“On the Gathering of the
Anglicans”
The Apostolic Constitution
Anglicanorum Coetibus
A Pastoral Letter to the Bishops,
Clergy and Faithful of the Traditional Anglican Communion
20th
January 2010
My Dear Fathers, Brothers and
Sisters,
Introduction: the dreams of Christian
unity
Few things could be expected to
excite more controversy than the reunion of churches that have long been living
in animosity.
Europe, and the world that Europe
colonised, has been shaped in its languages, its politics, its law, as well as
its religion, in large part by those animosities. The identity and culture of
people and nations have been significantly shaped by religious conflict and
division.
The healing of religious division
has been one of the most welcome features of 20th century
Christianity. The great conflicts of
the last century between Christianity and communism, and between Christianity
and Fascism, that turned that century into one of the most persecuting since
the great persecutions of the Roman Empire, diminished the sense of division
and emphasised the wisdom of unity.
In the Second Vatican Council,
the Catholic Church embraced the vision of unity. For Anglicans, dramatic
meetings occurred between Archbishops of Canterbury and Bishops of Rome. With
great optimism the two churches embarked on theological examinations of the
issues that had divided them for centuries and began what at first were
tentative and awkward steps in cooperation. Even praying in each other’s
churches demanded a confrontation with the habits and assumptions of
generations.
At the same time, Christians in
Europe and in the Third World began to experience the challenges of a militant
and fundamentalist Islam. Confrontation
and persecution began afresh. In Europe and the developed world, a renewed
interest in pagan and humanist
philosophy, combined with a diminished sense of identity of Christians
with their churches led to a dramatic diminishing of religious practice and
belief.
It was against this background
that the Anglican/Roman Catholic dialogue took place. At first optimistic, the
dream of full organic unity – what Pope Paul VI described as the supreme grace of true and perfect unity
in faith and communion – faded from reality.
I raise these issues because it
is of great importance now that people in our Communion clearly understand why
Archbishop Falk, Bishop Crawley of Canada and myself stood in St Peter’s
Square, Rome some 17 years ago. We had spent the
day with the Pontifical Council for Christian unity, briefing it on the developments
within the Anglican Communion that had led to the formation of the Traditional
Anglican Communion and of our yearning for the unity that was even then
becoming improbable between the Anglican Communion and Rome. The publication by
Pope Benedict XVI of the Apostolic Constitution is the culmination of the
prayers, dreams and efforts of Traditional Anglican Communion bishops for a
quarter of a century, and of the prayers, dreams and efforts of many other
Anglicans around the world. In his
recent letter to our bishops, Cardinal Levada spoke to us of the delicate process of discernment
that will no doubt need to be embarked upon by many of our Anglican brothers
and sisters, and no less of the many difficult practical issues that will need
to be faced. I
speak to you now, as the one whom my fellow bishops elected to carry through
the work of unity between the Traditional Anglican Communion and the Holy See,
to assist and deepen that delicate process of discernment.
Our Petition
As is normal in such
circumstances, our petition to the Holy See has remained confidential until a
formal response has been received. The letters to those who signed the petition
mark that formal response. As a result, in order to deepen our understanding
and promote discussion, I am releasing the petition with this pastoral letter.
The petition notes the history of
recent Roman/Anglican conversations, and the extraordinary note of optimism in
the 1960s. It then notes the abandonment by the Anglican Communion of those
things held by Rome and Holy Orthodoxy as essential to Apostolic Faith. It then
notes the development of the Anglican resistance and the faithfulness that
began with the conference at St Louis. The teaching of the Affirmation of St
Louis is set out, particularly as it relates to the sacramental life of the
Church and the nature of the Church itself.
The petition particularly notes
the words of the Affirmation where it states
we declare our firm intention to seek and achieve full sacramental communion
and the visible unity with other Christians who worship the Trinity in unity
and unity in Trinity and who hold the Catholic and apostolic Faith in
accordance with the foregoing principles.
Our Communion has always
understood that those words apply most significantly to the Catholic Church. (I
might add, lest there be any confusion, that I use the word Catholic Church as
the formal entity headed by the Bishop of Rome, and which consists of a number
of Rites, some in the East and some in the West,
of which the Roman Rite is the most populous.
In common conversation, of course, it is called the Roman Catholic
Church in many parts of the world. In a part of the petition where we quote a
Roman authority, the words Roman Catholic Church are actually used.)
The petition then notes the
formation of the Traditional Anglican Communion and its spread. It indicates the way in which its growth has
been shaped by the advice given at that first meeting 17
years ago in Rome. It notes the expansive process of consultation and synodical
debate that had already taken place as a precondition for the petition being
submitted.
Then comes the heart of the
petition. Firstly, it knowledge the wide consultation with Roman Catholic
people throughout the world. One observation was particularly influential in
the 12 months during which the petition was being prepared. It accurately
describes the founding purpose of our Communion, and then goes on to
acknowledge the four great aspects of the Anglican heritage that we desire to
be cherished in any unity:
Because the Lord has not yet returned in glory, the complete unity
and communion of believers for which He prayed has not yet been achieved, but
each believer and each church and ecclesial community, recognising the
life-changing unity engendered by our shared baptism, is called to make
Christian unity a lifelong commitment, just as we are called to spread the
Gospel to the whole world.
Recognising that obligation, and with great confidence in the Lord
and in the power of the Holy Spirit, a worldwide community of Anglican
Christians has united under the name “The Traditional Anglican Communion” for
three main purposes:
·
To identify, reaffirm
and consolidate in its community the elements of belief, sacraments, structure
and conduct that mark the Church of Christ, which is one throughout the world:
·
To seek as a body
full and visible communion, particularly eucharistic communion, in Christ, with
the Roman Catholic Church, in which it recognises the fullest subsistence of
Christ’s one Church; and
·
To achieve such
communion while maintaining those revered traditions of spirituality, liturgy,
discipline and theology that constitute the cherished and centuries-old
heritage of Anglican communities throughout the world.
The Bishops and Vicars-General who
assented to the petition and solemnly signed it on the altar then make four
solemn declarations.
The first concerns the Ministry of the Bishop of Rome. The late Pope
John Paul II wrote to the churches that are not in communion with the Bishop of
Rome, setting out in fresh language and in the light of the teaching of the
Second Vatican Council the ministry exercised by that Bishop, and seeking the
views of those churches on the way in which they could use his ministry of
unity and authority. Unity and authority are the two qualities that have most
eluded the churches of the Reformation. Anglican history is riddled with the
problems caused by lack of authority. Recent Anglican history has seen the
creation of one instrument of unity after another, but no one has discovered an
instrument by which authentic teaching can be given to God’s Anglican people.
The bishops in their petition described the limits on their exercise of
authentic apostolic authority that is created by their lack of communion
(especially Eucharistic communion) with catholic bishops throughout the world.
The second declaration concerns the nature of the Church. It is
fundamental to the life of the church that its bishops and the churches they
lead be in Eucharistic Communion with the See of Rome to which bishops of the
ancient church looked as the instrument of unity and Catholic authenticity. At
the same time, reflecting the Second Vatican Council, the bishops did not deny
the unity that already exists among Christian communities. This petition is
about more perfect unity – a unity so deep that the Eucharist can be shared.
The third declaration concerns the teaching of the Church as it has
been received from Jesus through the Apostles and their writings, confirmed by
the authentic tradition of the Church and proclaimed to the world at this time.
The fullest statement of contemporary Christian belief, the bishops believe, is
to be found in the Catechism of the
Catholic Church. It is deeply biblical and patristic, and addresses matters
that puzzle and confront Christians at the present moment. The bishops
understand that not everything in the Catechism is of equal authority, and also
understand that the faith must be proclaimed to every generation in language
that accurately portrays what the Church has received. Therefore they
acknowledge that the Catechism is the
most complete and authentic expression and application of the Catholic faith in
this moment of time, and that they signed a copy on the altar as attesting to the faith they aspire to teach
and hold. None of the bishops would claim to understand every aspect of the
faith with perfection, and none would claim to teach perfectly at all times.
But they do claim to aspire to teach and to hold the faith that is set forth in
the Catechism.
The fourth declaration is in effect the actual petition. The Bishops
state that we seek a communal and ecclesial way of being Anglican Catholics in
communion with the Holy See, at once treasuring the full expression of catholic
faith and treasuring our tradition within which we have come to this
moment. We seek the guidance of the Holy
See as to the fulfillment of these our desires and those of the churches in
which we have been called to serve.
The petition concludes with an act of trust
and faith in the power of the Holy Spirit.
The Response: the Apostolic
Constitution
You may recall that Cardinal Levada wrote to
me in July 2008 acknowledging that the situation within the Anglican Communion
in general had become markedly more complex since the submission of our
proposal. At the same time the Cardinal assured me of the serious attention
which the congregation for the doctrine of the Faith was giving to the prospect
of corporate unity raised in our petition.
An Apostolic Constitution is a
document of the highest authority, making a permanent addition to the body of
Canon Law. There is also a set of norms, which are in effect the regulations
for implementing the Constitution. There is also provision for norms unique to
each place where the Constitution is implemented.
It requires and deserves detailed
and careful study. As with any body of
law, the Constitution must be interpreted accurately and carefully.
Before discussing sections of this document, I
would draw your attention to the title. It speaks of Anglicans entering into full communion with the Catholic Church. There at the outset are the three critical
factors: Anglicans, full communion, and Catholic Church.
Section 1: the Church
Everything else flows from this section. Once
we are clear about the Church that Jesus founded and left to us “until the end
of time”, our duty becomes clear. False understandings of the nature of the
Church have encouraged the endless creation of new “churches”.
In the second paragraph of the
Constitution, there are three statements that set out the reason why the Pope
felt bound to respond positively to the petitions of the Anglicans.
In the light of this understanding of the
Church, the Constitution goes on to speak deeply of the way in which our unity
as Christians in the Church is manifested, particularly in the Breaking of
Bread. It then speaks, and this is important for Anglicans, of the governments
of the Church by the College of Bishops united with the head of the College,
the Bishop of Rome.
It then speaks of the many
elements of sanctification and of truth – note sanctification, not just truth -
that are beyond those visible confines
of the bishops in communion with the Bishop of Rome. And it states that these
gifts which belong to the Church of Christ are forces “impelling” towards
Catholic unity. In other words, where we
have cherished our traditions and been faithful to the Gospel, we have created
a force that drives the unity of the Church!
The gathering of all Christians
into a single Eucharistic communion is the imperative of all unity. This section concludes, once again, with a
reference to “Anglican faithful who desired to enter into full communion in a
corporate manner”.
Section 2: “Ordinariates”
The instrument by which the
Constitution creates communities of Anglicans in full communion with the
Catholic Church is the “Ordinariate”.
This is essentially a new structure created for this purpose, but with
some affinity with structures created for military personnel. The integrity of Anglican communities is
protected (among other things) by the fact that each of these structures is
equivalent to a diocese. Each of these structures is ruled by an
“ordinary”. Section 5 of the
Constitution spells out the powers of the Ordinary. The Ordinary exercises
these powers jointly with the local diocese in Bishop or Bishops. Not under or
over, but jointly. In section 6, these powers are amplified. It is the Ordinary
who accepts candidates for Holy Orders, including those who have exercised the
Ministry of Deacon, Priest or Bishop as Anglicans. It is the Ordinary who can
apply to ordain married men to the priesthood. It is the Ordinary who can
receive clergy from other Rites of the Catholic Church. It is the Ordinary and
the local Diocesan Bishop or Bishops who can create agreements for common
pastoral and charitable activities with other local catholic clergy. It is the
Ordinary who establishes seminary programs and houses of formation for the
particular needs of students to be formed in the Anglican Patrimony. It is the
Ordinary who can establish religious houses and other institutes of consecrated
life.
The Ordinariates will have
governing structures designed to replicate the structures of Anglican dioceses.
The governing council, comparable to a standing committee, has the right to
nominate the ordinary. This is a major
change to the practice in the Western Church, a safeguard to Anglican identity,
and an important part of Anglican ways.
The election of a bishop has an important bearing on the pastoral
relationship of a bishop and his people.
Finally it has provided that
admission to an Ordinariate is by application in writing, or by receiving the
sacraments of initiation (baptism and confirmation) within the Ordinariate.
The Standard of Belief
The wording of the Constitution
is very significant. The Statements of
Faith that have previously been used for people coming individually into
communion with the Catholic Church have been replaced in this case by
Catechism.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church is the
authoritative expression of the Catholic faith professed by members of the
Ordinariate.
This reflects the statement made by the bishops of the
Traditional Anglican Communion in their petition. It is a deeply pastoral solution to the question
of statements of faith. Many members of our community have been using the
Catechism as a reference and a sourcebook for years. Its language is
contemporary and its methodology, based on the Scriptures, the Fathers of the
Church, and the liturgical Creeds, is already familiar to Anglicans.
Many of the things being denied at this moment in the
world have been taken for granted for centuries. The nature of God, the
revelation of God in Christ, the nature of holy scripture, the authority of
Christian moral teaching about life and sexuality, the attack on the nature of
marriage, and the widespread abandonment of holiness of life (especially among
some of those consecrated to religious and priestly life), have all posed
enormous problems for those who seek to teach and understand the Christian
faith. The Catechism is a contemporary document addressing contemporary
problems of contemporary unbelief.
Liturgy
The
Constitution has a particularly beautiful passage when it speaks of the liturgy
that will be practiced within the Anglican Ordinariates.
Without excluding liturgical celebrations
according to the Roman Rite, the Ordinariate has the faculty to celebrate the
Holy Eucharist and the other Sacraments, the Liturgy of the Hours and other
liturgical celebrations according to the liturgical books proper to the
Anglican tradition, which have been approved by the Holy See, so as to maintain
the liturgical, spiritual and pastoral traditions of the Anglican Communion
within the Catholic Church, as a precious gift nourishing the faith of the
members of the Ordinariate and as a treasure to be shared.
In the norms, it is further explained that clergy will have the right to
celebrate not only the Anglican liturgy but also both current forms of the
Roman rite. A great deal of work has already been concluded in the updating and
expanding of Anglican service books. The calendar of saints for instance in the
Prayer Book of 1662 has no additions since then, in spite of the manifest
sanctity of so many Christians since that date. Much more work needs to be done
and will be a very high priority for those engaged in implementing the
Constitution.
Questions
Over the past several
months a number of questions have been raised. Some of these have been raised
in a spirit of controversy and denial of the actual provisions of the
Constitution and its norms. I regret this.
Each of our
communities, and each person within them, must address the very profound issues
that the Constitution raises. These issues include their relationship to Christ
in his Church, the needs of the church in our present world of intense
difficulty for Christians, the long-standing policy concerning unity of the
College of Bishops of the Traditional Anglican Communion, which has often been
publicised in the official organs of our Communion, the state of global
Anglicanism and the possibility of it returning to some resemblance of catholic
order which might allow a person professing catholic faith to maintain with a
clear conscience life within it. We also need to be aware of the very close way
in which the Constitution addresses our petition. As I stated recently, we
ought not to rush into a rash or hasty decision, but equally we ought not to
delay what is clearly the will of Christ for his Church.
Does the Constitution adequately protect the heritage of
Anglicans?
The structures proposed for Anglican Catholics
are entrenched in canon law, are governed by Anglican pastors and Ordinaries,
and protected by governing councils that have specific rights to give consent
to the Ordinary and in some cases to determine matters of policy and to
nominate the Ordinary. The clergy elect half the members of the governing
councils.
Matters of the
formation and admission of clergy, liturgical matters, the establishment and
regulation of parishes, and the maintenance and deepening of Anglican
spirituality, history, theology and pastoral practice are all within the
competence of the Ordinariate.
The establishment and
ongoing support of these structures has been left with the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith in Rome, where we have already found a warm and
understanding reception.
The Ordinaries will
meet as a college since they will visit Rome at five-year intervals as a
distinct group to report on their progress, to find mutual support, and to pray
at the tombs of the Apostles. I would hope that the Concordat of the
Traditional Anglican Communion could be adapted to provide a meaningful
structure that supports the Anglican Catholic Ordinaries.
What of those who are not yet ready to make this decision?
I have been
discussing this question with national groups of our bishops and with some of
those whom Catholic Bishops Conferences have appointed to liaise with us. There
is no time limit on the acceptance of this Constitution. It is designed to have
a lifetime of centuries. Some people are ready and anxious to move now; others
are seeking more time for prayer and reflection. Others are confused by the
surge of public argument about the Constitution. We are committed to the
pastoral care of all our people, those who will quickly move into full
communion and those who are not yet ready. We are already discussing the
structures for this. The Traditional Anglican Communion will not disappear, but
will endure for the same purpose that it was created to fulfil, and which is so
clearly described in the text of our petition.
What of the re-ordination of clergy?
One of the most
controversial aspects of the Anglican/Roman relations in the past century has
been that of Anglican orders. Rome ruled in 1896 that Anglican orders were null
and void.
The Anglican response
at the time was a beautifully written argument. More significantly, Anglicans
began to seek the involvement in their Episcopal and priestly ordinations of
bishops whose orders Rome recognized.
This was a tacit admission that there might be value in the Roman
argument, while arguing against the Roman argument. A very Anglican position!
In more recent times,
because of this involvement of others in Anglican ordinations, some Anglican
clergy entering into full communion with the Catholic Church have been
conditionally ordained rather than ordained absolutely. In very recent years,
this practice has been abandoned and absolute re-ordination has been adopted.
There are several
reasons for this. The first is the practical abandonment of apostolic practice
and belief in the Anglican Communion in the matter of the sacrament of Holy
Order. Not only the ordination of women
to all three sacred orders, but the redefining of the Anglican understanding of
itself as part of the “Church Catholic” that the ordination of women has
necessitated, has introduced more than grave doubt about the validity of any
Anglican Communion ordinations. It is now difficult to determine whether any particular
Anglican Bishop has any intention to do as the Church has always done, when he
(or she) specifically intends to do that which the Church has never done. The
almost complete elimination of what was once a dominant Anglo-Catholicism from
many provinces of the Anglican Communion has removed the clearest statement of
Catholic belief about Holy Orders from the Anglican consciousness.
Our own Traditional
Anglican Communion has been very careful to do the best that was
available. At that original meeting in
Rome, we were encouraged to use consecrating bishops from the Polish National
Catholic Church. We already had, and we
received an assurance that Rome recognised their orders. We have used Anglican Rites for ordination
that have been submitted by Anglican authorities to Rome in the early days of
ARCIC.
We have done our
best, in the context of an ecclesial body actively seeking catholic unity. Our conversations about the situation
regarding Orders that we have conferred are serious and continuing.
The following points
are important:
Finally, I commend this development to your
prayers and the deepest parts of your conscience. I believe with all my heart
that this is a work of God and an act of great generosity by Pope Benedict. The
Anglican tradition that we treasure will only survive, I believe, across the
generations yet to come if it discovers the protection of apostolic authority.
It is my cherished wish that each of us can stand at the altar with our fellow
Christians and receive the same Eucharistic Christ. That is the ultimate test
of unity. In the centuries since the church in the West became fractured there
has been no offer such as the one that is now before us. For Anglicans, Unity
has been a dream beyond reach. Now it is a dream that can be fulfilled. I
understood when I became a member of the Traditional Anglican Communion (in a
dark period of my life when it became impossible to practice my priesthood in a
diocese about to ordain women) that this was a Communion heading towards a
goal. It had separated from the Anglican Communion. Instead of drifting at the
whim of wave and wind, it had chosen to head towards the only realistic
destination, that from which Anglicans had separated centuries before. I was
grasped by that vision of those who founded this Communion. We are now in the
waves just beyond the harbour entrance. Pray God that we have the courage to
enter and make our homes there.
May God bless and
cherish each one of you.
Archbishop John
Hepworth
Primate