The Portal February 2014 | Page 14

THE P RTAL February 2014 UK Page 3 Thoughts on Newman Newman: The Head that Honoured the Hat Stephen Morgan I t was a great joy, several weeks ago, to learn that Pope Francis has named Archbishop Vincent Nichols amongst those to be made a Cardinal on 22nd February. Members of the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham have more reason than most to be glad at this news because of the constant support and solicitude Archbishop Nichols has shown in these first, nervous years of the Ordinariate’s existence. But as I thought more about the imposition of (that is the word that used to be used – later years took to using the grander and less threatening “elevation to”) the Cardinatial scarlet on Archbishop Nichols, the date of the consistory at which this will take place leapt out at me as having a particular relevance for members of the Ordinariate. Vincent Nichols, and eighteen others, will be made Cardinals on 22nd February 2014. the Chair of St Peter For over eleven hundred years – possibly much longer – 22nd February has been kept in Rome as the feast of the Chair of St Peter. Originally it was one of two such feasts, the other on 18th January, which marked the Church’s recognition of St Peter’s life and ministry as the apostle who guarantees the unity of the faith, the unity of the Church – the occupier of the Bishop’s seat or cathedra – first at Antioch and later at Rome. Now, with just the one feast, on 22nd February, it has come to be seen as a particular day on which to recall that the guarantee of our faith, the guarantee that we are Catholic, is our communion with St Peter’s successor. Newman’s life after his conversion was how he was cut off from the culture of his Anglican years: what we might call “patrimony”. The Catholic Church to which he made his submission in October 1845 was not one, at least not in England, noted for its liturgical beauty, musical splendour and cultural riches. It was a church where the utterly poor, migrant masses and the marginalised recusants were emerging, blinking, into public gaze following emancipation. It was a church anxious not to antagonise the Protestant majority with ostentatious displays of rituals that looked and felt foreign. It was a church that clung to its hastily whispered Low Mass, lest even that Many members of the Ordinariate had but a short would be taken from it once again. distance to travel in accepting the fullness of the Newman was never to hear the Archbishop of Catholic Faith, but the crucial step for so many was that coming into full communion with Peter that Westminster say to him and his fellow converts, what Archbishop Nichols was to say last September, to marked your reception. members and potential members of the Ordinariate: This feast should be, therefore, one of great that through the Ordinariates, “Anglicans who wish importance for those who have so lately, and often to enter the full communion of the Catholic Church, at great personal cost, made that journey. Indeed, bringing with them some of the traditions and beauty because of the price paid, that communion with Peter of the Anglican heritage in which they were nurtured, should be so much more highly prized and might be a may do so.” defining characteristic of members of the Ordinariate. So, as Archbishop Nichols travels to Rome to be made It is no accident that you Ordinariate brethren in North America chose the name “The Ordinariate of a Cardinal, let him be supported by the prayers of all the Chair of St Peter”. Catholic in this country, but especially by members of the Ordinariate, calling upon the heavenly intercession the day after Blessed of Blessed John Henry Newman, that what was said in John Henry Newman’s birthday Punch of Newman upon his being made a Cardinal in The other thing that struck me about the date was 1878 might be true also of Archbishop Nichols: that “it that it is the day after Blessed John Henry Newman’s isn’t the hat that honours the head, but the head that birthday. One of the sadnesses that one detects in honours the hat”.