The Portal October 2017 | Page 21

THE P RTAL October 2017 Page 21 Tips for the growth of an Ordinariate Group Ronald Crane spotted an article in the Anglicanorum Coetibus Society Blog I f you have not yet discovered the Anglicanorum Coetibus Society Blog, you could do worse than go to http://bit.ly/ord-growth and see some of the excellent articles there. One in particular caught my eye. Indeed, it was also spotted by Fr Ed Tomlinson, for he quoted it in his Blog on 19th September. parish/community is automatically eligible for It is from the pen of the webmaster at Catholic in Ordinariate membership as well. the Ozarks, Shane Schaetzel. Here Shane offers some advice to Ordinariate parishes for their growth. I quote 6. Offer highly traditional liturgy. Youth are more it in full. The emphases are mine. attracted to tradition these days. Don’t fall for the hippy happy-clappy trap. Nothing is more dated The following are eight recommendations from what than contemporary worship. If you want young I have witnessed to work. This is how we are growing people to join your community, you need to offer one Ordinariate parish so fast we can barely keep up old traditional liturgy - the more “high-church” with the building size… the better. So use that Divine Worship Missal regularly and vigorously. 1. Get away from established Catholic parishes. You can’t build your own house in somebody 7. Offer challenging homilies. People today are else’s backyard. Embrace the missionary spirit. sick and tired of watered-down, non-offensive Move away from your host parish and set up homilies that don’t challenge them to live the shop in a populated area where no Catholic faith. Don’t get me wrong. We need to show the parishes are nearby. Even if you have to meet love of God in all of our teaching, but at the same in somebody’s home, or in a storefront, it’s time we need to define sin clearly and challenge better than trying to build your own house in our people to overcome it. somebody else’s backyard. 2. Get a good website and reliable contact info. Work your Google business listing for the highest visibility. Make sure people can easily find you. 3. Behave like a parish. Make sure you’re offering mass and reconciliation regularly. 4. Make sure you have a parish name — patron saint — don’t go by “Ordinariate Community…” Nobody understands what that means. 5. Accept everybody, even cradle Catholics looking for a new home. Remember, people don’t have to be Ordinariate eligible to become members of an Ordinariate parish/community. Also, think outside the box when it comes to evangelism. If you’re only reaching out to Anglicans, you’re doing something wrong. You need to reach out to all non-Catholics. Remember, any non-Catholic (regardless of religious background) who is received into the Catholic Church through an Ordinariate 8. Don’t over-explain yourself. There is a tendency to want to explain the whole thing when it comes to the Ordinariate, Anglican Patrimony, our history, etc. Don’t do that. Just answer people’s questions as they ask them, and only give them the information they ask for. Don’t over explain it. That confuses average visitors and makes them think something is “fishy.” Just tell people what they need to know, only when they ask. Then carry on as if what you’re doing is the most natural thing in the world.                                                       There is certainly food for thought here. Personally, I do not go the whole hog with all Shane’s suggestions, but some are well worth consideration. His article is a good place to begin some debate about these important matters. There are places where the Ordinariate is attracting people, and in quite considerable numbers. As Jackie and I go about the country visiting various Ordinariate groups we have been encouraged by what we found in Fr Ed’s Pembury; at the Most Precious Blood, London Bridge; at Gainford, Darlington; in