The Portal October 2013 | Page 9

THE P RTAL October 2013 Page 9 The question of Anglican Patrimony by David Murphy of Ordinariate Expats Last month we introduced the project to share examples of the Anglican Patrimony that is being maintained and promoted in the Ordinariate. Today we consider the ecumenical significance of Pope Benedict’s decision to encourage us to preserve our distinctiveness. I n the 1990s, after the decision to ordain women to the C of E priesthood, over 500 Anglican priests left the Church of England with groups of laity and were received into the Catholic Church and subsequently ordained Catholic priests. At the time the feasibility of setting up Anglican Use parishes in the UK similar to the admittedly very small number of Pastoral Provision communities in the United States was discussed but not approved. So all of these Anglican priests and people were absorbed into Catholic parishes and gradually lost their former Anglican identity. Today, if you are not in the know, you would not be able to tell the difference between these and other Catholics. The Catholic Church itself has not been changed by their reception. and perhaps more importantly, where the Anglican Patrimony could be brought into the Catholic Church as a gift and an enrichment. Catholic Church changed overnight Through this enormously generous and prophetic decision the Roman Catholic Church changed overnight. For the first time in its history the Church opened itself to a church of the Reformation and welcomed elements of liturgical, musical, pastoral and spiritual patrimony, some of which originate from Protestants who even suffered execution at the hands of the Catholic Church. missionary and evangelising It should thus be clear to everyone that the Ordinariates are not merely full communion with “decompression chambers” facilitating the See of Peter the move from the Anglican Church After the turn of the millennium it to the Catholic Church and they are became clear that developments in certainly not seen as dispensable once the Anglican Church were such that it those newly received have become was likely that once again there was going to be a large accustomed to being Catholic. That would be completely number of Anglicans and Continuing Anglicans who to misunderstand Pope Benedict’s ecclesiological would seek full communion with the See of Peter. and ecumenical vision. The Ordinariates are by their nature missionary and evangelising, with the primary elements of the Anglican Patrimony task of building a visible bridge between Anglicanism This time two concepts dominated the petitions and the Catholic Church. Ordinariate members have made and the discussions which took place in the not ceased being Anglo-Catholics. On the contrary, ensuing years: corporate reunion and the retention of they are Anglo-Catholics reunited with Rome. elements of the Anglican Patrimony. It soon became clear that Rome could not and would not recognise unity in diversity the petitioners as a “sister church” distinct from The establishment of the Personal Ordinariates thus Canterbury and just enter into communion with it, demonstrates clearly the new approach to Church much like the model of the Eastern Catholic churches. Unity since Vatican II. Those seeking reunion with Rome must no longer abandon their faith history the Ordinariates in favour of uniformity. Instead the vision is one of But Rome did the next best thing and established the unity in diversity, where each tradition treasures its Ordinariates, canonical entities like dioceses within distinctiveness as an integral part and an enrichment the Roman Rite, where former Anglicans could remain of the whole Catholic and Apostolic Church. This is together with their pastors and their own Ordinary the task Pope Benedict XVI has given us.