The Portal June 2014 | Page 20

THE P RTAL June 2014 Page 20 The Ordinariate Liturgy Mgr Andrew Burnham looks at the Ordinariate Use and Anglican Patrimony T here Is a story about Mgr Graham Leonard, formerly Anglican Bishop of London, being asked by Cardinal Hume what he valued in the worship of the Church of England and would miss as a Catholic. He replied that it would be the Prayer Book Offices of Matins and Evensong, and in particular the psalms in course, following the Coverdale Psalter, as set in the Book of Common Prayer. There is no doubt that the daily services are the jewel in the crown and, when both Pope Paul VI and Pope Benedict XVI expressed their admiration for Anglican worship, it was the public celebration of the Offices that they had most clearly in mind. Small wonder then that the Ordinariate clergy in the United Kingdom particularly value the availability to them, as Catholics, of Morning and Evening Prayer in the Prayer Book tradition, as distilled in the Customary of Our Lady of Walsingham. modern Anglican and Roman rites But what of the Mass? Looking back at the classical Anglican rite of Holy Communion, this is clearly a Protestant service. Yet there is much that can be rescued. The Ordinariate’s Order of Mass incorporates this material and presents it in a shape largely familiar to congregations of the period up to about 1965 in such unlawful but widely used adaptations of the Roman Mass as the English Missal and Anglican Missal. Fifty years have now elapsed and Anglo-catholic congregations in England and Wales have almost entirely used the modern Anglican and Roman rites during this period. Nevertheless, it is good that there is a distinct Ordinariate Order of Mass, that it is in the sacral language of the Prayer Book, and that, though it will not be usable in many pastoral contexts, there will be some in which it is entirely right. It is, and will be, a milestone in the journey of Western liturgy and, like the other material incorporated into the Roman Rite through the Ordinariates, it will be very influential in the future evolution of the Roman Rite as it is expressed in English. Anglicanae Traditiones Work is nearly complete on the Missal, or Sacramentary, for the Ordinariate. Though the Order contents page of Mass has already begun to be used, the largest task for Anglicanae Traditiones, the liturgical Commission set up by the Holy See, has been the editing of the Propers. For almost every day and almost every occasion there are Propers. There is the Introit, or Entrance Antiphon, the Collect, the Gradual, the Alleluia or Tract, the Offertory, the Prayer over the Gifts, the Communion, and the Prayer after Communion. Add to these the Prefaces, for use with the Eucharistic Prayers, and the special rites for such occasions as Candlemas, Ash Wednesday, Palm Sunday, the Easter Triduum, and the Vigil of Pentecost, and it is not hard to see why the Missal is likely to weigh in at well over a thousand pages. Anglicans who are familiar with older versions of the Missal – the English Missal or Anglican Missal – will be surprised, perhaps, to discover that there are almost no readings in the Ordinariate Missal. One of the conventions of modern liturgy is that the Mass Lectionary is published separately and, indeed, we already have that for the Ordinariates in the Revised Standard Version, 2nd Catholic Edition. Those who have attended Ordinariate Masses everywhere will have felt the impact of this version of Scripture. It is much better suited for public reading than the Jerusalem Bible, used in most Catholic churches in England and Wales. The Jerusalem Bible, itself a very fine piece of work in its day, had its roots in an original French translation but the RSV is directly within the tradition of English Bible, stretching back to the work of Coverdale in the sixteenth century and the King James Version of