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Anglicans welcomed

by Staff writers
21 March 2010
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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KINGSTON, Ontario (CNS): Groups of Anglicans entering into communion with the Catholic Church will not be absorbed the way “a teaspoon of sugar would be lost in a gallon of coffee”, Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith prefect Cardinal William Levada said.

Instead, Anglicans will provide a distinct sound within the Church, the way the different instruments in an orchestra blend in a symphony, Cardinal Levada told a fundraising dinner for Catholic Christian Outreach and the Queen’s University Newman Centre on March 6.

“People long for discordant tones to be harmonised, united,” he said. “And when an individual or, indeed, a community, is ready for unity with the church of Christ that subsists in the Catholic Church, it would be a betrayal of Catholic ecumenical principles and goals to refuse to embrace them, and to embrace them with all the distinctive gifts that enrich the Church, that help her approach the world symphonically, sounding together or united.”

Pope Benedict XVI’s historic offer for groups of Anglicans to enter into full communion with the Catholic Church was “the logical outcome” of 45 years of ecumenical dialogue, Cardinal Levada said.

The Vatican’s offer came on November 9 with the publication of Pope Benedict’s apostolic constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus (Groups of Anglicans) along with specific norms governing the establishment and governance of “personal ordinariates”, structures similar to dioceses, for former Anglicans who become Catholic.

Cardinal Levada described the apostolic constitution as “one of the fruits” developing out of the statements issued by the Anglican Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC) on the Eucharist, ministry and ordination, and authority.

“It would be a betrayal of Catholic ecclesiology not to embrace (Anglicans) with all the gifts they bring,” Cardinal Levada said, explaining that those gifts include a distinct spirituality, liturgy and spiritual discipline.

But the cardinal also stressed the continued hope and commitment to work toward “full corporate unity” with the worldwide Anglican Communion.

He cited the announcement of a third Anglican Roman Catholic International Commission that came after last November’s meeting between Pope Benedict XVI and Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams.

ARCIC III will focus on the relationship between the local and universal Church, and also on women’s ordination, same-sex unions and actively homosexual clergy.

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Anglican communities in Australia, United Kingdom, the United States and other countries already have sent requests to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to establish personal ordinariates within the Catholic Church.

Archbishop John Hepworth, primate of the Traditional Anglican Communion, attended the dinner.

Archbishop Hepworth, who is based in Australia, has been meeting with Traditional Anglican Communion bishops around the world and was in Canada for visits to churches in Nova Scotia, Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia.

Archbishop Hepworth said he expected a request will come within weeks from Traditional Anglican Communion bishops in Canada.

Before arriving in Canada, Archbishop Hepworth met with Anglican Church of America representatives, Anglican Use parishes that are already part of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States, and Forward in Faith, a group of Anglicans still in communion with Canterbury who oppose women bishops and women’s ordination.

The Traditional Anglican Communion and representatives of Anglican Use parishes have issued a joint request for an ordinariate in the United States.

The Traditional Anglican Communion and Forward in Faith in the United Kingdom and Australia have made similar joint requests.

 

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