The Portal Archive February 2012 | Page 11

THE P RTAL February 2012 Page 11 Our man to teach in Rome Interview with The Revd Prof. Allen Brent, D.D (Cantab.) Fr Allen Brent , married to Kathy, is an internationally acknowledged historian of Early Christianity. A member of Cambridge’s Faculty of Divinity, Fr Allen is also a visiting Professor at King’s College, London and shortly at the Augustinianum, (Lateran University), Rome. moved remorselessly by the logic of his theological argument, to Catholicism.” His research and teaching in Rome is part of a collaboration between his two Universities in Rome and London, exploring iconographic and non-literary sources as historical evidence. Was it was right for us to come as groups and not individuals? “An individual in a separated Christian group might go to a Catholic Mass and say afterwards ‘I experienced a dimension to my faith that I have never experienced before... I must return here!’” But the Holy Father addressed ‘congregations (coetibus) of Anglicans’ because “we learned our Catholicism in our Anglo- catholic congregations, reflecting on our own traditions and in the light of their own logic sought to recover their truncated Catholic truth.” authority In perplexity at the crisis of authority in Anglicanism, he had long ago grasped the ARCIC principle that was fundamental to Church Unity: koinonia or ‘fellowship’ meant that we would never do apart what we could do together in fundamental matters of faith and morals. In the 1980s he had reacted rather smugly to the role of the bishop of Rome fostering the unity of the episcopal college ‘in the city where Peter and Paul died’. His Anglican church had not really needed Petrine authority to bind the bishops, in their various, scattered dioceses, together collegially: the bishops by their theological education, the grace given them, etc. could do this by themselves. The Pope was an optional extra included as a sop to the Romanists. But the contemporary explosion of the crisis in the C of E that developed over 30 years proved otherwise. Papal authority was not some optional extra but “a pastoral ministry of binding together churches under their bishops that fostered an intercommunion of love and fellowship, without which Christ’s prayer for the unity of all Christians remained unrealised. The Holy Father’s opened arms needed my response.” John Henry Newman Vatican II “Vatican II saw in such groups, though outside the visible Church, ‘elements of sanctification and truth’ moving us to seek unity, and the Holy Father too saw this taking place. Vatican II was Newman’s Council, and we can now see why.” The Ordinariate, in Fr Allen’s view, is like a new Religious Order struggling to be born. Money is urgently required to fulfill our mission. He echoed Mgr Keith Newton’s stress on Evangelisation and Ecumenism as roles for the Ordinariate. “The mission for the conversion of England, that fallen Standard of the C of E, must now be picked up by the Ordinariate.” Fr Allen said, “Having fulfilled the aims of the Oxford Movement, we now have ‘Catholic Evensong,’ and new, Catholic realisations of our Anglican heritage will follow.” “The Ordinariate is”, he claims, “An idea whose time has come.” Our second patron, the Blessed John Henry Newman, “was undoubtedly the leading The Portal wishes well to Fr Allen and Kathy his English religious thinker of the 19 th century, and wife, especially in Rome.