation for the priesthood in the Catholic Church without having been an Anglican cleric first.

In other words, there are two paths to ordination: ministry as an Anglican and formation ab initio in the Catholic Church.

So it is opening the way to future growth by specifying that priests of the Ordinariate do not have to have been an Anglican cleric first
 
Posted by DitzySpike (# 1540) on :
 
What struck me was the reference to canon 845 in the complementary norms:

quote:
§1. The lay faithful originally of the Anglican tradition who wish to belong to the Ordinariate, after having made their Profession of Faith and received the Sacraments of Initiation, with due regard for Canon 845, are to be entered in the apposite register of the Ordinariate. Those baptized previously as Catholics outside the Ordinariate are not ordinarily eligible for membership, unless they are members of a family belonging to the Ordinariate.
Canon 845 says:

quote:
§1. Since the sacraments of baptism, confirmation, and orders imprint a character, they cannot be repeated.

§2. If after completing a diligent inquiry a prudent doubt still exists whether the sacraments mentioned in §1

were actually or validly conferred, they are to be conferred conditionally.

I'm presently going through the RCIA process of going to Rome: most parishes here don't have the resources to handle converts separately from the RCIA route. I assumed that I will be received partly by confirmation since Anglican confirmations aren't valid in the proper sense.

It is interesting that Canon 845 is mentioned at all for the reception of converts in the Ordinariate, with regard to the sacraments of initiation. There are no questions, of course as to issue of baptism, but why is there a need to invoke the indelibility of the rite of confirmation? Since all Anglican confirmations are invalid, there is really no need for a 'diligent inquiry' into whether or not they are 'validly conferred'.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
Canon 845 applies in every case of baptism or reception into full communion of an adult. One has to be careful to establish whether someone is baptised or not. Sometimes people actually want to be baptised again, and one has to guide them through the reasons why this is not necessary or possible.

Also, the old custom of prudent doubt concerning all Anglican sacraments still persists for some. In them olden days prudent doubt dictated that you at least conditionally baptised all converts from other churches. Now the reverse is the case, and the conditional celebration of the sacraments is only done if there is real cause for concern. I should imagine that, in New Zealand for example, converts from Anglicanism in the future will need conditional baptism because there is the option to baptise in the name of the Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier. This is not regarded as a valid baptism by the Catholic Church.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
Doesn't this rather assume that the Methodist understanding of what its presbyters are and do, is a 'fully Protestant understanding'?
Angloid, you are right in correcting me. There is no single understanding of ordination or any of the other sacraments. So not a full Protestant understanding, but simply a Protestant understanding states the case correctly.
It's all a moot point anyway

the ordination of ministers coming from Anglicanism will be absolute, on the basis of the Bull Apostolicae curae of Leo XIII of September 13, 1896. Given the entire Catholic Latin tradition and the tradition of the Oriental Catholic Churches, including the Orthodox tradition, the admission of married men to the episcopate is absolutely excluded


Source
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
A suggestion for everybody converting either to Catholicism or Orthodoxy:

Help your pastor and help your Bishop or Ordinary by writing up a spiritual autobiography of yourself. Don't hold anything back. Turn it in to the pastor of the parish you will be joining. If your Catholic or Orthodox pastor needs you to do it, release your former confessor/spiritual director so he can talk to your new Catholic or Orthodox pastor about you and your spiritual life up to now. Give details of how your baptism, confirmation and the other sacraments you have received were administered, including the formulas used. For example, if you were baptised in the name of the "Creator, Redeemer, Sanctifier/Sustainer", that could create an issue.
 
Posted by DitzySpike (# 1540) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
Canon 845 applies in every case of baptism or reception into full communion of an adult. One has to be careful to establish whether someone is baptised or not. Sometimes people actually want to be baptised again, and one has to guide them through the reasons why this is not necessary or possible.

Thanks. Perhaps I am too willing to read more into it hoping for an easier jump-over.
 
Posted by Manipled Mutineer (# 11514) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
What does

quote:

The Ordinary has the faculty to incardinate in the Ordinariate former Anglican ministers who have entered into full communion with the Catholic Church, as well as candidates belonging to the Ordinariate and promoted to Holy Orders by him.

mean? It sounds as if it means that the Ordinary can choose to accept Anglican ordinations as valid and allow ex-Anglican priests to functiona s presbyters churches under his jurisdiction. I assume that it doesn't really mean that?


I assume it means that those clergy who have previous poped and been anaordained can be incardinated into the Ordinariate rather than having to slum it in the mainstream Church.

Thurible

A definition of incardination in case it is of use.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
"Given the entire Catholic Latin tradition and the tradition of the Oriental Catholic Churches, including the Orthodox tradition, the admission of married men to the episcopate is absolutely excluded"

I wonder how they dealt with St Peter?

Maybe they just made up a convenient legend that his wife was already dead. Though St Paul (at 1 Cor.9) seems quite clear that Peter and also Jesus's brothers had living wives

[ 09. November 2009, 14:12: Message edited by: ken ]
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
ken, don't be silly. There is full awareness that the matter of clerical celibacy is one which developed in the Church.

In both East and West by the early fourth century there was an ecclesiastical law which forbade the marriage of those who were ordained. It did not of course forbid the ordination of those who were married.

In the West the precept of celibacy began to apply to all clerics, so that married men could not be ordained. This the East strongly resisted, and still rejects. However, both East and West agreed that Bishops needed to be celibate - this became a matter of precept for the Eastern Churches at the Council of Trullo in 692.

It may not be in the Bible, but by the seventh century the celibacy of Bishops was the norm in both East and West. That is an ancient tradition, wouldn't you say?
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
Doesn't this rather assume that the Methodist understanding of what its presbyters are and do, is a 'fully Protestant understanding'?
Angloid, you are right in correcting me. There is no single understanding of ordination or any of the other sacraments. So not a full Protestant understanding, but simply a Protestant understanding states the case correctly.
It's all a moot point anyway

the ordination of ministers coming from Anglicanism will be absolute, on the basis of the Bull Apostolicae curae of Leo XIII of September 13, 1896. Given the entire Catholic Latin tradition and the tradition of the Oriental Catholic Churches, including the Orthodox tradition, the admission of married men to the episcopate is absolutely excluded


Source

It is this that will stop many even considering going over. Corporate union where one has to 'absolutely' deny one's sacramental life up to the moment, what's so great about that?

Thurible
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
what's so great about that?
I guess you have to consider the alternative to answer that question.

[ 09. November 2009, 15:56: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
Well, the Anglican Orders bit will be a stumbling block for some. But anyone who thought that Apostolicae Curae would be repealed was living in a fantasy land.

Nothing that the Jesuit canonist said precludes an Anglican minister from actively petitioning the CDF for a request for sub conditione ordination. The CDF might allow it in a particular case, disallow it in another. I'll bet that this very issue is going to taken up more than once.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
The Holy Father is giving the Anglo-Catholics the red-carpet treatment, killing the fatted calf, and so on. As such, this is a HUGE "put-up or shut-up" moment for Anglo Papalists. They have talked a lot of talk about unity with Rome, but have made lots of excuses about why they can't or won't. Some of the reasons over the last century have been understandable, but other reasons cited are less worthy. How many of those who have repeatedly said that they wanted an invitation to the wedding feast, now that it has arrive in the mail, will nonetheless send their regrets?
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
A worldwide ordinariat IMO will not be instituted.


It's more likely that there will be one ordinariate per province.

And the ordinary will not necessarily be a bishop; he will have the administrative responsibilities of a bishop, but not necessarily the sacramental responsibilities of one. Think of how the Celtic Church was overseen by an abbot, not necessarily in episcopal orders, who bossed all the bishops around.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
I am guessing that they will need to be one bishop in the several ordinariates. Even if there is only an abbot figure in other adjoining provinces.

What about ordination candidates in future? If the Ordinary is not a bishop who ordains? Or will ordination candidates be sent to the rest of the Roman Catholic Church rather than remaining within the Ordinariate? If the Ordinary can't ordain within the community then doesn't it die out in a decade or two. (Is that what really worries FiF?)
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Shadowhund:
The Holy Father is giving the Anglo-Catholics the red-carpet treatment, killing the fatted calf, and so on. As such, this is a HUGE "put-up or shut-up" moment for Anglo Papalists.

In his response to today's publication, Bishop John Broadhurst of FiF, included the following:

quote:
What Rome has done is offer exactly what the Church of England has refused. Indeed it has offered the requests of Consecrated Women? with the completion of its ecumenical hopes.
When Consecrated Women? was published in 2003, I was an enthusiastic supporter of a free province, within the Church of England, as an answer to the problems created by women bishops, for those unable to accept their ministry. I subsequently came to realise that the C of E couldn't grant such a request for reasons, not the least being, that the "church within a church" created by such a move wanted freedom of ecumenical manoevre. It would always have used this freedom to seek what the Holy Father has now offered.

The question of orders shouldn't be a problem. The Holy Father was never going to repudiate Apostolicae Curae. This is about the future, not the past. I don't know what hoops people expect the Pope to jump through. On the recent Orthodox-Catholic unity thread, it seems that some Orthodox want the Pope to get up on his hind legs and admit that a thousand years of Catholic history are a big mistake. It can't and won't happen. What we have is a Pope who visits the Ecumenical Patriarch with an olive branch in his hand, who tries to heal the rift with the SSPX, and who makes an offer to Catholic Anglicans whice includes, in effect, a free province within the terms of Consecrated Women? and a chance to eneter into full comunion with the See of Peter.

It is truly time for Anglo-Catholics to put up or shut up!
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
Yup - the terms are now absolutely clear - unconditional surrender (as if we hadn't guessed it). Trad Caths will have to make up their mind - if they want to join another denomination, that's what's on offer. It does make all the stuff about refinding the Mother Ship a bit of a mythical nonsense, doesn't it? If you want to join, here's the deal. It's the same deal that there's always been, with a bit of finessing at the edges. Bulk transfer available, but still the same old Vatican when you get there.

Clear choice - and if you still believe that the CofE is a perfectly legitimate reformed catholic church, it's a choice that isn't even worth thinking about. But I guess folk will have to make up their minds where they want to be. At least any romantic notions of reunion with Rome are now scuppered.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
Mmmm. Same old Anglican episcopal posturing.

What are you offering instead?
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
Reformed catholicism that doesn't have a supreme primate or a curia, neither of which I want any part of. A church rooted in scripture, tradition and reason. A church that is able to hold together Protestants and Catholics. That'll do. You like your brand. I like mine. See you at the eschaton. Let's get on with the job, separately, in the meantime.

We may have a bulk delivery for you, but I somehow doubt it...
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
It is a bit ridiculous to expect the pope not to be Roman Catholic, therefore it is unsuprising that an offer to come over is going to include the need to accept the structure and dogma of the Roman Catholic church. I thought the basics of this offer were effectively, you can come over on mass as a structure if there are enough of you - you can keep some local customs if they don't contradict the big ideas. I wasn't surprised.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
That's fine and quite appropriate for you. I have no problem with acknowledging your position for what it is. Those who buy into that position will never want union with the Catholic Church.

But given that this was a response to a request from those who said they professed the same Faith as that of the Catholic Church, and wanted union with the Successor of Peter, your position is quite irrelevant as this does not apply to you.

So let me change my question in response to your dismissive critique: what do you think the Catholic Church should have offered instead?
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
That was a response to pete173 of course, not Think
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
I loves ya anyway [Big Grin]

I suppose the thing is, that the end goal of ecumenicalness is the reunification of the whole church. And I suppose people had felt that maybe, just maybe, this was little closer. This announcement a clear restatement that the fundamental position hasn't changed - and folk are disappointed ?

Is there anything intrinsic to the faith of the Roman Catholic Church that requires a Pope ? Rather than, say, a college of Cardinals ?
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
It's funny that I had not read Broadhurst's reaction until after I wrote that post! Amazing.
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:


But given that this was a response to a request from those who said they professed the same Faith as that of the Catholic Church, and wanted union with the Successor of Peter, your position is quite irrelevant as this does not apply to you.

So let me change my question in response to your dismissive critique: what do you think the Catholic Church should have offered instead?

We've probably had this conversation before, but here goes:

I've never been under any illusions about the attitude of the RC Church. It seems to me entirely legitimate that if you want to convert, you do it under the ground rules of the denomination you're joining. It's the Trad Caths who have been naive. They've seriously thought that they could get a transfer on other terms than those being offered. The PEVs who went off to negotiate the deal have come back with a piece of paper that some of them quite like the look of. But for the majority of Anglican Catholics, they now have to face reality, abandon romantic notions and make hard choices, which will involve:

1. denying that their ministry up till now has been as priests in the Church of God [even though it patently has]

2. screwing themselves up to say that the "sacramental assurance" that they hold so dear hasn't been there in what they've received of the sacraments up to this point

3. buying into an authority structure that they *really* won't like when they get there (have just been negotiating a transfer the other way and marvelling at RC priests' relationship to their bishops...)

So, no, the RCs were absolutely true to themselves in offering this package. I just can't quite believe that Fulham, Ebbsfleet and Richborough want their priests to buy into it. It would of course be terribly convenient for those of us who want women bishops if there were to be massive take-up. But we'd lose a lot of people who wouldn't be being true to themselves or the way in which they've operated throughout their ministry - and they would be a loss. But I have quite a lot of faith that the CofE is inherently more attractive to these guys than Rome would be. We'll have to see. There are some grown-up choices to be made.

What I've said previously on this thread still stands, though. Those who don't understand the Trad Caths in the CofE need to do a lot more thinking about whether they value that part of our heritage enough to make provision for them to stay, and the Papal initiative (and the slightly wet response the CofE has made to it offically)hasn't helped that internal dialogue within the CofE. This is not a case of "if you know a better denomination, go to it" - the CofE has to be generous to those who want to stay.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
Don't we end up with yet another continuing Anglican church? For those who have now given up on Canterbury, but still can't handle the imminent reality of Rome while in parish ministry?
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
I found this to be an interesting take.

Facing Facts
 
Posted by Quam Dilecta (# 12541) on :
 
In my opinion, Father Hunwicke's blog, to which Alt Wally provided a link, is painfully accurate in asserting that an "Anglican elite" has done everything in its power to preclude any corporate reunion of the Anglican and Roman churches. One by-product of this campaign to heighten rather than to diminish differences in doctrine and discipline between the two churches has been to make the position of Anglo-Catholics ever more precarious.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
At least any romantic notions of reunion with Rome are now scuppered.

Not, as far as I can see, from Rome's point of view. Nothing in this provision - about which I have severe doubts, by the way - suggests anything about Rome's ecumenical approach towards the wider Anglican communion.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
Actually pete173, with that longer post I have little disagreement. It is an analysis of the issues confronting Anglicans, however, rather than an appraisal of the Holy See's provisions. Your earlier post was rather more confrontational of the Catholic Church, as if there had been a sleight of hand on the part of the Holy See.

There has never been any suggestion that all the obstacles to unity would simply be glossed over and swept under the carpet in order to poach willing and susceptible fish in a barrel. Those tough issues remain for discussion.

But this action of the Pope has been in response to an assurance that in fact those making the appeal accept:
(1) the Faith of the Church as it is expressed in the Catechism of the Catholic Church
(2) the Petrine ministry of the Pope.

That's a wholly different set of principles to respond to than your own position.

I share your doubts about there being a large influx of Anglicans into this Ordinariate. And I share DOD's reservations about these provisions. I may have expressed this earlier, I forget, but I'm not sure it is a good thing for people who have inhabited the edges of communion in one Church now to inhabit the edges of communion in another. The Apostolic Constitution tries to address that by promoting close pastoral and missionary activity between those in the Ordinariate and the wider Catholic Church. I hope that will be achieved. It will require effort on the part of both the Ordinariate and those of us who inhabit the wider Catholic Church.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
The Apostolic Constitution tries to address that by promoting close pastoral and missionary activity between those in the Ordinariate and the wider Catholic Church. I hope that will be achieved. It will require effort on the part of both the Ordinariate and those of us who inhabit the wider Catholic Church.

It would be an interesting gesture if the pope were to elevate an Anglican convert priest (unmarried, of course) to bishop and then cardinal, in order to oversee the ordinariate. This would be not without precedent, as some Eastern Rite patriarchs are elevated to cardinal.

(In fact, Eastern Rite patriarch-cardinals are treated with such honor that they are given the dignity of Cardinal-Bishop. Perhaps a patriarchate of Londonium could be established. Oh, the fun the Anglo-Catholics would have establishing the requisite tat! It would keep them busy for years! [Big Grin] ]

[ 09. November 2009, 21:49: Message edited by: Martin L ]
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
Martin L, that is an excellent idea. Making all the tat will hopefully keep them occupied enough so that they won't be engaging in ecclesiastical intrigue, and the results will (usually) be pretty good. And, the point about the cooperation between the Ordinariate and the local diocesan is critical. The former Anglo-Catholics absolutely have to play well with others, and a few are not known for that sort of thing. (And vice versa. Cardinal Mahony, e.g. is morally obligated to play nice with the Ordinariate, even if really doesn't want to. No Teflon Cardinal shenannigans please! And that goes for some other bishops I won't name....)
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Without wishing to be offensive I would have to take the Martin L/Shadowhund suggestion of a cardinalate as being hilarious.

The TAC's move towards Rome will, I fear, end with a whimper.

Anyone of any real ability moving to Rome would be well advised to join the Latin Rite.

At this stage any further prognostication as to what will happen is similar to those made before the invasion of Iraq. Everyone got it wrong.

For commonsense, perspective and charity.

[Votive]
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Quam Dilecta:
In my opinion, Father Hunwicke's blog, to which Alt Wally provided a link, is painfully accurate in asserting that an "Anglican elite" has done everything in its power to preclude any corporate reunion of the Anglican and Roman churches.

It is not an elite. It is a view of the clear majority of CofE people, priests and parishes over the past 25 years.

Corporate reunion of the type dreamed of by some anglo-catholics 25 years ago was almost thinkable, now it is almost dead in the water. It is most nearest extinction in the House of Laity, and getting more so with each Synod.

It is going to be more than a generation before it even becomes thinkable again, and is likely to happen when the unthinkable changes have happened in Rome first.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:


Reformed catholicism that doesn't have a supreme primate or a curia (...).

A church rooted in scripture, tradition and reason.

A church that is able to hold together Protestants and Catholics. (...)

Let's get on with the job.

I'll sign up for that Bishop.

Sorry for the snips, but I think this makes a pretty good statement of what the Church of England is.

Especially the bit about getting on with the job.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
Without wishing to be offensive I would have to take the Martin L/Shadowhund suggestion of a cardinalate as being hilarious.

I'm afraid it was meant to be. [Hot and Hormonal]

quote:
Edward Green:
I'll sign up for that Bishop.

Sorry for the snips, but I think this makes a pretty good statement of what the Church of England is.

Especially the bit about getting on with the job.

And there are plenty of others who would agree. Many Lutherans, for instance. I've been extremely happy about our ecumenical relations in the last twenty years or so, and I hope for increased levels of unity in the future. Hopefully we won't get bogged down in non-essential, Dead-Horseish social teaching debates.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Martin L:
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
Without wishing to be offensive I would have to take the Martin L/Shadowhund suggestion of a cardinalate as being hilarious.

I'm afraid it was meant to be. [Hot and Hormonal]

quote:
Edward Green:
I'll sign up for that Bishop.

Sorry for the snips, but I think this makes a pretty good statement of what the Church of England is.

Especially the bit about getting on with the job.

And there are plenty of others who would agree.

Me for one, FWIW. Although I am inclined to be less generous to the Trad Caths than Pete - while recognising that his position is probably the more responsible one. ISTM that they have to make up their minds whether they want to go to Rome or not- and that many of the best of them have aleady done so, with those who've gone, going, quite rightly, on Rome's terms.

If you are going to cross over, that's the way to do it- as a humble pilgrim, which is something that we can all respect, rather than expecting the sort of elaborate special treatment that the CofE has been indulgent enough to offer for the past few years (for what is the PEV system in practice but a personal prelature?).

That Rome has taken the approach that it has fills me with dismay. I also can't help feeling that it is also storing up trouble for itself, but that's their business. We who are left must get on with doing our job of being the indigenous and reformed Catholic, church in this country. All this other business is a distraction from our mission which (in the CofE in particular, it seems to me as an observer from a neighbouring province) has taken up far too much time and resources over the last few years.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Martin L:
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
Without wishing to be offensive I would have to take the Martin L/Shadowhund suggestion of a cardinalate as being hilarious.

I'm afraid it was meant to be. [Hot and Hormonal]

Thank God! [Smile]

As a practicing Anglican, I've never been able to decide whether to laugh, or to cry, or to attempt to do both simltaneously at the TAC and their antic progress.

I think - as TT inferred - those who remain loyal to the TAC and all its works, wherever so situated, will be totally on the margin of whatever margin...

That is not to say there are not more substantial men and women who are not in full accord with the way mainstream Anglicanism is going in many countries.

We are sadly divided.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
The TAC's move towards Rome will, I fear, end with a whimper.

Why? It was largely due to the TAC's overtures to Rome that the Apostolic Constitution was considered. The TAC has acepted Rome's generous offer. They will soon be in communion with Rome, with their own ordinariate and, quite likely, able to celebrate Mass according to the beautiful Rite of the English Misaal. How is that ending with a whimper? They may all die out within a generation, but that could be said of many churches whose attendence is in freefall, including the Church of England.

What remains to be seen, from my UK perspective, is how many present members of the Church of England want to be part of this. Will there be anough to make an ordinariate a viable proposition? What will they do about church buildings etc? I think, for themselves, the TAC has it sorted. Its the wider picture which is uncertain.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:


.....

A church rooted in scripture, tradition and reason.

A church that is able to hold together Protestants and Catholics. (...)


Except that this has and is only achieved by constantly and idiosyncratically redefining the words 'scripture', 'tradition', 'reason', 'Protestant' and 'Catholic', as the occasion demands. That is not a criticism, rather it is an observation made from the outside of what seems to be Anglicanism's particular genius.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
We who are left must get on with doing our job of being the indigenous and reformed Catholic, church in this country.

Ho ho ho. Anglican snobbery and pretentious self-justification. "How unlike the Italian Mission to the Irish we are, that foreign Church which is not really English".

These days that kind of attitude is described as racist. It's the religious version of the BNP.

Apart from the fact that it is just so wrong. Such nonsense has never quite managed to
suppress the Catholic Church in these islands, even in the darkest days, despite the best efforts of the Anglican State.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pete173:
Yup - the terms are now absolutely clear - unconditional surrender (as if we hadn't guessed it). Trad Caths will have to make up their mind - if they want to join another denomination, that's what's on offer. It does make all the stuff about refinding the Mother Ship a bit of a mythical nonsense, doesn't it? If you want to join, here's the deal. It's the same deal that there's always been, with a bit of finessing at the edges. Bulk transfer available, but still the same old Vatican when you get there .

Well, Bishop Pete, strangely enough, other people, especially ++ John Broadhurst have been overwhelmed by the Pope's generosity in this measure. But let's face it. The only thing the Pope could do to make you happy would be to dismantle his organisation and commit seppuku as an apology for a thousand years.

I heard the debate in which you and ++ John disagreed over what ARCIC meant and what it meant to you, personally. You are each entitled to your view, but I suspect some traditionally English anti-popery lurks somewhere in your mindset.
 
Posted by trouty (# 13497) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
We who are left must get on with doing our job of being the indigenous and reformed Catholic, church in this country.

Ho ho ho. Anglican snobbery and pretentious self-justification. "How unlike the Italian Mission to the Irish we are, that foreign Church which is not really English".

These days that kind of attitude is described as racist. It's the religious version of the BNP.

Apart from the fact that it is just so wrong. Such nonsense has never quite managed to
suppress the Catholic Church in these islands, even in the darkest days, despite the best efforts of the Anglican State.

Yes, those Anglicans should have followed the methods used by the Catholics in Spain, Italy, central Europe, France and the low countires. Maybe they would have been more successful in suppressing it.
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
They did far worse actually.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:


.....

A church rooted in scripture, tradition and reason.

A church that is able to hold together Protestants and Catholics. (...)


Except that this has and is only achieved by constantly and idiosyncratically redefining the words 'scripture', 'tradition', 'reason', 'Protestant' and 'Catholic', as the occasion demands. That is not a criticism, rather it is an observation made from the outside of what seems to be Anglicanism's particular genius.
Yes, and there is of course nothing "catholic" about this as it's the triumph of private judgment and the scuppering of any sort of infallibility of the church. The reformation has won in the CofE, and I agree with a previous poster who says it has done so by popular demand.

Bishop John was right in saying the bluff has been called by Rome by those who have been looking to her.
 
Posted by Thurible (# 3206) on :
 
In a slightly informal way, I shall quote a friend's reaction, one with which I entirely sympathise, understand and agree with.

quote:
§ 2. The Ordinary, in full observance of the discipline of celibate clergy in the Latin Church, as a rule (pro regula) will admit only celibate men to the order of presbyter. He may also petition the Roman Pontiff, as a derogation from can. 277, §1, for the admission of married men to the order of presbyter on a case by case basis, according to ... objective criteria approved by the Holy See.

Well f*ck that for Rome's acknowledging the value of Anglican experience of a married clergy. I'm not petitioning anyone for a derogation from canon law to fulfil my twin vocations to marriage and to priesthood. And I pity the wife of any married Anglican priest who thinks this is a step forward.

Thurible
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Quam Dilecta:
In my opinion, Father Hunwicke's blog, to which Alt Wally provided a link, is painfully accurate in asserting that an "Anglican elite" has done everything in its power to preclude any corporate reunion of the Anglican and Roman churches.

"Elite" is an odd word to use to describe the majority of the members of a denomination.

As far as anyone can tell an actual majority of ordinary Anglican churchgoers worldwide do not object to the ordination of women.

As far as anyone can tell an actual majority of ordinary Anglican churchgoers worldwide attend evangelical or charismatic churches that self-identify as Protestant and would not want to have anything to do with organisational bureaucratic union with a Roman Catholic church ruled by a monarchical Pope. Or any other denomination controlled from the centre.

Those two groups are not identical, but they do have a very large overlap - and in England (if not perhaps all other countries) that overlap includes the majority of Evangelicals.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
I'm much amused by Albertus' Indigenous English Church.

We have African Indigenous Churches here and they have Bishops and even female Archbishops one of whom I know personally. They also like wearing purple and have the tendency to disagree with each other and start up other churches from time to time.

I've been following the discussion with considerable interest over the last few weeks. Everyone knows the RCC doctrine of what the Church is. If they don't they can look at the Catechism...and there are enough links to that already. Any accommodation to Anglicans has to be within that framework, no matter what the inessentials may be in terms of liturgy, mitres on letterheads etc. Anyone who thinks otherwise is naive.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
We who are left must get on with doing our job of being the indigenous and reformed Catholic, church in this country.

Ho ho ho. Anglican snobbery and pretentious self-justification. "How unlike the Italian Mission to the Irish we are, that foreign Church which is not really English".

These days that kind of attitude is described as racist. It's the religious version of the BNP.


Bollocks. Bollocks. And thrice bollocks.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Thurible:
In a slightly informal way, I shall quote a friend's reaction, one with which I entirely sympathise, understand and agree with.

quote:
§ 2. The Ordinary, in full observance of the discipline of celibate clergy in the Latin Church, as a rule (pro regula) will admit only celibate men to the order of presbyter. He may also petition the Roman Pontiff, as a derogation from can. 277, §1, for the admission of married men to the order of presbyter on a case by case basis, according to ... objective criteria approved by the Holy See.

Well f*ck that for Rome's acknowledging the value of Anglican experience of a married clergy. I'm not petitioning anyone for a derogation from canon law to fulfil my twin vocations to marriage and to priesthood. And I pity the wife of any married Anglican priest who thinks this is a step forward.

Thurible
The wife of Mascall's "Ultra-Catholic" strikes again?

I'm not sure how the wife of the priest going through the process is prejudiced in anyway, other than the fact that the breadwinner of the family might have to be a "tentmaker" priest, if he is ordained a priest at all. Furthermore, I doubt we are going to see any repeats of the Pierre Connolly debacle.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
I think Fr. Ghirlanda is talking more about future vocations then he is about the pending formation of the ordinariate. I think it's safe to assume, no matter how current Anglican clergy are received how in terms of ordination, it's hard to imagine married clergy won't be accepted (barring some sort of abnormal circumstances to be addressed by a tribunal).

The experience of the Ruthenian Byzantine Catholic Church in the United States may be an interesting parallel to the ordinariate. Although a particular ritual church, they don't have a synod here and are immediately subject to Rome. They are a small group that has had to live in the midst of a sea of Latins.
 
Posted by Pancho (# 13533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):

I think - as TT inferred - those who remain loyal to the TAC and all its works, wherever so situated, will be totally on the margin of whatever margin...


I think it's the other way around. Rome is mainstreaming the TAC the way it's been mainstreaming it's own traditionalists with Summorum Pontificium and groups like the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter. That the TAC was persistent in petitioning to be received makes me think they are very willing to be a part of the normal life of the Church.

I think if they had not petitioned to be received they would have remained more or less on the margins. As an outside observer I also think tradtionalist Anglo-Catholics within the Anglican Communion are most in danger of being marginalized where they are.

I wonder if all of this provides a model for reunion of the Polish National Catholic Church, if that ever happens.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
An interesting article in the WSJ today. I quote

Satisfied that they can remain true to their convictions, many traditional priests don't plan to seriously consider the offer from Rome. They love the Anglican liturgy and they want to remain firmly within that tradition. Many are also married and while the pope has said he would accommodate them, they aren't sure they would fit into the Catholic Church.

Source
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
An interesting article in the WSJ today. I quote

Satisfied that they can remain true to their convictions, many traditional priests don't plan to seriously consider the offer from Rome. They love the Anglican liturgy and they want to remain firmly within that tradition. Many are also married and while the pope has said he would accommodate them, they aren't sure they would fit into the Catholic Church.

Source

I don't know how often this has to be said but this response is not some vague 'come on in the water's dreadful' initiative on the part of the Pope. It is a response to repeated and insistent requests from individuals and groups for some kind of accommodation. That it doesn't particularly interest others who have not repeatedly and insistently requested such an accommodation is neither remarkable nor newsworthy.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
This article on the newly published Apostolic Constitution for the Ordinariates may clarify a few matters.

http://www.episcopalchurch.org/80050_116538_ENG_HTM.htm

I understand what PaulTh and Pancho are saying but I believe the TAC and where it continues is pretty marginal to the main game anywhere.
 
Posted by Manipled Mutineer (# 11514) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
This article on the newly published Apostolic Constitution for the Ordinariates may clarify a few matters.

http://www.episcopalchurch.org/80050_116538_ENG_HTM.htm


Quite a useful summary, although I note that on the subject of ordination he quotes Fr Ghirlanda's gloss on the Constitution as if it was the constitution itself, which is unfortunate.

[ 10. November 2009, 21:15: Message edited by: Manipled Mutineer ]
 
Posted by Manx Taffy (# 301) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by trouty:
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
We who are left must get on with doing our job of being the indigenous and reformed Catholic, church in this country.

Ho ho ho. Anglican snobbery and pretentious self-justification. "How unlike the Italian Mission to the Irish we are, that foreign Church which is not really English".

These days that kind of attitude is described as racist. It's the religious version of the BNP.

Apart from the fact that it is just so wrong. Such nonsense has never quite managed to
suppress the Catholic Church in these islands, even in the darkest days, despite the best efforts of the Anglican State.

Yes, those Anglicans should have followed the methods used by the Catholics in Spain, Italy, central Europe, France and the low countires. Maybe they would have been more successful in suppressing it.
Trouty - Pathetic and irrelevant to the current debate.

Albertus - so what did you really mean by "indigenous" that prevents your comment from being at best offensive?
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
It is with regret that I must echo Trisagion's comment. B16's offer was directed at TAC and a few other ex-Canterbury Anglican outfits. That other grouplets of Anglicans don't wish to accept the offer is nothing which should surprise anyone or even raise comment. It should be noted that most of the anti-gay etc crowd is fairly low (at least in Canada) and given to waving the XXXIX at anyone in sight.

I do not see the Constitution as being directed toward mainstream Anglicans. The suggestion that Tibercrossers should do so as humble supplicants, begging to be absorbed into the Borg, is peculiar. Recall, dear shipmates, that Paul VI, in his allocution on the canonisation of the English martyrs, went out of his way to refer to the heritage and spirituality of Anglicanism and how it would be welcome into the RCC. Chief superintendents of the Italian Mission have always made it clear that this was their position and that some sort of arrangement would be made. J2P2 did so with the Pastoral Provision and B16 has followed it up.

Given how the US-only Pastoral Provision was barely tolerated by most Latin bishops, if that, the Constitution is pretty generous. I see a great benefit for the Latin church, which could use a whiff of diversity and my friends who earn their crust as minions of the Scarlet Lady, appear to be carefully open to what the new lot will bring. In my area (Ottawa), the ACCoC (part of TAC) is a bit eccentric, but I think that the integration into a more mainstream body will be very helpful for members and clergy, even if a few of the clerics will be rattled at the start by the discipline and duty of their new affiliation. It'll do them good.
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
I cannot shake the following idea from my head.

The one sea-change in this for the Vatican is that the Latin Rite (although a particular strand of it) will see a dramatic increase in the number of married priests within it, admitted on the same terms as Eastern Catholic priests are. Augustine the Aleut has mentioned that some in the Roman Catholic Church would welcome the initiative as a way to get more priests into parishes, regardless of where they came from. From a pastoral standpoint I feel this is logical, as if these new Anglican Ordiniate priets are truly Catholic priests, they may as well be used where they are needed. The Mass is The Mass, and if it celebrated in a parish that has had to do without a priest for a significant period of time, so much the better. It would probably help the new Anglican Ords fit into their new setting better.

However a significant part of the Catholic Church, the English-speaking dioceses will now see more married priests then has been normal up to now. Given that the Anglican Ordiniate will have to replenish itself, I can't shake the idea that this is going to lead to open debate on clerical celibacy in the Catholic Church.

To wit, I think the following dialogue will happen in the next few years.

HH The Pope: My son, how is the new Anglican Ordiniate going? Things are well among your flock, I trust?

Random Bishop: Very well, Your Holiness. The Anglican Ordiniate parishes are flourishing. Such excellent singers. Plus we taught them how to play bingo.

HH The Pope: Excellent, my son. All is going according to plan.

Random Bishop: Just so, Your Holiness. Though I must note, I have had some of the Anglican Priests temporarily fill some long-standing vacancies in my diocese. A priest is a priest, so I said to all who asked.

HH The Pope: Wunderbar!

Random Bishop: Just one thing, Your Holiness. I have noted that there are a number of previous Latin laity going over to this new Anglican Ordiniate. They seem to want to be priests. Many said they would rather stay fully Latin if they could be married and ordained. They seem to understand and accept they would never be bishops. Regardless, they persist. Was this part of the plan?

HH The Pope: ....

Ok, so what does this do? I recognize that clerical celibacy is a discipline, not a dogma but it is one of those fundamental Catholic things That Makes Us Not Like Those Icky Protestants.

As I am a Protestant, I hope my Catholic Shipmates could help my understanding.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
The AC provides for the reception of married Anglican clergy as RC clergy, on a case-by-case basis. I don't see an indication that this will be ongoing, i.e. that the discipline of celibacy will be permanently relaxed or waived for the Ordinariates. Once the current wave of married clergy is received & ordained, I don't expect that subsequent ordinations from within the Ordinariate community will allow for marriage without Papal dispensation (see Anglicanorum Coetibus , VI.2).

A separate rite is not being established here. The Anglicans received under this provision will be a Use of the Latin Rite, and thus will be subject to Latin Rite disciplines as a rule.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
Indeed, Fr Weber, but for the first time they are foreseeing the possibility of continuing dispensations for married candidates for the priesthood, who had not been previous Anglican priests. While the provision is on an exceptional basis, that is a lot more open (in Vatican-speak) than had ever been in the past, where the only provision for a married candidate was one where he and the Mrs had agreed to renounce their conjugal existence (and where, preferably, Mrs had joined a religious community).

One of the concerns of poping Anglicans was that their supply of married clergy would be dependent on ex-Anglican priests heading over the Tiber. For communities which were accustomed to the services of married priests, this was a headache and, for some, a source of vulnerability to the community's continued existence (whether this fear was justified or not in some places, I do not think I can say).
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
I see what you mean, Augustine. I agree that the door's being left open wider than it was before--well, I guess it was shut before, so I suppose this is a crack?

Nevertheless, I doubt that it will happen often, especially if the Pope himself is the court of appeal.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
...where the only provision for a married candidate was one where he and the Mrs had agreed to renounce their conjugal existence (and where, preferably, Mrs had joined a religious community).

Where on earth did you get that idea? That hasn't been the discipline since before Trent.

[ 11. November 2009, 06:15: Message edited by: Trisagion ]
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Wasn't there an American couple in the 19th century who were married episcopalians who converted to the Catholic faith.They had a surname of Connelly ,I think.

Mr C wanted to be a priest and the couple separated,the husband becoming a Catholic priest and Mrs a nun.

While Father C later abandoned the Catholic faith,Mrs C was an important leader of a women's religious community.

Sorry I can't remember many of the details,but to fit in with the last two posts,the couple were able to enter the religious life by giving up voluntarily their married state.
 
Posted by trouty (# 13497) on :
 
[/qb][/QUOTE]Trouty - Pathetic and irrelevant to the current debate.

It wasn't me who started it. I was just responding to what seemed like a persecution complex, and at the same time giving a reason why many, many people will never consider converting, no matter what. Sounds like your prepared to see it given out but not to take it.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Manx Taffy:
[Albertus - so what did you really mean by "indigenous" that prevents your comment from being at best offensive?

I genuinely cannot see what might be offensive about my comment.

However, on reflection, 'indigenous' does not accurately convey the meaning that I wanted to convey. 'Indigenous' might suggest that I thought that the Church in England and Wales originated here. That, of course, would be absurd: like almost everyone else, we owe our Christianity to missionary activity, and very grateful we should be for it.

What i did mean was that the CofE/CinW are the Catholic church as it has developed in England and Wales ever since these lands were Christianised. That is a pretty mainstream Anglican view. It does not necessarily imply, to anyone but the most abnormally oversensitive, any attribution of inferiority or lower value to other traditions which have (notwithstanding any small continuing presence since the Reformation) largely spread here as a result of later waves of missionary activity.

[ 11. November 2009, 09:21: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
The Constitution wouldn't be a good Vatican document if it didn't leave some ambiguity about how things will be done. I'm sure that the issues about married priests will be clarified soon enough.

Ingo said, some posts earlier, that the new ordinariates will have an interesting liturgical impact. I think that's right. Implementing the Constitution will broaden the range of liturgical choices, a range that's already growing: Novus Ordo (Latin or vernacular, simple or solemn), the various degrees of EF Masses, ad orientem or versus populum, etc. Apparently the Constitution will add quite a range of Anglican-use liturgies: Book of Divine Worship? Anglican Missal?

Catholics in the US are about to get a truly dreadful translation of the Roman Missal, one that is neither sacral nor simple, written in a bizarre language that is neither Latin nor English. I hope that implementation in the UK gets postponed, but doubt that this will happen. The reception of the new translation in South Africa was very poor -- not surprising, because it's a poor translation.

As this shift takes place the English of the Book of Divine Worship could look more appealing to a good number of Catholics.

What I hope we don't end up with is an alphabet-soup of parish and worship types -- e.g. "We're a C1QX54 parish", meaning that the main Sunday Mass is celebrated ad orientem, but in English with the old ICEL translation, and that the music is led by a nun playing a tambourine...
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
...where the only provision for a married candidate was one where he and the Mrs had agreed to renounce their conjugal existence (and where, preferably, Mrs had joined a religious community).

Where on earth did you get that idea? That hasn't been the discipline since before Trent.
My handy Canon Law Reports digest, issued by the CLSA, which, admittedly, I have not perused for a few years. There was a Belgian case in the 1950s which got the canonists digging. Sorry I can't chapter and verse it for you.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
other traditions which have (notwithstanding any small continuing presence since the Reformation) largely spread here as a result of later waves of missionary activity.

I assume that is a circumlocutory way of talking about the Roman Catholics?

Because the other large Protestant traditions in these islands - Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Baptists, Methodists, Salvation Army, Pentecostalists, Charismatic/Restorationists - mostly either also share the same Reformed Catholic heritage as the Anglicans do or else started here and spread to the rest of the world. The British Isles are a factory of Christian denominations. One of our major exports!
 
Posted by Oremus (# 13853) on :
 
Albertus many RC'S will of course argue that we have been in the UK since before the Reformation too.
 
Posted by Major Disaster (# 13229) on :
 
I really am on the sidelines of this, but want to add my two pennyworth....

Trisagion is out by a few hundred years I think.

There was a benedictine monk on the Isle of Wight (UK) in the 1950's who as a married man felt convinced of his religious vocation, and to fulfill it both he and his wife agreed to the then requirement to separate permanently, both making solemn monastic vows after the normal period of probation/formation (which involved her being in an enclosed community for the rest of her life), and he was subsequently ordained priest. This is significantly later than Trent, being within living, though failing, memory. I have forgotten his name. His paintings were still in the crypt of Quarr Abbey a few years ago.

More generally on the topic of the OP, I cannot sympathise with people who make a personal moral difficulty of something that does not affect anyone now, but may develop in the future. Whether the anglican influx heightens debate about celibacy in the Roman Church, or the anglican ordinariate ends up being staffed by celibate clergy because of the then pope refuses to dispense from the normal canonical rule for latin catholic clergy in the RCC, is surely irrelevant to the decision before the real anglicans now.

They must make a decision under the provisions offered by the Apostolic Constitution of BXVI. The consequences of that decision for their salvation are in God's hands and that of the Church which they join.

If one wants to play devil's advocate, and indulge in silly games of speculation, one is certainly free to do so. But one should not pretend that one is being serious.

I could posit a scenario of anglican clergy moving in numbers disproportionate to the number of lay persons. What would be the sense of ordaning all the clergy to the RCC priesthood in that case? Where would they work as priests? If in normal RCC parishes, how would their attempt to maintain their "anglican patrimony" survive in reality?
Similarly, if laity move but there is no priest of the ordinariate to care for them, what happens to their hold on their "anglican patrimony"? Do they not simply merge with the other Rc's in the parish churches they attend?
With the changes that have been made in Anglican liturgical practices in the 20th and 21st centuries, could a watertight, or even convincing case be made against a full-bodied acceptance of the Roman rite by those who accept the RCC as is? This is not being required under the Aposolic Constitution, and seems generous on the Roman side.

Anglicans can have their married priests now within the RCC. But they must accept the RCC as it is, and it will not change in itself just to suit them. A new generation of Catholics may arise, strengthening the Anglican tradition within the RCC, or that tradition may die out. That is not a matter of any but cultural concern to the Christians who individually have to follow their conscience and the Truth, to achieve salvation for themeslves, and through themselves the world.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
MD, I think the length of the time that married priests accepted into the RCC as already married before they became Catholics will probably have the most to do with the influence of married priests in the RCC. No one lives for ever on this earth.

There's a strict requirement that if any man, ordained or not, wants to bring his wife with him with a view to being a married priest in the RCC, he needs to

1. Be married =and Anglican= before he's ordained.
2. Be the "husband of one wife", so when his wife dies, he can't marry again.
3. Be an Anglican really before he even =starts= such a process.

So since I can hardly envision a scenario where, for example, a married priest coming from Anglicanism via this Apostolic Constitution, would want his mature son, who also wants to be a priest, to remain Anglican (and married) until he gets through Anglican ordination, before he even begins to start the process of becoming a Catholic, so that he turns out to be a Married Catholic priest who is accepted as a convert from Anglicanism.

I just read that all through and it doesn't make a bit of sense the way I've phrased it.... I hope you can follow my "reasoning" [Confused]

Bottom line: I think that this particular set of married convert-priests will probably die out in a generation.

Mary
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cor ad cor loquitur:

Ingo said, some posts earlier, that the new ordinariates will have an interesting liturgical impact. I think that's right. Implementing the Constitution will broaden the range of liturgical choices, a range that's already growing: Novus Ordo (Latin or vernacular, simple or solemn), the various degrees of EF Masses, ad orientem or versus populum, etc. Apparently the Constitution will add quite a range of Anglican-use liturgies: Book of Divine Worship? Anglican Missal?

Yet another reason that I'm very uneasy about the proposals.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
other traditions which have (notwithstanding any small continuing presence since the Reformation) largely spread here as a result of later waves of missionary activity.

I assume that is a circumlocutory way of talking about the Roman Catholics?

Yes, that's right. I can't think of any long-established (in terms of centuries) other presences here, but if there was one, however small, you could be sure someone on the Ship would know about it, so thought I'd play safe!
In answer to Oremus- yes, of course there has been a continuous RC presence since before the Reformation - that's what i'd intended to suggest. But my other point is that the main historical and institutional tradition of the Catholic church in England and Wales has flowed (I think for better, others doubtless think for worse) into the CofE and CinW.
 
Posted by Oremus (# 13853) on :
 
Albertus whilst I appreciate your POV I would humbly suggest that your "other point" is debatable (some might even say highly) and some might even call it dubious.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Yes, of course it's debatable: I recognise that quite a lot of people don't agree with it. But quite a lot of people do (and it is as I say a pretty mainstream one within the CofE). I don't expect you, as an RC, to agree with it and indeed would find it difficult to see how in conscience you could: and I respect that. But I hope that you can see that this is a view which I can consistently hold as an Anglican. I would expect us to agree to differ: I wouldn't expect to be accused, as I was by Triple Tiara, of racism in making the point.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
Wasn't there an American couple in the 19th century who were married episcopalians who converted to the Catholic faith.They had a surname of Connelly ,I think.

Mr C wanted to be a priest and the couple separated,the husband becoming a Catholic priest and Mrs a nun.

While Father C later abandoned the Catholic faith,Mrs C was an important leader of a women's religious community.

Sorry I can't remember many of the details,but to fit in with the last two posts,the couple were able to enter the religious life by giving up voluntarily their married state.

Drat! I have heard/read this tale too. But I cannot recal the details. It was in the 1800s if I recall.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
I agree that one can put forward the point of view that the CofE is the continuation of the Catholic church in England.

How do Anglicans see the Church of Scotland which claims to be the continuation of the Catholic church in Scotland?

If one accepts the first argument about the Church of England,then surely one must accept a similar point of view about the Church of Scotland. If one does,why is it that the Church of England is not in full communion with the Church of Scotland?The C of S would claim equally to have apostolic succession (in a different manner from the anglicans) and to be the Scottish portion of the Church catholic.
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
I agree that one can put forward the point of view that the CofE is the continuation of the Catholic church in England.

Only from Canterbury, where if IIRC, the previous two bishops stopped being commemorated from Augustine's time.

The Church existed here before that, for some six hundred years before that. Bishops sent to Nicaea and other councils and such, from its beginnings of the first Christians. Aristobulus was first bishop.

As some RCC council in Spain (?), mentioned in passing, that Britain received Christianity first here. Baronius also referred to this.


Myrrh
 
Posted by Fëanor (# 14514) on :
 
ETA: This is in response to Forthview

It seems to me (and I could be completely wrong) that a claim of Apostolic Succession without Bishops is a bit like a claim of indoor plumbing without pipes (to continue the metaphor, Apostolicae Curae would be the Romans claiming that the Anglicans hadn't soldered their joints properly).

Thus, it's quite logically sound to both accept both that the CofE is the continuation of the Catholic church in England and that the same is not true of the Church of Scotland.

[ 11. November 2009, 14:36: Message edited by: Fëanor ]
 
Posted by Metapelagius (# 9453) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fëanor:
ETA: This is in response to Forthview

It seems to me (and I could be completely wrong) that a claim of Apostolic Succession without Bishops is a bit like a claim of indoor plumbing without pipes (to continue the metaphor, Apostolicae Curae would be the Romans claiming that the Anglicans hadn't soldered their joints properly).

Thus, it's quite logically sound to both accept both that the CofE is the continuation of the Catholic church in England and that the same is not true of the Church of Scotland.

Many moons ago Psyduck (who hasn't contributed for ages, sad to say) gave a lucid explanation of how both piskies and presbies could both legitimately claim to be the continuation of the pre-reformation church in Scotland, despite having been at one another's throats in the c17-18, and despite one group ending up with established status of a sort, the temporalities and the bulk of the populace. With reference to Forthview's point about Apostolic Succession - as far as I understand the matter the CoS rejects monarchical episcopacy, and instead vests the concept and duties of episcope in a council or court of the church - the presbytery corporately has the responsibilities of a bishop, though particular tasks may by custom be done by its moderator. That is certainly the case with a URC synod moderator, who is also working in a sort-of presbyterian ecclesial structure. To continue the domestic metaphor, cooking with electricity instead of gas?
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
Or maybe not cooking at all.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
If the claim of the Church of England to be the continuation of the Catholic church in England is based on the fact that it is/was the church of the majority of English people,then one could put forward the argument that by the same process in Scotland the church of Scotland (Presbyterian in government since 1688) is the national Catholic church of Scotland. The church of England as a 'national' Catholic church ought to be in full communion with the church of Scotland.

If the claims of the Church of England to be the national church are based on something else ,as for example apostolic succession,claims of right order etc,then it ought to be in full communion with the wider Catholic church and not to be picking and choosing which doctrines of the wider Catholic church it will accept and which not.
 
Posted by Major Disaster (# 13229) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fuzzipeg:
Or maybe not cooking at all.

Can we have popcorn while watching this particular aspect of the discussion? [Snigger]
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
Don't you mean popecorn?

I really can't see anything new coming out of the OP and various red herrings such as Apostolic Succession have already started to drift across. I wasn't sure what the relationship between the CoS & the CoE had to do with the OP.

[ 11. November 2009, 16:00: Message edited by: Fuzzipeg ]
 
Posted by Major Disaster (# 13229) on :
 
[Smile] , Actually dried peas for the participants would be useful. Throwing them at a wall, is the Polish expression equivalent to [brick wall]

My money's on Forthview, who is being very restrained at this stage, but he has the knock-down argument firmly in hand.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
If the claim of the Church of England to be the continuation of the Catholic church in England is based on the fact that it is/was the church of the majority of English people,then one could put forward the argument that by the same process in Scotland the church of Scotland (Presbyterian in government since 1688) is the national Catholic church of Scotland. The church of England as a 'national' Catholic church ought to be in full communion with the church of Scotland.

If the claims of the Church of England to be the national church are based on something else ,as for example apostolic succession,claims of right order etc,then it ought to be in full communion with the wider Catholic church and not to be picking and choosing which doctrines of the wider Catholic church it will accept and which not.

It's not about picking and choosing, it's about different understandings of catholicity (which I accept is also at the heart of the CoS question, upon which I do not feel qualified to comment).
It's also not (just) about having the allegiance of the majority of the people- part of my argument is that there is in England and Wales an enormous and important institutional continuity.
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Yes, and there is of course nothing "catholic" about this as it's the triumph of private judgment and the scuppering of any sort of infallibility of the church.

The Church of England has never in its history claimed to be infallible about anything.

quote:
The reformation has won in the CofE,
I can't find it particularly shocking news that the Reformation has 'won' in a reformed church.

quote:
Originally posted by cor ad cor loquitur:
Book of Divine Worship? Anglican Missal?

I have a hard time imaging that these books would find any wide favour with most Anglican-to-Catholic converts, especially in England. Even if the new mass translation is horrible, I assume the vast majority of Catholics will use it.

ETA: As with all historical developments, the Reformation represents both continuity and change. It's a bit rose-bespectacled, though, to indulge in too many romantic reveries about the CofE continuing as the 'catholic' church in England. There were Catholics active in England from the Reformation up til the re-establishment of the hierarchy. The Howards, not to mention to Stuarts (to use a notable example or two) must have been mightily confused about the CofE to have remained so stubbornly true to those 'other' catholics.

And even if the Church of England is catholic, it is not so in the sense the Pope would understand. That is not a sad or lamentable secret, and there is certainly room in a post-Christian Europe for churches of several flavours and self-understandings to pursue God's Kingdom.

[ 11. November 2009, 16:26: Message edited by: Hooker's Trick ]
 
Posted by Call me Numpty (# 3012) on :
 
FYI, this from GAFCON:

quote:
Statement from GAFCON/FCA Primates Council

We have received the Archbishop of Canterbury’s letter informing us
of the Pope’s offer of an ‘Apostolic Constitution’ for those
Anglicans who wish to be received into the Roman Catholic Church. We
believe that this offer is a gracious one and reflects the same
commitment to the historic apostolic faith, moral teaching and global
mission that we proclaimed in the Jerusalem Declaration on the Global
Anglican Future and for this we are profoundly grateful.

We are, however, grieved that the current crisis within our beloved
Anglican Communion has made necessary such an unprecedented offer. It
represents a grave indictment of the Instruments of Communion whose
very purpose is to strengthen and protect our unity in obedience to
our Lord’s clear command. Their failure to fully address the
abandonment of biblical faith and practice by The Episcopal Church and
the Anglican Church of Canada has now brought shame to the name of
Christ and seriously impedes the cause of the Gospel.

The Primates Council of the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans
(GAFCON/FCA) is convinced, however, that Anglicanism has a bright
future as long as we remain grounded in the Holy Scriptures and
obedient to our Lord Jesus Christ’s call to reach the lost and make
disciples of all nations teaching them to observe the whole Gospel. We
also believe that there is room within our Anglican family for all
those who hold true to the ‘faith once delivered to the saints’.
We would like to encourage those Anglicans who are considering this
invitation from the Roman Catholic Church to recognize that Anglican
churches are growing throughout the world in strength and offering a
vibrant testimony to the transforming work of Christ.

We are convinced that this is not the time to abandon the Anglican
Communion. Our Anglican identity of reformed catholicity, that gives
supreme authority to the Holy Scriptures and acknowledgement that our
sole representative and advocate before God is the Lord Jesus Christ,
stands as a beacon of hope for millions of people. We remain proud
inheritors of the Anglican Reformation. This is a time for all
Christians to persevere confident of our Lord’s promise that
nothing, not even the gates of hell, will prevail against His Church.

+Peter Abuja,

Chairman,

GAFCON/FCA Primates Council


 
Posted by Fëanor (# 14514) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
<snip>
then it ought to be in full communion with the wider Catholic church and not to be picking and choosing which doctrines of the wider Catholic church it will accept and which not.

And there's the rub. Indeed, all "churches" ought to be in full communion -- differences being resolved in forbearance and brotherly love. And on a side note, the CofE does a not-half-bad job at modeling this, on (rare) occasion.

But unfortunately, saying that the CofE somehow ought to be in communion either with Rome or with Edinburgh (or wherever the highest council of the CofS meets) is really denying the complexity of the matter. The historic episcopacy (as located in a person, and not a council) is essential to Anglicanism. Hence the stumbling block to communion. Anglicans might disagree with Rome as to what counts as "historic" or not, but it's an entirely different thing to suggest that this disagreement somehow logically necessitates Anglicans jettisoning the whole thing.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
The historic episcopacy (as located in a person, and not a council) is essential to Anglicanism. Hence the stumbling block to communion.
Not in the United States it isn't, and of course people have argued here it shouldn't be in the CofE either in terms of putting aside traditional notions of what constitutes valid ordination. Forthview I think has put his/her (sorry, not sure which) finger on an extremely valid point.

quote:
The Church of England has never in its history claimed to be infallible about anything.
Fallible church = Protestant church
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
quote:
Originally posted by Manx Taffy:
[Albertus - so what did you really mean by "indigenous" that prevents your comment from being at best offensive?

I genuinely cannot see what might be offensive about my comment.

However, on reflection, 'indigenous' does not accurately convey the meaning that I wanted to convey.

Ken and others once posted on a thread about the CofE in England, the CofS in Scotland, Lutheran in Northern Europe, the RCC in some Western European countries etc. being the normative church.

Where normative might mean state sponsored, majority or plural or central, or least effort to join, or most allied to cultural norms, or catholic etc. but without connotation of racial indigenity or Roman Catholic world-view.

It is perhaps slightly less true than it was a few decades back.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fëanor:
And there's the rub. Indeed, all "churches" ought to be in full communion -- differences being resolved in forbearance and brotherly love.


But unfortunately, saying that the CofE somehow ought to be in communion either with Rome or with Edinburgh (or wherever the highest council of the CofS meets) is really denying the complexity of the matter. The historic episcopacy (as located in a person, and not a council) is essential to Anglicanism. Hence the stumbling block to communion. Anglicans might disagree with Rome as to what counts as "historic" or not, but it's an entirely different thing to suggest that this disagreement somehow logically necessitates Anglicans jettisoning the whole thing.

Indeed. This brings up all sorts of issues.

1) Most Protestants believe it is not necessary to place total control of the church in the hands of one person, who [even by his own church's estimation] is fallible and subject to error in almost everything he does or says.

2) Most Protestants believe that a requirement of full doctrinal unity is not humanly possible, and the expectation that sacramental unity be hinged upon doctrinal unity is a human [and therefore subject to fallibility] contrivance that could easily be eliminated if parties truly desired so to do.

3) Most Protestants believe that the potential for human fallibility is too great to put the church in the hands of one person, who has the right to approve or deny his closest advisors and assistants, thus ensuring that any personal idiosyncracies, pet projects, soapboxes, or stereotyped visions of others can be perpetuated indefinitely.

"Picking and choosing" doctrines must be part of any healthy church body. By the admission of even the Roman Catholic Church, the pope, the magisterium, and any other leaders are all subject to the limit of fallibility. I'm even putting aside the issue of infallibility right now, for it has only been invoked on rare occasion, and by nature any leader (especially ones with administration appointed by himself) who bestows infallibility on himself is suspect.

Anglo-Catholics who convert to Rome may indeed fit right in. Then again, they may not. Being satisfied that they were meeting Roman liturgical requirements is one thing, but actually facing the harsh reality of bishops putting an end to idiosyncratic parish practices is another thing altogether. They may be lucky and end up with a bishop of turns a blind eye to any oddball practices. This does happen in RCism on occasion. However, as the years move farther and farther into the era of JP2 and Benedict bishops, there seems to be more and more bishops appointed who toe the party line. The old days of renegade bishops who don't mind shaking up the system seem to be disappearing quickly.
 
Posted by Hooker's Trick (# 89) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Fallible church = Protestant church

Realistic church = Protestant church.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Blimey! I know the clocks have just gone back, but I thought it was 1 hour, not 470 years.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
The relationship of the reference to the CofE and the CofS which I was trying to make is :

If I understand,some anglicans complain that the RC church does not recognize them,as what some anglicans claim to be.

If I understand correctly anglicans do not recognise (by being in full communion) the Presbyterian Church of Scotland as being what it (sometimes) claims to be - the 'national' Catholic Church on Scotland.For one reason or another they do not recognise (sometimes) the authenticity of the sacraments(well,some of them) as conducted by Presbyterian ministers.

One big difference is that the Church of Scotland does not talk(except in fairly closed circles)of being the Catholic church of Scotland.
Its clergy woud never talk of celebrating Mass,for example - well not of them celebrating Mass)
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Realistic church = Protestant church.
Which indeed may be the case. I'm not trying to argue who is actually right. To me however, "reformed" and "catholic", is like being "a little pregnant".
 
Posted by Fëanor (# 14514) on :
 
AltWally: At the risk of demonstrating my own ignorance, could you clarify your statement beginning: "Not in the United States it isn't..." please? Are you referring to the communion agreement between TEC and ELCA? If so, then I understand how the "historic" point begins to be dulled a bit -- but surely you accept that there's a significant difference between even an 'invalid' episcopacy, and councils that perform "episcopal" functions?

MartinL: Those are very salient points -- ones that, imho, do a nice job of illustrating the difference between anglo-catholicism and anglo-papalism. I personally have a soft spot for unity arising out of forbearance/brotherly love, as opposed to unity proceeding from "if you disagree, we'll kick you out." But my own opinions aren't exactly relevant here. (ETA: as much as I love your point #2, I think the folks in WELS might disagree with you [Biased] )

forthview: Now I think I understand you a bit better. It's certainly an interesting point. Perhaps I'm just too dense, but it still seems "reasonable" for the CoS's lack of a 'personal' episcopacy (regardless of historicity) to impede communion. Just to satisfy my own curiousity, does the CoS (or even a subset thereof) actively desire communion with the CoE (and hence the rest of global Anglicanism)?

[ 11. November 2009, 21:05: Message edited by: Fëanor ]
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:

If I understand correctly anglicans do not recognise (by being in full communion) the Presbyterian Church of Scotland as being what it (sometimes) claims to be - the 'national' Catholic Church on Scotland.For one reason or another they do not recognise (sometimes) the authenticity of the sacraments(well,some of them) as conducted by Presbyterian ministers.

The Church of England recognises the Presbyterian Church of Scotland as being a legitimate national church. Its own Supreme Governor has received communion in the Church of Scotland.

The Church of England is in full communion with the Episcopal Church in Scotland, which means that it shares full ministry with that church. But no-one really believes that the Anglican church in Scotland is the normative national church of Scotland.

Anglo-catholics within the CofE would obviously have a problem with the orders of presbyterian ministers in the CofS, but then Anglo-catholics within the CofE have lots of issues with orders.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
The Reformed tradition maintains that it is a valid form of the Church, others may or may not be. In modern, ecumenical times we tend to assume yes; in the absence of certainty in other ages we have assumed negative.

Many Church of Scotland folk assume that if they are in England they should be Church of England. However they also often do not settle well into CofE and this may be the source of the view that I have heard expressed in the last decade that England never has been a truly Christian nation.

If however you want to ask about validity by the Reformed Churches own standards of Anglican orders, the answer seems to come out as quite a clear invalid. The Reformed tradition requires that to be ordained your calling is tested within the church local that is by at least one local congregation (URC practice works out as one for elders, but two for ministers). This simply does not happen within the Anglican tradition, it does not happen in Roman, the first local may happen within Methodism although not the second as people are ordained by conference and Baptists actually often fulfil this criteria.

The thing is the Reformed tradition does not have an Episcopacy but does have quite strong understanding of Episcope, which depending on how strongly you doubt wider groupings, is either exercised by Presbytery or by the local church (the URC compromises on that and some powers are to Synod and some are with the local congregation). Calvin uses the texts about 'overseer' to apply to the cleric and not to the Bishop. Texts that Anglicans and RC apply to priests are applied to Elders. The church therefore is far more small scale and localised.

Jengie
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
Jengie, what exactly do you mean by "tested"?

Here in the UCCan a congregation has to nominate someone for ordination. Conference ordains candidates and a minister of the Conference actually lays hands on the Ordinand. You must also be ordained to a specific congregation. Our rule is no destination, no ordination. Which is how I wound up with a New Brunswick birth certificate.
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
I don't find the "indigenous" description particularly racist. Substitute rather "the denomination that goes with the grain of the prevailing culture". In England, the CofE; in Scotland, the Church of Scotland.

It might change over time, of course, (and no doubt our RC friends are rather hoping that it will), but the RC church in England has of late been the church of immigrant minorities (Poles and Filipinos now; Irish previously) and of the persecuted before that. The RCs may not like that, but it is the historical reality.

If I found myself in another country from that of my birth, I have two options: either seek out the denomination that is my "home" one, or do the slightly more incarnational thing of joining the majority culture church. I'd opt for the second of those - if I were living in Scotland, the Church of Scotland would be the obvious place to be, not the Piskies.
 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:

If I found myself in another country from that of my birth, I have two options: either seek out the denomination that is my "home" one, or do the slightly more incarnational thing of joining the majority culture church. I'd opt for the second of those - if I were living in Scotland, the Church of Scotland would be the obvious place to be, not the Piskies.

And so, if you found yourself in Italy . . . .

[Smile]
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
And so, if you found yourself in Italy . . . .

[Smile]

. . . . you'd be a lapsed Roman Catholic who shows up at Mass on Christmas and Easter, chatting on a cell phone the whole time! [Razz]
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:

If I found myself in another country from that of my birth, I have two options: either seek out the denomination that is my "home" one, or do the slightly more incarnational thing of joining the majority culture church. I'd opt for the second of those - if I were living in Scotland, the Church of Scotland would be the obvious place to be, not the Piskies.

For me, it would probably depend on which town I was in and why. If I was in Edinburgh say, I would probably go to Sts Paul and George (P&G) - the liveliest of the Episcopal churches. In an ordinary town, probably the CofS, but possibly another free church.
 
Posted by Major Disaster (# 13229) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by pete173:
I don't find the "indigenous" description particularly racist. Substitute rather "the denomination that goes with the grain of the prevailing culture". In England, the CofE; in Scotland, the Church of Scotland.

When a barb is aimed at discomforting others to one's own benefit, of course one does not judge it as a particular nuisance. That's simple complacency. The "denomination that goes with the prevailing culture" exposes the total bankruptcy of a church or its spokesman who see nothing fundamental to challenge, contradict, or confront, in the prevailing culture of a particular country, whether his own or of his neighbour. I'm alright Jack, and Dr Pangloss, meet at last.
quote:

It might change over time, of course, (and no doubt our RC friends are rather hoping that it will), but the RC church in England has of late been the church of immigrant minorities (Poles and Filipinos now; Irish previously) and of the persecuted before that. The RCs may not like that, but it is the historical reality.

A very short view of history, and selective, too. Any claim of the CofE or CofS to continuation of catholicity in Britain completely ignores their inception in an upstart disobedience and usurpation of lawful ecclesiastical authority, motivated by prospects of economic or political gain, and enforced by looting and destruction of property on a barbaric scale, with the murder of those who opposed them. A fine birth certificate of Catholicity indeed, issued fifteen centuries too late to prove legitimacy, all the niceness of ecumenical dialogue notwithstanding.

quote:

If I found myself in another country from that of my birth, I have two options: either seek out the denomination that is my "home" one, or do the slightly more incarnational thing of joining the majority culture church. I'd opt for the second of those - if I were living in Scotland, the Church of Scotland would be the obvious place to be, not the Piskies.

Even within the European Union, "the majority culture church" in different states has beliefs and practices which are directly opposed to those of other states. Such a personal relation to the church as you confess, is maintained with a commitment maintained at the level of political expediency or correctness, rather than witness to the Faith of the Church, which is martyrdom.

How does this square with a real belief in One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church that has any real existence and is not a house divided against itself?
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
I have no objection to the Church of England or the Church of Scotland describing themselves as indigenous. Neither am I in any way embarrassed nor do I feel compromised by the fact that the Catholic Church has a large proportion of immigrants. In my own little patch of responsibility I would guess about a third of the regular congregations are English. The rest are Irish, Polish, Chinese, Italian, Filipino, Nigerian, American and anything else you care to mention. I am quite delighted that we are able to welcome and make space for our brothers and sisters of other cultures. Each Sunday I look out at what is truly a Catholic scene, with people from all nations. And our indigenous population are part of that universal People of God. But the Catholic Church is not just some foreign ethnic chaplaincy: we are a local Church who make space always for all who are our brothers and sisters in Christ.

However, to couple indigenous with Catholic, and describe the Church of England as the "indigenous Catholic Church" is at best fantasy, ignoring the reality of the Catholic Church which continued to exist in this country despite the birth of the Anglican Church. Thomas More, John Fisher and countless others did not think the new national Church was simply a continuation of the old, and they were prepared to die for that position. How do you explain away that continuing Catholic presence if you also claim the Anglican Church was in fact the real Catholic Church?

At worst the description is one of jingoistic nationalism. The old mocking appellation of "Italian Mission to the Irish" reveals this attitude. Are English Catholics just johnny foreigners in disguise? Are they all foreign agents, as Tudor propaganda liked to suggest?


I am quite willing to admit that Albertus is not guilty of this attitude, if that is what he claims. Given the significant, ongoing presence of the Roman Catholic Church, however, his use of "indigenous Catholic Church" to describe the Anglicans was unpropitious.
 
Posted by Resurgam (# 14891) on :
 
Good Christians, rather than fighting the Reformation all over again, perhaps we should consider whether we're straining out gnats while swallowing camels? The Pope was petitioned for acceptance by a group of disaffected Anglicans; he assented to their request. Good news for both sides, yes?
Materialism and secularism are galloping on in society and people wonder why they aren't happy yet. I think we have better ways of building the Kingdom. [Angel]
 
Posted by Myrrh (# 11483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Major Disaster:
A very short view of history, and selective, too. Any claim of the CofE or CofS to continuation of catholicity in Britain completely ignores their inception in an upstart disobedience and usurpation of lawful ecclesiastical authority, motivated by prospects of economic or political gain, and enforced by looting and destruction of property on a barbaric scale, with the murder of those who opposed them. A fine birth certificate of Catholicity indeed, issued fifteen centuries too late to prove legitimacy, all the niceness of ecumenical dialogue notwithstanding.

This should be interesting. Come on ye Anglicans..

Myrrh
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fëanor:
AltWally: At the risk of demonstrating my own ignorance, could you clarify your statement beginning: "Not in the United States it isn't..." please? Are you referring to the communion agreement between TEC and ELCA? If so, then I understand how the "historic" point begins to be dulled a bit -- but surely you accept that there's a significant difference between even an 'invalid' episcopacy, and councils that perform "episcopal" functions?

The agreement you mention is one of the principle issues since it has an "out" in it that allows for non episcopal ordinations. As a precursor to full communion there is
this agreement between the United Methodist Church and the Protestant Episcopal Church. The issue is not solely one of the procedure of ordination, but the sacraments themselves which flow through ordination. The catholic understanding is authority in the church comes from the charism of a bishop handed down in succession from the apostles. The Eucharist cannot itself be valid or celebrated when removed from this framework. The Reformed Episcopal Church in the United States was started essentially over this issue, but with the circumstances reversed.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Major Disaster:
How does this square with a real belief in One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church that has any real existence and is not a house divided against itself?

Belief in One Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church is, above all, belief in our Lord, not in an institution or in trifles thereof. Throughout the Gospels, Jesus bristles against institutionalized Judaism.

Realistically, we [humanity] recognize the utility of organization. However, we must be careful to confess the faith of the church, not the faith in the church. To do otherwise would elevate a disjointed organization to an exalted status, rather than to acknowledge that we are the church--those who carry on the apostolic tradition by confessing our faith together.
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
Dear me, why does every argument seem to boil down to "Catholicity" around here? And I didn't even start this tangent this time!

I am quite sure that my little corner of the Body of Christ is valid and true, coming as it does through joint parentage of the Church of Scotland, the Methodists (both British and American) and the Congregationalists.

As for pete173's idea of "going along with the culture", I dare him to follow that advice. Really, I expected a better argument. Whence where you go on this side of the pond, Pete? No ecclesial community has a majority, and English Canada has never had a dominant church. And just to make matters worse, the United Church of Canada is a third larger then the Anglicans.

The same bafflement awaits you if you go to the United States. Bring some dice, it might help you decide.

I am being hard, but this sort of "Church of the whatever locality" is so bankrupt its sad. Come on, stand for something. Christ is not confined to one corner of the world, nor is his faith. Aren't there any principles anymore?
 
Posted by pete173 (# 4622) on :
 
Yeah, there are principles, but they aren't about the type of denomination we espouse. The principles for a lot of us, as people well know, are about adherence to orthodoxy, not about ecclesial pedigree. That's why we'll never "get" each other. For those of you for whom apostolic succession, episcopacy, communion with a particular historic see are important, you'll always be looking for what is properly "catholic" in your terms. For those of us for whom the shape of the ecclesial institution is a matter of less importance, we'll pick the one that's credally orthodox and missionally doing the job.

You're looking for a manifestation of the one holy catholic and apostolic church expressed in structural and visible terms; we're looking at a church that, in all its diversity, already expresses what it means to be the one holy catholic and apostolic church.

We won't convince each other. Transferring between denominations is something that from one perspective is either unthinkable or about seeking the desideratum; from the other perspective, it's just about finding the place that works.

Cultural alignment is one criterion that one might use to evaluate which denomination or local church to get stuck into; it's not the only one.
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
I think the problem for Anglicanism is that it tries to be all things to all people. I noted to a fellow Anglican that Anglicanism is the one tradition where everyone complains about its short-comings. Catholics complain that we aren't high church enough, and that most parishes do not offer Solemn High Masses every Sunday. Evangelicals cry that we don't take the Bible seriously. Liberals complain that we aren't inclusive enough. Feminists complain that we still have too much masculine language in our liturgy, etc, etc.

Perhaps we Anglicans have spent too much time criticizing our faith, without looking at its positive aspects. Irrespective of what Rome does, Anglicans should concentrate on nurturing our tradition so that not only will people stay, but hopefully more people will join, including disaffected Roman Catholics.
 
Posted by seasick (# 48) on :
 
I'll think you'll find that there are complainers in all traditions... You just notice the ones in your own tradition more.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:

I am quite willing to admit that Albertus is not guilty of this attitude, if that is what he claims. Given the significant, ongoing presence of the Roman Catholic Church, however, his use of "indigenous Catholic Church" to describe the Anglicans was unpropitious.

Thank you. I will stand by indigenous but will modify it to 'the main stream of the indigenous Catholic church' in England and Wales, to recognise more explicitly the continuing presence of Catholics who, while being entirely English and grounded in the traditions of the pre-Reformation English church, retained their ecclesiastical allegiance to Rome.

And that's my final contribution to this debate: other than to say that I welcome the presence of any ecclesiastical community, Catholic, Orthodox, or Protestant, which maintains or increases the overall amount of Christianity in these lands. I have no doubt that we are all much better off for the revived presence of Roman Catholicism here than we would have been without it.

[ 12. November 2009, 10:40: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:

I am quite willing to admit that Albertus is not guilty of this attitude, if that is what he claims. Given the significant, ongoing presence of the Roman Catholic Church, however, his use of "indigenous Catholic Church" to describe the Anglicans was unpropitious.

Thank you. I will stand by indigenous but will modify it to 'the main stream of the indigenous Catholic church' in England and Wales, to recognise more explicitly the continuing presence of Catholics who, while being entirely English and grounded in the traditions of the pre-Reformation English church, retained their ecclesiastical allegiance to Rome.

And that's my final contribution to this debate: other than to say that I welcome the presence of any ecclesiastical community, Catholic, Orthodox, or Protestant, which maintains or increases the overall amount of Christianity in these lands. I have no doubt that we are all much better off for the revived presence of Roman Catholicism here than we would have been without it.

Thank you very much, Sir. We're ever so grateful.
 
Posted by Rosa Winkel (# 11424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:
In my own little patch of responsibility I would guess about a third of the regular congregations are English. The rest are Irish, Polish, Chinese, Italian, Filipino, Nigerian, American and anything else you care to mention. I am quite delighted that we are able to welcome and make space for our brothers and sisters of other cultures. Each Sunday I look out at what is truly a Catholic scene, with people from all nations.

[Smile]

In these (from my view) anti-immigrant days that's cool to read.

Us Anglicans are also international, of course, but I feel our focus on the parish means we lose a focus on the rest of the communion, though of course some parishes in GB have links with parishes in the likes of Nigeria or the Solomon Islands.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
I hope you will allow me to give some sort of answer to Feanor's question about whether even a subset of the Church of Scotland would want union with the Church of England.

Of course my question was about the attitude of the Church of England to the Church of Scotland in the light of the attitude of the Roman Catholic Church to the Church of England,as I think that they sometimes treat the Church of Scotland in the way that they feel the RC church treats them.

For most Church of Scotland members there is no active wish to come closer to the Church of England.Relations between the two churches are,I think,good but most Scots,including Presbyterians see the C of E as expressing the foibles of our English cousins.It is generally seen as a 'Protestant' church which has however 'bishops', a word which raises the hackles of most Presbyterians,given the bitter and bloody struggles between the supporters of episcopacy and the supporters of Presbyterianism between 1560 and 1688. Most people would call the clergy of the Cof E 'ministers'. The word 'vicar' is unknown to most people within Scotland,except to those with great knowledge of ecclesiastical history.

The Church of Scotland has its own controversies between 'liberals' and 'conservatives' but arguments between 'Catholic' and 'Evangelicals' are virtually unknown.

Allow me a short story to illustrate this point.

A few years ago I attended a communion service in an Old Folks' Home taken by a C of S minister.For the service ,held on the 3rd Sunday of Advent the minister put on her black gown,nicely set off with a red stole.After the service she said to me 'sorry,but I haven't got a purple stole' I said 'Well don't worry! It's not important'Trying to put her at ease I added 'It's the 3rd Sunday of Advent you could have used a rose coloured stole and the red is a bit like that.'

Two Presbyterians standing by asked 'what on earth are you talking about ? 'The minister,much more liturgically aware than the parishioners ,attempted to say something in simple terms about the Western sequence of liturgical colours.'Oh' said one of the ladies ,'I thought you were wearing red because it was Christmassy !'
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
'tis interesting that GAFCON's response to the Holy Father's invitation was considerably more polite and measured than the response of many Anglican liberals. Just another example of how, in observing the gay sex wars in the Anglican Communion, and in American society, it has become increasingly difficult to discern just who are the narrow-minded bigots as opposed to the broad-minded, open-hearted visionaries.
 
Posted by Desert Daughter (# 13635) on :
 
I am a Roman Catholic myself, and do not really have a problem with the Vatican being opposed to female ordination (ie it is just not very high up on my personal agenda of faith-related concerns). Which is why Ihaven't posted here earlier.

But I now feel the issue goes much deeper than women bishops. The issue is the diversity and vitality of Catholicism (Orthodox, Roman, and Anglican)

While I respect the Vatican's stand on tradition, and agree that changing this tradition will open a whole pandora's bow of issues and problems and Zeitgeist-infected idiocies, I believe that our Catholic faith (Anglican and Roman) is not at all served by the Pope's open invitation to Anglicans.

The issue of female ordination is not cast in stone. Remaining traditional is IMHO as much justified as trying to change it. Why not accept that one part of the Catholic family opens its doors to the practice of women bishops, after all, they already have some experience with female priests, and the world did not come to an end.

Catholicism is a beautiful expression of the Cristian faith, but it needs to have many faces, and it needs to advance. Why not allow one part of the family to advance, and see what happens?

So please, all you traditional Anglo-Catholics, do not sign up with Rome. Remain yourselves and show us another face of good Catholicism, so that we may learn from you and your experiences.
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
Reply to Desert Daughter:

quote:
Catholicism is a beautiful expression of the Christian faith, but it needs to have many faces
It will now have one more. Eastern-rite, Latin-rite, modern vernacular rite, Charismatic, etc, etc, etc, ... and now Anglican

quote:
and it needs to advance.
Aren't you presupposing that change and progress are one and the same?

quote:
Why not allow one part of the family to advance, and see what happens?
It has. People have seen what happens. That's why they want to leave.
 
Posted by Fëanor (# 14514) on :
 
Forthview and AltWally, thanks for the responses -- they've been enlightening!
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:
Jengie, what exactly do you mean by "tested"?

That the candidate will have a decision of recognition from the councils of the local congregation. The recognition is local.

In our case that means both that the sending congregation has to bring their candidacy to a church meeting and that they need to have a call issued by the church meeting before they can be ordained.

However I am willing to accept that one and not the other is sufficient (we are stricter about the first which always has to happen than the second but it is unusual, someone going straight from theological college to a post where there is no congregation but it is necessary that they are ordained, such posts are normally second or successive pastorates). I am suspicious that the CofS is stricter on the second than the first but cannot confirm and I am happy in situations where elders are more powerful for them rather than church meeting to enact.

Jengie
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
The decision should be "decision of support/recognition of the vocation"

Jengie
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
quote:
Originally posted by Triple Tiara:

I am quite willing to admit that Albertus is not guilty of this attitude, if that is what he claims. Given the significant, ongoing presence of the Roman Catholic Church, however, his use of "indigenous Catholic Church" to describe the Anglicans was unpropitious.

Thank you. I will stand by indigenous but will modify it to 'the main stream of the indigenous Catholic church' in England and Wales, to recognise more explicitly the continuing presence of Catholics who, while being entirely English and grounded in the traditions of the pre-Reformation English church, retained their ecclesiastical allegiance to Rome.

And that's my final contribution to this debate: other than to say that I welcome the presence of any ecclesiastical community, Catholic, Orthodox, or Protestant, which maintains or increases the overall amount of Christianity in these lands. I have no doubt that we are all much better off for the revived presence of Roman Catholicism here than we would have been without it.

Thank you very much, Sir. We're ever so grateful.
(Breaks earlier resolution).
I've tried to be gracious and eirenic about this. Maybe you could do the same.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Desert Daughter:
While I respect the Vatican's stand on tradition, and agree that changing this tradition will open a whole pandora's bow of issues and problems and Zeitgeist-infected idiocies, I believe that our Catholic faith (Anglican and Roman) is not at all served by the Pope's open invitation to Anglicans..

Your reference to "our Catholic faith (Anglican and Roman)" misses the point. There is not a shared "Catholic faith" between Roman Catholics and Anglicans on the OoW (nor on many other isues) - partly because there is no common doctrine on the OoW within the Anglican family. There is no authoritative mechanism for establishing doctrine between Anglicans themselves or between Anglicans and Roman Catholics. But there is between Roman Catholics - the magisterium.

quote:
Originally posted by Desert Daughter:
The issue of female ordination is not cast in stone. Remaining traditional is IMHO as much justified as trying to change it.

For Roman Catholics who are loyal to the magisterium, that matter is settled - definitively. The Church teaches that there are "hard deposits" of the faith which she cannot change - to depart from those is not justified. Remaining "traditional" over defined essentials is not just a personal expression of what kind of Catholic you are - it is a necessary condition of being a Catholic in the first place. This is the reason the CDF went to such elaborate, explicit measures to send out the message that the teaching that the Church does not have the authority to ordain women was to be held definitively (i.e., it was "settled").
quote:
Originally posted by Desert Daughter:
Why not accept that one part of the Catholic family opens its doors to the practice of women bishops, after all, they already have some experience with female priests, and the world did not come to an end.

Because of what I've said above, and also because the Anglicans are not a "part of the Catholic family" in the sense you imply.
quote:
Originally posted by Desert Daughter:
Catholicism is a beautiful expression of the Cristian faith, but it needs to have many faces, and it needs to advance. Why not allow one part of the family to advance, and see what happens?

As above, and what Chiltern Hundred said.

quote:
Originally posted by Desert Daughter:
So please, all you traditional Anglo-Catholics, do not sign up with Rome. Remain yourselves and show us another face of good Catholicism, so that we may learn from you and your experiences.

I refer the honourable poster to the reply I made some moments ago.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
why does every argument seem to boil down to "Catholicity" around here?
Because "catholicity" means the fullness of faith. Because it's where our understanding of the church starts.

Wherever the bishop appears, there let the people be; as wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the catholic Church. It is not lawful to baptize or give communion without the consent of the bishop. On the other hand, whatever has his approval is pleasing to God. Thus, whatever is done will be safe and valid. -- St. Ignatius of Antioch

Cut the chord from this and you're in a new paradigm, and one which isn't catholic.
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
I very much doubt that Catholicity just means saying the right words at the ordination liturgies, or wearing albs rather than surplices. Catholicity means faithfulness to the apostolic witness of Jesus Christ as Lord.

If defined this way, I think we all, Catholic or Protestant, fall short of the catholic ideal.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
I think, Desert Daughter, it is, at this stage, a moot point as to the number of High Church/Anglo-Catholic Anglicans who will go across to the new ordinariats.

Certainly the Traditional Anglican Communion - having left the general Anglican Communion over, principally, the issues of women's ordination and sexual behaviour issues - will do so almost en masse.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Anglican_Communion

Some TAC members, such as the Primate, having formerly been Catholic priests, will not be allowed to.

The most impressive Anglo-Catholics, including the Arcbishop of Canterbury, appear to be staying.

The Anglican Church has traditionally attempted to include those inclined towards more Catholic belief and practice with those who tend to take a more Protestant stance on faith and sacraments. There have also been, particularly in countries such as England, what have been called mainstream Anglicans.

At the moment the age old Anglican consensus seems to have broken down. Accusations have been thrown to and fro. The more Conservative Evangelical dioceses in Sydney; parts of South America and African countries like Nigeria gathered together in GAFCON seem to be effectively out of communion with the Episcopal Church in the USA.

'Catholic' is a word that can mean different things to different people. The disagreement on 'Catholicity' seems to continue on this thread.

There are many who will appreciate your clearly stated and charitable approach whether they agree or disagree with you.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Sir P - I understand that the archbishop of the TAC,according to what is laid out in the apostolic constituion will not be allowed to function as an Anglican rite priest - but would he be able,if he so wished to transfer to the 'anglican rite' as a lay person ?

Or would he, if he wished to return to the Catholic church, have to be re-integrated to the Latin rite as a laicised priest in an 'irregular' marriage ?
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
From what I understand, Forthview, I would think the latter. He has been married twice so I would suspect, if they observed the letter of the law, it would be difficult for him to communicate.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:

Wherever the bishop appears, there let the people be; as wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the catholic Church. It is not lawful to baptize or give communion without the consent of the bishop. On the other hand, whatever has his approval is pleasing to God. Thus, whatever is done will be safe and valid. -- St. Ignatius of Antioch

Cut the chord from this and you're in a new paradigm, and one which isn't catholic.

Amen and Amen. The force of the Catholic Reformation is that Rome had departed from the faith represented by the early mothers and fathers and the New Testament. Where the Reformation fell into error was when it abandoned the representative apostolic ministry.

Both still fall short of the fullness of the Catholic faith. But when I look at all sorts of movements in the wider church, be they catholic, sacramental, evangelical, charismatic, (post)liberal or neo-apostolic, I believe the Spirit is working to bring the whole church closer to this fullness.

Perhaps TAC and FiF heading Romewards is part of that. I believe it is.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Anglican_Brat and Edward Green, I must disagree. The fullness of the catholic faith exists where the true eucharist does, because there is Christ himself.

That is why the issue of ordination, succession, etc. is not a trivial matter.

[ 13. November 2009, 13:36: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:

I've tried to be gracious and eirenic about this. Maybe you could do the same.

You got the sarcastic response for the same reason that TT took exception to your earlier post. If that's gracious and eirenic, give me patronising supercilliousness and passive aggression any day of the week.
 
Posted by ianjmatt (# 5683) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Anglican_Brat and Edward Green, I must disagree. The fullness of the catholic faith exists where the true eucharist does, because there is Christ himself.

That is why the issue of ordination, succession, etc. is not a trivial matter.

Surely the Fathers had it the other way round. The church is where he Bishop is, and where the Bishop is, is where true eucharist can be found.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ianjmatt:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Anglican_Brat and Edward Green, I must disagree. The fullness of the catholic faith exists where the true eucharist does, because there is Christ himself.

That is why the issue of ordination, succession, etc. is not a trivial matter.

Surely the Fathers had it the other way round. The church is where he Bishop is, and where the Bishop is, is where true eucharist can be found.
Correct, that is why I posted the quote of St. Ignatius above (or on the previous page now).

[ 13. November 2009, 14:17: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
The force of the Catholic Reformation is that Rome had departed from the faith represented by the early mothers and fathers and the New Testament.

Do you really mean 'force'? It was hardly that was it? It wasn't even a 'Catholic' Reformation but a local one - if your distinction between a Protestant and Catholic Reformation means what it appears to mean.

Do you really think that the Holy Spirit, promised to the Apostles, managed to fall asleep on the job until the dynastic terror of the English monarchy and the lust for wealth of the English nobility and gentry fortuitously appeared on the scene to allow that same Spirit to make good on that promise. It's preposterous. It's 'Look our Johnny's the only one in step'.

I can take Anglicanism that recognises that from the very first it was grounded in Protestant ecclesiology, soteriology and approach to Sacred Scripture. What I find almost impossible to understand is this perpetuation of the Tractarian myth.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:
Do you really think that the Holy Spirit, promised to the Apostles, managed to fall asleep on the job until the dynastic terror of the English monarchy and the lust for wealth of the English nobility and gentry fortuitously appeared on the scene to allow that same Spirit to make good on that promise.

Probably! We Anglicans live in our own little bubble!
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
It is said of the scholarly archdeacon of London John Jortin (1698-1770):
quote:
his criticism of Roman Catholicism was such that he argued that it was only the direct supervision entailed by divine providence that had preserved Christianity up to the era of the Reformation.[/QB]
Plus ça change, innit.
 
Posted by ianjmatt (# 5683) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
Originally posted by ianjmatt:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Anglican_Brat and Edward Green, I must disagree. The fullness of the catholic faith exists where the true eucharist does, because there is Christ himself.

That is why the issue of ordination, succession, etc. is not a trivial matter.

Surely the Fathers had it the other way round. The church is where he Bishop is, and where the Bishop is, is where true eucharist can be found.
Correct, that is why I posted the quote of St. Ignatius above (or on the previous page now).
So who has the authority to say that the See of Canterbury is not authentically apostolic, therefore not a valid Bishop, therefore not a valid church?
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:
Do you really think that the Holy Spirit, promised to the Apostles, managed to fall asleep on the job until the dynastic terror of the English monarchy and the lust for wealth of the English nobility and gentry fortuitously appeared on the scene to allow that same Spirit to make good on that promise.

Probably! We Anglicans live in our own little bubble!
Fog in Channel. Rome cut off from Canterbury.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ianjmatt:
So who has the authority to say that the See of Canterbury is not authentically apostolic, therefore not a valid Bishop, therefore not a valid church?

It isn't you or me.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:


I can take Anglicanism that recognises that from the very first it was grounded in Protestant ecclesiology, soteriology and approach to Sacred Scripture. What I find almost impossible to understand is this perpetuation of the Tractarian myth.

As a sort-of Anglo-Catholic, sort-of Liberal, I frequently cringe at various expressions of Anglican triumphalism, whether it's the barely-disguised jingoism of public-school liberal Angllicanism, or the fantasies of those anglo-catholics who pretend that their little world of Martin Travers baroque and rose-pink fiddlebacks represents Catholicism, let alone the C of E.

But Trisagion's comment epitomises a common misunderstanding of the mainstream (not just a-c) Anglican position. 'Anglicanism', as a distinctive set of doctrines - or rather a distinctive approach to doctrine - may or may not be 'grounded in Protestant ecclesiology'. Theologians may argue either way, though I would think it is not so much 'grounded in' as 'strongly influenced by'.

That's not the point. The C of E (and by extension, the Anglican Communion) has never seen itself as a denomination (hence the dangers of ecclesiastical jingoism); rather, as part of the historic Catholic church. Evangelicals (notably Ken of this parish) hold this view as strongly as those of us who are closer to (and pine for unity with) the RCC. We believe that we are first and foremost Christians, secondly Catholics (though not accepting the centralised Vatican bureaucracy, which not a few Roman Catholics question too), and thirdly Anglicans. Our Church, we believe, is not grounded in anything except the promises of Christ and the foundation of the Gospel... we certainly don't see our foundation as dating from the 16th century Reformation, the 19th century Oxford Movement, or whichever century Papal power began to exert an over-dominant influence on the Western Church.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
Do I get the impression that most of those thinking about swimming Tiber-wards now are over the age of 55?
 
Posted by Manx Taffy (# 301) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Martin L:
quote:
Originally posted by Fifi:
And so, if you found yourself in Italy . . . .

[Smile]

. . . . you'd be a lapsed Roman Catholic who shows up at Mass on Christmas and Easter, chatting on a cell phone the whole time! [Razz]
So there's the faithful of a whole country dismissed with a crass generalisation.

Why do it? Do you think its actually true? Or was it just a cheap jibe?

I can assure you that I'm not someone that is generally over sensitive or lacking a sense of homour. But since becoming a Catholic a few years ago I've been struck how, in all sorts of places including the national media, it seems perfectly OK to make offensive generalisation about Catholics in a way that would be totally ubacceptable against say muslims, Poles or methodists!

Personally I can cope, but if you#re going to do it at least make it funny enough to be worthwhile.
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:

Wherever the bishop appears, there let the people be; as wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the catholic Church. It is not lawful to baptize or give communion without the consent of the bishop. On the other hand, whatever has his approval is pleasing to God. Thus, whatever is done will be safe and valid. -- St. Ignatius of Antioch

Cut the chord from this and you're in a new paradigm, and one which isn't catholic.

Amen and Amen. The force of the Catholic Reformation is that Rome had departed from the faith represented by the early mothers and fathers and the New Testament. Where the Reformation fell into error was when it abandoned the representative apostolic ministry.

Both still fall short of the fullness of the Catholic faith. But when I look at all sorts of movements in the wider church, be they catholic, sacramental, evangelical, charismatic, (post)liberal or neo-apostolic, I believe the Spirit is working to bring the whole church closer to this fullness.

Perhaps TAC and FiF heading Romewards is part of that. I believe it is.

[Paranoid]

I'm tipping my head left and right to see if it helps in making sense of this ridiculous excuse for an argument

...

Nope, not working.

Seriously, Reformed ecclesiology says that each congregation (parish to some) is to have its own Minister of Word and Sacrament, duly ordained as such into the Holy Catholic Church and exercising the Apostolic Ministry of proclaiming the Word and lawfully administering the Sacraments.

Ministers (Church of Scotland and progeny meaning) are properly infected with the Holy Spirit, you know.

St. Ignatius would be eminently pleased at the current state of the Reformed Churches. A representative of the Apostles in each congregation is surely pleasing to the Lord for the betterment of his Church.

Angloid:

You're flat wrong. No two ways about it. When Anglicans stepped off the boat in Canada they came up against an equal number of French Catholics and another equal number of Scots Presbyterians. And a goodly number of Methodists. They are a denomination along with the rest, no two ways about it. Every single argument you make about the Anglican Church can be made about the Church of Scotland, and when the progenies of both Churches meet in the same land, the fallacy of your argument becomes readily apparent.

The one distinctive about Anglicanism is its episcopacy. This is why IMO Anglicanism has pushed into a more Catholic form in places where Reformed style churches pervade.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Yes, and as in the time of St. Ignatius, we have the bishop's representative in each congregation in the person of the priest who dispenses the sacraments only under his (the bishops) authority. Pleasing it is indeed that this tradition didn't disappear for 1500 years or so only to reappear in some Germanic principalities or thereabouts.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
Do I get the impression that most of those thinking about swimming Tiber-wards now are over the age of 55?

That would seem on the cards.

TAC congregations in this country are often led by a retired priest. From my observation there would be few young people amongst them.

Why would anyone young, bright and alive join what always will be a fringe movement? [Confused]
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:

Angloid:

You're flat wrong. No two ways about it. When Anglicans stepped off the boat in Canada they came up against an equal number of French Catholics and another equal number of Scots Presbyterians. And a goodly number of Methodists. They are a denomination along with the rest, no two ways about it.

Of course. I should have made clear that the 'non denominational' descriptor is only true for England (and possibly Wales), where Anglicanism began. 'Anglicanism' as a concept only has meaning once the church sees itself not as the normative church of the land, but as a distinctive denomination with distinctive doctrines. As does, I suspect , TEC: which is probably at the root of its problems.

But we are very good at living with compromise (or at least we used to be), and when members of the C of E began to settle in other countries they had to decide what to do. Joining the existing church in the land was, for most people, not possible in majority Catholic countries; when, as in North America, all churches (including the Catholic church) were de facto denominations there was no other option but to become one.

That doesn't alter the fact that the roots of Anglicanism are not based in denominationalism.
 
Posted by Gee D (# 13815) on :
 
I spent part of a beautiful late spring afternoon reading the last few pages of the thread, and then going back to the OP and the press release. ISTM that the original intention was to make particular provision for the TAC and some of the other of small groups not in communion with Canterbury, rather than a wholesale raid on the mainstream Anglican churches. Some of those may well convert, but I suspect that the numbers will be few; it is much more than retention of Anglican liturgy which has retained them to date.

It seems strange that some in the FiF group would now consider a change. Marriage may well be relevant to the clergy, but not a major concern for the congregations. If any go, and particularly the bishops referred to, there will be a loss to Anglicanism, but that will probably be overcome in the near future.

The common view is that very few laity will move; indeed, if I read the thread correctly, there will probably be more clergy than lay converts. The question must be asked: why have there been so few converts in the past? I suspect that at heart all those referred to are Anglican catholics, whatever that may mean, rather than Roman. It is much more than a question of liturgy.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:

I'm tipping my head left and right to see if it helps in making sense of this ridiculous excuse for an argument

...

Nope, not working.

Seriously, Reformed ecclesiology says that each congregation (parish to some) is to have its own Minister of Word and Sacrament, duly ordained as such into the Holy Catholic Church and exercising the Apostolic Ministry of proclaiming the Word and lawfully administering the Sacraments.

Ministers (Church of Scotland and progeny meaning) are properly infected with the Holy Spirit, you know.

Firstly I we are exploring Reformed Catholic ecclesiology. I happen to believe that abandoning episcopacy was a mistake. But I would argue that the gift operates anyway even in movements that don't have a tactile succession and the title Bishop or Apostle.

Secondly Reformed does not just mean Calvinist and Presbyterian. It may be what we mean by it today at times, but historically Luther was a reformer as was Cranmer.

Thirdly I didn't say CoS ministers were not infected. :-)

Having said that I believe the Apostle/Bishop is the root and base of Christian ministry. You start with representative apostolicity and build the prebyteriat from that, not the other way round.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Angloid - the roots of the (Presbyterian) Church of Scotland were not based in denominationalism,but rather in a desire to 'cleanse of idolatry' the Church.One could say the same for many churches which are issue of the Reformation of the Western church.

I am not sure of this,but the word 'denomination' might well have come into use in Scotland ,where from the late 1600s the Reformed church was already beginning to break up in to lots of smaller groups who shred a broadly similar theology but divided on small(but to them vitally important)points.

'Denomination' is a word which is mainly confined to the anglophone world.

BTW I am glad to see that another poster has claimed the word 'Reformed' for other Christians who are not necessarily Presbyterians.I wouldn't dare to do that now.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gee D:

The common view is that very few laity will move; indeed, if I read the thread correctly, there will probably be more clergy than lay converts. The question must be asked: why have there been so few converts in the past? I suspect that at heart all those referred to are Anglican catholics, whatever that may mean, rather than Roman. It is much more than a question of liturgy.

It could be to do with the relative power of the key laity in many Anglican congregations, of all churchmanships.

Converting priests who convert will still be 'important'. Converting laity will be freshers / nobodies again, unless they move with the whole parish and building, which would be rare.

If you had been vice-chairwoman of the altar guild's wives club, on the flower and coffee rota, ex-churchwarden's wife etc. would you really want to give all that up for no visible change. Only if everyone in the peer group goes, or she becomes spontaneously convinced that Rome is the answer.

I don't think that the average Roman Catholic Church has quite the same level of influential lay groups. Partly the more hierarchical nature of the church, lower lay democracy, and larger parishes, more centred around the mass. (I'm sure some RCs will think they have grim lay politicians too, but I think the CofE/AC can top that.)
 
Posted by Stranger in a strange land (# 11922) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
Do I get the impression that most of those thinking about swimming Tiber-wards now are over the age of 55?

That is not my impression here in the UK. Those with a long priestly ministry find the prospect of 're-' ordination particularly difficult and may feel they can put up with whatever provision the CofE Synod offers for the next 10 years.

For those with potentially 40 or more years in ministry, the prospect of half-hearted provision in the CofE which will likely be weakened further in the future is particularly unattractive. Hence the extremely enthusiastic reception of Benedict's initiative among most of the young clergy and ordinands that I know. (Who also seem to be more 'traditionalist' than previous generations in any case).

Agewise, I'm somewhere in the middle and undecided...
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
BTW I am glad to see that another poster has claimed the word 'Reformed' for other Christians who are not necessarily Presbyterians.I wouldn't dare to do that now.

I assume you mean you wouldn't claim Reformed as only referring to Presbyterians ...
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stranger in a strange land:
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
Do I get the impression that most of those thinking about swimming Tiber-wards now are over the age of 55?

That is not my impression here in the UK. Those with a long priestly ministry find the prospect of 're-' ordination particularly difficult and may feel they can put up with whatever provision the CofE Synod offers for the next 10 years.

For those with potentially 40 or more years in ministry, the prospect of half-hearted provision in the CofE which will likely be weakened further in the future is particularly unattractive. Hence the extremely enthusiastic reception of Benedict's initiative among most of the young clergy and ordinands that I know. (Who also seem to be more 'traditionalist' than previous generations in any case).

Agewise, I'm somewhere in the middle and undecided...

I agree about the comparitive youth of those in the UK who are tempted by the Holy Father's offer.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Reformed also applies to Congregationalist, Waldensians, Reformed, Protestant (as opposed to Evangelical which is Lutheran). You can check out this partial list if you want examples of such.

Jengie
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
I have been told that only certain Christians can refer to themselves as 'Reformed' I understand that in an everyday context it does refer to certain groups of 'reformed' Christians and emphatically not to others.

It is the same argument about exactly what 'Catholic' means.Some people use it in a very limited sense and others use it in a much wider sense.By the same token the word 'Catholic' has a particular meaning in an everyday context.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
JJ - thanks for the list of 'acceptable' Reformed churches. I see some of them have the title 'evangelical'So I assume one can be both 'evangelical' and 'reformed' There is even a church based in the Czech Republic which uses the word 'evangelisch' which has a slightly different meaning (in common parlance anyway) in German from the meaning it has in English.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Manx Taffy:
Personally I can cope, but if you#re going to do it at least make it funny enough to be worthwhile.

...puh-leeze. [Roll Eyes]

We Protestants spend our whole lives being told time and time again by many Roman Catholics [mostly well-meaning, I'll admit] that we're wrong.

Contrarily, our theology allows us to believe and teach that Roman Catholics are indeed part of the common Christian faith and witness, even though that sentiment is not returned to us very often.

A minor jab every now and then is par for the course aboard Ship. If I were offended every time somebody here (or especially in Eccles) pulled the whole "the faith is dependent on bishops in communion with Rome" card, then I wouldn't come around.

My comment was innocent, and it is clear that I do not seriously believe that. Yet, I constantly have to face being told my faith is wrong by people who do mean it. I don't make a point of whining about it.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
People might be interested to read Nicholas Lash's thoughts on the matter .
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Yes, its complex I just could not think how to post it.

Firstly Reformed church split and merge readily. There are many Reformed churches that are mergers across traditions so I don't know if if some of Evangelical churches are those that are Lutheran and Reformed (the Italian Waldensians for instance are a merger of Waldensians and Methodists)

The Protestant versus Evangelical is the continental form as opposed to the British. It is wider than Germany, as I think the one clear case is in France. However in English nomenclature Evangelical is used often to mean what Evangelical means in the statement "Evangelical Alliance".

Oh by the way the list isn't even the entirety of "Kosher" Reformed churches. The World Alliance of Reformed Churches days are numbered. The World Communion of Reformed Churches will arise next year out of its merger with the Reformed Ecumenical Council. . There is some commonality of membership between the two but I think that takes the "Kosher" list to the same size as the Anglican Communion, and then I don't know if there are other international Reformed bodies.

Of course then we have the non Kosher lot as well, which I normally guess as being as large - they are of course legion. That is a multitude of denominations, which usually are very small, but do have some significantly large players.

Jengie

[ 14. November 2009, 20:14: Message edited by: Jengie Jon ]
 
Posted by Manx Taffy (# 301) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Martin L:
quote:
Originally posted by Manx Taffy:
Personally I can cope, but if you#re going to do it at least make it funny enough to be worthwhile.

...puh-leeze. [Roll Eyes]

We Protestants spend our whole lives being told time and time again by many Roman Catholics [mostly well-meaning, I'll admit] that we're wrong.


Contrarily, our theology allows us to believe and teach that Roman Catholics are indeed part of the common Christian faith and witness, even though that sentiment is not returned to us very often.

A minor jab every now and then is par for the course aboard Ship. If I were offended every time somebody here (or especially in Eccles) pulled the whole "the faith is dependent on bishops in communion with Rome" card, then I wouldn't come around.

My comment was innocent, and it is clear that I do not seriously believe that. Yet, I constantly have to face being told my faith is wrong by people who do mean it. I don't make a point of whining about it.

ML Apologies, I think the problem may be geographical. In my part of the world the boot is definitely on the other foot whereas down your way it sounds like the Catholics are dishing it out.

Either way, why do Christians of all stripes so easily forget the "judge not" commandment.

Sorry if I over reacted. [Smile]
 
Posted by Manx Taffy (# 301) on :
 
P.S.

My only excuse is that my one experience of mass in Italy (at the Duomo in Florence) was very positive. Though thinking about it there were a few Italian older ladies in over the top fur coats and shades who might have been posing!
 
Posted by LQ (# 11596) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:
They are a denomination along with the rest, no two ways about it. Every single argument you make about the Anglican Church can be made about the Church of Scotland, and when the progenies of both Churches meet in the same land, the fallacy of your argument becomes readily apparent.

Well, it depends on one's understanding of the esse of the Church. If it involves bishops, then there is a line with Anglicans on one side and Presbyterians on the other. Of course, everyone draws the line at a different place: the Orthodox at themselves, Rome with episcopacy plus unbroken valid intention, and many denominations at the "invisible" Church of all the baptised. In any event, the answer doesn't seem forthcoming (although one hopes we can at least rule out the scenario envisioned in South Park).

[ 14. November 2009, 20:51: Message edited by: LQ ]
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
People might be interested to read Nicholas Lash's thoughts on the matter .

Or maybe not.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
Well, one can be interested in something without agreeing with it. Although, as it happens, I have not a little sympathy with what Lash says. His concerns are traditional in a sound sense of that over-used words: how do the proposed treatments of convert Anglican bishops relate to the Church's sacramental theology? What is to be made of the treatment of the JPII Catechism as though it were a confessional document? Sensible questions; or so it seems to me.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Spot on Gee D! [Cool]

The TAC will end with a whimper.

The future of the fractured Anglican Communion lies firmly within itself.

[Votive]
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LQ:
quote:
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:
They are a denomination along with the rest, no two ways about it. Every single argument you make about the Anglican Church can be made about the Church of Scotland, and when the progenies of both Churches meet in the same land, the fallacy of your argument becomes readily apparent.

Well, it depends on one's understanding of the esse of the Church. If it involves bishops, then there is a line with Anglicans on one side and Presbyterians on the other. Of course, everyone draws the line at a different place: the Orthodox at themselves, Rome with episcopacy plus unbroken valid intention, and many denominations at the "invisible" Church of all the baptised. In any event, the answer doesn't seem forthcoming (although one hopes we can at least rule out the scenario envisioned in South Park).
Quite so, but at least you are frank that it is a matter of debate. This thread developed a tangent that contained some serious misrepresentations of Reformed theology and eccelesiolgy that were extremely grating.

My objection is to the multiple mischaracterizations of what others believe.

Edward:

By Reformed I mean a Reformed Church, one which traces its roots to the reforms of Calvin, in whole or in part. Presbyterian is the English-language descriptor for the most often seen variety of Reformed Church in the English-speaking world. The Kirk has the most influential Reformed Church for English-speakers. Lutheran Churches are "Evangelical". Anglicanism is Reformed Catholicism because it omitted the eccelsilogical reforms of Calvin.

Of course in modern times there are a number of United Churches in the Reformed Churches, the United Church of Canada was one the earliest of these, second only to the Protestant Church of Germany.

My main objection is that we here in the Reformed Camp do believe that the Apostolic Ministry and succession is maintained in our churches. It's fine if you don't like our orders, but we certainly did NOT abandon the concept of Apostolic ministry.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:

My main objection is that we here in the Reformed Camp do believe that the Apostolic Ministry and succession is maintained in our churches. It's fine if you don't like our orders, but we certainly did NOT abandon the concept of Apostolic ministry.

I would affirm this. I think the Apostolic ministry is so essential to the church that it manifests itself in all 'traditions'. That doesn't change my understanding of episcopacy however. But no-one has made John L. Bell a bishop .... yet!
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
The real issue is how does one define faithfulness to the Apostolic faith? Many Protestants argue that faithfulness to the apostolic faith derives from having correct doctrine and belief. They point to examples of when bishops have fell into error, either doctrinally or morally, as examples of the shortcomings of historic episcopate.

If the Pope tomorrow decides all of a sudden, Arius was correct, and that Our Lord is not equal in majesty with the Father, will the entire Roman Catholic Church follow suit and renounce the Nicene Creed?

I bring up that scenario as an illustration of the Protestant criticism of Catholic ecclesiology. Protestants contend that simply because one is in the apostolic succession, does not mean that one is suddenly immune from doctrinal error.
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Anglican_Brat:
Protestants contend that simply because one is in the apostolic succession, does not mean that one is suddenly immune from doctrinal error.

If one believes apostolic succession is a guardian from error, then one has a pretty poor understanding of the catholic faith and of church history in general. Thank you-know-who that nobody believes that.

Faithfulness to the apostolic faith is summed up in the vincentian canon; and if the Pope woke up tomorrow and decided he was an Arian, the church would recognize him as a heretic.

[ 15. November 2009, 00:28: Message edited by: Alt Wally ]
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LQ:
everyone draws the line at a different place: the Orthodox at themselves

Not quite that simple.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LQ:
... it depends on one's understanding of the esse of the Church. If it involves bishops, then there is a line with Anglicans on one side and Presbyterians on the other.[/URL]).

Not really. Plenty of Anglicans recognise the ministry of oversight in the Presbyterian churches, whether or not they have one minister with a pointy hat they call a "bishop".

And another large (but overlapping) set of Anglicans see episcopacy as useful or beneficial to the Church, but not essential top it.
 
Posted by cor ad cor loquitur (# 11816) on :
 
Damian Thompson's latest blast on this topic is, in my view, utterly disgusting.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
I think he obviously was stirring, cor ad cor loquitor.

This whole TAC thing has really shaken the nuts off their trees.

Sane people like you should just laugh.

He's shock jocking with a vengeance.

You should hear some of the reactions to deliberately provocative wank like that on Australian talkback radio. [Paranoid]
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cor ad cor loquitur:
Damian Thompson's latest blast on this topic is, in my view, utterly disgusting.

His blog in general is a vile little sewer. But, yes, that is partiularly horrible.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
So much so that it has prompted me to start a Hell thread.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
Och, Daimster, the wee scamp...

Anyway, apparently, the bishop of Southwark is on today's "World at One" on Radio 4 with Ed Stourton to talk about a "property" settlement for departing CofE folks.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
Damien Thompson's blog is bigoted tripe. Henry VIII was never motivated by Protestant theology, he remained a Catholic all his life. He was motivated by the need to produce a male heir and prevent a return to the War of the Roses. He was also right in his disagreement with the Pope.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LQ:
quote:
Originally posted by Sober Preacher's Kid:
They are a denomination along with the rest, no two ways about it. Every single argument you make about the Anglican Church can be made about the Church of Scotland, and when the progenies of both Churches meet in the same land, the fallacy of your argument becomes readily apparent.

Well, it depends on one's understanding of the esse of the Church. If it involves bishops, then there is a line with Anglicans on one side and Presbyterians on the other. Of course, everyone draws the line at a different place: the Orthodox at themselves, Rome with episcopacy plus unbroken valid intention, and many denominations at the "invisible" Church of all the baptised. In any event, the answer doesn't seem forthcoming (although one hopes we can at least rule out the scenario envisioned in South Park).
Thank you for reminding me of the South Park episode. It has quite made my day, having wasted too much time this afternoon arguing with an asshole who tells me that my mortal soul is in danger if I don't submit to the Roman Pontiff.
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
Anglican Brat scripsit:

quote:
If the Pope tomorrow decides all of a sudden, Arius was correct, and that Our Lord is not equal in majesty with the Father, will the entire Roman Catholic Church follow suit and renounce the Nicene Creed?
I used to object to Rome on these grounds, but it turns out that this isn't actually possible. According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church and the VatII Constitution on the Apostolate of the Laity, the Pope formulates and articulates dogma in conjunction with the whole Church and under strictly limited conditions. (Any inaccuracies result from my quoting from memory, as I have neither of these documents in front of me.)
 
Posted by seasick (# 48) on :
 
Yes, I understood that a Pope who declared heresy automatically ceased to be Pope - isn't that what the sedevacantists use to try and give foundation to their claims?
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
I just listened on iplayer to The World This Weekend in which Ed Stourton talked to the Bishop of Southwark. Stourton started by asking the bishop about the news that the revision committee will not recommend any legislation to provide an alternative episcopal structure for dissenters from women bishops. The bishop said that things are now "taking shape" in the sense that Rome has made its offer, and the Church of England has made its decision. This is a clear message to the dissenters-its time for you to leave.

When asked about church property, buildings etc, he said that he had taken legal advice, and that all buildings must remain the property of the national church. He countenanced the possibility of local sharing arrangements, which the C of E already has with other denominations, but not of the ceding of any property rights.

This is the final kiss off from the Church of England to Forward in Faith. Its the final betrayal of the promises made in 1992 that both integrities have an honoured place within the C of E. All round, this is put up or shut up time. The Church of England will give no ground that is in any way meaningful, or that those of the FiF persuasion could live with. They will be unchurched unless they take up the Pope's offer.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
.

When asked about church property, buildings etc, he said that he had taken legal advice, and that all buildings must remain the property of the national church. He countenanced the possibility of local sharing arrangements, which the C of E already has with other denominations, but not of the ceding of any property rights.

This is the final kiss off from the Church of England to Forward in Faith.

Nonsense. Whether he wants to or not the Bishop has no power to change the rather peculiar legal status of parish churches as property held in trust by the incumbent for the whole parish. That would take at the very least an Act of Parliament, more likely a substantial measure of disestablishment, that would likely be impossible to get even discussed, never mind passed, for some years. Whether the CofE wanted to or not there is no realistic possibility of simply handing parish churches over to priests who leave for some other church. And no sane member of FiF every thought they would do that.

Its hard to imagine any other large organised body of churches in the world doing as much as the CofE is likely to do for the dissidents within it - and certainly not as much as it probably would have done has this spanner not been thrown in the works, or as much as was done back in 1992.
 
Posted by Merchant Trader (# 9007) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
.

When asked about church property, buildings etc, he said that he had taken legal advice, and that all buildings must remain the property of the national church. He countenanced the possibility of local sharing arrangements, which the C of E already has with other denominations, but not of the ceding of any property rights.

This is the final kiss off from the Church of England to Forward in Faith.

Nonsense. Whether he wants to or not the Bishop has no power to change the rather peculiar legal status of parish churches as property held in trust by the incumbent for the whole parish. That would take at the very least an Act of Parliament, more likely a substantial measure of disestablishment, that would likely be impossible to get even discussed, never mind passed, for some years. Whether the CofE wanted to or not there is no realistic possibility of simply handing parish churches over to priests who leave for some other church. And no sane member of FiF every thought they would do that.

Its hard to imagine any other large organised body of churches in the world doing as much as the CofE is likely to do for the dissidents within it - and certainly not as much as it probably would have done has this spanner not been thrown in the works, or as much as was done back in 1992.

[Overused] cannot be summed up more insightfully than in Ken's post
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
The freehold is actually a corporation sole of all incumbents past current and future, of which the only current visible trustee is the current incumbent. (During a vacancy, the churchwardens and area dean act as sequestrators.)

So a Vicar is not acting on behalf of his parish but on behalf of his successor, lawfully appointed as a priest in the CofE. Patronage rights cannot be exercised by Roman Catholics either.

Nothing to stop individual dioceses, vicars and PCCs coming to agreement with the Roman Catholic Church on a temporary rental basis. In some cases the Diocese and Church Commissioners might eventually sell on a former parish church at the market price, but this would not be quick or easy.

Anything else would require very complicated legislation which would be even more time consuming than the women bishops vote is going to be. And I just can't see the next Parliament or Government wanting to waste the time on it.

Any departing anglo-catholic priest thinking otherwise has been inhaling something stronger than incense.
 
Posted by The Man with a Stick (# 12664) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
The freehold is actually a corporation sole of all incumbents past current and future, of which the only current visible trustee is the current incumbent. (During a vacancy, the churchwardens and area dean act as sequestrators.)

So a Vicar is not acting on behalf of his parish but on behalf of his successor, lawfully appointed as a priest in the CofE. Patronage rights cannot be exercised by Roman Catholics either.

Nothing to stop individual dioceses, vicars and PCCs coming to agreement with the Roman Catholic Church on a temporary rental basis. In some cases the Diocese and Church Commissioners might eventually sell on a former parish church at the market price, but this would not be quick or easy.

Anything else would require very complicated legislation which would be even more time consuming than the women bishops vote is going to be. And I just can't see the next Parliament or Government wanting to waste the time on it.

Any departing anglo-catholic priest thinking otherwise has been inhaling something stronger than incense.

Otherwise that the fact that the Bishop acts (in his role as Incumbent Paramount) as freeholder in a vacancy, this is pretty much spot on.

The position might however be a little different for other buildings (church halls etc) which are held in trust for a PCC.

There's also nothing stopping the Church Commissioners looking at redundancy schemes for excess buildings. Many churches have a market value of pretty much nil (the land is not valuable for development purposes if Listed Building law forbids you from demolishing a building).

I don't see the CofE allowing any Parsonages to go however.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:

Its hard to imagine any other large organised body of churches in the world doing as much as the CofE is likely to do for the dissidents within it - and certainly not as much as it probably would have done has this spanner not been thrown in the works, or as much as was done back in 1992.

Why has the CofE done so much? A lot of 'liberal' catholics are not besandled rainbow stole wearers who don't believe in God. Many, both men and women felt a real concern for those who could not accept the ordination of Women. Some voted against it on ecumenical grounds, but then accepted the decision of the Church of England. They had to to reconcile their own understanding of the CofE's catholicity.

I would not want to tar all 'Traditionalist' Catholics with the same brush, or birds of a feather them together either. But since '92 the tone of the 'dissenters' has become increasingly adversarial. Or perhaps it has happened on both sides. Suffice to say less good will exists now than it did in '92.

In a sense the same thing has happened in Evangelical circles.
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
quote:
or as much as was done back in 1992
... which was done at the behest of Parliament. Had General Synod had anything to do with it, there would have been no PEVs.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
Suffice to say less good will exists now than it did in '92.

There's the rub! Lack of good will. Attitudes have hardened over the years. The majority proponents of women bishops have now come to see Forward in Faith as an irksome group who are blocking progress towards the desired goal. FiF sees the current situation as one of betrayal of the promises to respect both integrities in the long term.

But good will can solve most problems. A congregation doesn'thave to own a church building to worship there. It happens all the time. In secular Britain, there are more than a few churches standing idle. I repeat: good will can solve most problems!
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
I just read the following on a blog by Fr Tomlinson, SSC
quote:
A press release issued by the revision comittee of the General Synod today further highlights why Rome’s offer is so welcome to Catholic Anglicans. One might have assumed the revision committee would counteract the Pope’s gesture by offering something equally substantive and generous, a sign to Anglo-Catholics of a clear desire to hold onto us and provide us with what we need. Instead the little they had considered is now being withdrawn (ie the retention of our bishops etc) and we are back to the flimsy and totally unworkable ‘code of practice’, meaning women bishops would govern us but promise to ignore us whilst we languish in the margins of the church.
Unless the Church of England can come up with something more than a code of practice, which FiF members have always said they can't accept, it is driving out Catholic Anglicans who can't accept the ministry of women. This is, of course, what groups like WATCH want.
+ Pete has said that he would regret losing such a tradition which brings balance to the "broad church" from people who are genuinely faithful Christians. The Holy Father's offer has certainly muddied the waters, but the message I read from the revision committee suggests that nothing more can be done, irrespective of the changes circumstances.

This process still has some distance to go with Synod, but there can be few Catholic Anglicans, and I mean of the FiF type, not just those who like a bit of tat, who can see any future in the church of their baptism, confirmation and, in some cases, ordination. All that is being opened by the revision committee is the exit door. They know that this will unchurch those who feel strongly against the ordination of women, but they will only come up with a limp and unworkable proposal. This is a sad loss for everybody involved.
 
Posted by Ethne Alba (# 5804) on :
 
i do see diocese allowing Some parsonages to go.

in our area alone, i can think of three standing empty, two with( very) short term tenants, one that's been boarded up for years and years, a couple more standing looking dusty with various adhoc stuff going on in them and three have recently been levelled.

However. the C/E dictates that optimum market rental must be obtained for them- or they must be sold.

If your Available Vicarage is in the middle of a rough housing estate/ the wrong side of a busy road with no garden/ the edge of an industrial estate/ with no other houses around because they've all been pulled down/ in an area with no rental market/ comes with a garden that would cost a second mortgage to fence........i do believe that these Vicarages might very well be offered to the new iniciative.

And I can think of a few that come with an already closed but weatherproof church and no ( as yet) suitable usage...........

For goodness sakes. We're surrounded with surplus church buildings. GIVE them to this new iniciative. Win Win
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
The fact of the matter is that the parish churches of England are the heritage of the nation and not to be decided upon the whim of one denomination - whether that be the established church of not. The time may well be near when these churches are vested in the state and leased to whichever denomination can make the best argument for occupying them and make the necessary undertakings for preserving and providing public access to them.

[ 16. November 2009, 12:51: Message edited by: aumbry ]
 
Posted by Clavus (# 9427) on :
 
Interesting use of the phrase 'The fact of the matter is...' to mean 'In my dreams...'
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
Jostle me awake two years down the road when something might actually have happened.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Lietuvos, put this extra time to good use! Friends of mine, on a trip to Egypt decades ago, spent a profitable hour praying for the souls of all the mummies in glass cases in the Cairo Museum. [Smile] They deserve it, if only for their magnificent contribution to civilisation!

[ 16. November 2009, 13:25: Message edited by: Leetle Masha ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ethne Alba:

For goodness sakes. We're surrounded with surplus church buildings. GIVE them to this new iniciative. Win Win

A bit premature. Can't we wait to see hoe many, if any, people move over as churches rather than individuals? So far this "new initiative' is about four or five thousand people, mostly in North America. We have no idea how many might go in Britain, or what proportion of them will be grouped into existing congregations.

Also th Roman Catholics in England are making some of their own churches redundant as their numbers fall (outside London and a few areas with large numbers of central Europeans). The last thing they need is to be lumbered with a few dozen listed buildings to maintain.

Maybe they can use St Walburge's in Preston as the central church of one of their new Ordinaries?
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
<Leetle M. tries to estimate cost of steeplejack's maintenance, fails.>
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Ken - I believe (just like yourself,I think) that people should come into full communion with the Roman pontiff and the wider Catholic church,only if they actually think that this is a positive step to take.

I have absolutely no idea how many might want to do that, but I do really hope that there might be a good number in and around Preston.St Walburghe's is a magnificent church and to read that it is under threat makes me very sad.I think it is the sort of building which would be a 'dream' for any anglo- Catholics.

It is also one of those buildings which helps to remind us that there are 'indigenous'Catholics in England,united in communion with Rome, who built of their own scarce resources this splendid temple of English Roman Catholicism.

If there were 'new'(Anglican ordinariate) Catholics prepared to look after it,I,for one would rejoice - and I hope that the bishop of Lancaster would also.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Over here in the U.S., Forthview, dioceses are finding out that unused churches lose their tax-exempt status and the dioceses have to pay real-estate tax on the property. This is Not A Good Thing, I hear.

Somehow, it reminds me of the old Irish question that people asked one another during the penal times: "Have you been to the rock?" [Have you been to Mass? (clandestinely celebrated out of doors on a convenient rock used as an altar)] I suspect many will be inspired by this tradition and be glad to leave their buildings empty. A small cost if they're really sincere!

Mary
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
LM, do you know of a supply of mummies closer to home? I do recall praying silently for the mummies at the British Museum -- the human ones anyway; they also have a mummified crocodile and several very nice cat mummies.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
There's the rub! Lack of good will. Attitudes have hardened over the years. The majority proponents of women bishops have now come to see Forward in Faith as an irksome group who are blocking progress towards the desired goal. FiF sees the current situation as one of betrayal of the promises to respect both integrities in the long term.

Which is then followed in another post by,

quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
This process still has some distance to go with Synod, but there can be few Catholic Anglicans, and I mean of the FiF type, not just those who like a bit of tat, who can see any future in the church of their baptism, confirmation and, in some cases, ordination.

Yet to return to the first post.

quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
I repeat: good will can solve most problems!

Then show some.

I am not the most Catholic of Anglicans. My roots are in a more Reformed Catholicism and Prayer Book Catholicism. But good will is not created by this 'tat-loving' rhetoric. My understanding of what happens at the altar, my understanding of the church, my understanding of the creeds and the faith is not dependent on a spade ended stole.

I doubt that the faith and practice of many others who support the OOW is either.

If FiF and SSC wanted support and understanding then perhaps a joint statement with AC and SCP over what they hold in common, despite different understandings of the CofE's authority to ordain women outside a Catholic ecumenical council, might be a good place to start. It would certainly be an affirmation of the Catholic witness in the Church of England.

But I fear it is too late. The Ship has sailed. Which saddens me because my own vocation was fostered by so many who are on it.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Clavus:
Interesting use of the phrase 'The fact of the matter is...' to mean 'In my dreams...'

Do you not think that the churches are the Nation's heritage? And the Church of England is not in a position to flog them off (well certainly not the architecturally important ones).

As the church dwindles further I really cannot imagine the state would be willing to let the rump that is left of the Church of England decide the fate of this important part of the heritage. Under current conditions there are already far too many Church of England churches: within walking distance of my house there are about ten Anglican churches all of them with sadly diminished congregations. To stop those congregations who leave to join the RC from taking their churches would really be an act of vindictiveness by the rump.
 
Posted by Comper's Child (# 10580) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:


If FiF and SSC wanted support and understanding then perhaps a joint statement with AC and SCP over what they hold in common, despite different understandings of the CofE's authority to ordain women outside a Catholic ecumenical council, might be a good place to start. It would certainly be an affirmation of the Catholic witness in the Church of England.

But I fear it is too late. The Ship has sailed. Which saddens me because my own vocation was fostered by so many who are on it.

Yes, yes, yes. I am sickened by my brethren of both sexes who cannot possibly listen to the opposing points of view without picking up stones to hurl at one another, each "victimised" by the other side whilst forgetting we are meant to be working toward unity based on following Jesus of Nazareth.
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
I don't know what to do. I'm a member of a FiF congregation and the general position seems to be one of great sadness rather than huge joy at the position we're in. We would love to be reunited with the Roman Catholic church but we have an identity with the Church of England which in some cases has gone back generations. Choosing whether to swim the Tiber is a horribly difficult thing.

I don't care about woman priests. I genuinely don't have an opinion either way. I care about church unity and I care about the church I'm a member of. The overwhelming feeling we seem to have is that the Church of England don't want us and we will have no choice but to swim to continue to be the parish we are.

We're not tat queens - as a congregation we're too poor to have tonnes of tat exploding everywhere. What we have is a historic theological position that has been a part of the church since it was first opened. The first priest of the congregation was prosecuted under the Public Worship Regulation Act. This is our witness, this is who we are. Do the Church of England want us?
 
Posted by Clavus (# 9427) on :
 
The Church Commissioners have been flogging off redundant churches for years under the terms of Measures with the force of law in England. There is some information on this page from the Church of England website. See also The Churches Conservation Trust.

The Church Commissioners are not able in law to 'give away' churches (except to the Churches Conservation Trust). But they can and do sell them.

'Daughter' churches can be sold by Parochial Church Councils - we have just sold one ourselves! (Admittedly it is not an architecturally important one.)
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
The fact of the matter is that the parish churches of England are the heritage of the nation and not to be decided upon the whim of one denomination - whether that be the established church of not. The time may well be near when these churches are vested in the state and leased to whichever denomination can make the best argument for occupying them and make the necessary undertakings for preserving and providing public access to them.

Even assuming in the best(?) of all possible worlds that your conjecture came to pass, would Rome really be interested in allowing the parish to take on the expenses of maintaining a building which they will not own when they have listed buildings of their own which are closed or underutilized?

Ten years from now, some of these congregations will have left--or partially left. A few of them may well be meeting in the same buildings where they are now. I don't see any way to avoid the conclusion, however, that a lot of them will not be in their current buildings.

It would be my suspicion that those congregations which remain in their buildings will manage to take a much larger percentage of their laity to Rome. Those which have to move--even to a building as grand as that to which Ken linked--will probably hemorrhage congregants.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chive:
...The first priest of the congregation was prosecuted under the Public Worship Regulation Act. This is our witness, this is who we are. Do the Church of England want us?

I'm just an outsider, but I would suspect the C of E wants you more now than it did at the time of the prosecution.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
LM, do you know of a supply of mummies closer to home? I do recall praying silently for the mummies at the British Museum -- the human ones anyway; they also have a mummified crocodile and several very nice cat mummies.

Toronto-based or -visiting shipmates can always call by at the Royal Ontario Museum's Egyptian galleries, discreetly pocketing your rosaries as you tell the beads for their souls.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
Oh good to know that! I've stalked past the Royal Ontario so many times without ever going in (they do charge an admission fee IIRC).
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
quote:
Originally posted by Clavus:
Interesting use of the phrase 'The fact of the matter is...' to mean 'In my dreams...'

Do you not think that the churches are the Nation's heritage? And the Church of England is not in a position to flog them off (well certainly not the architecturally important ones).

As the church dwindles further I really cannot imagine the state would be willing to let the rump that is left of the Church of England decide the fate of this important part of the heritage. Under current conditions there are already far too many Church of England churches: within walking distance of my house there are about ten Anglican churches all of them with sadly diminished congregations. To stop those congregations who leave to join the RC from taking their churches would really be an act of vindictiveness by the rump.

We have explained the State's position over the past 50 if not 450 years to you several times and you seem to be uninterested.

What you propose would require primary legislation from the government and an extremely awkward bit of legislation which would raise all sorts of other issues about the monarchy and bishops in the Lords and faculty jurisdiction and goodness knows what. The chance of this appearing in the Queen's Speech on Wednesday is nil.

Failing that the State's unchanged and absolutely clear legal position is what you regard as vindictiveness by a rump. But this is not a plot by AffCath or whoever.

And if the State or Church somehow decided to break the law and not be vindictive, the Courts would intervene and ensure vindictiveness prevailed.

Some of these issues do need sorting out but we are talking 10-20 years down the line, after and along with resolution of all the other issues.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
Posted by Chive: I don't know what to do. I'm a member of a FiF congregation and the general position seems to be one of great sadness rather than huge joy at the position we're in. We would love to be reunited with the Roman Catholic church but we have an identity with the Church of England which in some cases has gone back generations. Choosing whether to swim the Tiber is a horribly difficult thing.

I'm sure Chive speaks for many people who feel marginalised and are loyal to the Anglican Church.

I found this such a sad post despite being on the other side of the Tiber. In many ways I know how you feel as I am constantly worried by what I see here in SA where the strong intellectual tradition of Anglicanism seems to have vanished along with the music and the spirituality. 20 years ago the Archbishop of Cape Town was a member of the Oratory of the Good Shepherd and there was a spiritual strength in Anglicanism here but it seems to have seeped away. There are odd parishes who try to maintain a tradition but they appear to be increasingly isolated.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
<"discreetly pocketing your rosaries"> Thank the good Lord for your fingers, dear Augustine!

All that is by way of just letting you all know that I feel sure you all are very dear to Our Lord, whether you are mummies or daddies yet still alive, or earnest loners, or the Egyptian mummies for whom we all really did pray....I mean, how would you feel if you had to lie dead in a glass case with thousands of tourists filing by and staring all day at your poor dead body, when you couldn't stare back?

In other words, I feel sure God is there with you, and your decision, if you offer it to Him, will be the right one. I am confident of that!

My friends and I made various decisions of this sort many years ago, but always reminding each other that we were praying, with St. Thomas More, "That we may merrily meet in heaven". Prayers like that I highly recommend.

Mary
Looking forward to meeting lots of different people in heaven!
 
Posted by malik3000 (# 11437) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fuzzipeg:
20 years ago the Archbishop of Cape Town was a member of the Oratory of the Good Shepherd and there was a spiritual strength in Anglicanism here but it seems to have seeped away. There are odd parishes who try to maintain a tradition but they appear to be increasingly isolated.

20 years ago South Africa was alot different. Do you attribute a weakening of spiritual strength due to the current Archbishop, ++Tutu, or to the change in the political structure, or due to some other causes?

This is a sincere question as (1) I am no expert on South Africa at all, and (2) however (from what i've read about him AND by him) Archbishop Tutu strikes me as being a person of great strength, spiritual and otherwise, and -- to me -- is a saintly person.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chive:
Do the Church of England want us?

Yes, overwhelmingly, we do.

But we also want women bishops.

So we - and you - are going to have to find a way to live with that.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:


As the church dwindles further I really cannot imagine the state would be willing to let the rump that is left of the Church of England decide the fate of this important part of the heritage.

Even if every single one of the parishes linked to Forward in Faith were to leave the C of E (which is indeed a big 'if'), what they would leave behind can't be any stretch of the imagination be described as a 'rump'. To my mind that means a minority, probably a small minority. No diocese I am sure has anything like 50% of parishes in FinF (this diocese has about 1%); even if you included all the Reform and similar evangelical churches which might conceivably leave, the C of E would appear hardly unchanged.

Which isn't to say that we wouldn't miss them. We would. But let's keep a sense of proportion.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:


As the church dwindles further I really cannot imagine the state would be willing to let the rump that is left of the Church of England decide the fate of this important part of the heritage.

Even if every single one of the parishes linked to Forward in Faith were to leave the C of E (which is indeed a big 'if'), what they would leave behind can't be any stretch of the imagination be described as a 'rump'. To my mind that means a minority, probably a small minority. No diocese I am sure has anything like 50% of parishes in FinF (this diocese has about 1%); even if you included all the Reform and similar evangelical churches which might conceivably leave, the C of E would appear hardly unchanged.

Which isn't to say that we wouldn't miss them. We would. But let's keep a sense of proportion.

I suspect that aumbry was suggesting that it is the entire CofE constitutes a rump.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
Malik3000: 20 years ago South Africa was alot different. Do you attribute a weakening of spiritual strength due to the current Archbishop, ++Tutu, or to the change in the political structure, or due to some other causes?

First of all, Malik, the Anglican Church of SA is on its second Provincial since Tutu who retired long ago. The current Archbishop of Cape Town is Archbishop Thabo Makgoba who was previously Bishop of Grahamstown and is an admirable person.

Secondly I was talking about spirituality, not politics but as that is something you want, here you are.

The Anglican Church here had always been in the forefront of the battle against apartheid and the leading church where this was concerned until the election of Bill Burnett as Archbishop of Cape Town in 1974. He was a member of the Charismatic Movement and the Anglican Church was split down the middle.

The moral leadership against apartheid was lost to the Anglicans and became centred in the SA Council of Churches under the General Secretaryship of Bishop Desmond Tutu from 1978 to 1984 for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Philip Russell was Archbishop from 1981 to 1986 and he picked up the pieces after the rocky Burnett period and Tutu succeeded him.

I don't think the Anglican Church ever recovered from the Burnett period either from the point of view of moral leadership when criticism of the Apartheid regime practically ceased except from individuals within the Church like Tutu though his platform was outside it; or from the divisions that appeared at that time. This is, of course, a personal view and that of an outsider.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ken:
So we - and you - are going to have to find a way to live with that.

Nobody has any reason to doubt the sincerity of Ken or + Pete when they say that they want to keep as many AC's on board as possible. But if the C of E pursues a course of action which it knows will result in the expulsion of a section of its membership, then it can't wonder at the result. By course of action I don't mean ordaining women as bishops,because even the most hardline of dissenters knows that this is inevitable.

What I mean is refusing to allow an alternative episcopal oversight acceptable to that section of the church. The Bishop of Fulham and all the PEV's have said that they can't remain within the C of E without a structured alternative oversight. The revision committee and Syned know this. If they are only to offer a code of practice which they know is unacceptable, they know the result is to show those people the door. I don't see how it can be interpreted in any other way.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
...The Bishop of Fulham and all the PEV's have said that they can't remain within the C of E without a structured alternative oversight. The revision committee and Syned know this. If they are only to offer a code of practice which they know is unacceptable, they know the result is to show those people the door...

I think there is no doubt a number of C of E clergy will swim the Tiber, regardless of Synod's actions. The real question, of course, is what they will find on the other side--and especially, who will follow them. I think that's the 800 lb gorilla in the room--which no one is talking about because no one really knows the answer to the question.

Two or three laypeople for every cleric won't make a viable Ordinariate. Even twenty laypeople for every cleric means a lot of priests are going to be taking regular RC posts or giving up their vocation.
 
Posted by The Black Labrador (# 3098) on :
 
Am I the only person who thinks this will be a damp squib? IMO almost all the clergy who go will largely be retired, and there will be hardly any full scale congregational transfers.

As Freejack has pointed out, departing clergy wont be taking their churches, and more importantly vicarages with them, unless they can pay the market price. Where will the cash come from?

The RC church in the UK is in a poor financial state, and is closing church buildings on a larger scale than the C of E. They cannot possibly afford to take on more full time clergy, who are on much higher stipends than they would get in the C of E, and whose housing requirements if they are married/have children will be greater than for RC priests. Nor will they have any interest or capacity to take over what are by and large listed, high maintenance buildings.

Realistically the RC would only be able to take on those churches which are financially self supporting. As previous threads on a Third Province have demonstrated, there are very few FiF parishes where this is the case. In any event few of those will see 100% of their congregations wishing to go to Rome, thus reducing their income further.

The RC church model in the UK is very different from the C of E. In particular, congregations are much larger. By contrast, most FiF parishes have small congregations and are subsidised by their C of E diocese and/or other C of E parishes.

Conversion to Rome is likely to be largely restricted to retired clergy and some non-stipendiaries.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Black Labrador:
The RC church in the UK [...] cannot possibly afford to take on more full time clergy, who are on much higher stipends than they would get in the C of E[.]

This is the complete opposite of the case. RC stipends are on average 1/3 of CofE ones. This may be one reason why there is explicit permission in the Apostolic Constitution for the ordinaries to allow their clergy to work full-time in suitable professions.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
I think, Black Labrador, that you have to remember that this whole exercise is in response to the approach by the TAC. Certainly some CofE people have been approaching Rome, but I don't think it has been that many. I have no idea what they have been told, but I would guess it was something like "hold on until the TAC decision is public- it may well answer your needs."

With that in mind, the discussion has certainly been bigged up, probably because of the forthcoming synod vote on women bishops. People seem to be bringing a guessed version of the future into the present. I think most people - from many different perspectives - seem to agree that initially not much will happen and what does happen will happen to those who have already identified themselves.

However, what is unknown is what will play out in the slightly longer term. It has been said many times before, but bears repeating again, the sort of people who we are talking about are for the great part loyal Anglicans. They have stuck with the church despite the recent trajectory of the church against them. But if things seem to continue against them, they will gradually lose confidence and drift away. For some of them, Rome will seem an increasingly attractive option.

If the next general synod seems to be triumphalist, then the rate of attrition could be rapid. If it seems genuinely conciliatory, then it won't. I guess the nightmare scenario is that if for whatever reason general synod does not approve the move to consecrate women bishops, we will have a stalemate that will cause maximum dissatisfaction everywhere. Goodness knows what happens then - gradual loss of everyone to all points of the compass probably.

The comments about finances are very relevant, but I think they omit a number of factors relating to overheads. It may be that a FiF parish that does not meet it's parish share could become an ordinariate congregation that could support itself if its overhead burden is different. One would need to see the figures to make that call though.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
The comments about finances are very relevant, but I think they omit a number of factors relating to overheads. It may be that a FiF parish that does not meet it's parish share could become an ordinariate congregation that could support itself if its overhead burden is different. One would need to see the figures to make that call though.

Good point. My own RC parish recently had an October count of 300 for "average" Sunday attendance. That is significantly higher than the ASA of the average Episcopal parish, including most of the Anglo-Catholic parishes (whether, FIF, AffCath, or neutral) in my area. We are considered a marginal congregation partly because of numbers and partly because the parishioners are poor. Unless the Anglican Use parish was super-fab, there is no way that there would be a 300 ASA. Since the Apostolic Constitution allows for "tentmaker" priests and they operate outside (more or less) of the purview of the local bishop who operates under a "big box" model of parish life, these small parishes might be able to make ends meet.

I am less familiar with how the smaller eastern rite parishes operate, but I would suspect that a similar model of parish life exists - - or that allowances are made for the rather small numbers of - - lets say the "Grand Fenwick" Rite - - in a given town.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Shadowhund:
lets say the "Grand Fenwick" Rite - -

Ah! My favorite rite. Where the versicle is "yes" and the response is "no!"
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
It may well be, looking back from the future, that the TAC's overture to Rome, resulting in the yet-to-be-established ordinariats and whoever joins them, is a side issue as far as the global future of Anglicanism goes.

Demographically the growth seems to be all with the GAFCON adherents, particularly in Africa.

I found this article about the recent statement by the Archbishop of the Anglican Church of North America (the former ECUSA Bishop of Pttsburgh) somewhat disturbing but I suspect there is considerable truth in what he says:

http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/holy-post/archive/2009/11/15/archbishop-duncan-of-the-anglican-church-of-north-ameri ca-on-the-anglican-schism.aspx
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
[QUOTE] By course of action I don't mean ordaining women as bishops,because even the most hardline of dissenters knows that this is inevitable.

What I mean is refusing to allow an alternative episcopal oversight acceptable to that section of the church. The Bishop of Fulham and all the PEV's have said that they can't remain within the C of E without a structured alternative oversight.

We're tottering on the edge of the equine cemetery here, but I wanted to say that, as long as FinF remain in the C of E, it is impossible to ordain women as bishops in the full sense. Some women might be ordained to the order of bishops, but they can't act as bishops because a bishop is the focus of unity in his/her diocese and so must be accepted by all.

I'm reluctantly coming to the conclusion that ordaining women as bishops must be put off indefinitely. To do so would either force an artificial two-tier church, or drive significant numbers of our best priests and people out of the C of E. I think there are far more of them than are likely to be tempted by the Pope's offer.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
Some women might be ordained to the order of bishops, but they can't act as bishops because a bishop is the focus of unity in his/her diocese and so must be accepted by all.

There have been plenty of bishops rejected or ignored by at least some of the parishes in their care in the past. Us evangelicals are experts at it.

And many FiF types already are already de facto out of communion with dicoesan bishops who ordain women.

And the language about the Bishop being the "focus of unity" is an innovaton in an Anglican context anyway. For most of the history of the Church in this country, before and after the Reformation, bishops were basically adminstrators. At best, pastors of pastors.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
We're tottering on the edge of the equine cemetery here, but I wanted to say that, as long as FinF remain in the C of E, it is impossible to ordain women as bishops in the full sense. Some women might be ordained to the order of bishops, but they can't act as bishops because a bishop is the focus of unity in his/her diocese and so must be accepted by all

There are only two ways in which women bishops can exercise their ministry to the full, without barriers, glass ceilings or discrimination. One is to forcibly expel FiF from the C of E. The other is to create an episcopal structure which respects their ecclesiological integrity. FiF has argued this since the beginning of this process. It wouldn't need to be called a third or free province if that offends the equal rights lobby, but it would have to get the job done.

There are many FiF members, even in Resolution C parishes, who are loyal Anglicans, and would much rather be part of a structure within Anglicanism which respects that integrity, rather than part of a structure within the RC Church which recognises Anglican Patrimony. Further back in this thread, both + Pete and Ken said that the C of E can't agree to a separate episcopal structure to accommodate FiF, even though the Archbishop of Canterbury expressed his support for the idea. Many of these Anglicans loyal to the church of their birth feel they have a right to expect the C of E to honour its promises of the 90's that both integrities will be respected and regarded as heirs to the Anglican tradition.

Such people would only leave if they were forced out by by a failure on the part of the C of E to honour those promises. It is quite conceivable that a failure to provide adequate oversight for dissenters would result in a failure to achieve the necessary majority vote in Synod to take the process forward. If the revision committee fails, as I expect it will, to come up with a workable solution, it will be telling FiF members that thay are no longer welcome in the Church of England, that it has moved on and that the promises made in the past are no longer of any importance compared to the project in hand.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
Which is why I think the best (if painful for some) compromise would be to hold fire on women bishops, rather than set up a parallel church, provided that FinF and other opponents of women priests would accept unreservedly their (male) bishop. They don't have to accept the ministry of women priests, but to refuse to accept a validly consecrated male bishop just because of his views or actions doesn't seem very Catholic to me.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:

And the language about the Bishop being the "focus of unity" is an innovaton in an Anglican context anyway.

Ken, you've brought this one up before. Instead of 'focus of unity' how about, the 'primary minister'? (not prime minister). As expressed in a licensing or institution service when he says to the priest, 'receive this cure of souls, which is both mine and yours.' (or words to that effect). A priest only exercises a ministry on behalf of the bishop; no-one (not even a Reader, as you know) can legitimately preach or celebrate the sacraments without his licence.

To me, that suggests 'focus of unity'. But however you express it, the concept is surely not an innovation.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
to refuse to accept a validly consecrated male bishop just because of his views or actions doesn't seem very Catholic to me.

And unfortunately, the mindset that you describe is exactly the one that the PEV scheme has endorsed and institutionalised.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:

And the language about the Bishop being the "focus of unity" is an innovaton in an Anglican context anyway. For most of the history of the Church in this country, before and after the Reformation, bishops were basically adminstrators. At best, pastors of pastors.

But this in not early church or NT ecclesiology. Not in the slightest.

Talking about Bishops with a charismatic colleague we agreed we both expected them to be Apostolic and more than an admin manager.
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
Further back in this thread, both + Pete and Ken said that the C of E can't agree to a separate episcopal structure to accommodate FiF, even though the Archbishop of Canterbury expressed his support for the idea.

Yes I've never understood this view that you can't have separate episcopal structures. We don't follow the principle of one bishop, one territory in any case; we already have parallel jurisdictions and let's face it many CoE parishes are already pretty detached from bishops (and have always quite liked it that way). Finally, the Roman Catholic Church has been happy to operate all sorts of parallel jurisdictions. Who are we then to think that we're the upholders of catholic principles?
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
Spectral nags hover, but it is no argument to say that Roman Catholics allow 'parallel jurisdictions', any more than to say that TEC and the C of E have parallel jurisdictions in mainland Europe.
The reason for these jurisdictions being separate is not theological. I'm sure that the Pope wouldn't accept an 'Anglican rite' jurisdiction that insisted on allegiance to the 39 articles, or even the 1662 communion rite in its totality. If the PEVs were in agreement with the mainstream diocesan bishops on all except cultural issues, there would be no reason for them to exist.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
What Angloid just said (above).
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Finally, the Roman Catholic Church has been happy to operate all sorts of parallel jurisdictions.
True, and those parallel jurisdictions remain in full communion with each other and the bishops and priests of the various particular churches are mutually recognized as having valid ordinations. At times, the bishops of one particular church are given oversight over another particular church as the need arises.

Would that be the case with a third province?
 
Posted by Carys (# 78) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
Which is why I think the best (if painful for some) compromise would be to hold fire on women bishops, rather than set up a parallel church, provided that FinF and other opponents of women priests would accept unreservedly their (male) bishop. They don't have to accept the ministry of women priests, but to refuse to accept a validly consecrated male bishop just because of his views or actions doesn't seem very Catholic to me.

That's easy for you to say as bloke (I believe), but what about the generation of women priests affected by this? What if God is calling some of them to be bishops? Are we stifling the spirit if we ignore this call?

The problem is that it is not logically possible to be a church that both does and does not ordain women. We've managed for the last 15 years by finding a not very logical compromise, but the problems with that compromise are now being highlighted.

I worship at a church a moderately catholic CofE church with a female priest. We're growing slowly and have had some very good comments from recent visitors. God is, I believe, at work in this place and I think that is in danger of being forgotten in these discussion. I cannot deny the vocation of the female priests I have known.*

*And last time I counted, of priests I have known well, it's about 50:50 male:female. And growing up I had a lot more respect for our female curate than our male vicar.

Carys
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
I know what you're saying, Carys, and I sympathise, bloke as I am. It can't be easy to see and welcome women as priests and to know that there is no likelihood of them becoming bishops. I think what I'm trying to say is that in the present situation they would not be bishops even if they were consecrated to that order and given mitres. Not because the sacrament 'wouldn't take', but because if a proportion of their flock refused to accept their authority their episcopal ministry would be at least flawed.

A separate jurisdiction would remove this element so that her diocese could function, but in what sense would that jurisdiction be 'Anglican'? I know these arguments have been rehearsed over and over again (and this is likely to get sent to the knacker's yard); I know that the present PEV system raises similar issues, but I think there is a sort of permeability between the two factions which would disappear with separate jurisdictions.
 
Posted by seasick (# 48) on :
 
What happened to the 'period of reception'? It seems to me that the Church of England needs to review that period and decide whether the development of female priests is to be received or not. It seems to me to be trying to run before you can walk to push forward to the consecration of female bishops before having that discussion. The period of reception cannot be indefinite IMO.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Seasick wrote:
quote:
What happened to the 'period of reception'? It seems to me that the Church of England needs to review that period and decide whether the development of female priests is to be received or not. It seems to me to be trying to run before you can walk to push forward to the consecration of female bishops before having that discussion. The period of reception cannot be indefinite IMO.
I think the problem with that one, Seasick, is that the period of reception is supposed to be the period of reception by the whole church here on earth*. So the period is not indefinite, but it is not in our hands only.

I don't think that on its own is a deal breaker. However, it probably does imply the need to accommodate those who are opposed until then.

(* naturally, many would say this is unrealistic. I'm only reporting my understanding, not advocating it)
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
I think it is Sweden where 'the period of reception' has led to a growth in FiF equivalent parishes i.e. opposition to women bishops has grown bigger, not diminished.

I agree with Angloid that the consecration of women should be postponed until the C of E finds a way to honour its promised to our FiF brothers and sisters.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Carys:
... but what about the generation of women priests affected by this? What if God is calling some of them to be bishops? Are we stifling the spirit if we ignore this call?

Yes. That's why we should go ahead.

And (I am almost sure) will go ahead. I think its probably all over bar the shouting.

And it looks as if FiF won't get even what we were trying to give them a few weeks ago. It looks as if those who were trying to get the revision committee to move the new rule in the direction of provision that FiF might accept have been bounced out of court.

We won't know the details of what happened till next year (if we ever do learn them) but what seems to have happened is that some who might have changed their minds and voted for something more flexible, became persuaded that the core clergy of Fif were going to Rome anyway and so no longer needed to be taken into account. So the committee went for the deafult option as voted on by Synod (see this news item on the Fulcrum website and the press relese from the Committee)

If that is the case, then maybe the Pope's offer to TAC has come at what might be a disastrous time for some in FiF. The assumption, perhaps false, that CoE clergy opposed to women bishops will join a new RC Ordinariate may have tipped the balance against them on the committee and amongst the bishops. Which might be a tragedy.


It also seems (I mean "seems" I have no inside knowledge) that the evangelicals in Synod and the Hous of Bishops were trying the hardest to work with FiF - the hard-line opposition to them seems to come from the liberal catholic establishment in the CofE. (A group I know think I exempt Rowan Williams from being a member of - some of us used to think he was like that but he has done a lot better as Archbishop than they feared)
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
I think it is Sweden where 'the period of reception' has led to a growth in FiF equivalent parishes i.e. opposition to women bishops has grown bigger, not diminished.

I agree with Angloid that the consecration of women should be postponed until the C of E finds a way to honour its promised to our FiF brothers and sisters.

I'm not sure you can compare the situations in the CoS and CoE in that way. I was told years ago by the late +Robert Terwilliger that outside of the two major cities, the Swedes were quite traditional and pious, very different to the stereotype of Swedes as ultra-progressive liberals. In any event, the liberals and AffCath types in the CoS clearly have had the upper hand for a long time and no doubt will continue to call the shots. I don't think that an increase in FiF types within the CoE will be catalyzed by the consecration of lady bishops.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
It seems to be in Stockholm, Lund, Gothenburg and Uppsala.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
I would think in any event that a better comparison might be to the situations in the USA and Canada, both of which have had OoW for quite a long time now. The dissidents left and haven't been replaced by any newly minted crop of FiF types. Do you really think the dear old CoE is so very different?
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
The CofE is indeed quite different to TEC, especially as the CofE has not only not shed its evangelical wing - it is getting stronger. That makes quite a difference, though that is not to say that it may not follow the same track as TEC. The point is that if it does, it may be for different reasons.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Yes, but most CofE evangelicals either support the ordination of women or don't regard it as a churchbreaking issue.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
Which is not to say that they necessarily feel the same about the other Dead Horse.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Both points fully appreciated. The point in making it was exactly to note that the following in one matter may not be taken to infer others will follow after that, whether of the dead horse variety or not.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ken:
And it looks as if FiF won't get even what we were trying to give them a few weeks ago.

In which case the Church of England will have behaved disgracefully towards them, given the assurances of the past, that both integrities are to be regarded as being loyal Anglicans. Many members of FiF parishes, given that the Pope has called their bluff with his offer, will take the line of least resistance, stay in their parishes and take whatever crumbs of comfort the C of E is willing to throw at them. This will probably be a weak and unenforcible code of practice which will soon be swept away.

At the other end of the FiF spectrum are the ardent Anglo-Papalists who would have gone to Rome as soon as the Pope made any offer to receive them with some hope of retaining their identity. But for many, this will be a painful decision. They will have to leave their parishes with an uncertain future about where they can worship. We've all agreed that good will is likely to be thin on the ground with regards to the sharing of C of E resources. To many such people, worship is an obligation, not a Sunday hobby.

To join another church, especially the RC Church, which carries with it the obligation of obedience, it isn't a good enough reason just to have been unchurched and abandoned by one's own heritage. It is not too late for the Church of England to take measures to retain those who would want to stay. It can avoid this dishonouable and ignominious outcome which must result from its refusal to honour the promises of the past.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
I'm not a philosopher, but I would have thought it is logically impossible to respect the integrities both of a woman bishop and of those opposed to her very existence, within the same church. Which probably means that the original promise was pure fudge, but why was anyone taken in by it?
 
Posted by Gee D (# 13815) on :
 
Ken, With
quote:
Yes, but most CofE evangelicals either support the ordination of women or don't regard it as a churchbreaking issue.
you seem to have forgotten ++ Sydney and his followers. They oppose the OoW and also see it as a church-breaking issue. And it's hard to get more evangelical than they. Lay presidency yes, women priests no, is their motto.

++ Jensen seems to have quite a few non-evangelicals outside the UK in his entourage.

[ 19. November 2009, 08:21: Message edited by: Gee D ]
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
I'm not a philosopher, but I would have thought it is logically impossible to respect the integrities both of a woman bishop and of those opposed to her very existence, within the same church. Which probably means that the original promise was pure fudge, but why was anyone taken in by it?

You are probably right, Father, that's how it will turn out, but I used to say the problems of Northern Ireland were insoluble because the two communities wanted mutually irreconcileable things. Here, what is lacking, is the will to find a structural solution which would, at the same time, allow women bishops to participate to the full, and also allow the dissidents their own episcopal space.

So why did anyone believe the fudge? because we have the right to expect integrity and honest speaking from our church leaders. Anglicans born and brought up at a time when this wasn't an issue don't become disloyal and worthy of being thrown to the wolves because they prefer the old ways.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
PaulTH says:

quote:
To many such people, worship is an obligation, not a Sunday hobby.
quote:
To join another church, especially the RC Church, which carries with it the obligation of obedience, it isn't a good enough reason just to have been unchurched and abandoned by one's own heritage.
Could you unpack that a little more for me? What do you mean by "unchurched" and "abandoned by one's own heritage"? For those who see the Church as the community of believers, the Body of Christ...how can schism destroy what is indefectible? Surely whatever remnant is left by schism is still the Church? What is "the Anglican heritage"? The only "heritage" I could see, more than three decades ago, was, and still is, God's unchanging truth. The rest seems now to me to have been only externals.

Mary
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leetle Masha:
For those who see the Church as the community of believers, the Body of Christ...how can schism destroy what is indefectible?

Mary, this is very ecumenical of you. I wish all Christians saw it your way! I'll try to answer your question steering clear of dead horse territory. If a church makes a major innovation, as the C of E did in 1992, it can expect that some members feel unable to go with the change. Yet the Church of England assured those members that their integrity would be respected, and there was always an honoured place for their Christian witness within the church of their heritage.

If things proceed along the lines that the revision committee is now to recommend, that promise has been broken because some, and I don't say all, of those in FiF will have no choice but to leave the C of E due to that same integrity. If they join another Christian body believing, as you do, that the whole Christian movement is part of the Body of Christ, they are not "unchurched" in the true sense of the term. But they are expelled from their own cultural expression of that Body. This may cause a lot of pain to some people.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Paul, what I said was not

quote:
If they join another Christian body believing, as you do, that the whole Christian movement is part of the Body of Christ
.

What I said was a paraphrase of a short hymn of ours:

As many of you as have been baptised into Christ
have put on Christ, Alleluia!

When you became a Christian, your heritage was Christ.

When people put Christ down as a "Great Teacher" rather than as the only-begotten Son of God, where do you go?

That's all I was saying. But thanks for your answer--food for thought!

Best wishes,

Mary
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
In other words....

"When", by Leetle Masha, with apologies to Kipling

When one must keep God’s Truth while all about him,
Are changing that and offering theirs instead,
When one must trust the Lord when all men doubt Him,
And not succumb to doubt or lose one’s head,
When one must hope and not be disappointed,
When lies abound and one gets nought but fudge,
When God’s own Truth has been denied, disjointed,
And one still holds that Truth, and cannot budge;

When one believes in Truth, Truth is his Master.
When one thinks rightly, Right must be his aim,
When one must meet defeat, and then disaster,
One tends to see those two as just the same.
When one must bear to see the Truth one’s spoken
Twisted by some, to catch men in their net,
One cannot bear to let one’s God be broken
And crucified again, while they forget

That Jesus is the Way to man’s salvation,
The Truth to guide man to His home above,
But when one can’t find truth in innovation,
Nor see truth compromised, and call that love,
One cannot quench the Light and choose the shadow.
One cannot hide the Truth or bar the Way.
One cannot watch a faction’s sheer bravado
Detouring wandering pilgrims far astray.

When one has come to see that there’s no winning
A battle that was joined decades ago,
When one has come to see that what was sinning
Is now praiseworthy, to be put on show
For all the world to laud, and then to follow
The way that it is leading, what to do?
When one can see all present boasts are hollow,
There’s but the Cross of Christ, for me, for you.

With prayers for everyone on this thread,

Mary

[ 19. November 2009, 14:14: Message edited by: Leetle Masha ]
 
Posted by The Royal Spaniel (# 40) on :
 
Why apologise? 'If' with the Pelagianism left out. Very good,LM - I like it...... [Smile]

(being a Royal Spaniel both Catholic and Reformed......)
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Thank you kindly, Royal Spaniel (the breed with the sweetest face God ever made!)....

That poem refers to nobody here in particular. It's about what happened to me, how I made up my mind, what I went through, and how it turned out for me 32 years later.

Any decision we make for the sake of our faith alone is going to be a wrench. That's why I keep praying for everybody, leaving nobody out! We can do what we have to do, and all the better if we aren't bitter when we do it!

Mary
 
Posted by Comper's Child (# 10580) on :
 
Perhaps this will clarify what the ABC is thinking at this point:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article6923807.ece
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
If a church makes a major innovation, as the C of E did in 1992, it can expect that some members feel unable to go with the change. Yet the Church of England assured those members that their integrity would be respected, and there was always an honoured place for their Christian witness within the church of their heritage.


I cannot now remember what was and wasn't said in 1992, but ISTM that if you were told, in effect, that the system of alternative oversight would be a permanent or long-term one, that was culpably dishonest. The PEV system could perhaps be justified as an illogical if pastorally sensitive transitional measure to allow those opposed to the measure time to see whether they felt that they could, after all, remain in the church to which many of them had contributed so much. But you simply couldn't institutionalise, long-term, a system in which one part of the church was allowed to assert, openly, the invalidity of the ordination of numbers of clergy in the other part of the church.

As I say, I cannot remember the detail of what went on, and I am prepared to be corrected on it, but I fear that this may have been an example of that bad Anglican (Christian?) habit of hoping that unpleasant choices would go away if we all pretended that they weren't there. So while, Paul, I disagree profoundly with you about the ordination (and consecration)of women, if you were given the assurances to which you refer, I think that you were shabbily and unfairly treated; worse treated in the longer term, indeed, than if no alternative provision had been made, because then the pain would have been faced at the time and could have started to heal sooner.

[ 19. November 2009, 21:14: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gee D:
Ken, With
quote:
Yes, but most CofE evangelicals either support the ordination of women or don't regard it as a churchbreaking issue.
you seem to have forgotten ++ Sydney and his followers.

Sydney wasn't in England last time I looked.

quote:


They oppose the OoW and also see it as a church-breaking issue.

Except they don't because they are still in communion with Anglican provinces, even ones in Australia, that ordain women.

Like evangelicals in general they have no theory of taint. As long as they have no women priests in their own churches they have no doubts about the validity of their own churchces.

quote:


Lay presidency yes, women priests no, is their motto.

And when did they start licensed lay presidency in Sydney?
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
Spectral nags hover, but it is no argument to say that Roman Catholics allow 'parallel jurisdictions', any more than to say that TEC and the C of E have parallel jurisdictions in mainland Europe.
The reason for these jurisdictions being separate is not theological. I'm sure that the Pope wouldn't accept an 'Anglican rite' jurisdiction that insisted on allegiance to the 39 articles, or even the 1662 communion rite in its totality. If the PEVs were in agreement with the mainstream diocesan bishops on all except cultural issues, there would be no reason for them to exist.

Well you still don't seem to be able to offer me a reason why the principle of one bishop, one territory is to be upheld. It may be largely a good thing, but certainly not an essential thing - which is why I've offered examples of parallel jurisdictions. Why's geography so important to the church, when proximity has become much less important in society in general?
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Spawn asks:

quote:
Why's geography so important to the church, when proximity has become much less important in society in general?
Off the top of my head, two words: Carbon footprint.

That's why the idea of "flying bishops" is wasteful. O for the day when the Church is truly One again [Votive] . Just think of the time and fuel saved!
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
Spectral nags hover, but it is no argument to say that Roman Catholics allow 'parallel jurisdictions', any more than to say that TEC and the C of E have parallel jurisdictions in mainland Europe.
The reason for these jurisdictions being separate is not theological. I'm sure that the Pope wouldn't accept an 'Anglican rite' jurisdiction that insisted on allegiance to the 39 articles, or even the 1662 communion rite in its totality. If the PEVs were in agreement with the mainstream diocesan bishops on all except cultural issues, there would be no reason for them to exist.

Well you still don't seem to be able to offer me a reason why the principle of one bishop, one territory is to be upheld. It may be largely a good thing, but certainly not an essential thing - which is why I've offered examples of parallel jurisdictions. Why's geography so important to the church, when proximity has become much less important in society in general?
That's not the point in dispute. Geographical jurisdictions are IMHO the best arrangement, but they are clearly not essential and overlapping ones don't necessarily jeopardise the unity of the Church, as the various examples quoted from the Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion prove.

What is however specious logic is to argue that a diocese can separate from the mainstream on theological grounds and still be accepted equally with the rest. Seems a bit like having your cake and eating it to me.
 
Posted by Qoheleth. (# 9265) on :
 
Useful summary here fro mthe Jesuits.

quote:
So far, no Ordinariates have been established, and our reflection must cease until they have.[...]

It is only then that those questions which remain can begin to be answered, questions such as: How many Anglicans will seek to enter full communion with the Catholic Church? How many of those will wish to join the Ordinariate? How willing will those Anglicans who join the Ordinariate be to integrate with the local Catholic community? Where and how will they worship? How willing will the Catholic community be to welcome them? How will the Ordinariate relate to the Diocese in practice? How will its priests relate to the diocesan priests? Bearing in mind the power of symbolism, what does allowing former Anglican bishops to wear episcopal insignia say about the Church’s teaching on the invalidity of Anglican orders?


 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Comper's Child:
Perhaps this will clarify what the ABC is thinking at this point:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article6923807.ece

Yes, blame the tree when the car runs in to it.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
Finally, the Roman Catholic Church has been happy to operate all sorts of parallel jurisdictions.
True, and those parallel jurisdictions remain in full communion with each other and the bishops and priests of the various particular churches are mutually recognized as having valid ordinations. At times, the bishops of one particular church are given oversight over another particular church as the need arises.

Would that be the case with a third province?

Raises the question of what 'full communion' with each other really means.

Similar to points raised by Gee D and Ken in different ways.

I tend to believe there is a de facto schism and limited communion between different dioceses in the worldwide Anglican Communion.

'Cosmetic unity' might be the only thing possible, both in England and the world.

Hypocritical or realistic? [Confused]
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
quote:
Originally posted by Comper's Child:
Perhaps this will clarify what the ABC is thinking at this point:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article6923807.ece

Yes, blame the tree when the car runs in to it.
I especially like +Cantuar's contention that the Pope is stifling ecumenism by his insistence on the RC theology of the priesthood. There's more than one way to look at that, bub!
 
Posted by Gee D (# 13815) on :
 
Ken : No reading of my post shows that at any stage have I said that any licensing for lay presidency has occurred. Indeed, ++ Jensen has said that it won't for the moment; indeed to do so would cost him most of his GAFCON support. I simply set out the motto.

++ Jensen has made it very clear that he does not regard himself as being in communion with + Robinson, and a reasonable reading of what he says suggests that he does not do so with the ECUSA as a whole.

Finally, I had completely missed the subtle use of 'CofE'. My error.

[ 21. November 2009, 04:52: Message edited by: Gee D ]
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
What is however specious logic is to argue that a diocese can separate from the mainstream on theological grounds and still be accepted equally with the rest. Seems a bit like having your cake and eating it to me.

Well if it's not geography, it seems to be about not being able to have your cake and eat it. Well I've never understood why you can't have your cake and eat it, so you're going to have to do better than that.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
I cannot now remember what was and wasn't said in 1992, but ISTM that if you were told, in effect, that the system of alternative oversight would be a permanent or long-term one, that was culpably dishonest. The PEV system could perhaps be justified as an illogical if pastorally sensitive transitional measure to allow those opposed to the measure time to see whether they felt that they could, after all, remain in the church to which many of them had contributed so much. But you simply couldn't institutionalise, long-term, a system in which one part of the church was allowed to assert, openly, the invalidity of the ordination of numbers of clergy in the other part of the church.

The PEV system was never intended to be permanent when discussed in 1993 (wasn't it after the 1992 vote itself). On the other hand, as I recall a counter-bid to limit it to a short term of years such as 10 or 15 failed as well.

The 3 PEVs plus Fulham have all been appointed and reappointed from the same constituency when vacant. Unlike Wales where they dropped the equivalent after a decade-ish(?) And the PEVs haven't been poor appointments (from the point of the recipients), nor have the Reform / cons. evos been given one which was a perfectly reasonable option.

So 16 years later and we still have much the same deal agreed in 1993 in place and working as well as it might do. We are only now talking about how the scheme needs to be changed once there are actual women territorial bishops, which can't happen before 2013 or so at the earliest - and is likely to be two or three suffragan bishops in liberal diocese to begin with.

Relative to the historic standard service of a pensionable stipendiary service of 37 years in orders, that is reasonable to me. There won't be many serving stipendiary priests left by 2013 who were ordained pre-1992. Most of them will be incumbents in their final parish who can be their own pope until they go themselves, as long as they can choose their own bishop for confirmations, which is all they really need a bishop for in visible terms.

I can't get so excited about the fate of those ordained post-1992, whatever 'promises' they think they were given they were not and never could have been eternal, or the CofE would have set up separate diocese at the time.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
It's not just about clergy, though. What about the laity, when those vicars retire?
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
Well, leo, it seems to me you have put your finger on the greatest unknown factor in the whole situation to start with--no one seems to know or even be willing to guess what the laity will do. From what I have seen and read (as an admittedly uninvolved outsider) the lay folk are not as overwhelmed by Rome's generosity as the clergy.

I have observed in the US (and you would be better placed than I to know if it holds true in the UK) that the laity are generally more attached to their building and their fellow congregants than they are to their cleric--many have seen priests come and go, and know that any particular incumbency is temporary. I suspect that is one reason those clerics considering the move to Rome are pushing for the buildings.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
It is not unknown in the C of E for a PCC to vote for the Resolutions, as an act of loyalty towards their current parish priest, and when he has left, to quietly drop them and eventually accept a woman priest as curate or vicar.

I think the proportion of lay people with strong views one way or the other on this issue is much smaller than amongst the clergy.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Angloid wrote
quote:
It is not unknown in the C of E for a PCC to vote for the Resolutions, as an act of loyalty towards their current parish priest, and when he has left, to quietly drop them and eventually accept a woman priest as curate or vicar.

I think the proportion of lay people with strong views one way or the other on this issue is much smaller than amongst the clergy.

I'm sure the generality of this is right. But I don't think it's just in one direction on this issue - it really is generally true I suspect. (I think I'm right in saying that the number of A/B/C parishes has actually risen slightly over the years, which would appear to indicate people taking opposite decisions).

This may well be a double-edged sword to both sides of course.

[ 21. November 2009, 16:36: Message edited by: Honest Ron Bacardi ]
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
It's not just about clergy, though. What about the laity, when those vicars retire?

Well those who want a male vicar will go to a parish with one, just like they do now. Laity can ignore bishops even more than clergy do. There won't be that many women bishops for a long time. Avoiding them wouldn't be that difficult if you really wanted to. Laity don't usually have to make oaths of allegiance to a bishop, so there isn't the same theological problem as for clergy.

The extreme logical anglo-catholic opponents will go over to Rome or become reconciled to Affirming Catholicism or just become too small to matter in the grand scheme of things. There are all sorts of minority groups in the CofE.

Eventually, we would only be talking about a group of laity as yet unborn, and it is difficult to argue that any promises allegedly made by bishops in 1993 really apply to them.

Which does not mean that anglo-catholicism will die out. But anglo-papalism will do. The Pope has killed off that already.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
What is however specious logic is to argue that a diocese can separate from the mainstream on theological grounds and still be accepted equally with the rest. Seems a bit like having your cake and eating it to me.

Well if it's not geography, it seems to be about not being able to have your cake and eat it. Well I've never understood why you can't have your cake and eat it, so you're going to have to do better than that.
The expression is more understandable if it's reversed : eat your cake and have it too. If you've eaten it, you don't have it anymore.
 
Posted by Comper's Child (# 10580) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
What is however specious logic is to argue that a diocese can separate from the mainstream on theological grounds and still be accepted equally with the rest. Seems a bit like having your cake and eating it to me.

Well if it's not geography, it seems to be about not being able to have your cake and eat it. Well I've never understood why you can't have your cake and eat it, so you're going to have to do better than that.
The expression is more understandable if it's reversed : eat your cake and have it too. If you've eaten it, you don't have it anymore.
That's the point, Father - wanting to eat it and still retain it...
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
It is not unknown in the C of E for a PCC to vote for the Resolutions, as an act of loyalty towards their current parish priest, and when he has left, to quietly drop them and eventually accept a woman priest as curate or vicar.

I think the proportion of lay people with strong views one way or the other on this issue is much smaller than amongst the clergy.

indeed - have just come back from the pub with some FiF friends - all but one lay - they ain't going anywhere.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
[Slight tangent] I read back in the days when they published the "Unabomber Manifesto", that the Unabomber reversed the original expression "Eat your cake and have it too" so that it came out "Have your cake and eat it too", and the Unabomber's version became current then. [/tangent]
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
indeed - have just come back from the pub with some FiF friends - all but one lay - they ain't going anywhere .

I would agree with leo. I've had about 20 emails and phone calls on this subject since the news broke, mostly from friends and acquaintances in FiF. Only two priests I know have indicated that they will seriously take up this offer. Not one lay member seems interested.
 
Posted by Ashworth (# 12645) on :
 
I feel that there is a difference in attitude between clergy and laity. I also think that there is a difference between both priests and laity in the Northern and Southern Provinces. Most of the talk about leaving seems to be coming from a number of fairly high profile FinF priests in London and the south.

For me as a lay person the whole idea of leaving and going to Rome raises almost as many problems as the ordination of women. There certainly do seem to be more clergy talking about leaving than there are laity and that is what concerns me. I'm in a diocese where finf is very weak and there only a handful of finf clergy. If the laity don't feel they can leave who will support and minister to their needs if large numbers of finf clergy do go?
I think this is becoming a very sad situation where thousands of people are going to be left stuggling in the wilderness, perhaps unchurched, because of a lack of charity and compromise on both sides of the argument. It does seem that the C of E is going overboard to be an inclusive church where every minority are to be welcomed and encouraged with open arms except those people who cannot accept the ordination of women.
I am only in my early 50's and would like to think that there would still be a welcome in the C of E for me, with my views, for at least another 30 years. However, I greatly fear there will not be.

I did find the Bishop of Beverley's recent letter an encouragement. Is he saying that he will be staying to look after those of us who want to stay? Unfortunately he too must soon be coming towards retirement.

http://www.bishopofbeverley.co.uk/news.htm
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
As an outsider to this, can I just ask - for you, perhaps for FinF generally, what is/are your doctrinal differences with Rome ?
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ashworth:
I feel that there is a difference in attitude between clergy and laity. I also think that there is a difference between both priests and laity in the Northern and Southern Provinces. Most of the talk about leaving seems to be coming from a number of fairly high profile FinF priests in London and the south.

For me as a lay person the whole idea of leaving and going to Rome raises almost as many problems as the ordination of women. There certainly do seem to be more clergy talking about leaving than there are laity and that is what concerns me. I'm in a diocese where finf is very weak and there only a handful of finf clergy. If the laity don't feel they can leave who will support and minister to their needs if large numbers of finf clergy do go?
I think this is becoming a very sad situation where thousands of people are going to be left stuggling in the wilderness, perhaps unchurched, because of a lack of charity and compromise on both sides of the argument. It does seem that the C of E is going overboard to be an inclusive church where every minority are to be welcomed and encouraged with open arms except those people who cannot accept the ordination of women.
I am only in my early 50's and would like to think that there would still be a welcome in the C of E for me, with my views, for at least another 30 years. However, I greatly fear there will not be.

I did find the Bishop of Beverley's recent letter an encouragement. Is he saying that he will be staying to look after those of us who want to stay? Unfortunately he too must soon be coming towards retirement.

http://www.bishopofbeverley.co.uk/news.htm

I think that is quite a good piece by +Beverley. (Actually sounds like the name of a woman bishop!)

Sounds like he is staying for as long as he is in stipendiary ministry. Might be reconciled to Rome closer to his death bed if the CofE moves further away.

Just a thought for the melting pot, but any chance of a new ordinariate offer from +Antioch at this point? (There are clearly fewer practical problems for married anglo-catholic priests in taking that option.)
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leetle Masha:
[Slight tangent] I read back in the days when they published the "Unabomber Manifesto", that the Unabomber reversed the original expression "Eat your cake and have it too" so that it came out "Have your cake and eat it too", and the Unabomber's version became current then. [/tangent]

Er, no. That's the exact wrong way round.
The story is told in the ever-reliable Language Log Both forms have been in use for centuries. "have - eat" is currently much more common than "eat - have" and has been for a long time. Ted Kaczynski used the "eat - have" order in his letter, which was one of the things that caused his brother to suspect it was him.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Really! Well, thank you! Sorry to have posted in error.

Mary
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
There has been a rumour coming out of the Vatican that Benny was not happy about C of E not keeping it's part of a deal made when the B'lair of Shyte a Roman Catholic
It appears part of the deals was in taking him the Vatican could open up a chain of St Peter's Coffee Shops in a number of prime churches; as well as providing the pasta for the Alpha suppers. One of the main reasons they have thrown open the doors.

Trust me it is all one big conspiracy
 
Posted by Ashworth (# 12645) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think²:
As an outsider to this, can I just ask - for you, perhaps for FinF generally, what is/are your doctrinal differences with Rome ?

Speaking purely for myself and not for FinF I don't think there are any major doctrinal differences. However, there are a number of smaller issues that I would not be happy with, which when put altogether does create quite an obstacle for me being comfortable with becoming a Roman Catholic.

Although I have a great personal devotion to Our Lady, and indeed I am part of a Walsingham Cell, I do have problems with the idea of the Immaculate Conception. I cannot agree with the infalibility of the the Pope. The whole issue of birth control causes me problems especially as I see nothing particularly unnatural about using a condom. I am not sure whether the Roman Church is always correct in its views on divorce. I am not in agreeance regarding celebacy as in my experience a priests wife can often be a great asset both to the priest and more importantly to the parish. I believe that the priests that have ministered to me and administered the sacraments to me within the C of E over many years have been valid priests with valid sacraments as indeed I was confirmed by whom I believe to be a valid bishop. I could go on.

I am very happy to worship on occasions in a Roman Catholic Church, as I have to do more and more frequently when on holiday these days, when the local anglican church is not acceptable to me. However, it is a different matter to become a member of the Roman Catholic Church.

I think many anglican lay people feel the same as I do. I would be interested to hear.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
Sounds fairly typical story for a CofE anglo-catholic to me. Have you ever thought about the Orthodox alternative?
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ashworth:


Although I have a great personal devotion to Our Lady, and indeed I am part of a Walsingham Cell, I do have problems with the idea of the Immaculate Conception. I cannot agree with the infalibility of the the Pope. The whole issue of birth control causes me problems especially as I see nothing particularly unnatural about using a condom. I am not sure whether the Roman Church is always correct in its views on divorce. I am not in agreeance regarding celebacy as in my experience a priests wife can often be a great asset both to the priest and more importantly to the parish. I believe that the priests that have ministered to me and administered the sacraments to me within the C of E over many years have been valid priests with valid sacraments as indeed I was confirmed by whom I believe to be a valid bishop. I could go on.

With the exception of the validity of anglican sacraments, I thought cradle RCs have similar issues and square that via the doctrine of 'primacy of conscience' ?
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
Think2..... With the exception of the validity of anglican sacraments, I thought cradle RCs have similar issues and square that via the doctrine of 'primacy of conscience' ?

Yes, you're probably right, Think2. I can't think of any Catholic I know who really worries about any of these particular things. I'm sure that few people can't sleep because of worries about Papal Infallibility or the Immaculate Conception or even condoms for that matter. I suppose it is easier to be a dissenter inside the RCC rather than trying to join it when it looks as if you have to swallow every jot & tittle. Just like joining a political party, really!

It's the spirituality of the RCC that attracts, holiness not the Magisterium.

I'll now wait for some of my more conservative co-religionists to burn me at the stake...or is it steak?
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
I don't have the reference to hand, could probably dig it up, but research has shown that denomination in the US (possibly also UK) does not determine the percentage of folk using contraception.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
Papal infallibility, the Immaculate Conception, and the condemnation of artificial birth control and divorce are doctrinal issues. Those non-Catholics who view dissent from these teachings as a real obstacle to being received as Roman Catholics are right to do so. I certainly would not have been received myself if I could not have submitted to the Church's authority on them.

Also, "primacy of conscience" does not obviate the duty (upon Catholics) to "think with the Church".

[ 22. November 2009, 18:36: Message edited by: Chesterbelloc ]
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
I wouldn't advance any particular opinion on papal infallibility,Immaculate Conception or condom,except to say that there are very ,very few cradle catholics who would spend much time thinking about them.

However it is,I suppose, a different matter for those who might just think about coming into full communion.One can't just say 'well that is part of the heritage' One has to ask oneself 'do I want this to be part of my heritage ?

I would say,however,that there are probably many Anglicans
and other Christians who are able to celebrate Christmas,without spending sleepless nights about what exactly the Virgin Birth means.

There are others who are not quite sure what the Resurrection means.But again I suppose that those who might think of becoming a christian would have to ask themselves 'is it more than a 'conjuring trick with bones'' ?
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ashworth:
I think many anglican lay people feel the same as I do.

I think probably most Anglicans, even many in FiF have the same reservations you have. But Chesterbelloc is right in saying that these are certainly doctrinal issues which must surely influence the decision of someone contemplating coming into full communion with the RCC. Most of the Anglicans who were serious about joining Rome over the issue of the oow have already done so. The Catholic Church has always been there.

Many of the people I spoke to today at a FiF parish want to wait upon events. Many, and I include myself, have no strong views on the oow, but love catholic cermeony, and fear what will be left in the C of E if large numbers of AC priests leave. The failure to provide adequate space for the dissenters may yet lead to a failure in Synod to get the necessary majority to make the change, which would force the issue back to the drawing board. Even if it procceds smoothly, we won't see women bishops until 2013.

So this is no time for anyone to panic. If the Pope's offer stays on the tale, which I'm told it will, one can always take it up later. All involved in FiF need to search their souls and ask themselves what they really want. Going over to Rome does demand, IMO, all the points mentioned by Ashworth. People who are naturally Anglican enough to dispute them would need to tread very carefully before making the commitment. For now they should wait and see what happens to the C of E.
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
Sorry, typo! Read table for tale.
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
If it is just 'Catholic ceremony' which Anglo Catholics like,then what is the problem about staying on in the CofE. Are there not anglican churches which have Catholic ceremonies without Catholic beliefs ?

The problem surely lies in certain AngloCatholics having a certain number of Catholic beliefs,but not being sure enough of them to commit 100% to them.

It is much easier for those who are already 'dans le bain'(in the bath).They don't have to agonise over many of these doctrines. I admire those who have the courage to get into the bath,but I also respect those who are afraid of the hot water.
 
Posted by Qoheleth. (# 9265) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
Many, and I include myself, have no strong views on the oow, but love catholic cermeony, and fear what will be left in the C of E if large numbers of AC priests leave.

Paul,

Could you expand on this, please? As I'm sure you know, catholic worship is not causally linked to an anti-OoW FiF stance. Could a smells'n bells Affcath Parish provide a home for you?

(xp with Forthview, but the request for expansion stands!)

[ 22. November 2009, 19:36: Message edited by: Qoheleth. ]
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
The problem surely lies in certain AngloCatholics having a certain number of Catholic beliefs,but not being sure enough of them to commit 100% to them.

This is very true. Its not just about catholic ceremony. Many AC's would describe their views as more Catholic than Protestant. I, for example, belong to the Guild of All Souls, and our work is to pray for the dead. I believe in priciple in the primacy of the See of Peter, and I have a great love and respect for the current holder of that office and his predecessor. But I'd be hard pushed to support Catholic Mariology, papal infallibilty or a ban on condoms. To commit to the whole package would require some deep soul searching.

quote:
Originally posted by Qoheleth:
Could you expand on this, please?

Same point as above. It's not just catholic ceremony. Unlike Orthodox Christianity where liturgy, spirituality and mysticism are woven together like Christ's seamless robe, I think in the West we compartmentalise those things. Its only in FiF parishes that I've encountered GAS chapters, along with CBS (Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament). Or seen Benediction following Evensong, though the latter may happen elsewhere.
 
Posted by Ashworth (# 12645) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:

I think probably most Anglicans, even many in FiF have the same reservations you have. But Chesterbelloc is right in saying that these are certainly doctrinal issues which must surely influence the decision of someone contemplating coming into full communion with the RCC. Most of the Anglicans who were serious about joining Rome over the issue of the oow have already done so. The Catholic Church has always been there.

Many of the people I spoke to today at a FiF parish want to wait upon events. Many, and I include myself, have no strong views on the oow, but love catholic cermeony, and fear what will be left in the C of E if large numbers of AC priests leave. The failure to provide adequate space for the dissenters may yet lead to a failure in Synod to get the necessary majority to make the change, which would force the issue back to the drawing board. Even if it procceds smoothly, we won't see women bishops until 2013.

So this is no time for anyone to panic. If the Pope's offer stays on the tale, which I'm told it will, one can always take it up later. All involved in FiF need to search their souls and ask themselves what they really want. Going over to Rome does demand, IMO, all the points mentioned by Ashworth. People who are naturally Anglican enough to dispute them would need to tread very carefully before making the commitment. For now they should wait and see what happens to the C of E.
[/QUOTE]

I think that is basically what I, and indeed as far as I know, all of the FinF people within the church I attend are going to do. We are not a FinF church although we have passed Resolutions A and B. Our priest is not FinF, and not against oow, but he does understand our position and has always been very caring and generous towards us including accepting the fact that keeping Resolutions A and B in place is best for the unity of the congregation. Although he does have more of a leaning towards Affcath than FinF, he does realise that it is the FinF members of the congregation who on the whole, do most of the work, give most of the money, and attend worship most often especially midweek festivals, Holy Week etc.

We intend to stay there as long as possible especially if our priest does not move on as we wpould like to support him as he has understood and supported us. After 2013, or whenever who knows, but if we don't actually ever get a woman diocesan bishop perhaps we can continue to 'bury our heads in the sand' for much longer.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Paul, when you say

quote:
I think in the West we compartmentalise those things
are you asking for a kind of "cafeteria" Catholicism?

You're right, it's not possible to "compartmentalise" Orthodoxy, but I think it's also not on offer in the Apostolic Constitution for people to pick and choose which dogmata they'll accept and which not. If one has to compartmentalise either one, it seems to me that they are not ready yet.

That's why it's a good idea to take one's time over any such huge and life-changing choice, in my humble opinion, FWIW. I've seen many, many people who thought they could be "partially" Orthodox, and when they found they couldn't, they had to go back to where they came from.

Mary
[speling]

[ 22. November 2009, 20:06: Message edited by: Leetle Masha ]
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leetle Masha:
are you asking for a kind of "cafeteria" Catholicism?

Mary, as ever, you are full of wisdom! Many Anglo-Catholics like the freedom of thought which goes with the Protestant tradition. Does that make them Protestants? I don't know! I always feel that the veil between heaven and earth is at its thinnest when I kneel at the altar rail. I pray for the dead, in the belief that my prayers, and much mor so the intercession of the saints, can lighten their darkness. all very Catholic. But talk about the Spanish Armada and I'm a Prot! As you say, perhaps we are not yet ready to take on the yoke of the Apostolic tradition
 
Posted by Major Disaster (# 13229) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
quote:
Originally posted by Leetle Masha:
are you asking for a kind of "cafeteria" Catholicism?

Mary, as ever, you are full of wisdom! Many Anglo-Catholics like the freedom of thought which goes with the Protestant tradition. Does that make them Protestants? I don't know! I always feel that the veil between heaven and earth is at its thinnest when I kneel at the altar rail. I pray for the dead, in the belief that my prayers, and much mor so the intercession of the saints, can lighten their darkness. all very Catholic. But talk about the Spanish Armada and I'm a Prot! As you say, perhaps we are not yet ready to take on the yoke of the Apostolic tradition
That's an old chestnut!
Talk about the Spanish Armada, and you'll find the Duke of Norfolk alongside you, as an Englishman!

(I hope!)
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Whoaaa..... the Duke of Norfolk!

Paul, I think we're talking about apples and oranges. What some call "Freedom of thought", we call The Fullness of the Faith, because we buy the whole programme. We don't say "I believe this but not that". If we said we believed one teaching of the Church but not another, we simply wouldn't have all of Orthodoxy's teachings. We would be "Orthodoxes-manqués". For us, when God gave out eyes, if we were taking one thing and not another, we might have said, "OK, God, I can see fine with the left eye You just gave me. You can keep the extra one...."

Best wishes,

Mary
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leetle Masha:
Whoaaa..... the Duke of Norfolk!

Paul, I think we're talking about apples and oranges. What some call "Freedom of thought", we call The Fullness of the Faith, because we buy the whole programme. We don't say "I believe this but not that". If we said we believed one teaching of the Church but not another, we simply wouldn't have all of Orthodoxy's teachings. We would be "Orthodoxes-manqués". For us, when God gave out eyes, if we were taking one thing and not another, we might have said, "OK, God, I can see fine with the left eye You just gave me. You can keep the extra one...."

Best wishes,

Mary

From the Protestant standpoint, belief in the teachings of the Church--and I'm referring specifically to social teachings--is not considered a fundamental necessity. Faith is very simply expressed in the three Creeds. Everything else is open to investigation and debate. This business of accepting every single teaching of the Church, which admittedly has fallible humans in positions of power, is not a Protestant concept.

Since we're people of scripture, we go by examples in the Bible, and in the Gospels (time and time again) it is shown that faith can be expressed very simply: "Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom." We see it as unnecessary to impose further human strictures (such as "You must believe church teaching on birth control to be admitted to communion") on something that is, to us, clearly meant to be simple.

Of course, life isn't simple, and issues do arise that call for the church's voice. However, it ultimately comes down to a matter of individual conscience. We can gather together to express our common fullness of faith, and still differ on issues where human interpretation kicks in.

In this regard, I'd be so bold as to say that worldwide Anglicanism as a whole has seemed to move more and more toward a Catholic way of thinking...one in which total doctrinal unity seems increasingly to be the goal.
 
Posted by Major Disaster (# 13229) on :
 
I really do sympathise with the negative reaction towards having my behaviour controlled. within the context of church organisation/administration, "kicking against the pricks" conjures up an interesting picture.

It also, however, reminds me of St Paul's conversion.

In his case, one sees how he insisted on certain behaviour, and was ready to exclude from the Church those who would not conform to his teaching on norms of sexual behaviour. It goes with the Faith, and we do have good biblical precedent for being obedient to the teaching of not only the Apostles, but of those whom they appointed. That Apostolic Succession is important for maintaining our Faith.
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Martin L:
quote:
Originally posted by Leetle Masha:
Whoaaa..... the Duke of Norfolk!

Paul, I think we're talking about apples and oranges. What some call "Freedom of thought", we call The Fullness of the Faith, because we buy the whole programme. We don't say "I believe this but not that". If we said we believed one teaching of the Church but not another, we simply wouldn't have all of Orthodoxy's teachings. We would be "Orthodoxes-manqués". For us, when God gave out eyes, if we were taking one thing and not another, we might have said, "OK, God, I can see fine with the left eye You just gave me. You can keep the extra one...."

Best wishes,

Mary

From the Protestant standpoint, belief in the teachings of the Church--and I'm referring specifically to social teachings--is not considered a fundamental necessity. Faith is very simply expressed in the three Creeds. Everything else is open to investigation and debate. This business of accepting every single teaching of the Church, which admittedly has fallible humans in positions of power, is not a Protestant concept.

Since we're people of scripture, we go by examples in the Bible, and in the Gospels (time and time again) it is shown that faith can be expressed very simply: "Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom." We see it as unnecessary to impose further human strictures (such as "You must believe church teaching on birth control to be admitted to communion") on something that is, to us, clearly meant to be simple.

Of course, life isn't simple, and issues do arise that call for the church's voice. However, it ultimately comes down to a matter of individual conscience. We can gather together to express our common fullness of faith, and still differ on issues where human interpretation kicks in.

In this regard, I'd be so bold as to say that worldwide Anglicanism as a whole has seemed to move more and more toward a Catholic way of thinking...one in which total doctrinal unity seems increasingly to be the goal.

It was put very succinctly in the last issue United Church Observer: we (the United Church of Canada) are a confessional church, not a creedal one. We confess our faith in the Trinity. There is no other test of membership. So all other statements of faith not absolute barriers. The Nicene Creed is certainly our guide, but it isn't used to exclude absolutely. Which is why we annoy other churches by constantly coming up with statements of faith, which looks like so much unnecessary theologizing to them.

We can't help but be who we are. [Smile]
 
Posted by Hedgerow Priest (# 13905) on :
 
the coiled spring wrote
quote:
There has been a rumour coming out of the Vatican that Benny was not happy about C of E not keeping it's part of a deal made when the B'lair of Shyte a Roman Catholic
It appears part of the deals was in taking him the Vatican could open up a chain of St Peter's Coffee Shops in a number of prime churches; as well as providing the pasta for the Alpha suppers. One of the main reasons they have thrown open the doors.

Trust me it is all one big conspiracy

Man, that spring fellow is one prophetic guy, can we look forward to Pizzeria Maria Immaculata with every Brompton Margerita from now on?? This would indeed be ecumenical progress.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
quote:
Man, that spring fellow is one prophetic guy, can we look forward to Pizzeria Maria Immaculata with every Brompton Margerita from now on??
How did you find out about that as they are hoping to bring that in next year. Rome wants to canonise the healing team who are behind the miracle for Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi still being with us, but does not want a well known Anglican church claiming credit.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
PaulTH.... Many Anglo-Catholics like the freedom of thought which goes with the Protestant tradition. Does that make them Protestants?

Well I like the freedom of thought that goes with the Catholic tradition. There seems to be much more debate within the RCC than within the confines of Protestantism. As a friend of mine who is 2ic at the Catholic University here said to me once. "What I love about the Church is that no matter how bizarre your opinions may be you'll always find another Catholic who shares them."

Maybe the difference is that we are all aware of being privileged to be part of the RCC and have the tendency to stay rather than rush off to another church or even start our own.
 
Posted by Comper's Child (# 10580) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fuzzipeg:
PaulTH.... Many Anglo-Catholics like the freedom of thought which goes with the Protestant tradition. Does that make them Protestants?

Well I like the freedom of thought that goes with the Catholic tradition. There seems to be much more debate within the RCC than within the confines of Protestantism. As a friend of mine who is 2ic at the Catholic University here said to me once. "What I love about the Church is that no matter how bizarre your opinions may be you'll always find another Catholic who shares them."

Maybe the difference is that we are all aware of being privileged to be part of the RCC and have the tendency to stay rather than rush off to another church or even start our own.

True, but some on this thread would argue you're not actually Catholic if you have any disagreements with Catholic Doctrine.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
I'm not quite sure what you mean by that, Comper's Child. I suppose it depends on your interpretation of Catholic Doctrine. Both Kung & Benny are priests in the Catholic Church. So were Theillard de Chardin and Dennis Hurley. It doesn't mean that they have the same opinions.

Yes, there are Catholic shipmates who would disagree with me very strongly when it comes to interpretation of certain things...I don't think many would unchurch me.

Unfortunately this move to the right in all religions has a tendency to produce super christians or super jews or super what-ever you like. Contrary to this I believe that Catholic Church is not exclusive and only for those who follow specific norms. I believe it is for everyone..even outsiders. Simone Weil is the perfect example of someone who felt that she benefited from the Church and yet was never baptised.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
As Sober Preacher's Kid said,

quote:
We can't help but be who we are.
Exactly, SPK. And if you are definitely a protestant, then you wouldn't want to sign your name to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and perish the thought you'd try to become Orthodox where you'd have to be asked to renounce Calvinism. [Eek!] If I were a sincere protestant like you and others on this thread, I never could have become Orthodox.

Why would anyone want to sign their names to something they don't believe? I'd say, "Thank you so much for thinking of me, but maybe later."

However, I didn't want to be what I was when I became Orthodox. I wanted to be made new.

I don't know how new I am at this point, but I am certainly not the same as I used to be, spiritually. It seems like I am walking into different spiritual landscapes every single day, and it's quite an adventure! But I won't go into details about it, as I do become inarticulate these days when I try to talk about spiritual matters. Plus, I doubt many people would want to read my wordy meditations. [Hot and Hormonal]

Mary
(Orthodoxy is not just an "alternative".)
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
The German dramatist Lessing wrote a wonderful play called 'Nathan der Weise' (wise Nathan)
Set in the holy Land at the time of the crusades it deals with Jews,Christians and Moslems living together. The Jews and the Moslems are portrayed in a sympathetic light ,but the christians are sometimes narrowminded.

Nathan the Jew has a Christian ward.Saladin the moslem ruler asks Nathan why he doesn't get his ward to convert to Judaism,if that is the true religion,or why doesn't he convert to christianity or to Islam if either of them is the true religion ?

Nathan tell him the 'parable of the three rings'
Some people may know this story which is reputed to have come originally from Spain in the 12th century.

A father had a splendid ring which he passed on to his favourite son before he died.It was a sign of his special love.This happened over several generations until once there was a father with three sons.He loved them all and could not bear to give the ring to only one of his sons.He had two exact copies made and as he lay on his death bed he called each of his sons, assured them of his love and gave each one the precious ring.

After his death each of them claimed to have the ring,but which one had the original 'real' ring ?

It is the same with us,said Nathan.Each one of us receives our religion from our parents (or church community)each one of us prizes it,if it has come from a loving parent(church community).We wish to be true to that love which has been shown us by our parents. If we have trusted them in small things we will trust them in large things.

Only very few people are able to detect the flaws in the specially made rings.Even if we do that and seek another of the rings,we should always remember that whatever one we received first came to us because of the special love of that person who was our father.

For this reason Nathan was able to honour all religions, and yet be true to the religion of his fathers.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
I've never heard the story, Forthview. Really excellent. Many of us are what we are because of our parents or our geographical location or both.

The Ship probably has a preponderance of converts from one thing to another or at least a much higher proportion than the average congregation. I believe it is that seeking for a spiritual home that is the most important and usually people find it in the religious tradition of their childhood.

We seem to have moved far from the OP and are teetering on the brink of another thread.
 
Posted by Shadowhund (# 9175) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fuzzipeg:
I'm not quite sure what you mean by that, Comper's Child. I suppose it depends on your interpretation of Catholic Doctrine. Both Kung & Benny are priests in the Catholic Church. So were Theillard de Chardin and Dennis Hurley. It doesn't mean that they have the same opinions.

While it is true that Kung has not been suspended from the priesthood or formally excommunicated, Rome did declare him to be no longer fit to teach Catholic theology, in large measure of his unwillingness to assent to the dogmatic decisions of Nicaea I and Vatican I. So there are limits. If I were to spout heresies or heterodox opinions in the parish dining hall, I doubt I would be excommunicated and would probably receive no more than an arched eyebrow from Very Rev. Monsignor, as I am too unimportant a person to bother with. Even still, I would not be in full communion with the Church despite any protestations from me to the contrary and neither is Kung.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
Nonsense, Shadowhund. Kung is in full communion with the Church and, as you said, has not been suspended from the priesthood. He cannot be considered a "Catholic Theologian" what-ever that means. Theology is theology.

[ 23. November 2009, 16:35: Message edited by: Fuzzipeg ]
 
Posted by PaulTH* (# 320) on :
 
Forthview, what a truly inspiring story! And how true. There are many on the ship who not only believe that their own religion (Christianity) is the only way, but even that their own cultural variant (Othodox, Catholic and Protestant) or sub variant alone has the fullness. Nathan Die Weise has the measure of them all!
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fuzzipeg:
Kung is in full communion with the Church and, as you said, has not been suspended from the priesthood. He cannot be considered a "Catholic Theologian" what-ever that means.

For someone like Küng, who is a priest and a Professor of Theology, not being a "Catholic Theologian" means that he is not in full communion with the Church (since he can hardly be ignorant of his heresies). That he's not officially excommunicated is really neither here nor there, and I'm pretty sure that Küng would agree with that judgment. For he most assuredly thinks that the RC magisterium is not in full communion with him, and that it bloody well should be... Full communion is not the same as not excommunicated, just as one is not the same as not zero (except for the binary minded).

quote:
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
Nathan Die Weise has the measure of them all!

That would be "Nathan der Weise" (masculine case). Do you really learn anything new from the masonic, humanist, deist Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, who fought in persona Reimarus against the belief in revelation and miracles? Pretty much par for the liberal course, I would have said, only remarkable for being first. His ring parable is anyway adapted from Boccaccio's Decamerone...
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Ingo I should not want to take issue with you,but yes,in my opinion we can learn from all sorts of people.Lessing ,the son of the Lutheran pastor of Kamenz,near Dresden, was certainly not an orthodox Christian in later life,but he was a fine humanist (not humanist in the sense of seeing no religious side to life.

He may have taken the story from Boccaccio but Boccaccio probably got it from that period in Spain,when Jews,Moslems and Christians lived in close proximity to one another.

Nathan der Weise ( masculine gender,nominative case,adjectival noun)
 
Posted by Resurgam (# 14891) on :
 
So does freedom of thought in the Catholic tradition not extend to Patrick Kennedy?
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
Freedom of thought is one thing. Claiming that the exercise of that freedom openly and consciously to dissent from fundamental Catholic teaching leaves one no less a Catholic than your bishop is another.

Catholicism is not an ethnic or cultural grouping - it is a faith position.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
Is that relevant to converting Anglicans?
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
Well, it was a response to a query that wasn't directly, but sure.

Catholicism is not about belonging to a particular ethnic/genetic/cultural/"identity" grouping - it is a truly universal ("Catholic") faith. All that is required to become a Catholic is a commitment to accept the Church's fundamental teachings - but it requires no less than that.

That, it seems to me, is highly relevant to those Anglicans thinking about taking the plunge.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
But it doesn't really solve the dilemma. Some people on this thread would seem to be saying that a would-be Catholic must accept all the teachings of the Church, fundamental or not (or maybe, accept that all the teachings of the Church are fundamental.) If you don't believe the latter, Chesterbelloc, what are the 'fundamental' teachings and what are less so?
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
I am not setting myself up as an authority on the magisterium here and would not wish to be any kind of stumbling block to those approaching the Catholic Church. Certainly, not eveything that appears in any given Catholic document bears the mark of infallibility.

But it seems to me that anyone who has a real "issue" with anything in the Catechism, to the point of being unwilling to give inner assent to it, is quite possibly not ready to become a Catholic. Certainly, one must be able to accept all that the Church has definitively taught in faith and morals, and be corrigible when one's personal judgements differ with those of the Church. [And this is what Patrick Kennedy is not demonstrating on the issue of abortion with his bishop.]

More than that I really am reluctant to say.
 
Posted by IngoB (# 8700) on :
 
Angloid, imagine someone discussing marriage with his girlfriend. Should he pressure her to specify precisely minimum requirements? OK, it is reasonable to agree on the broad outlines, like sexual faithfulness, wished number of children, careers vs. homemaking, etc. But just how weird would it be to discuss whether it is absolutely necessary for him to bring down the trash, ever? Or who gets to decide on the vacation spots? And just how painful would be a detailed discussion of what is meant exactly by "no adultery", what messing around with other women he could get away with?

The point is that in order to marry someone, one should love them. And while it is prudent to check that love is not papering over fundamental disagreements about life, faith, and marriage, it is also prudent to trust love to take care of most details. Who gets to bring down the trash is something that a loving couple should be able to work out. And it is in contradiction to love to inquire stubbornly just how much one can hurt the other before they would throw the towel. If it is of such pressing concern how much fooling around will still be possible, then marriage is simply not such a good idea.

Converting to a religion (or switching denominations) is a lot like marriage. If one loves the Church, then a lot of these questions just do not arise. Not because of a lack of realism - it is understood by all that most relationships of members to their Church end up as perfect as most marriages, namely not very. But because one must let love do its thing. Even if in the end there is barely enough love left to prevent murder. But perhaps, just perhaps, one gets lucky and she will be the quiet joy of one's life till death does one part from her...
 
Posted by Resurgam (# 14891) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:


But it seems to me that anyone who has a real "issue" with anything in the Catechism, to the point of being unwilling to give inner assent to it, is quite possibly not ready to become a Catholic. Certainly, one must be able to accept all that the Church has definitively taught in faith and morals, and be corrigible when one's personal judgements differ with those of the Church. [And this is what Patrick Kennedy is not demonstrating on the issue of abortion with his bishop.]


I appreciate your wise and well-considered response. However, Rep. Kennedy was not elected to be a diocesan representative, but a Representative in the the United States Congress. Not all of his constituents are Catholic, or even Christian. If he were to change his voting in order to please his Bishop, he would in effect be representing the Bishop and not the People. When his uncle J. F. Kennedy was elected, a lot of people in (at that time largely Protestant) America were worried about a similar kind of interference.
 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
The issue is that Church/State divide here Chris Matthew's interview with Bishop Tobin on MSNBC's Hardball.

The US hierarchy seem to think that abortion is the primary issue in the US, almost the only one. They don't seem to have a clue as to what an elected representative's obligations are to his constituency within a secular society. It is this attempted interference in the democratic process that gives the Church a bad name and would certainly put me off if I were an Anglican seeking to join.

Fortunately our hierarchy are far more responsible and are aware of their position in a secular state. They are obviously pro-life, aren't we all whether we are Catholic or not? They do give the Catholic view when it comes to legislation on social issues but they don't try and tell Catholics how to vote!
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
Lest we forget, men voted for Mathias, yet God choose Saul/Paul. Which one made the headlines. Let man choose does not mean getting it right
 
Posted by Triple Tiara (# 9556) on :
 
Gosh, you have an interesting version of the Scriptures. In the version I follow it says nothing about anyone voting for Matthias.
quote:
So they proposed two, Joseph called Barsabbas, who was also known as Justus, and Matthias. Then they prayed and said, ‘Lord, you know everyone’s heart. Show us which one of these two you have chosen to take the place in this ministry and apostleship from which Judas turned aside to go to his own place.’ And they cast lots for them, and the lot fell on Matthias; and he was added to the eleven apostles.

Acts 1: 23-26


 
Posted by Fuzzipeg (# 10107) on :
 
And he was numbered with the twelve apostles despite having been nearly crushed to death by them.
 
Posted by the coiled spring (# 2872) on :
 
quote:
And he was numbered with the twelve apostles despite having been nearly crushed to death by them.
And let us not forget when Paul fell on a youth who happened to fall out of a window and died, a miracle took place and life was restored
 
Posted by Alt Wally (# 3245) on :
 
Vicar Threatened
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Vicar Threatened

Although I am saddened by what happened, Fr Ed's blog makes rather like it was the local SCP chapter wot dunnit. Disgraceful.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fuzzipeg:
And he was numbered with the twelve apostles despite having been nearly crushed to death by them.

That is funny! I had never noticed that interpretation.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Resurgam:
Rep. Kennedy was not elected to be a diocesan representative, but a Representative in the the United States Congress. Not all of his constituents are Catholic, or even Christian. If he were to change his voting in order to please his Bishop, he would in effect be representing the Bishop and not the People.

But his bishop is not asking him to vote against his party, his platform or his conscience - just to refrain from claiming to be just as much a Catholic as if he voted "with the Church". Obviously, if he wishes not to have his status as a loyal Catholic impugned, he could always stand as a loyal Catholic candidate in the first place, making it clear that he won't vote or otherwise act against the fundamentals of his faith. If he chooses to vote "for abortion" he cannot claim to be doing so as a Catholic in good standing. He must know that. Therefore, why claim to be one?

He is actually being "less Catholic" by supporting abortion rights in this way, although that is precisely what he denies. On this one, it's his bishop's judgement that counts for more.

But all of this is now a massive de-railment of a perfectly good threat topic. Sorry.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Vicar Threatened

Although I am saddened by what happened, Fr Ed's blog makes rather like it was the local SCP chapter wot dunnit. Disgraceful.
The discussion threads to both of these blogs make the Ship look like a Very Christian Website Indeed.

While I am disgusted at the vandalism, and concerned for Fr Waller and his people, it's sad that both of the priests imply that their main motive for becoming Roman Catholics would be despair at the Church of England. This is exactly the wrong reason, as Archbishop Nichols says very clearly.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
it's sad that both of the priests imply that their main motive for becoming Roman Catholics would be despair at the Church of England. This is exactly the wrong reason, as Archbishop Nichols says very clearly.

But such disillusionment can be the necessary "letting go" stage in a process of genuinely appreciating and moving towards a postive good. It very often is, in fact. Sometimes necessary, never sufficient.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Vicar Threatened

Although I am saddened by what happened, Fr Ed's blog makes rather like it was the local SCP chapter wot dunnit. Disgraceful.
The discussion threads to both of these blogs make the Ship look like a Very Christian Website Indeed.
It started out so well. 'Let's all be friends', 'We come in peace', but ends with:

quote:
Pray today then for our common future amd spare a thought for Anglo-Catholics who cannot accept the ordination of women. It really does feel horrid being in the Church of England currently. Father Waller’s board expresses what many of us are starting to fear- that we are actually hated within our own family, who have no real desire to help us, but will seek to hurt us if we stay and hurt us if we go. Pray God that this fear is entirely unfounded.
{Bangs head against wall}.

The fear is unfounded. But fear leads to ...
 
Posted by Comper's Child (# 10580) on :
 
I think the fear is indeed unfounded, despite this sad episode. This fear, though, is the central issue in numerous dead horse issues, some of which have lead to the pope's offer. Religion based on the teachings of Christ ought to be free of fear.
 
Posted by Christian Agnostic (# 14912) on :
 
I'm new to this board so please forgive me if I'm being presumptous.

I really don't have a dog in this fight as I'm somewhere in the middle of the candle theologically speaking (my chaplain at grad school loved to call me a "Protty"). I'm a musician so when it comes to liturgical music and extra-liturgical music in church, I'm floating several feet above the candle. I'm just wondering what would happen if an Anglican rite parish was assigned a "cradle" Roman priest who decided to replace the pipe organ with a synthesizer ang instituded the singing of "guitar masses" and "singing nun" ditties? [Devil] [Smile] [Devil]

[ 24. November 2009, 21:51: Message edited by: Christian Agnostic ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Christian Agnostic: .... I'm somewhere in the middle of the candle theologically speaking

All Anglicans think they are central. Its a Rule.

quote:

I'm just wondering what would happen if an Anglican rite parish was assigned a "cradle" Roman priest who decided to ... "singing nun" ...

I imagine that is exactly why TAC wanted an ordinariate - so that these deployment decisions would be made by an Ordinary who is one of their own. And now they are promised one they are it seems going to join Rome as a body - bishops, priests, deacons, congregations.

In England (& also perhaps in some parts of Africa) the issues are rather different, and not so much about liturgy, and I suspect many fewer people will find themselves willing or able to take up the offer.
 
Posted by Christian Agnostic (# 14912) on :
 
Forgive my typos. I have typing dyslexia.
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:
He must know that.

In defense of Rep. Kennedy, he has never given the impression that he is the brightest of Congressmen.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Comper's Child:
I think the fear is indeed unfounded, despite this sad episode. This fear, though, is the central issue in numerous dead horse issues, some of which have lead to the pope's offer. Religion based on the teachings of Christ ought to be free of fear.

I agree with Comper's second sentence. The first is, alas, not that accurate. The peculiar episode aside, those who hold the opinion in North American Anglicanism are, at best, ignored with embarrassment or gently mocked. At worst, they get lectures, suggestions that they find another home, and are regularly sidelined. English FinFers are not unaware of this.

At the same time, the call of their home altars is very powerful, and I think few will desert them. As I have noted before, B16's offer is for the TAC gang, and I do not imagine that there will be hordes in addition to that lot. However, it does provide a home for a few, and will be useful for that end.

++Rowan was quite right when he said that it was an imaginative pastoral move (IIRC), but that it broke no ground ecclesiologically. I think that B16 missed an opportunity there-- one which could have kept a wider door open for the long run-- although I understand how the logic of his perspective would not have allowed a move in that direction.

In the short term, it will provide a healthier home for TAC and other Tiber-traversers, and will not be a bad thing for the Latins-- there are circles where diversity will come to be a cherished if not initially welcomed gift.
 
Posted by Saviour Tortoise (# 4660) on :
 
A number of people on this thread have suggested that the group most likely to avail themselves of this provision are the TAC. (Indeed it's been suggested that the TAC is main group BXVI had in mind.)

For me this raises a question about who Anglicanorum Coetibus applies to. It says it is aimed at "Anglicans". How is that being defined?

If one defines Anglican as "in communion with the See of Canterbury", then the TAC aren't Anglican are they? Is it just "all groups of Christians who self identify as Anglicans"? How much more than the name Anglican would a given Christian grouping require in order to be allowed to join the new Ordinariate?
 
Posted by Forthview (# 12376) on :
 
Christian agnostic - I don't have a dog in this fight either,but I thought that the whole idea of the 'anglican rite ordinariate' was that it would operate as a rite within the wider Catholc church,just like the Maronite rite and others.
A Roman rite priest would not be assigned to be pastor of a Maronite parish,nor would a Roman rite priest be assigned as pastor of a Byzantine rite parish.The faithful,of course, can attend the services of any 'Catholic' church,but most out of habit,knowledge and respect would attend the services of their own rite.

One example of those easily transferring between one rite and another would be in the ecclesiastical province of Milan where the faithful can easily attend both Roman rite and Ambrosian rite parishes.

Should this 'anglican rite ordinariate' ever get off the ground - at the moment everything is quite hypothetical - then I would hope that the faithful of both rites would come and go,but the clergy qua clergy no.
 
Posted by Chesterbelloc (# 3128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by New Yorker:
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:
He must know that.

In defense of Rep. Kennedy, he has never given the impression that he is the brightest of Congressmen.
Invincible ignorance, eh? [Biased]
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
When faced with stumbling-blocks, here is a temporary solution that brought me a smile a few days ago:


An ecumenical song anyone, well, almost anyone, can sing

Mary

[ 25. November 2009, 12:32: Message edited by: Leetle Masha ]
 
Posted by Comper's Child (# 10580) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leetle Masha:
When faced with stumbling-blocks, here is a temporary solution that brought me a smile a few days ago:


An ecumenical song anyone, well, almost anyone, can sing

Mary

Ah Mary, always the voice of charity and reason.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Yeehaw, Comper's Chile.... [Smile]
 
Posted by New Yorker (# 9898) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Forthview:
... then I would hope that the faithful of both rites would come and go,but the clergy qua clergy no.

But currently the small number of Anglican Use priest can say the Roman Rite and do, as I understand it. They also fill in when needed at Roman Rite Roman Use (as opposed to Roman Rite Roman Use?) parishes. Also, bishops who will most certainly be Roman Rite Roman Use will have to celebrate Roman Rite Anglican Use liturgies. Hmmm. Could we one day see B16 saying a Roman Rite Anglican Use Mass in St Peter's?
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
J2P2 had said Mass by the Mozarabic Use in Toledo (IIRC) and, of course, Paul VI was familiar with the Ambrosian as a former Archbishop of Milan, so then B16 should have no trouble with an Anglican Use Mass, although we might have trouble with understanding his accented English.
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
quote:
Could we one day see B16 saying a Roman Rite Anglican Use Mass in St Peter's?
We might even see him saying one in Birmingham or Oxford next year!
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Just out of interest- and I'm definitely not trying to make a party point here- what would be the score for Anglican clergy/congregations that use the Roman Rite if they went over under the proposed plan? Would they have to de-Romanise their liturgy?
 
Posted by chiltern_hundred (# 13659) on :
 
AIUI, they'd be required to adopt the Book of Divine Worship, which is more Anglican than what they use now and more Roman than the BCP. I am happy to be corrected by anyone who has more accurate information than I do.

quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
Just out of interest- and I'm definitely not trying to make a party point here- what would be the score for Anglican clergy/congregations that use the Roman Rite if they went over under the proposed plan? Would they have to de-Romanise their liturgy?


 
Posted by Fifi (# 8151) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chiltern_hundred:
AIUI, they'd be required to adopt the Book of Divine Worship, which is more Anglican than what they use now and more Roman than the BCP. I am happy to be corrected by anyone who has more accurate information than I do.

quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
Just out of interest- and I'm definitely not trying to make a party point here- what would be the score for Anglican clergy/congregations that use the Roman Rite if they went over under the proposed plan? Would they have to de-Romanise their liturgy?


Not so.

From the Apostolic Constitution:

'III. Without excluding liturgical celebrations according to the Roman Rite, the Ordinariate has the faculty to celebrate the Holy Eucharist and the other Sacraments, the Liturgy of the Hours and other liturgical celebrations according to the liturgical books proper to the Anglican tradition, which have been approved by the Holy See, so as to maintain the liturgical, spiritual and pastoral traditions of the Anglican Communion within the Catholic Church, as a precious gift nourishing the faith of the members of the Ordinariate and as a treasure to be shared.'

(Emphasis added by me)
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Very clear- thanks
 
Posted by St. Punk the Pious (# 683) on :
 
Perhaps this question should be a separate thread. But, apparently, ++Rowan has told ++Vincent that the sale of CofE properties to the Romans is impossible.

I am puzzled by this as the CofE certainly could use the money and many of these old buildings are very expensive to maintain.

Perhaps those more familiar with arcane CofE property issues than I can unpuzzle me a bit. (Some of the discussion on page 18 is already helpful.)
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chesterbelloc:


But it seems to me that anyone who has a real "issue" with anything in the Catechism, to the point of being unwilling to give inner assent to it, is quite possibly not ready to become a Catholic.

What the Catholic Church requires of people received individually into communion with it is that they assent to all those doctrines which the Catholic Church believes to be divinely revealed.

Are you seriously suggesting that a committed Christian believing the creeds, the doctrines of the councils and the ex cathedra statements of Popes ought not to become a Catholic because, say, she cannot agree with the Catechism's teaching on masturbation, or that Christians have a duty to vote in elections, say? That just seems bizarre.
 
Posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf (# 2252) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Vicar Threatened

Although I am saddened by what happened, Fr Ed's blog makes rather like it was the local SCP chapter wot dunnit. Disgraceful.
The discussion threads to both of these blogs make the Ship look like a Very Christian Website Indeed.

While I am disgusted at the vandalism, and concerned for Fr Waller and his people, it's sad that both of the priests imply that their main motive for becoming Roman Catholics would be despair at the Church of England. This is exactly the wrong reason, as Archbishop Nichols says very clearly.

I actually know both priests from my Anglican days. Whilst that may have been the impression given by the reports, I don't think it's really where they are coming from.

[ 27. November 2009, 15:52: Message edited by: Divine Outlaw Dwarf ]
 
Posted by LQ (# 11596) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Edward Green:
quote:
Originally posted by Alt Wally:
Vicar Threatened

Although I am saddened by what happened, Fr Ed's blog makes rather like it was the local SCP chapter wot dunnit. Disgraceful.
Well, quite. I hardly think that vandalism is the sort of thing even the wooliest of liberals in the CoE would countenance. If anything, this reads like a Church Society job! [/irony] I find it curious (to be polite) that Fr Tomlinson is so stricken by what he perceives as AffCath's lack of charity given that his posts stand very much in the old school of "gin, lace, and backbiting." Definitely not part of the new friendly face of FiF.

What immediately struck me about the attack in question was that it must have been carried out by someone who had some knowledge of AC movement in the CoE, and who has followed the developments of the constitution. Obviously S. Saviour's is a Papalist parish - resolution C, Roman Rite (I should imagine anyway - I'm open to correction), and as I recall their last curate went over to Rome ahead of the apostolic constitution. But the defacing was obviously done by someone who knew all this, and not by some drunken young ruffian who didn't care about his target (i.e. the sort of person I would expect this sort of thing from). But I suppose you never really know.

[ 27. November 2009, 16:30: Message edited by: LQ ]
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
I actually know both priests from my Anglican days. Whilst that may have been the impression given by the reports, I don't think it's really where they are coming from.

It's good to know that. I suppose too that either of them, in the exasperation of the moment, could let slip comments about the C of E which wouldn't necessarily represent their considered opinion.

Re: the vandalism... could it not simply be coincidence? ie. a drunken follower of some quasi-fascist protestant sect (they do still exist, though even Paisley is probably above that sort of thing), who sees the word 'Mass' on an Anglican noticeboard and reacts predictably. He (probably a 'he') might not even have heard of the Pope's recent move.

Re; the 'impossibility' of the C of E selling church buildings to the Ordinariate. Isn't it more likely that the RCC wouldn't want to be saddled with them? After all, they are closing churches because their congregations have dropped below the size needed to maintain them, which is much greater than that of most struggling - or even average - Anglican congregations. I can't imagine that a congregation 'converting' en masse would be as big as even 100.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Edward Green/Angloid - I've just looked at Fr. Ed's blog, and I can't for the life of me see how you read that SCP thing into it. Am I reading the right page? All he said was a passing comment about Traditionalists vs. Liberals in the church generally - a POV I disagree with BTW, but one commonly held on both sides of this divide.

Is it on another page to that linked?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Divine Outlaw Dwarf:
I actually know both priests from my Anglican days. Whilst that may have been the impression given by the reports, I don't think it's really where they are coming from.

I wondered if it was around your old gaff.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LQ:
Well, quite. I hardly think that vandalism is the sort of thing even the wooliest of liberals in the CoE would countenance. If anything, this reads like a Church Society job! [/irony] I

Spreading nasty lies about fellow Christians isn't negated by wrapping the word "irony" around it. Though you do manage to show that you probably don't know what "irony" means.
 
Posted by LQ (# 11596) on :
 
That really wasn't my intent, and if that was how it came across, I disavow that portion of my remarks.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Sorry, maybe over-reacted.

Weird as the Church Society are (I can't quite get my head around simultaneously supporting the English Establishment and Calvinist Evangelicalism - they don't go together in my book - and I neither understand nor sympathise with their obsession with homosexuality) I don't think they are the sort of people who go in for vandalising church buildings. Grumpy whinges over the sherry after Morning Prayer maybe, but that's about as hard as they get. Not a lot of Rangers supporters in that on the whole rather pleasant and doctrinally very orthodox and very Anglican bunch of people (not that I have anything against Rangers supporters. Quite a lot of my relatives are Rangers supporters)
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Punk the Pious:
Perhaps this question should be a separate thread. But, apparently, ++Rowan has told ++Vincent that the sale of CofE properties to the Romans is impossible.

I am puzzled by this as the CofE certainly could use the money and many of these old buildings are very expensive to maintain.

Perhaps those more familiar with arcane CofE property issues than I can unpuzzle me a bit. (Some of the discussion on page 18 is already helpful.)

Well, it isn't strictly impossible, but so rare, difficult and time-consuming as to be not a major option across-the-board.

I refer the Hon. Gentleman to my post on page 18.

The 'CofE' does not exist in terms of owning things. It is a spiritual entity, but it is not the money owning or spending bit.

The Church Commissioners are a joint body of Church and State who act as trustees of the national property of the Church of England, and pay the clergy and retired clergy pensions, and many other things. They must act as charity trustees and in the manner required by Parliament and the other legitimate authorities of church and state.

A major change to their function would require major primary legislation, which would be difficult to get through Parliament and would need the government to allocate time to something with no political advantage. ++Canterbury is one of the Commission but has no real power in that context, they must follow professional legal advice.

There are a whole range of other charitable trusts and officials which own or pay the other charitable trusts in the line from parish to diocese to the national church.

Thus in general church buildings are held in tension and trust between the national church trust (but this is not under the control of the General Synod or Archbishops), the diocesan trust and the local corporation sole - the vicar in office. So the Vicar in office has the right to remain in the vicarage, he rents it free from a charitable trust of which he is the only living trustee! But if he defects to Rome, then he automatically stops holding that position and his successor takes over.

The congregation have absolutely no possession rights over the church physical property.

The diocese only gets rights during a vacancy and a suspension. If a parish church becomes non-viable as a separate church it may be merged with a neighbouring church, in which case that Vicar gets the rights over that church as well, or closed. Even if closed and sold, the money gets split between the diocese and church commissioners, they must achieve a market price. Nothing to stop the RC bidding at this point, but they would have to have enough money and need for it. But no special favours can be done.
 
Posted by Qoheleth. (# 9265) on :
 
A lovely lighter moment at 25:30 on The Now Show (available BBC iPlayer in UK only).

Possibly the first time that the Angelic Doctor has been rhymed with the female internal genitalia. Or maybe not the first.... [Biased]
 
Posted by Stranger in a strange land (# 11922) on :
 
Thank you FreeJack for a comprehensible explanation of the position (as I struggle to understand it).
I think this portion is worthy of comment.

quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:

Thus in general church buildings are held in tension and trust between the national church trust (but this is not under the control of the General Synod or Archbishops), the diocesan trust and the local corporation sole - the vicar in office. ...

The congregation have absolutely no possession rights over the church physical property.

The interesting moral question is that in most cases the national church and its trust, and the diocesan church and its trust, will have paid ne'er a penny towards the building, ehanancement or maintenance of the building. Probably most of the anglo-catholic churches will have been built by the vicar in office or the local congregation and the upkeep will also have been entirly at their expense.
Obviously with ancient churches the original building was 'acquired' by the national church but has foe very many years been entirly funded locally).
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stranger in a strange land:
The interesting moral question is that in most cases the national church and its trust, and the diocesan church and its trust, will have paid ne'er a penny towards the building, ehanancement or maintenance of the building. Probably most of the anglo-catholic churches will have been built by the vicar in office or the local congregation and the upkeep will also have been entirly at their expense.
Obviously with ancient churches the original building was 'acquired' by the national church but has foe very many years been entirly funded locally).

Thanks. My post wasn't 100% technically accurate but for non-CofE specialists conveys the sort of inter-woven charitable complexity of it all.

You make the key point again. Congregations, collectively or individually do not own the buildings or its fittings or even the PCC cash bank account.

Once you give money to a charity it is theirs not yours, you have no residual control over it. (You may in certain circumstances place restrictions at point of gift.)

If I give £10 to Cancer Research and then in ten years time, decide I'd rather have given it to the RSPCA, I can't ask Cancer Research to forward the money on to the RSPCA, and they must not do it.

If I give £10 to a CofE PCC, I cannot subsequently ask for it to be forwarded to a RC diocese when I convert. I cannot insist that the PCC never changes its churchmanship - indeed a PCC does not have one. A PCC cannot convert to Rome, by law it must be part of the CofE. It must serve all its parishioners, not just the clique who 'run' the church. If a PCC goes off the rails, then eventually the diocese and/or parish meetings will bring it back into line.

(Probably another reason, the RCC don't want to get too involved with Anglican buildings and finance. As I understand it most ordinary RC churches are owned by the diocese, or a monastic order, not individual parishes.)

There are a few evangelical and anglo-catholic charities that are designed to be slightly more portable, if its leaders change denomination, but it is very hard to do that, without basically just naming the trustees at a point in time.

So the moral point is if you give money to a charity, you have given it, you must have no residual benefit from it, except perhaps a warm inner glow, and even that can be dangerous if you start thinking of it as 'my altar rail' or 'my hymn book' in 'my church' because 'I paid for it.'
 
Posted by The Man with a Stick (# 12664) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
quote:
Originally posted by Stranger in a strange land:
The interesting moral question is that in most cases the national church and its trust, and the diocesan church and its trust, will have paid ne'er a penny towards the building, ehanancement or maintenance of the building. Probably most of the anglo-catholic churches will have been built by the vicar in office or the local congregation and the upkeep will also have been entirly at their expense.
Obviously with ancient churches the original building was 'acquired' by the national church but has foe very many years been entirly funded locally).

Thanks. My post wasn't 100% technically accurate but for non-CofE specialists conveys the sort of inter-woven charitable complexity of it all.

You make the key point again. Congregations, collectively or individually do not own the buildings or its fittings or even the PCC cash bank account.

Once you give money to a charity it is theirs not yours, you have no residual control over it. (You may in certain circumstances place restrictions at point of gift.)

If I give £10 to Cancer Research and then in ten years time, decide I'd rather have given it to the RSPCA, I can't ask Cancer Research to forward the money on to the RSPCA, and they must not do it.

If I give £10 to a CofE PCC, I cannot subsequently ask for it to be forwarded to a RC diocese when I convert. I cannot insist that the PCC never changes its churchmanship - indeed a PCC does not have one. A PCC cannot convert to Rome, by law it must be part of the CofE. It must serve all its parishioners, not just the clique who 'run' the church. If a PCC goes off the rails, then eventually the diocese and/or parish meetings will bring it back into line.

(Probably another reason, the RCC don't want to get too involved with Anglican buildings and finance. As I understand it most ordinary RC churches are owned by the diocese, or a monastic order, not individual parishes.)

There are a few evangelical and anglo-catholic charities that are designed to be slightly more portable, if its leaders change denomination, but it is very hard to do that, without basically just naming the trustees at a point in time.

So the moral point is if you give money to a charity, you have given it, you must have no residual benefit from it, except perhaps a warm inner glow, and even that can be dangerous if you start thinking of it as 'my altar rail' or 'my hymn book' in 'my church' because 'I paid for it.'

There is potentially a case in Equity if not in common law for a church building entirely built by "catholic" funding. Likely unsuccessful, but a possibility.
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Man with a Stick:
There is potentially a case in Equity if not in common law for a church building entirely built by "catholic" funding. Likely unsuccessful, but a possibility.

Almost certainly unsuccessful. I cannot think of a single case where this has been done, not even when there has been say an HTB takeover and a real change of churchmanship.

I cannot think the Roman Catholic Church would be remotely interested in it. An expensive court case with the Church of England trying to use some principle of non-statute to overturn a statutory provision before judges who will most likely be closet Anglicans. In order to 'win' a church with enormous heating and maintenance bills and which would become a focal point for disunity. Dream on, John.

And if the change of churchmanship is only from say FiF to a moderate AffCathism then you would have a hard job saying that Roman Catholicism is closer 'somehow' to the original FiF donors than AffCath anglo-catholicism, even if you could work out who the donors were.

(I can see complications of the equity type where you have a parish with districts of different churchmanship and the PCC over-rules the DCC or similar.)

If FiF are really planning to sue the CofE then that will kill whatever goodwill there may be in General Synod towards those that remain.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
I'm not sure why people keep worrying about the possibility of a brangle over Anglican Church property which might become redundant with the rise of the new ordinariats. This really is worrying about nothing.

I suspect the new ordinariats, like the TAC, will mostly hold services on the premises of Latin Rite Catholic churches which already exist.

The prospective great move across the Tiber is not going to happen.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
I cannot think the Roman Catholic Church would be remotely interested in it.

Too bloody right.

In my day job, I am the Financial Secretary of a Catholic Diocese - the job is a sort of combination of Diocesan Secretary and Diocesan Treasurer in CofE terms. I can assure you that there is absolutely no appetite for the kind of dispute you envisage.

I think it also important to recognise that the way we are organised means that in these kinds of cases, there's no such a thing as a collective Catholic entity. The apostolic constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus establishes, in the Ordinariates, new juridic persons, i.e. new canonical entities with the right to acquire, administer and alienate their own property free from the interference of others (subject to certain hierarchical oversight provisions). Therefore, should a congregation geographically located in, say, my diocese wish to join the ordinariate, issues of property are strictly its own business not my Bishop's.

In England and Wales the legal structure of ownership of property is that diocesan trusts own all the real and moveable property of the diocese (excluding that owned by individuals and religious orders). This is a hang-over from the time, pre-1909, when parishes were strictly only 'missions' for canonical purposes. The structure envisaged in both the 1917 and 1983 Codes of Canon Law (and indeed in the Septem Librorum which preceded 1917) is rather more like the CofE structure, i.e. that parishes (that is properly erected parishes and not missions) are juridic persons with all the rights that go with that status. Accordingly, they would 'own' their own parishes. Since 1909 (when England and Wales ceased to be 'mission territory') there has been no attempt to devolve the properties held by the dioceses to the parishes and for a whole host of reasons I can't see that happening. With the ordinariates, if parishes (personally rather than territorially defines, I suspect) are established, and having regard to what we are encouraged to refer to as 'Anglican Patrimony', it might well be that they would own their own property rather than it being vested in the ordinariate.

[ 29. November 2009, 09:50: Message edited by: Trisagion ]
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
Edward Green/Angloid - I've just looked at Fr. Ed's blog, and I can't for the life of me see how you read that SCP thing into it.

quote:
Father Waller’s board expresses what many of us are starting to fear- that we are actually hated within our own family, who have no real desire to help us, but will seek to hurt us if we stay and hurt us if we go. Pray God that this fear is entirely unfounded.
I guess it depends how you read 'family'. As I see the traditionalists as part of the 'Reformed Catholic' family perhaps I took it too personally?
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Ah - I see. I had read it to mean Anglicanism in general. But who knows?

Thanks for responding anyway.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
Given the fashion for public apologies for things done by our ancestors, maybe we Anglicans should give back to the RCC the buildings we stole from them at the Reformation.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
I may be tangenting too much on an already-overtanged thread, but perhaps a solution might be found in the French model where, if I understand it correctly, the Republic owns the buildings, and leases them to "cultic associations." This would solve not only several disestablishment-related questions, but also safeguard the preservation of the religious built heritage of the English people (for argument's sake, everything pre-1867, the year of the first Lambeth conference).

Leases could be distributed either to PCCs, or even to inter-church consortia. This would allow for the Ordinariate to snap up a few less-used Butterfield or Ninian Comper joints, the Latin Rite folks could comfort themselves with some ancient saints' shrines, the CoE could breathe more easily as surplus churches (a growing designation) find homes and local congregations would get a respite from maintenance and externally-imposed reno costs.

With greater clarity among all on building ownership, we might even have less desecration of godly spiritual edifices with power-point screens and amplifiers.
 
Posted by trouty (# 13497) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
Given the fashion for public apologies for things done by our ancestors, maybe we Anglicans should give back to the RCC the buildings we stole from them at the Reformation.

Maybe if they were to repay the money spent on the upkeep of these churches since that time.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
Given the fashion for public apologies for things done by our ancestors, maybe we Anglicans should give back to the RCC the buildings we stole from them at the Reformation.

Ken will surely be along in a minute with his standard argument that proves to his entire satisfaction that they weren't stolen.

Nevertheless, the reality is that we don't want them back, thanks: the upkeep would be far too expensive.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by trouty:
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
Given the fashion for public apologies for things done by our ancestors, maybe we Anglicans should give back to the RCC the buildings we stole from them at the Reformation.

Maybe if they were to repay the money spent on the upkeep of these churches since that time.
Only of we could set against those monies, the chantry Mass stipends that were appropriated at the time.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
I hear a sound in the background.... "Cha-ching!!!!" and soon after that sound, I hear the swish of a scourge of small cords whooshing through the air, tables being overturned, general chaos....

[/tangent]
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Of course, things are tough all over. We can't get this one back either, minus the added enhancements....

background music

[Biased]
 
Posted by FreeJack (# 10612) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:

With greater clarity among all on building ownership, we might even have less desecration of godly spiritual edifices with power-point screens and amplifiers.

Without the evangelical renewal of the CofE over the past 20 years even more such buildings would have been declared surplus and sold off for luxury flats.

Surprisingly enough Archdeacons and Chancellors increasingly tend to take the view that it is better to 'desecrate' a place of worship in use with some modern equipment than to knock it down.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:
Ken will surely be along in a minute with his standard argument that proves to his entire satisfaction that they weren't stolen.

Just cos you don't like it doesn't stop it being true.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Trisagion:
Ken will surely be along in a minute with his standard argument that proves to his entire satisfaction that they weren't stolen.

Just cos you don't like it doesn't stop it being true.
'Certo, to be sure', as we say 'round here.
 
Posted by Edward Green (# 46) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:

With greater clarity among all on building ownership, we might even have less desecration of godly spiritual edifices with power-point screens and amplifiers.

Without the evangelical renewal of the CofE over the past 20 years even more such buildings would have been declared surplus and sold off for luxury flats.

Not to mention past 'desecrations' with pews, pipe organs, hymn books, screens, eagles, pulpits, vain memorials, etc.

I used to worship in a church with a less than practical altar cross with the words inscribed 'To the Glory of God, and in memory of so-and-so ...... who died on the xxth of month 19**'

The text wrapped round the cross base so the text on the front read:

'To the Glory of God who died on the xxth of month 19**'

Give me power-point any day!
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FreeJack:
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:

With greater clarity among all on building ownership, we might even have less desecration of godly spiritual edifices with power-point screens and amplifiers.

Without the evangelical renewal of the CofE over the past 20 years even more such buildings would have been declared surplus and sold off for luxury flats.

Surprisingly enough Archdeacons and Chancellors increasingly tend to take the view that it is better to 'desecrate' a place of worship in use with some modern equipment than to knock it down.

Not wishing to further derail a thread which has begun to resemble a major railway junction, I am not certain that I see the connexion between an evangelical revival in the English church and these horrid things. They are certainly common enough in churches of various leanings, and are to be found disfiguring many RC churches-- a nicely carved statue of Saint Viateur in Casselman, Ontario now sits behind an amplifier where the heat from the apparatus is now degrading its Victorian paint work. As of yet, the Orthodox seem spared (but this may be on account of their not having hooked up their churches to electricity).
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
Interrupting this serious discussion to ask if anyone else heard the fabulous Midge Benn "The Pope Wants Vicars" song on Friday night's Now Show

Available on Listen Again here about 25 minutes in (ie just before the end)

[I was going to quote a few lines, but they didn't come across very well - really need to hear the whole thing]

I caught it on Friday night and laughed and laughed and then my mind went immediately to this thread. Enjoy. Or hate.

But it does give an interesting insight into how the outside world (albeit the R4 version of the outside world) is perceiving the whole thing.
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
For sure, every vicar needs to know that the R4 World is out there, in every Church. They'd better be ready! Thanks, Yangtse!

Mary
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
Apologies for suffering from British spelling syndrome, needed for my w*rk, but affecting my typing of your Ship Name, dear Yangtze! [Hot and Hormonal]

Mary
(aware that the R4 world also exists in the U.S. [Ultra confused] )

[ 01. December 2009, 14:39: Message edited by: Leetle Masha ]
 
Posted by Loveheart (# 12249) on :
 
I now have a 10yo daughter, shocked at the mention of vaginas [Hot and Hormonal]

Very funny! [Devil]
 
Posted by uffda (# 14310) on :
 
I was going to resist the temptation to go there, but after your post, Loveheart, I just had to find out what it was all about!
[Big Grin]
 
Posted by bonabri (# 304) on :
 
How many "pagans" will be knocking on church doors demanding their temples back soon?

[ 01. December 2009, 15:57: Message edited by: bonabri ]
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Yes, there's the Pantheon, for a start, just down the road from Benny the Rat himself!
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
I used to know an Orthodox Christian priest who thought that the echo in the marble concourse of a large railroad station would make that railroad station ideal for a Paschal Divine Liturgy.

So if somebody wants a church back, there's always the railway station!

Mary

[ 01. December 2009, 17:09: Message edited by: Leetle Masha ]
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
And I always thought it a pity (well, it is anyway) that Battersea Power Station has been left in ruins- would have made a splendid cathedral.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
Just as Liverpool Cathedral (same architect) would make a splendid railway station. Just think, we could do a swap with Liverpool Central: great cathedral for the postmodernist world. [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Leetle Masha (# 8209) on :
 
See how creative we can be when we set our minds to it?

[Cool]
 
Posted by Christian Agnostic (# 14912) on :
 
I think all the pope wants is better church music/church musicians.
 
Posted by Think² (# 1984) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
And I always thought it a pity (well, it is anyway) that Battersea Power Station has been left in ruins- would have made a splendid cathedral.

I thought it became the tate modern ?
 
Posted by Oremus (# 13853) on :
 
No Tate Modern is Bankside,
 


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