From Terry Mattingly’s most recent column:
In the fall of 1979, a cluster of Episcopalians made another trip to Rome seeking a haven for Anglo-Catholic believers anxious to exit their increasingly divided church.
Vatican officials agreed that it was time to petition their new leader, the young Pope John Paul II. The document was prepared and then signed on the altar of the North American Martyrs at Rome’s North American College. In it, members of the Society of St. Augustine of Canterbury and other like-minded clergy made a blunt request.
“We pray and beseech your Holiness to receive and accept us into the Roman Catholic Church,” they wrote, “for we are sheep not having a shepherd and would return to the care of that Holy Apostle singularly commissioned by the Divine Lord to feed his sheep.”
The pope soon said “yes.” But that simply opened another chapter in a long, long, story, one that continues decades later.
There is certainly more to this story than headlines about a sudden decision by Pope Benedict XVI to commence sheep stealing in the wake of his “Anglicanorum Coetibus (“groups of Anglicans”) pronouncement in 2009. This document allowed Anglican priests and congregations to join new “personal ordinariates,” the equivalent of national dioceses, while retaining key elements of their liturgy, music and other traditions. The plan allows for married men to become priests, but not bishops — as in Eastern Rite Catholicism.
In England, The Times knocked this 2009 plan, saying, “Rome has parked its tanks on the Archbishop of Canterbury’s lawn.” Today, tensions remain high on both sides of the Atlantic after a Jan. 1 announcement that the ordinariates are set to open.
It’s almost laughable to call these developments “sudden” or the result of unilateral actions by the pope, said the Rev. Allan Hawkins of St. Mary the Virgin Catholic Church in Arlington, Texas, a priest in the Church of England before coming to America. The roots of these events even predate the Episcopal Church’s 1976 vote to ordain women as priests and later to the episcopate.
Read the entire column, “The long Anglican road to Rome”. Fr. Hawkins wrote the Introduction to Anglicans and the Roman Catholic Church: Reflections on Recent Developments, edited by Stephen Cavanaugh, and published by Ignatius Press last year: “Ecclesia Anglicana“.
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