English Wisdom: Triumvirate

Here's another contribution from former Our Lady of Walsingham parishioner, Vincent Uher.  This piece, for me at least, begs the question of when and how are we to see Governing Councils in the Ordinariates come to be.  Under Anglicanorum cœtibus, the Governing Council of a Personal Ordinariate has considerable sway, its approval necessary for a number of key pastoral decisions, such as erecting a new parish or advancing postulants to Orders.  These are unusual limits placed on the power of a Catholic Ordinary (and my only guess is that this was intended to be a nod to Anglican synodal government), but they are clearly mandated in the primary legislation and norms.  Presently, the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter is "governed" by the Ordinary, his assistant, Fr. Scott Hurd, and (truth be told) several "interested" Catholic bishops.

In England, at least, there has already been established some form of collegiality and aid to the Ordinary, Msgr. Newton.  It is this temporary arrangement which Mr. Uher addresses his latest piece and which we propose for our reflection.

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English Wisdom: Triumvirate

I think my family and friends in Britain have been blest greatly with a triumvirate at the head of your Ordinariate in Britain. While one must necessarily be appointed to make the final decisions, having a council of three at the top is a far better situation than having one leader in isolation. Even if in Britain this is more ad hoc than a canonical structure, I would hope this sort of triumvirate model would become the norm for the Ordinariates. Msgr. Newton has shown great, great wisdom through it.

Of course, it would be different in North America and in Australia. My family and friends in Australia might imagine the Ordinary being named and then two others raised up (as Monsignors of the Protonotary Apostolic or something like it) who would perhaps be former bishops in TAC, the Australian Anglican Church or former priests of the same. It would be incredibly wise to create from the marvellous incoming Church in Torres Strait such a Monsignor to serve in this triumvirate.

In North America it would make sense to create such a triumvirate under Msgr. Steenson as well. The territory is vast, and the Ordinariate is not the only expression of the Anglican Patrimony in the Catholic Church in North America. By way of example, a former Anglican Catholic bishop in Canada would make an excellent choice as another Monsignor with oversight for the Canadian deanery. And it would be prudent and very wise to make the senior pastor of the Pastoral Provision parishes also a Monsignor with similar oversight responsibilities among those in the Pastoral Provision but serving in concert with his brother in Canada and together with Msgr Steenson's leadership of the Ordinariate.

I offer these thoughts to my family and friends who are far more influential than I. No one seems much interested in what a lay hermit in Texas thinks of these things. So I entrust the ideas to you if they are worthy. The one thing that has become clear to me is that a single Ordinary with a Vicar General and an office assitant is an irreduceable minimum that should have been given more provisions for the journey by Rome. It is too small an organisational model to be effective with so great a missionary task.

I know some will say, But look here! In North America, the Ordinary has got health insurance for us this May. And look at all of the men being ordained through the training programme he developed. I am in no way trying to take away from these stellar achievements. One should applaud the Ordinary right heartily for being willing to take up a task where Rome provided no money and the USCCB offered no immediate help with Insurance from the get go. We see that as an historian and a scholar he is absolutely the right person for all of these tasks at the onset. There are other considerations though where he would be well served to have brothers — a Msgr. 'Canada' and a Msgr. 'Pastoral Provision' with which to work in this common mission.

What has developed in England from Msgr. Newton's excellent leadership and vision is clearly a model worth repeating. And it really is worth reapting everywhere an Ordinariate is established or where they might be a mixed situation like that in North America … say in India for example. My family in India have some very clear thoughts about these things, but sadly… and it is sad that this is the case across the board, there is only the most limited collaboration with the Laity in Christ of the Anglican Patrimony, a matter that should be corrected post haste. Bishops and priests don't make the Church. Jesus Christ and all of His Faithful make the Church.

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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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TAC Chancellor and Torres Strait Bishop Quoted in The Australian

The Australian is running a great story about positive developments in the country.  Expect the announcement of a formal application for the erection of a personal ordinariate on behalf of the Church of the Torres Strait very soon.  As we reported a couple of weeks ago, the Australian TAC province has already signaled its desire to proceed with the implementation of the Apostolic Constitution.

Anglican-Catholic union has a following

Tess Livingstone

FEDERAL Liberal MP Peter Slipper, the chancellor of the Traditional Anglican Communion, has backed moves for Anglicans to enter into full communion with the Vatican.

Mr Slipper, who was ordained a priest two years ago, having been a deacon since 2003, said the Pope had made "an extremely generous offer" to Anglicans to convert to Catholicism in his apostolic constitution in November last year.

"I think it is a wonderful opportunity for conservative Anglicans in Australia and abroad to enter into full Communion with the Holy See," Mr Slipper said.

"Pope Benedict is an amazingly visionary person. What he has done is establish an evolutionary process that will help undo the Reformation. The Anglican Church has been hijacked by modernism, with synods trying to amend the faith and this process will allow traditional Anglicans to be themselves."

As chancellor of the TAC, Mr Slipper is the chief legal adviser to Archbishop John Hepworth, the head of the Anglican breakaway group in Australia.

Mr Slipper took over the role from the Labor Attorney-General of South Australia, Michael Atkinson. "Michael's a good bloke, but I don't like his politics. But we're a broad church," Mr Slipper said.

One of the areas of Australia likely to be most affected by the mass movement of traditional Anglicans into the Catholic fold is the Torres Strait, where bishop Tolawa Nona overseas nine parishes, 11 priests, five deacons and about 5000 parishioners.

Bishop Tolawa, whose diocese stretches from the Papua New Guinea border south to Sarina in Queensland and who is about to open a new parish in Townsville, said his parishioners were looking forward to the chance to be "among the billions of Christians worldwide united with the Holy Father".

"It has long been our prayer that all should again become one in the church," he said.

Bishop Tolawa said the Church of the Torres Strait would petition the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith separately from the TAC.

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