The Portal March 2014 | Page 23

THE P RTAL March 2014 Page 11 Our ritual heritage by an Ordinariate observer The tradition and law of the Catholic Church have been explicit and remarkably emphatic about the need for personal fidelity to one’s ritual heritage: “...Each and every Catholic, as also the baptised of every non-Catholic church or denomination who enters into the fullness of the Catholic communion, must retain his own rite wherever he is, must cherish it and observe it to the best of his ability....” Furthermore, the faithful “...can and should always preserve their legitimate liturgical rite and their established way of life, and... these may not be altered except to obtain for themselves an organic improvement... [and] they should attain to an ever greater knowledge and a more exact use of them, and... should take steps to return to their ancestral traditions,” “...desiring that these treasures flourish and contribute ever more efficiently to the evangelisation of the world.” opposed to mere liturgical or sacramental participation in the ordinariate’s rites. The primary significance of official membership is the authority of the Ordinary and the particular canons applicable to life in his jurisdiction, though for most laymen there would be very little day to day difference made by canonical membership in an ordinariate, as the salvation of souls While some with no Anglican background may also feel called to worship with the Ordinariate, former Anglicans have a special responsibility prayerfully to consider the call to join. For such faithful, their relationship with diocesan clergy will remain unimpaired. Anglicanorum Coetibus specifically mandates that dioceses and ordinariates “cultivate bonds of unity” and foresees “common pastoral and within the Latin Church charitable initiatives and activities” between them. While Anglicanorum Coetibus clearly erects personal The Complementary Norms mandate “close ties ordinariates not as sui juris particular churches but of communion” and the co-ordination of pastoral as autonomous bodies within the Latin Church, if activity. one were to consider the full intent of the authorities quoted above there would seem to be some form of in the families and faithful responsibility for former Anglicans to adhere to what Those now joining the Ordinariates will also support, is coming to approximate to an Anglican ‘Rite’. encourage and help future incoming Anglicans, who will need their support and fellowship. The potency No time restrictions have been set forth on when one of the Anglican patrimony ‘shared’ within the Church must have joined the Church in order to be eligible for lies not just in liturgical books and ritual culture but membership in the Ordinariate, which is “composed most importantly in the families and faithful who pray of... faithful... originally belonging to the Anglican those liturgies and form, and are formed by, that living Communion and now in full communion with the liturgical and musical tradition. Catholic Church, or those who receive the Sacraments of Initiation within the jurisdiction of the Ordinariate.” Support for the Ordinariates from those who were Those of the Anglican tradition “who wish to belong received earlier into the Catholic Church would help to the Ordinariate... are to be entered in the apposite them establish a firm foundation. The more members register of the Ordinariate.” the Ordinariates can count on, the easier will be their establishment. All Catholics may attend the liturgies of, and generally fulfil their obligations within, any other rite So all those who at whatever time, originated in of the Church. Yet Christians also normally belong to or passed through the Anglican tradition, regardless a diocese, eparchy, or ordinariate of a particular ritual of when they became Catholic, should give the culture. Might it be the case, all things being equal, that Ordinariates a certain degree of serious consideration those who previously came to the Catholic Church and should do what they can to support the living from Anglicanism already belong in some sense to the tradition whence and by which they came to the Ordinariates? Catholic Church. All Catholics, regardless of rite, should pray for great fruit to be borne by Pope Benedict XVI’s Anglican ordinariates; that they may bring about the salvation of souls and great blessings