Our gratitude for Paul VI

 

Blessed Paul VI

Blessed Paul VI

For those of us who were nurtured in the Faith as Anglicans the beatification of Pope Paul VI is special. He seemed to have a particular regard and concern for the Anglican Communion. It was expressed by one short sentence in his homily for the canonisation of the Uganda Martyrs, part of which we read each year on their feast day, 3rd June.

Young witnesses to Christ: the Martyrs of Uganda

  Young witnesses to Christ: the Martyrs of Uganda

You will remember, perhaps, that among those young men killed during the years 1885-1887 were both Catholics and Anglicans. After speaking in his homily of the ancient Christian martyrs of Africa, to whom he was now adding St Charles Lwanga and his companions, Paul VI added:

Nor should we forget those others, of the Anglican Communion, who died for the sake of Christ.

We thank God today, as Pope Paul VI is beatified, for these words, so few but so rich in significance, which inspired  many of us to continue longing and praying for the restoration of communion.

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Blessed John Henry Newman 9th October 2014

Blessed John Henry Newman

Blessed John Henry Newman

In gratitude for our Patron, Blessed John Henry Newman, and asking his prayers this day

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Forming priests the Kelham way: true patrimony

The Great Chapel at Kelham

The Great Chapel at Kelham

With the Feast Of St Michael and all Angels on 29th September (St Michael, St Gabriel and St Raphael in the current Roman calendar) the thoughts of those of us who were trained as Anglicans for the priesthood at the House of the Sacred Mission, Kelham (near Newark-on-Trent in Nottinghamshire) turn to the place of our formation. True, there are an ever dwindling number of us, for the House closed in 1972, although some training continued for several years afterwards. There was a time when to say that you were trained at Kelham brought an immediate look of recognition – if not always of approval. But over forty years on there will be many Anglicans – and many more Catholics – who know nothing of its history and its unique approach.

In an earlier post I wrote something of the genius of Fr Herbert Kelly, the founder of the Society of the Sacred Mission, a religious community in the C of E dedicated to the training of clergy. Yet as we begin to re-assess the years since the Second Vatican Council, and to re-evaluate much that disappeared in the 60’s and 70’s, perhaps Kelham and its method might be part of this process. The Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus makes provision for distinct seminaries within the Ordinariates; perhaps there is something in the Kelham way which might be of both spiritual and practical value: a genuine part of the Anglican patrimony.

I knew nothing of Kelham when, in August 1968 I received notification of my disastrous ‘A’ level results: a C (in English), an E (in Religious Knowledge!) and another ‘O’ level pass (in Latin) I was already pursuing my vocation, but had expected to go to University. Against the advice of my teachers, I began to look at other possibilities, and spent a few days with the Kelham Fathers. The students were all on vacation, and the thirty or so brethren were rattling around in the vast buildings (which looked like St Pancras Station) which combined monastery and theological college. I fell for the place, hook, line and sinker, was offered a place and started there in September 1968.

Kelham Hall with the 1930's chapel on the left

Kelham Hall with the 1930’s chapel on the left

Fr Kelly had not really intended to start a religious community, but rather to train men for the new Korean Mission. Quite quickly he took up training priests for the Church in England, and formed a community of priests and lay-brothers as the best way of doing it. He himself was a bit of an academic failure, and he thought that the clergy of his generation spent too much of their time studying theology in the atmosphere of the universities. He viewed the move of the Bishops to restrict ordination to graduates as very foolish. But he was quite sure that men from non-academic, ‘working class’ backgrounds needed a formation which was demanding and rigorous: he aimed to teach his students to think, to do their theology, and not just to learn a series of ‘correct’ answers to be trotted out in sermons. So the life he created was all-embracing: Mass and the daily Office, lectures, housework, manual work – even sport – all were part of the day to day life of the College. Students lived alongside the Community, not in a separate building, and the Kelham way often saw senior tutors sweeping corridors and washing up under the direction of their students.

The day began at 7am with Morning Prayer, followed by twenty minutes of silent prayer and meditation, and the Mass. Breakfast was normally eaten in silence and was followed by housework. For this both students and brethren were divided into three groups: Domestici cleaned the common rooms and corridors; Cibarii were responsible three times a day for serving meals and washing up (the Community employed a cook in my time); Sacristani cleaned the chapel and looked after the sacristy. Each of these groups was overseen by a Magister (a student or the Novice Sacristan) , and the particular jobs were defined and described on a series of cards. Although this level of organisation sounds rigid to modern ears it had the great advantage of telling you when you had completed a job: it was in fact very releasing for a worrier like me to know that I hadn’t forgotten this or that! The rest of the morning allowed for two study periods or lectures and seminars.

The Kelham Rood by Sargent Jagger, now in St John the Divine, Kennington, S. London

The Kelham Rood by Sargent Jagger, now in St John the Divine, Kennington, S. London

After the Midday Office and a light lunch, the weekday afternoons provided three Houselists, heavier jobs including the maintenance of the grounds, and the shovelling of coal for the furnaces (for which Kelham was renowned); one afternoon of sport (football, tennis, cross country running) and one free afternoon. After tea Evensong was sung every day, followed by an evening study period. Dinner was the main meal of the day and was substantial. There was time for recreation, although television was never especially popular, with Compline at 9.45. The Greater Silence began after Compline and lasted until after breakfast. On Sundays there were no lectures, and the High Mass was fully sung and later. Evensong was solemn, and groups of visitors often joined us for tea and the service. This pattern was repeated week in, week out, with Saturday afternoon free (but only enough time to get as far as Newark). Each half-term there was an exeat (between Mass and Compline) and during one these I paid my first visit to the shrine at Walsingham.

Fr Gregory Wilkins SSM mows the lawn (in habit!)

Fr Gregory Wilkins SSM mows the lawn (in habit!)

What was it about the Kelham method or way that so gripped me and others? The ‘Catholicism’ of Kelham was sometimes dismissed by the rest of the Movement: certainly it was independent (it produced in all its years only one diocesan Bishop, I think) but it was not ‘liberal’. Radical Catholicism is a better description. And I need to remind people, as I pointed out in another post, that the whole of my class is now Roman Catholic. Certainly I came to believe while I was at Kelham that the future of the C of E (and of the Anglo-Catholic Movement) lay in a renewed Catholic theology and life. Theological thought and discussion was to be revelled in, not treated with suspicion, for it led to a deeper orthodoxy, not to a trivial liberalism. But it led to a Catholic orthodoxy which could be argued for in terms which modern men and women could engage with. There was growing criticism (which perhaps contributed to the closure of Kelham, though there were many factors, both internal and external) that the Kelham system took young men and shut them away: what they needed was time in the ‘real world’. How easily my generation bought into that way of thinking! But the ‘real world’ was increasingly a world trying to live without God. It was a world which rejected the accumulated wisdom of generations of civilisation – and generations of faith.  It was a world which misunderstood the whole notion of human freedom. Thus the life at Kelham had about it a richness – indeed a ‘reality’ – which made it attractive and fulfilling. In place of personal achievement, competition and self-fulfilment, it put at the centre  life lived according to the will of God. Ad gloriam Dei in eius voluntate (To the glory of God in his will) is the SSM motto. It is an idea in the working, and most of us spend our lives working out the truth of such living. And although the life was simple, at times stern, I found it a place of immense kindness, serious and yet full of the humour of the absurd – no-one who took themselves too seriously could have survived.

When, after my Catholic ordination, I embarked upon the two year course of studies prepared for us in the Ordinariate, I was rather nervous. Could I read conscientiously and write essays again? Half way through I am enjoying it enormously; I am back at Kelham again, thrilled by the refreshing waters of renewed orthodoxy. It is wonderful, in semi-retirement, to have the time todo it, and to enjoy it.

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The liturgical life and the music of Kelham I have hardly touched on. Perhaps another post might be of interest to some people; and a few thoughts about what we might learn for the formation of clergy today. 

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In the struggle against terrorism what hope is there for free-speech?

Theresa+May

Reports of  Theresa May’s speech at the Tory Party Conference are beginning to cause some concern. For while the British people are united behind efforts to counter violent terrorism, some commentators identity an important shift in the Home Secretary’s thinking. The words “terrorist” and “extremist” are often used in the same sentence, and certainly “terrorists” are “extremists” who use violence to bring about political change and to enforce their views on others. But some are taking this identification further insisting that non-violent extremism, though not illegal, is a ‘social ill that British society should be intolerant of.’ (from an internet blog)

But how do we define “extremism” and, if we are to be “intolerant” of views which are not our own, then what happens to the cherished British notion of “free speech”? I have the privilege of saying Mass for a group of (mainly) young people who provide a counselling service for women considering abortion. Since they are Catholics they hope to persuade women to embrace a solution which does not involve terminating the pregnancy. Their work includes prayer vigils outside abortion clinics. There are people in our society now who regard abortion as a women’s “right” and become angry and vociferous at any attempt to curtail this “right”. They have ample space in the media (listen for example to “Woman’s Hour”) to expound their views. To be anti-abortion is presented as “unacceptable”, hostile to women, and indeed a form of “violence”.

But this manipulation of language must be challenged. It is not “violent” to express views different from the mainstream (and indeed minority views may well become mainstream in 20 or 30 years time. If anyone had suggested thirty years ago that it would be possible for two men to “marry” his views would have been described as “extremist”, and “unacceptable” to the huge majority, including many gay men and women.)

Moreover, it is offensive to talk about religious extremism when our problem is violent Islamic terrorism. It is as silly as talking about “sport hooliganism” when we actually mean “football hooliganism”. We do not have to spend millions policing bowls matches, and as yet Centre Court at Wimbledon has not been invaded by rival fans wearing steel-capped plimsolls. Christians may well ask why it was so easy to talk about going to the help of Bosnian Muslims (and thank God we did) but much more of a problem talking about (let alone rescuing) the Christians of Syria.

Finally, the secular establishment in the UK needs to be much more open in acknowledging where our tradition of tolerance, free-speech, exchange of ideas, welcome and protection of minorities, actually comes from. It is not from secular atheism which has only Soviet Russia and Communist China to hold up as examples. Central to our way of life today is the conversion of this country to Christianity, a religion which has the image of the God-Man, broken, rejected and dying on the cross, at its heart. In the recovery and renewal of this faith lies our hope of freedom and of peace – and with it hearts captured by divine love and so able to reject extremist violence.

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What shall we sing at Mass?

I have been re-reading “Anglicans and Catholics in Communion”, a collection of articles and essays published by the Catholic League in August 2010. Looking back even over four years at the hopes and fears for the Ordinariates is fascinating, instructive, hopeful – and even at times a bit sad. Towards the end of the book there is an article by Fr Mark Woodruff entitled  “Hymns: the Sound of Communion”.  His balanced remarks about hymns and worship songs, and a quotation from Archbishop Rowan Williams are well worth thinking about.

‘ While there are those (worship songs) that evoke deep reverence and high praise (some Taize and Iona chants stand out; as do some characteristic pieces from the Mission Praise and the Pentecostal corners of the Church, like Dave Evans’ Be still for the Spirit of the Lord and several songs by Graham Kendrick), others have proved truly inadequate, uneqal either in quality or execution to the dance and light music they emulate.  Yet a good hymn, as Archbishop Rowan Williams remarked to the International Hymn Conference at York in 1997 … “sustains an imaginitive process”,  “taking time to allow images to unfold”. He distinguished this “measured movement” in exposition from a worship song or chorus, which is meant to be “rhapsodic, to create a mood, rather than a set of perceptions”. On the other hand, a chorus “need not develop anything”;

it really doesn’t matter how often you sing a chorus, whereas a congregation singing O Sacred Head sore wounded three times in succession would be a bizarre phenomenon. Because you are taken through a process (in singing a hymn) you can’t intelligently or intelligibly start it again  immediately. The chorus does not work to the same obligations. This is why I don’t want to enter into the fashionable game of being rude about choruses in order to make greater claims for classical hymnody. You’re not comparing like with like. I would only say that there is a problem when the chorus has almost completely displaced the hymn; and I think this is an increasingly grave problem in British Evangelical piety and is fast becoming a problem for popular Roman Catholic devotion. If there is nothing that systematically sets out to extend your imagination and to allow you to perceive, to think and to feel yourself in new ways in relation to the central narrative of faith, then your Christian self understanding is massively undermined. Mood cannot be everything.

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Sunday evenings

It is sometimes said that ‘Evensong’ or ‘Evensong and Benediction’ is the typical worship of the Ordinariate, at least in the UK. Certainly, it is more familiar and easier to find your way around than the Ordinariate Form of the Mass. But it may be just a generational thing – Evensong being familiar to me because of my age!

village church

village church

Fifty years ago you would have found Evensong (or Evening Prayer) as the Sunday evening worship is almost every Church of England parish. In many Evangelical and Central parishes there was a different congregation in the evening – people who went to Evensong as their Sunday worship. The growth of the Parish Communion movement between the wars had made its mark, and in Anglo-Catholic and Prayer Book Catholic parishes (forgive the distinctions – they seemed real and important in those days) the majority of people went to the Parish Eucharist at 9.30 (probably fasting, and so the parish might provide breakfast after, so that all could make their Communion). Before the Vatican Council the ‘Papalist’ Anglo-Catholics would still have maintained the 11 am High Mass, with people going to Communion at an earlier Mass.

choir at evensong

choir at evensong

So Sunday evening worship across the Church of England was remarkably similar. The Prayer Book service was used with little alteration. In the 16th century Archbishop Cranmer had conflated the evening Offices of Vespers and Compline to form ‘Evensong’ or ‘Evening Prayer’. After the penitential introduction the familiar words, ‘O Lord, open thou our lips’ were sung, and the psalms were sung. These were usually to the music known as ‘Anglican chant’, a form of harmonised chanting developed in the C of E from the 16th century onwards. Of course, fifty years ago most Anglican churches still had a robed choir, sitting in the chancel between the congregation and the altar. In many churches only men and boys sang, in imitation of the Cathedral choirs.

a robed choir

a robed choir

In ‘low’ churches women supplemented the boys to provide the soprano and alto line. The Old Testament reading followed the psalms, and was read from a lectern, often in the form of an eagle, opposite the pulpit; the readings were usually read by lay-people, perhaps the churchwardens. The Magnificat (either to chant or to a choir setting) followed, though in more ‘Catholic’ churches the Office Hymn would be inserted, sung to plainchant, or more likely to one of those 18th century tunes which the English Hymnal had found in French Service Books – tunes which are only known now to Anglicans over 50! The New Testament Reading and the Nunc Dimittis followed, and then the Creed, Our Father and three Collects. The last Collect which begins, ‘Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord,’ was one of those Cranmer compositions widely known and used across the English-speaking world: it had entered into the English tradition of prayer. The Office proper ended at this point, bu the evening service usually continued for another 20 – 30 minutes. In most churches a sermon would be preached, intercessions and a collection interspersed with hymns, and a final blessing given. In some churches, mainly in London and the urban areas of the midlands and north, the service of Benediction followed. It has to be remembered that even fifty years ago, most Anglican Bishops frowned on the use of the Blessed Sacrament for any other purpose than the Communion of the Sick. The Place of Reservation was normally a side chapel, not the High Altar. Nonetheless, in some churches the Host was placed in a monstrance at the end of Evensong, censed while the people sang O Salutaris and Tantum Ergo (but in English) and then the priest, donning the humeral veil, would bless the people with the Host. In his book ‘Paths of Spirituality’ John MacQuarrie describes (movingly and positively) his first expererience of ‘Evensong and Benediction’ while visiting a church in NW London (almost certainly St Andrew, Willesden Green) in the 1940’s. He remarks on the liturgical satisfaction of the Office (the word of God) being completed (by adoration of the Word made flesh), in the sacramental service of Benediction.

benediction at St Silas Kentish Town

benediction at St Silas Kentish Town

Patterns of Sunday evening worship changed very quickly after the 1960’s. In many churches evening worship was simply abandoned: the Evening Mass did not catch on among Anglicans, who preferred the ‘Parish Eucharist’ tradition on Sunday mornings. Evangelical Anglicans developed a quite different approach, once they felt able to abandon  liturgical worship, and to replace choirs and organs with singers and bands. Evening worship then became a place of outreach, as they believed that younger people would come more easily on Sunday evening.

evangelical worship - band and singers

evangelical worship – band and singers

What, then, of the Ordinariate as it seeks to retain the best of its Anglican heritage of liturgy and worship. It seems to me that we are unlikely to see any major revival of Sunday evening worship based around the Office as opposed to the Mass. For myself I would value being able to go to Vespers/Evensong on Sunday, but I would be looking for something simple and reflective, rather than long and elaborate – more along monastic lines, though the chant and polyphony of Westminster Cathedral is tempting.  And 5 pm  gets my vote rather than 6.30 – the traditional time. Evensong is more likely then to be a weekday devotion, as it is in my own Ordinariate church, being sung before Mass on Thursday evening. What about festivals? We have had attempts to marry together ‘Cathedral Evensong’ (Smith responses/Dyson in D/Anthem by Charles Wood – sort of thing!!) with Anglo-Catholic traditionalism, copes, incense, birettas – and Benediction. Magnificent, but expensive (with the collapse of voluntary choirs in the 60’s music now costs hundreds of pounds) and hardly possible for the congregation to participate in.

plainchant adapted to Common Worship from the website of Fr Richard Peers trinitylewisham.wordpress

plainchant adapted to Common Worship from the website of Fr Richard Peers trinitylewisham.wordpress

It is perfectly possible to recognise good – even great – music and not like it: I’m a bit like that with the Anglican choral revival of the 19th century.  Having spent my formative years with the Kelham Fathers my own taste is for plain-chant as the supreme music of the liturgy – and the music of the people if they are taught it and encouraged to sing. But that is, perhaps, another post.

And is the experience of the Evangelicals – using Sunday evening worship for oureach and fellowship, especially with students and young people – worth us investigating, and developing in a Catholic worship context? What do you think?

go-to-evensong-1

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Commercialisation + Alienation = Radicalisation

Forgive the jargon words of the title of this post. In the face of all the hand-wringing about the ‘radicalisation’ of Muslim young men, I want to reflect on what happened to the British youth scene from the 1960’s: its subversion over fifty years has brought us where we are today.

Factory Gates

Until the 1950’s there really was no such thing as a teenager. When you left school at 14 you went to work, and your aim was to grow up as quickly as possible. You wanted to fit in with your dad and his mates, to be an adult and not a child. From the end of the 50’s young people had employment and money – and time of their own as home and working conditions improved rapidly. Recently one of our 59 Motorcycle Club members wrote a reminiscence of the Rocker era of the ’60’s. It was full of meeting his mates at the Ace Cafe, hurtling down the A40, riding past the Dorchester Hotel where the trick was to see who could get his motorcycle close enough to the doorman to knock his top-hat off, and then on to Chelsea Bridge. But his story ended when he left his friends (who were going on to the Busy Bee) because he needed an early night. ‘It wasn’t that at all,’ he wrote, ‘but because my mum had said I had to be in by 11 pm.’ Yes, it’s easy to see this period through rose-tinted spectacles, but it was still pretty innocent – until, of course, the money-makers saw how it could be exploited.

The British Youth Scene

The British Youth Scene

Young people are often spoken of as ‘alienated’. What, or who, has alienated them? British teenagers were becoming distanced as the 60’s wore on, from sources of ‘authority’ – their parents, schools, the Church, the police … yet I believe that here was nothing particularly inevitable or even natural about this process. Most teenagers had (and many still have, let’s be honest) a loving, supportive relationship with their parents. But for the press and the media there was something exciting about the ‘alienated’ youngster, moody, bitter and angry. It’s perfectly portrayed in the film ‘Quadrophenia’ with its bleak and nihilistic ending in the suicide of the main character. This was ‘cutting edge’ – but it also made young people vulnerable to exploitation.

Quadrophenia

Quadrophenia

It was both sad and fascinating to watch the process being repeated, a generation later, among black youngsters of Caribbean heritage. Their parents were first generation immigrants, many of them bringing with them the values and behaviour of the pre-war Empire. In the face of their financial and housing struggles, and the racism of parts of the host community, that first generation had remained largely united around a shared culture, hard work, strong religious belief and moral code. It was not to last. The process of alienating the young took hold, and fashion and music were peddled as part of a new identity for a new generation. Inevitably it was the poor, those who had benefitted least from their education, who were most vulnerable. Unemployment and the benefit culture left the young with time on their hands, drugs addled their brains, ever more children grew up without their fathers – and without the support and strength of the extended family that a previous generation had known. And their parents and grandparents were utterly at a loss to know what to do.

420_grandma_child_imgcache_rev1285259918902

Middle class Britain was able, by and large, to ignore these problems. They did not live in Tottenham or Notting Hill; the shut-down of major industries and the subsequent demoralisation of working-class life was happening ‘up-north’; and any way, their children were at ‘good schools’ and heading for ‘good jobs’, and looking forward to living in a ‘good area’. And there were many among the middle classes, who now formed the opinionated establishment, who were only too glad to throw off the authority of Church, moral codes, and the stuffy culture of the past. It was as if ‘de-regulation’, so popular in the financial world, was now being applied to British life itself. But some people began to wonder if it they would have to ‘reap the whirlwind’ somewhere in the future.

polls_50_cent_gun_rap_music_4014_931018_answer_1_xlarge

As we look back at these years, and at the series of financial ‘crashes’ and the boom and bust of the property market – whether we have yet learnt anything is debatable. As house price inflation in London is now reported to be running at 20%, it would seem not. But the signs of a moral/spiritual/cultural crash are all around us, and the public killing of the American journalist by – in all likelihood a young Briton – is the most deadly sign to date.

Multicultural Britain photo by Jamie

Multicultural Britain
photo by Jamie

The liberal establishment had reckoned that the next generation of immigrants, from the Asian sub-continent would integrate in the same way as those from the Caribbean. In other words, they were confident that the first generation would maintain their beliefs, religion and life-style; but their children and grandchildren would be swept into the materialist culture and hedonistic life-style of the host community. The promotion of the ‘multi-cultural/multifaith’ society had been useful for putting down Christianity, and especially for reminding the Church of England that it now only occupied a place on the margins. But beneath this façade the liberal culture viewed Islam with aversion. Whereas it thought it understood Christianity (having been given the watered-down, public school, version in the 50’s, it had laughed at the lampooning of the Church in the 60’s) it feared Islam. Yet it remained confident that secular culture working on the young would do its job.

The rise of ‘fundamentalism’ has affected Christianity as well as Islam: it has a number of common factors. It represents a revulsion against the materialism and decadence of western society. It is authoritarian, with high regard for the written scriptures, and, in the case of Catholics, the Magisterium of the Church. It is evangelistic, seeking to convert from – and not to accommodate with – the surrounding society. There is evidence that some young people find this a credible and exciting alternative to what has been peddled as ‘youth culture’ for half a century in the west.

St Francis Xavier

St Francis Xavier

I have been struck recently by the young age of so many of the saints of the Catholic Renewal of the 16th and 17th centuries (sometimes called the Counter-Reformation). In the Oxford Movement in the 19th century it was young men and women who challenged establishment thinking, embraced a deeply counter-cultural way of life, and rediscovered the roots of their faith – true ‘radicals’ they were.

In turning away from the values of their contemporaries young Muslims, and young Christians, are looking for a renewed and challenging faith by which to live. The ‘jihadis’ have entered into a way of life which is cruel and perverted. The sight of heavily armed youngsters, with their sinister masks and their wicked boasting about their exploits, is chilling.

crucifixion-8

Young Catholics have two great advantages as they work to discover a Faith which is radical but not fundamentalist. First, is the knowledge of God who takes to himself the life of a humble carpenter, and offers this life on the Cross while praying for his enemies. Second, is the living authority of the Church presenting the Faith once delivered, new and fresh for each changing generation, under the power of God the Holy Spirit. The first calls every Christian to a life of humble service, even of enemies; the second enables Christians to know what is right belief – and what is a blasphemous perversion of it.

500 young Catholics at Lourdes in France

500 young Catholics at Lourdes in France

 

 

 

 

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A hymn for the Ordinariate

 

Among a number of gifts at the time of my ordination last year was a subscription to ‘Magnificat’. Each month the booklet arrives, containing for each day a form of prayer for morning and evening, the Mass readings and prayers, and a meditation drawn from a great variety of resources. I heartily recommend ‘Magnificat’ and shall be renewing my subscription later this year.

The following hymn was set for Evening Prayers for yesterday, Sunday 24th August. It struck me that it would be very appropriate as a Hymn for the Ordinariate. The name of the author is not given.

O Love who drew from Jesus side,
One Body freed from Adam’s shame,
One Church sent forth to serve and guide,
One faith confirmed by gifts of flame:
When empty words our hopes assail,
Your kingdom come, your truth prevail.

Round Peter’s chair may all unite;
From blinded eyes the veil withdraw;
The minds of rulers set aright
Who bind your Church beneath their law:
Where faith grows dim and hearts are frail,
Your kingdom come, your truth prevail.

While Christians pray for unity,
Pour forth the light your saints have seen;
Dispel the dark of enmity;
Make known to all what love can mean:
Where brooding minds old wounds bewail,
Your kingdom come, your truth prevail.

Spoiled children, we, so blest with sight,
Redeemed by love surpassing all;
Lest we who glory in your light
Share not our gift, heed not your call:
In Christian hearts that faint and fail,
Your kingdom come, your truth prevail.

The suggested tune is ‘Melita’ (Eternal Father, strong to save) which is rousing and singable.

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The ‘English Use’ – is it a liturgical cul-de-sac?

Southwark Anglican Cathedral - the reredos

Personal customs and habits in the priest celebrating the Mass were very common among Anglo-Catholics. Indeed, some churches prided themselves on ‘the way we do it at St X’s’ . While it was hardly a problem for the vicar, in a parish where he was well-known, it could be curious and difficult for a visitor, especially if he had to be sent lengthy instructions in order to learn the parish foibles. I recall assisting as the ‘deacon’ at a High Mass in one of the big Anglo-Catholic shrines. After the Mass a server thought to compliment me: ‘That was almost perfect, Father.’ Slightly put out, I replied, ‘I have been ordained for over twenty-five years; I should hope I know what I’m doing.’ To which came the slightly patronising reply, ‘But you have never taken part in the High Mass at St X’s, have you?’.

 

Liturgical chaos is no aid to worship; and the modern Mass can be just as clericalist as the old Mass was supposed to be. A priest who ‘makes it up as he goes along’, with lots of chatty asides and witticisms whenever there is a hiatus, not only dominates, but also takes the liturgy away from the people. This is because they laity have a right to know how the worship is to be ordered: so that they can take their part in it. This happens both through individual ministers who read, assist at communion, and serve the altar, as well as the congregation as a whole, who participate fully and intelligently, as the Mass proceeds.

The English tradition at Exeter Cathedral

The English tradition at Exeter Cathedral

By the end of the nineteenth century there was considerable liturgical chaos in the Church of England! In order to rectify this the Revd Percy Dearmer, vicar of St Mary’s, Primrose Hill in north London, wrote the Parson’s Handbook. Its directions for the ordering of the church building, and the celebration of the Eucharist and the Divine Office had a profound effect. They produced what many of us would have, until recently, recognised as ‘Cathedral worship’: dignified, restrained, beautiful, combining art, music, and liturgical principle to elevate worship as an offering to God, and an edifying and moving event for those who participate.

 

The Revd Dr Percy Dearmer

The Revd Dr Percy Dearmer

Dearmer was single-minded, opinionated, and sometimes known to have adjusted historical evidence to fit his own tastes. He was however committed to the vernacular worship of the Book of Common Prayer, and to its (sometimes misguided and misinformed) attempts to reform and restore the liturgy. The ceremonial he revived and devised was designed to serve the Prayer Book forms. In all these areas the other school, the ‘Roman’ or ‘Western Use’ found difficulties. They were attempting to marry together a Latin liturgy with one in English; they were attempting (with various degrees of elaboration) to fit the ceremonial of a liturgy weighed down by centuries of accretions, to one which had been purged (some would say stripped) of all but the essentials; finally, they were not averse to subjugating the rite to the ceremonial.

It has been remarked elsewhere that most English Anglo-Catholics were quick to adopt the reformed ceremonial of the 1970 missal (and after 1994 they adopted the rite, too). They recognised that many of the concerns from the Reformation period – lay participation, frequent communion, audibility and visibility, simplicity and clarity – had been recognised by the Council and put into effect – (many thought much more effectively than the Anglican Prayer Book) in the new Missal.

The Nave Altar in Anglican tradition

The Nave Altar in Anglican tradition

It is also true to say that most English Anglicans were content with a modest, rather than a radical, change in worship. The High Altar retained, and a new altar in front of the screen was often as far as it went. Anglicans were used to singing, and continued with their chant, hymns and anthems, much as before: they added the best of post-conciliar music and song, rather than  becoming addicted to the worst of it. The tradition of beauty as servant of the liturgy held them back from the excesses of Brutalism which seemed to have taken hold of some parts of the Catholic Church.

Sir John Ninian Comper

Sir John Ninian Comper

In this we see the influence of the Anglo-Catholic  architect, Sir John Ninian Comper, who made a significant contribution to this ‘English’ tradition, though he was a very different character from Percy Dearmer. He is dismissed by some as ‘pretty’ and rather too fond of gold leaf. For others his significance is seen in  exquisite mediaevalist re-creations, as for example at Cantley, Clarence Gate (London) and Wimborne St Giles. But I believe that his later work as he moved away from mediaeval precedents has  more significance for us. Here we see a man directing his architecture to serve the liturgy. His little church at Cosham, near Portsmouth, is a remarkable anticipation of the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council. It is also very beautiful. It stands in contrast it with, say, Coventry Anglican Cathedral, where the plan shows no evidence of liturgical thinking, and the 1960’s art-works are at  best period pieces, and at worst, extremely ugly. (It is not entirely clear, from the picture below, that the altar stands almost at the centre of the church, while the sanctuary is defined only by a single step and low rails on four sides. ‘Eastward’ and ‘Westward’ position are both feasible as the people are circumstantes as in the earliest rites.

The Altar of St Philip's Cosham

The Altar of St Philip’s Cosham

As the Ordinariate starts, perhaps rather tentatively, to adopt and celebrate its own liturgy, it needs to be guided by liturgical principle and a sound knowledge of art and architecture. It seems  unlikely that we shall be in a position to build churches, and much more likely that we be setting up in a school hall, or trying to make something of a fan-shaped brick-and-concrete mass-centre circa 1963.  The Anglo-Catholic temptation is to hide the ugliness with clutter, rather like Auntie Sheila in her dreary council flat. (For china animals, dralon pouffes, and crotcheted doilies – read numerous brass candlesticks, shiny acetate vestments and lace!)

The clutter of a 19th century Catholic church

The clutter of a 19th century Catholic church

Both Dearmer and Comper reacted against industrialisation. They believed that there was a moral dimension to beauty. Dearmer saw that the ugly (which was so often fussy and pretentious) was usually produced by cheap labour, working in appalling conditions for poverty wages.

Where these is not much money to spend, then simplicity rules. We have been persuaded that there is a ‘correct’ and ‘ecclesiastical’ fabric for making of vestments. This is a ruse of the church furnishers to get us to patronise their establishments. I have in my possession a rose silk Spanish chasuble, made in the 18th century. The fabric is powdered with what look like daisies: there is not a cross or Chi-Rho in sight! When Comper started producing his own fabrics and interpreting the colours he found on his travels, the results shocked the ecclesiastical establishment. Here was an almost pine-green in place of the   rotting-grass-clippings green favoured by the late Victorian designers. Here was the deep rose-red (I have read that he did not like it called ‘Comper pink’) which contrasts with and enlivens his white interiors. Proportion, honest materials and great care over ornamentation –  all combine to produce a ‘noble simplicity’.  Alongside my Spanish chasuble I have a set of six candlesticks – turned wood, stained dark, well proportioned – bought at IKEA. They complemented perfectly the massive lines of the grey slate altar in my last parish.

Dearmer and his ‘English Use’ may be of value to us, before we uncritically adopt the styles and customs of what Peter Anson called the ‘Back to Baroque Movement’.  There is something rather effete now, rather faded and unappetising, about this 20th century attempt to take the Anglo-Catholic Movement back to 18th century France and Belgium. I read recently on an American blog that the English Ordinariate favours the baroque. Let me assure the blogger that this is not so! Caring about the liturgy is not the same as an obsessive fussiness about its details. One the main differences between the Tridentine Missal and the post-Vatican II rites is precisely this: that the former prescribes in minute detail what is to be done, while the latter expects the priest and ministers to have a deep understanding of the liturgy, and a grasp of beauty and order, which are served by its rubrics and guidance. That the Ordinary Form of Mass is sometimes celebrated so badly, so shabbily, just shows that the implementation of the reforms of the Council have a long way to go.

liturgical-abuse

And I suppose the point of this post is that regard for the liturgical patrimony of the English Use might well help us continue the reforms, and come to feel that we are in heaven when we go to Sunday Mass.

 

 

 

 

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When words are used to hide the truth 5

The western world is very nervous about what it calls ‘judgemental attitudes’. In order to make sure that moral decisions are not ‘pre-judged’ it prefers morally ‘neutral’ words. One of the most obvious examples is the way in which ‘abortion’ came to be called ‘termination’. ‘To abort a foetus’ bears a weight of disapproval by society at large, as well as referring very directly to what is actually happening in the process!

It’s interesting then, to observe the opposite happening – i.e. a change from a morally neutral term to one of ‘condemnation by description’. I refer to the shift from the use of the expression ‘female circumcision’ to ‘female genital mutilation’. The word circumcision has been used to describe an operation performed for religious (Jews and Muslims) or medical (mainly in the USA) reasons, and until recently understood by the public to refer to men! But in order to change public attitudes – quickly and effectively – campaigners against the use of circumcision on women have persuaded the media to use the expression ‘female genital mutilation’. ‘Mutilation’ is a judgement word: no-one, surely, could agree that it is right to ‘mutilate’ a woman?

But is it right to ‘abort a foetus’?

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