Welsh Bishop for Canterbury?

Now where have we heard that speculation?  There was a Welsh Bishop at the end of Queen Elizabeth's reign who had great hopes of such a move.  Alas it came to nothing — for being chosen to preach before the Queen during Lent, he was unwise enough to speak of "advanced years."  The Queen did not like to be reminded of her age, and the black mark against him outlasted Elizabeth.  When Canterbury became vacant in 1604 on the death of John Whitgift the lot fell on Bancroft, and poor Dr Rudd stayed on at St David's until his death in 1615.

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House and Courtyard Garden

In fact "poor" is not the right epithet for Anthony Rudd.  He was very wealthy indeed, and the house and garden he created witness to his wealth.  There is a great enthusiasm in Britain for recreating lost gardens.  Heligan in Cornwall was exhumed from the undergrowth a few years back, and the latest to receive a makeover is in Wales.  Despite dismal weather, we visited Aberglasney, and it was worth the effort.  The house (remodelled twice since Bishop Rudd's time, and lately rescued from a ruinous state) is on a very grand scale, but it is the gardens which are most worth seeing.

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The greatest surprise of all is a newly created indoor garden.  There had been a courtyard behind the house, with kitchens and out-buildings.  These had all fallen into decay, and instead of rebuilding them someone had the brilliant notion of making another garden from them.  A glass roof covers the entire area at the back of the house, broken walls have been made safe and whitewashed, and a magical space has been created, full of tropical and sub-tropical plants.  After the downpour which we braved on the way from Cardiff, this came as a surprise and a relief.
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What a parallel with the state of the church in England and Wales.  Once so grand and powerful, now fallen on hard times and in many places ruinous.  Maybe it takes the vision of someone looking at us from outside to see the possibilities and recreate our ruins into something productive and beautiful.  It will never be the same as once it was; but if the Ordinariate can build on the best of the past, and capture people's enthusiasm and imagination, it may be that there will again be a church in these lands which will be acclaimed as stupor mundi, something worth travelling miles to see.

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Jungle in the ruins


Related posts:

  1. Bishop Andrew Burnham Launches His New Book
  2. A Visit to Canterbury
  3. A Magical Island
  4. York and Canterbury to Intervene
  5. The Bishop of Ebbfleet's August Pastoral Letter
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About Fr. Edwin Barnes

Bishop Barnes read theology for three years at Oxford before finishing his studies at Cuddesdon College (at the time a theological college with a rather monastic character). He subsequently served two urban curacies in Portsmouth and Woking. During his first curacy, and after the statutory three years of celibacy, he married his wife Jane (with whom he has two children, Nicola and Matthew). In 1967, Bishop Barnes received his first incumbency as Rector of Farncombe in the Diocese of Guildford. After eleven years, the family moved to Hessle, in the Diocese of York, for another nine years as vicar. In 1987, he became Principal of St Stephen’s House, Oxford. In 1995, he was asked by then Archbishop of Canterbury, George Carey, to become the second PEV for the Province. He was based in St. Alban’s and charged with ministering to faithful Anglo-Catholics spread over the length of Southern England, from the Humber Estuary to the Channel Islands. After six years of service as a PEV, Bishop Barnes retired to Lymington on the south coast where he holds the Bishop of Winchester’s license as an honorary assistant bishop. On the retirement of the late and much lamented Bishop Eric Kemp, he was honored to be asked to succeed him as President of the Church Union. Both these appointments he resigned on becoming a Catholic in 2010. Fr. Barnes is now a priest of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, caring for an Ordinariate Group in Southbourne, Bournemouth.

4 thoughts on “Welsh Bishop for Canterbury?

  1. Thank you Excellency for your wonderful post. I just finished my first masters level history course on English history. I know… I know… I should have taken it far sooner… And one thing I find fascinating is that the first British Prime Minister (though he didn't hold that title officially), Sir Robert Walpole, helped end the bitter wars of religion that had wracked Britain since the beheading of Charles I by turning the gentry into gardeners. Maybe there is a lesson there for us all. If we could get all those divisive people in the Catholic Church, the Anglican Communion, TAC, Forward In Faith etc… to sit down and grow something together maybe we could actually make some ecumenical progress…

    Oh! And Excellency, I don't know if it's any comfort, but while my father's half of the family is of New England Puritan stock, my mother's family only moved to America after my grandfather was wounded at Normandy and was taken care of my an American nurse (my grandmother). Though I've never been to England, I still think of it as my spiritual and ancestral home. I love the Church of England, however wounded it may be. If there is one thing English history has taught us, it's that we should never think that something is beyond saving. Right when things look the blackest for the Church, God somehow finds away to pull her back to the light. God bless you Excellency!

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