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A Paper on The Society
at
the Forward in Faith National Assembly 2011
Perhaps
understandably, I have lost count of the number of times I
have either written about The Society or have spoken of
it. During a recent conversation it was suggested that I
should find a more headline-grabbing name. You can tell
that the conversation took place in the North when I tell
you that the first suggestion was that we rename it ‘The
Co-op’! The subsequent proposal was that we name The
Society ‘The Mafia’! That would certainly have produced
more interest but there was always the fear that such a
title might just be a little too near the truth.
But, let
me start in what to some might seem an unlikely place. I
want to begin by paying genuine tribute to those who have
felt led by God to join the Ordinariate. Some of my
oldest friends are among their number. On a personal
note, over the past months what Newman famously called
“the parting of friends” has literally at times brought me
to the point of tears. I begin here because, right from
the first suggestion of forming The Society, some
immediately responded by saying it was a swift proposal to
try and produce an alternative to the Ordinariate.
Nothing was further from the founders’ minds. What we
recognised was that just as some were driven by conscience
to join the Ordinariate so many others were equally driven
by conscience, at least for the time being, to remain
within the Church of England. Such people surely had the
right to explore how best to organise for the future and
especially to identify what might be the most likely
ecclesial provision that might be not only acceptable to
them but also to the Church of England. Our friends who
have in conscience joined the Ordinariate must surely now
give us space to try and bring this about. Perhaps I
should just say at this point just how much I have
appreciated the understanding and encouragement for
working towards a successful establishment of The Society
that I and others have received from some of our Roman
Catholic colleagues.
Indeed, I am sure some
of you will have heard Bishop Geoffrey Rowell speak of his
recent visit to Rome and of his audience with Pope
Benedict. Bishop Geoffrey came away confident that Pope
Benedict understood why some of us sought to stay within
the Church of England to work for the establishment of The
Society. The important thing was that we should remain
close to each other in our journey towards Christian
Unity.
The key question in
seeking to establish The Society is how can we produce
something which still enshrines a basic understanding of
what it means to be a church of priests, deacons and
people gathered around its bishops, given that the Church
of England, were it to admit women to the episcopate, has
steadfastly set itself against permitting separate
dioceses for those of us who could not assent to such an
act. I doubt I need to set the problem out in full. Most
of us here have lived with the dilemma for many years. We
want bishops who are truly our fathers in God, who are the
font of our sacramental life, and so also have the care of
us that flows from such a position. We want priests who
are clearly the priests of such a bishop, alternates with
him and with one another as, by their ministries, they
bind us more and more into the authentic life of the
catholic church. We want to be empowered in mission to
make that church flourish as many more are brought into a
living relationship with Jesus Christ.
We are
far from convinced of a view of the episcopate which sees
bishops as some kind of quasi-magical characters. The
idea that we can answer to any bishop regardless of gender
or orthodoxy and then be grateful for someone whom we
regard as being genuinely a bishop being parachuted in for
us to undertake certain sacramental actions falls far
short of a truly catholic understanding of the
Episcopate. I might add, in passing, that the present
legislation does not even propose that measure of
sacramental and pastoral care for us. It is doubtful that
any code of practice would make such provision either.
So it is that in this
near last ditch situation some of us are trying to
persuade the Church of England to let us live within a
Society model. What does this mean? It means that the
Church of England entrusts the care of traditionalists to
that of traditionalist bishops. They might be orthodox
diocesans or suffragans. It is hard to see how any
meaningful provision could be made without also having at
least three provincial bishops based on the present sees
of Beverley, Ebbsfleet and Richborough for those diocese
and regions that do not make more local provision. Such
bishops would necessarily need to be given such
jurisdiction (to use the technical term) that enabled them
to be the fount of sacrament and pastoral life for their
clergy and people. It might just be that this could be
brought about even at a late stage by the re-introduction
into the General Synod of something like the archbishops’
ill-fated amendment. Such an amendment would be far from
perfect but would probably enable much of what we seek to
come about.
There
would still be, of course, some anomaly in all of this as
we try to work out the basis on which priests of The
Society are then, with their Society bishops’ permission,
licensed and employed in the various dioceses of the
Church of England. Perhaps we might be thinking of
something rather like, in the Roman Catholic Church, where
the monks of Ampleforth, for example, are firstly monks of
that community and then parish priests active within a
local diocese; or when, for example, an Ordinariate priest
is released for work in a local diocese while, of course,
remaining a member of the Ordinariate and answerable to
his Ordinary.
Clearly,
the parallels are not exact. I admit I am doing some kite
flying in an area where much more detail would need to be
worked out in the future. Who knows? Addressing such
practical implications could even make the code of
practice relevant and useful to us.
Is this
tidy? No. Is this perfectly reflecting of Catholic order
as we have known it? Probably not. But is it a bearable
anomaly such as Catholic Anglicans have had to live with
since the Reformation and, more precisely, that we have
had to live with since the first women bishops appeared
within the Anglican Communion, or the first women priests
were created within the Church of England? Coping with
bearable anomaly is an essential ingredient of being an
Anglican in a divided church. If we cannot accept the
truth of that then I guess we would not wish to remain
members of the Church of England whatever the outcome of
our current dilemmas.
What we
can do now is to formalise the life we have in fact
already been living for the past seventeen years or so
into a proper ecclesial body. The Society can, here and
now, be our way of living out what it means to be the
Church. And up and down the country, in places as diverse
as Chichester or Blackburn, Wakefield or the West Country,
this is beginning to happen. We have our constitution in
place and Catholic bishops are overseeing our journey
forwards. We have thousands of people signed up to the
idea and need thousands more as we send out a signal to
the Church of England that this is not only what we want.
It is, rather, the very basic bottom line of what we need
if we are to be enabled in good conscience both to stay
and to flourish within the Church of England.
Be sure
there will still be a need for Forward in Faith. The
Society is not a rival society. It is our way of being
the Church. We can be sure that, at some time, we will
still need a strong and uncompromising campaigning body to
help maintain ground won and to help achieving with more
in the future.
And
finally, a note of caution. We have to be realistic. The
evidence so far is that every olive branch we have held
out has been refused. Every time we have explained what
are the bare essentials for us to stay within the Church
of England we have been told instead that we do not
understand our own position and that others know what is
better for us.
I do not
know what odds I might put on succeeding in our
endeavour. I suspect they would be disappointingly low.
The history of the past few years gives little ground for
hope. I do know that God has put me and, I trust, you
here at this time to persevere in the attempt and to do
our best to make it succeed. If there be only a thirty
percent chance or even only a ten percent chance of
bringing The Society permanently into being, and I would
put the odds a little higher than that, we have no choice
but to go for it, being equally realistic and determined.
So,
please, support, join, encourage The Society and let us
see where God takes us with it.
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