The Portal Archive December 2011 | Page 7

THE P RTAL December 2011 An Anglican Worthy: Nicholas Ferrar Page 7 Anglican Luminary by Fr Keith Robinson Up until 1536, it is said that a quarter of England belonged to the monasteries. In less than five years over 800 monasteries had been dissolved by order of the king, and thus was swept away, in England, a tradition of Christian living almost as old as the Christian Faith itself. For a long while, the monastic life became a significant aspect of the “black myth” of Catholicism, which continues, arguably, to perpetuate prejudice into our own time. and his extended family and some friends (evidently altogether about thirty people) left London and the secular life behind. They moved, astonishingly, to the deserted village of Little Gidding in the depths of rural Huntingdonshire. There had been no dwellings there since 1594. Only a ruined manor house and the ruins of St John’s church survived. They bought the manor and restored the house, and also set about restoring the village church, which became the heart of the community’s life. The project had the blessing of the Bishop of Lincoln, and the strong support travelled of the Archbishop of Canterbury, However, the rather cold and damp climate of the William Laud, who ordained Nicholas to the diaconate fens was not conducive to his good health, and it was in the same year in Westminster Abbey. on medical advice that he began to tour Europe. At Of course, the community had no enclosure, no first he travelled as a courtier in the retinue of James I’s daughter, Princess Elizabeth, but he presently decided vows and no Rule as such. Unsurprisingly, it has to continue alone. Passing through the Netherlands, provided a model for several twentieth century Germany, Austria, Bohemia, Italy and Spain, he quickly Anglican communities. Each member worked hard picked up the languages of those countries, to the to help establish the community’s self-sufficiency; life extent that he was able to take up studies in Medicine was patterned on the Bible, and liturgically ordered first at Leipzig and then at Padua. A particular pleasure according to the Book of Common Prayer – perhaps an and interest was meeting with Jews, Protestant and indication of the versatility of that book. An unbroken Catholics, and engaging in conversation with them. chain of prayer was established in the church. King He especially got to know a number of Jesuits and Charles I visited three times. Oratorians. Nicholas died on the 4 December 1637, and is buried Little Gidding in the churchyard. The community did not survive With his horizons thus considerably broadened, he for long after his death. It was always regarded with returned to England in 1618, and promptly became suspicion by the Puritans, who called it the “Arminian a Member of Parliament. However, his life was to Nunnery”, but the tradition that they eventually sacked change dramatically, again, in 1626, when Nicholas it is now no longer thought to be true. Nicholas Ferrar is in most ways a surprising person to have experimented with the reintroduction of the religious life. He was born in London on the 22 February 1592, into a family involved in the London Virginia Company. Able to read before he was five, he seems to have been something of a child prodigy. In 1605, at the age of thirteen, he entered Clare Hall, Cambridge, graduating in 1610, and being elected fellow the following year. It was in Cambridge that he met his life-long friend George Herbert.