News from Edmonton

Just got word that the Edmonton group will be received on Sunday, July 29th, this weekend.

Here is the email that was forwarded me from former Anglican Catholic Church of Canada priest David Skelton.

 'I am truly delighted to be able to tell you that we now have a firm date for our reception. This is July 29th at 10. 00 a.m. at the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Edmonton. We will be received by our new Auxiliary Bishop, Geoffrey Bittman. Archbishop Smith was very sorry not to be able to officiate himself, but like us, he was anxious to proceed as quickly as possible. Please keep our little ‘Group of Seven’ in your prayers."

Finally!  I hope someone will take lots of photographs and send us a report!

I stayed with then Fr. David Skelton and his lovely wife Mary when I spoke at a writers' conference in Edmonton back in 2005 or thereabouts.  They have a lovely chapel in their home where we prayed Mattins and Evensong together while I was there.

There are others who are already Catholic who will be part of this Ordinariate-bound group.

Please keep them in your prayers!

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Australian Synod Endorses Request for Ordinariate

Here's the news we have been waiting and hoping for: the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia has endorsed their bishops' request for an Ordinariate.

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Australian Synod votes on Anglicanorum Coetibus.

The Synod of the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia (one of two Traditional Anglican Communion Provinces in Australia – the other being the Church of Torres Strait) met at Saint Stephen’s College, Coomera, for four days from 27th – 30th July.

The Synod worked through a series of seminars on “Power and Trust in the Church”, “Child-safe environment: reporting child abuse and neglect” and “Occupational Health and Safety” in response to changing legislation in Australia.  A representative from the Synod insurers, the Catholic Church Insurances Ltd, was present for two of the sessions of Synod.

These seminars were conducted by Lay Canon Cheryl Woodman, who has just completed four years of Masters–level study in order to be qualified to head the Professional Standards work of the Australian TAC.  She is also a Chaplain (working mainly with sex offenders) at South Australia’s principal prison.

Also on the agenda were resolutions designed to move the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia further along the path of accepting and implementing the Apostolic Constitution.  Many Synod members were clearly unsure at the outset about the need and value of Professional Standards, but were scarcely into the first seminar when the importance became obvious.  This work on three mornings of Synod laid the groundwork for a church intending to grow.  And surrounded by the two thousand students of the first College founded by the TAC in Australia, that message was hard to ignore.

Archbishop Hepworth celebrated the opening Mass of the Holy Spirit, preaching the same sermon as he had the previous week at the Canadian National Synod.

His charge set out the global problems facing the Church, and reflected on the unique moment in Anglican history in which the Synod was meeting.

Two afternoons were spent studying the Apostolic Constitution and debating the resolutions arising from it.  Every member of Synod took part in the discussion.

At the end of a debate that went into the evening to allow everyone the opportunity to speak, Synod passed six resolutions.  One was a technical endorsement of the suggestion for an Interim Governing Council in the letter of ACCA Bishops to Cardinal Levada responding to his invitation to start the Ordinariate process.  Another was a carefully worded technical resolution designed to protect the assets of the ACCA in the process of founding the Australian Ordinariate.

The four remaining resolutions passed with six dissenting votes in a Synod of 56 voting members:

That this National Synod endorses the action of its Archbishop and Bishops in requesting the establishment of an Anglican Ordinariate in Australia under the terms of the Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus, and that the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia, in the words of the Apostolic Constitution, desires to enter into the full communion of the Catholic Church in a corporate manner*, thereby achieving the status of an Anglican Ordinariate.

That this National Synod welcomes with joy the partnership of Forward in Faith Australia and all other Anglican clergy and people who desire to enter into the full communion of the Catholic Church in a corporate manner* through the Anglican Ordinariate in Australia.

That this National Synod strongly endorses the application of the Bishop of the Torres Strait to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for an Ordinariate of the Torres Strait.

That this National Synod requests the Primate to communicate to the Holy Father its gratitude for his Apostolic Constitution, ands warmly thanks him for his continued protection of faithful Anglicans and their tradition, and assures him of our prayers at every celebration of the Eucharist for his ministry of “caring for all the churches”.

There was an overwhelming sense of joy and relief among members after the vote.  Years of longing and praying for unity had borne fruit.

Bishop Entwistle celebrated a Votive Mass for Unity on the Wednesday of Synod, and gave a homily on faith and belief that was quoted by many of those who spoke in the debate.

Bishop Robarts celebrated the Synod Requiem for deceased members and benefactors of the ACCA.  He preached a moving homily on holiness and stillness in our quest for God.  Three sermons, three bishops, a feast of biblical preaching.

This was a tough Synod.  The issues were emotionally and spiritually demanding.  There were more than a few tears.  Even the readings at Morning Prayer conspired to move us.

The Anglican Catholic Church in Australia is a daughter church of the Anglican Catholic Church in Canada.  Its first bishop was consecrated in Ottawa.  Archbishop Hepworth observed how appropriate it was that the two National Synods should have met within a week of each other, and together accept the offer of Pope Benedict to enter into the full communion of the Catholic Church in a corporate manner*.

* Anglicanorum Coetibus, Introduction, Paragraph 5

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Archbishop Hepworth's Charge to the Australian Synod

The Charge of a bishop at the Synod of his diocese is rather like the speech of the sovereign at the opening of Parliament.   It reflects the context of the times, the difficulties facing the church, the challenges that the Synod must address, and the obstacles that must be overcome.

The Bishop is more than a local church leader. Each bishop shares the responsibility with every other bishop in the world for the transmitting of the faith from the Apostles to those as yet unborn – until the end of time.  That great founding father of the Australian Constitution, Alfred Deakin, stated in an Adelaide speech in the 1890’s that “The Constitution we seek to prepare … is for the ages yet unborn and unknown”.  So it is with the teaching role of a bishop.  When bishops join with one another as a global village in transmitting the faith in communion with the one who succeeds Peter, they are teaching the truth which comes from God.  This is so because Peter was charged by Jesus Christ with the gift of the keys of the kingdom of heaven, to confirm his brothers in the faith, and to have the leadership of His whole flock.  Christ continues to teach the Church, which is His body, through the successor of Peter and his fellow bishops, until the end of time

It is in performing this awesome task that a bishop stands before his priests, deacons and people, when they gather to represent the church in Sacred Synod, and gives his Charge under the twin burden of Apostles and bishops past, and bishops yet to come.

If he is in communion with Peter and his successors then he teaches under that Divine protection that was promised until the end of time.  If that communion is broken, then that divine protection is less tangible, and the bishop’s teaching is less certain.

That was at the heart of the TAC bishops’ petition to the Holy See.  We said (indeed, we signed on the Altar in the midst of the Holy Sacrifice):

We understand that, as bishops separated from communion with the Bishop of Rome, we are among those for whom Jesus prayed before his death “that they may be completely one”, and that we teach and define matters of faith and morals in a way that is, while still under the influence of Divine Grace, of necessity more tenuously connected to the teaching voice of catholic bishops throughout the world.

Continue reading

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Church of the Torres Strait to Request Personal Ordinariate

DSC00235 1024x768 Church of the Torres Strait to Request Personal Ordinariate

Bishop Nona and the Primate enter the church.

Bishop Tolowa Nona and Archbishop John Hepworth, Primate of the Traditional Anglican Communion, enter the church for Solemn Mass on Sunday, May 2, 2010, during the midst of a four-day Conference and Synod on Badu Island in the Torres Strait.  Bishop Nona, with the unanimous support of his clergy and people, is now petitioning the Holy See for the erection of a personal ordinariate under the provisions of the Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus.  The Church of the Torres Strait, a distinct province of the TAC, is applying to Rome separately from the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia.

DSC00243 1024x768 Church of the Torres Strait to Request Personal Ordinariate

Bishops and some of the clergy, Including two young subdeacons studying for the Priesthood.

604px TorresStraitIslandsMap Church of the Torres Strait to Request Personal Ordinariate

Map of the Torres Strait Islands.

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Text of ACCA Petition for an Australian Personal Ordinariate

In response to the request of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (in the Holy See's reply to the October 2007 Petition) that Anglican groups intending to proceed under the terms of the Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus indicate this desire in writing to that dicastery, the Australian province of the Traditional Anglican Communion, the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia, has petitioned the Holy See for the erection of a personal ordinariate for that country.

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Traditional Anglican Communion
Synod of the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia (Q) Inc
ABN 38 446 364 827
Archbishop John Hepworth

His Eminence William Cardinal Levada
Congregazione per la Dottrina Della Fede
Palazzo del S. Uffizio
00120 Vatican City

Your Eminence,

Prot. N. 217/08-30924

The bishops of the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia  (a province of the Traditional Anglican Communion) express their profound gratitude to you for your positive response of December 16th 2009 to our Letter to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith of October 5th 2007 in which we expressed our desire to “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 have read and studied with care the Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus with the Complementary Norms and the accompanying Commentary, as well as the initial statement from your Dicastery at the time of your press conference with Archbishop DiNoia.

And now, in response to your invitation to contact your Dicastery to begin the process you outline, we respectfully ask

  • that the Apostolic Constitution be implemented in Australia;
  • that we may establish an interim Governing Council consisting of the two suffragan bishops (who serve both the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia and Forward in Faith Australia), the Chancellor and Vicar General of the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia (both priests), a priest from the Council of Forward in Faith Australia, and a priest from among the former Anglican clergy who are now Catholic priests in Australia and who have indicated a desire to be incardinated into the Australian Ordinariate once it is formed.
  • and that this interim Council be given the task and authority to propose to His Holiness a terna for appointment of the initial Ordinary.

We are working with Bishop Peter Elliott, who has been nominated by the Australian Conference of Catholic Bishops to liaise with us in the formation of the Ordinariate.

We also note that the Church of Torres Strait, a separate province of the Traditional Anglican Communion for Islanders resident in the Torres Strait and throughout Australia, is making a separate response through its bishop, Tolowa Nona.

We attach the resolution of the Council of Forward in Faith Australia also seeking the implementation of the Apostolic Constitution at this time.  The Traditional Anglican Communion in this country and Forward in Faith have been working very closely for many years.

We are also in conversation with Anglican parishes and individuals (both clergy and laity) who have indicated a desire to explore more deeply the pathway to unity with the Catholic Church opened by the Constitution.

In the last week of July, a National Synod will be held in Queensland to bring together all those who have indicated a firm desire to be part of the proposed Ordinariate.  The Synod has the power to enact legal and canonical legislation to give practical effect to a positive decision for Unity.

With continued expressions of appreciation for the generosity of the Holy Father in gathering the Anglicans into the fullness of Eucharistic communion,

Yours sincerely in Christ,

+John Hepworth, Diocesan Bishop

+David Robarts, Bishop of the Southern Region; Chairman of Forward in Faith Australia

+Harry Entwistle, Bishop of the Western Region; Council of Forward in Faith Australia

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