The Portal May 2019 | Page 3

THE P RTAL May 2019 Page 3 P ortal Comment Leaving and joining – the journey of converts Will Burton reviews his journey F or some Catholics, being a Convert is sometimes thought of as being second best. I expect most of us will have heard it said with pride, “Well; I am a Cradle Catholic!” Yet conversion is surely an essential aspect of the Catholic Faith. We all need conversion. We all need to be rescued for. Concise and certain orthodoxy was a welcome from our sinful ways, and brought into the joy of home from home. The welcome was warm and forgiveness, surrendering ourselves to the love and unjudgmental. salvation brought by Our Lord Jesus Christ.   The Catholic Church posses a Catechism that lays The conversion of members of the Personal out what the Church stands for in a positive and Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, indeed of unambiguous way. Its attraction is obvious; the concise anyone, has two parts. First: there is the decision to orthodoxy of Pope Benedict appealed to Anglicans leave the place where one has been for a long time, hungering for doctrinal stability. Let us be sure not to maybe one’s whole life. Second is the decision to enter lose the very thing that brought us to this point in the life of the Church: doctrinal stability. into full communion with the Catholic Church.  In her column this month my colleague Joanna Bogle outlines one of the reasons for the decision many of us took to leave the CofE. It is a question of gender and the importance of holding that, although the two genders of male and female are equal, they are, nevertheless, not interchangeable. She also outlines the difficulty of expressing, let alone holding, such a view as the “thought police” gradually tighten their grip.  We must add the understandably negative reaction to sexual scandals in the church. They too; have contributed to the slow-down in converts. Such scandals, and theological fuzziness, do not attract converts.  Thank God, we have faithful Ordinaries, Bishop, Priests, Deacons, and lay folk in the three Ordinariates that hold fast to the teaching of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. There were, of course, other reasons why so many of us felt the need to leave the dear old CofE. In the time Let us pray others will see the deep attraction of this of my short life, the established church of this land had and make the journey that we have already made. altered out of all recognition. Doctrinal ambiguity had not just replaced concise orthodoxy, it had become a New Ordinariate Members tenet of faith. I realised that my time in the CofE was limited when a cleric boasted to me that “I have a Before Easter: Churchwarden who is not Baptised”.  24th March – 1 at Most Precious Blood, Borough 31st March – a young family of 3, including a The words of the Creed (Apostles and Nicean, not former Anglican priest, at Warwick Street to mention that of St Athanasias)  came to mean something rather different from the traditional In Holy Week – a Diocesan Catholic becomes understanding. A lax view of marriage, divorce and Ordinariate at Most Precious Blood same-sex relationships became the official line. A – 1 at St Mark’s Hemel Hempstead vague and fluid theology gradually crept into every Received at Easter: aspect of the church’s doctrine. So one had to leave.  – 2, a mother and daughter at Most Precious Blood – 3 at St Osmund’s, Gainford, Darlington The Catholic Church was an attractive place to head