The Portal March 2014 | Page 4

THE P RTAL March 2014 L ittlemore is on the outskirts of Oxford: the bus ride from the city goes through frankly unlovely semi-industrialised not-quite-Oxford-and-not-quite -anywhere-else. In the mid-19th century this was an impoverished rural area. Littlemore had no church of its own and no school. When John Henry Newman, still at that time an Anglican clergyman, was appointed to the parish, he worked heroically: with his mother and sisters, caring for the victims of a cholera outbreak, and building a church - which still stands today - and school. Auntie Jo a n LOGS at Littlemore Page 4 na wri tes We had long planned this outing and we had expected it to be like many other LOGS events - cheery and talkative and fun - and in lots of ways it was like that, but in other ways it had a quality absolutely its own. There was a seriousness, even solemnity, about the day that was not sad or dreary but rather extraordinarily and unexpectedly prayerful. We were touched by the whole thing in ways we had not imagined possible. Newman’s story is in many ways an uncomfortable one: he lost friends through his decision to enter into full communion with the Catholic Church, he became estranged from one of his sisters, he was often misunderstood by leading figures in the Catholic Church here in England and in Rome, and he was ridiculed in the press and misrepresented again and Newman also created a retreat for himself and others again. Yet, as he wrote and explained many times, he in an old stable-block near the church. It was here never wavered in his faith or in the joy and serenity it that he made the great decision that was to change gave him. the course of his life, and the history of the Church in England. After much study and prayer, he sought full In a very important sense, the Ordinariate is his communion with the Catholic Church. It was in the legacy. library of the former stable block at Littlemore that he knelt before Father Dominic Barberi, the Passionist Joanna Bogle DSG priest and missionary, and asked to be received into the Church. Today, the library and the other buildings are in the care of a group of religious sisters, and Littlemore is a place of pilgrimage. And to this place came members of LOGS, the Ladies Ordinariate Group, at the end of February. It was an unforgettable day. We had a tour of Littlemore led by Sister Christine, one of the team of young Sisters, and we ate lunch in Newman’s library and prayed in his private chapel, using his rosary. We visited the church he built - the foundation-stone was laid by his mother and there is a touching memorial to her there.