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Saturday, December 31, 2005

On the TAC and Rome

Will published this at Prydain, and I thank him for making it available. (My apologies to the authors if I got the paragraph breaks wrong; I am still learning the technology).

If you've been following the ongoing stories about the Traditional Anglican Communion and its seeking some form of union or intercommunion with Rome, you may find these interesting as (according to an email I received) they are from a Canadian bishop in the TAC, Bishop Peter Wilkinson, and from Archbishop John Hepworth, the Primate of the TAC.

Here is the statement by Bishop Wilkinson:

From the desk (and computer) of Bishop Peter Wilkinson, OSG

Dear Brethren: Over the course of this year many of you have asked for information on the progress of our talks with Rome. I have told you what I know. So, as a further help to all of us, I have asked the Primate for a letter that would bring us up to date. It follows my introductory comments.

INTRODUCTION

After about 450 years of attempts of varying seriousness, Anglicans and Roman Catholics really began talking to one another after the joint decision by Pope Paul VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey, expressed in a Common Declaration during their meeting in Rome in March 1966 --39 years ago.

Within a year the Commission they established had produced a report that proclaimed "penitence for the past, thankfulness for the graces of the present, urgency and resolve for a future in which our common aim would be the restoration of full organic unity."

In April 1977 Archbishop Ramsey's successor in the See of Canterbury, Donald Coggan, and Pope Paul VI, made a further Common Declaration declaring their desire for "the restoration of complete communion in faith and sacramental life." In the same year, The Affirmation of St Louis, so deeply embedded in our ACCC Constitution and the Concordat, also declared "our intention to seek and achieve full sacramental communion and visible unity with other Christians who 'worship the Trinity in Unity, and Unity in Trinity,' and who hold the Catholic and Apostolic Faith in accordance with the foregoing principles."

This should not be news to anyone in the ACCC. Since those days a lot of water has flowed down the Thames and the Tiber, and a big log jam -- the purported ordination of women to the priesthood. Rome reacted immediately with both Pope Paul VI and Pope John Paul II stating in letters to the Archbishop(s) of the day that this act would create a stumbling block to unity. Anglican Synods paid no heed either to the pleas of their own constituency, to Roman Catholics, or to the Orthodox Churches of the East some of whose Synods had declared Anglican Orders valid (Constantinople, Jerusalem and Cyprus).

The Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission [ARCIC] talks continued and some good progress was made to which Rome did not react.

With the advent of the real possibility of the purported consecration of woman to the Episcopate in England, a Roman Catholic Bishops' response to the Rochester Report (which recommends the Church of England proceed to consecrate women) has stated that, "if the Church of England consecrates women bishops its relations with Roman Catholicism could suffer 'irreparable damage' and warns that women bishops would 'radically' impair relations between the two Churches.

They also said that the reform was at odds with the ecumenical steps taken between the two Churches. The source of this statement goes on to comment that "the long-hoped for reunion between Anglicanism and Roman Catholicism remains the pipe dream of a few ecumenical specialists."

Sad to say, in the Canterbury Communion the situation is still deteriorating. A report says that Archbishop Ellison Pogo told over 100 delegates to the 11th General Synod of the Church of Melanesia, that the Anglican Church in the Central Pacific should permit the ordination of women to the priesthood. Archbishop Pogo urged the recusants [Anglo-Catholics] to rethink their stance.

Another report has it that "the Anglican Churches of the Global South are as divided over the issue of women's orders as is the Church of England. Evangelical provinces such as Uganda, Kenya and Rwanda ordain women -- while Nigeria and Southeast Asia do not. Anglo-Catholic Provinces are equally divided with Central Africa opposed and the West Indies in favour of ordaining women.

"The leader of the Ugandan Church, Archbishop Henry Orombi argued that women priests were not a universal panacea for the church's ills and would not work in some places he cautioned, but he believed this was not an issue that should divide the Church."

Dissident groups that have left the ACC [note - ed: Anglican Church of Canada] and PECUSA and are bound up with these Provinces and Dioceses, already have some women in major orders. In light of such a massive defection from Anglican (and therefore Catholic) faith and practice [see the Preface to the Ordinal and the Solemn Declaration in our BCP, which declare that we have no Ministry of our own but only that of Christ's Holy Catholic Church], who is there for Rome to talk to -- only the TAC, and those few remaining faithful dioceses and provinces of the Canterbury Communion?

It is a dialogue Anglicans began in good faith 39 years ago, and it is a dialogue that we are bound to continue, "that", as our Lord Jesus Christ said, "they may be one, even as We are one, I in them and Thou in Me, that they may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that Thou hast sent Me and hast loved them even as Thou hast loved Me [St John 17:22b, 23]; who livest and reignest with the same Father, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, One God, forever and ever. Amen.

+Peter Wilkinson, OSG

And here is the statement from Archbishop Hepworth, which is most interesting:

The Primate Responds to Reports and Speculation about the TAC and Rome.

It is twelve years since Archbishop Falk led a little group to Rome to explore the possibility of a closer communion with the Holy See, in continuation of the ARCIC agreement between Archbishop Ramsey and Pope Paul VI. Since then, every meeting of the College of Bishops of the Traditional Anglican Communion (and we have managed to meet every two years) has endorsed the principle of the TAC seeking to be "an Anglican Church in communion with the Holy See".

Different parts of the TAC have different ways of reporting the doings of the College of Bishops, and there are still some differences in the way that the TAC Concordat (the ruling document that creates the "communion" between TAC bishops) is embedded in the Constitutional arrangements of our member churches, so some seem to know more about what happens in the TAC than others. Some churches have managed frequent visits by the Primate to brief synods and meetings of clergy and laity, others have managed rather less.

So the awareness of what is happening with the "Roman question" varies around the TAC. At this time, almost every National Synod has passed some form of resolution accepting the concept of "an Anglican Church in communion with the Holy See", at least in principle. Some have passed very detailed and enthusiastic resolutions, and embarked on detailed activities with local Roman Catholic communities.

Why are we doing this? Our communion with the Anglican Communion in most parts of the world was shattered by the ordination of women to Holy Orders. In this ultimate of schismatic acts, the Anglican Communion betrayed its claim to share a common Apostolic Ministry with the churches of East and West, which had undergirded its claims to be authentically catholic since the Reformation.

In the same step, the great doctrines of Creation, Incarnation and Redemption are denied. The sacramental life of the Church, by which Jesus brings the saving grace of redemption to each of us, becomes an object of suspicion and uncertainty. Placing a woman priest in a diocese is always "communion breaking", since it makes the very act of communion impossible.

At the same time, the ordination of women fractured one of the most solemn agreements ever made by an Archbishop of Canterbury. Michael Ramsey, when he signed the agreement to create "full and organic communion" with the Holy See, acted upon the urging of the Lambeth Fathers since the "Bell Resolutions" of the Lambeth Conference just before the Second World War, and the enthusiasm of the earliest Conferences for discovering a basis of unity with Rome. And the Pope, in agreeing to this unity that he described as "united but not absorbed", determined to end five centuries of often bitter division.

The Anglican-Roman Catholic Commission was created to achieve this unity. It was clearly understood that, if Anglicans ordained women to Holy Order, the unity would become almost impossible. So each Anglican Province that voted for women priests, voted to end the possibility of unity. The TAC has simply determined to continue the process, since the impediment does not exist within our Communion.

And there is another reason. Having had our communion with the Anglican Communion shattered, we cannot remain "a church on the loose". To hold the catholic faith requires that faith be exercised in communion. Bishops cannot exist cut off from the mainstream of the church's life. Unity is not an option. Jesus commanded it.

Will we be absorbed by Rome? Roman Catholics (including a significant number of former Anglican clergy and laity) have urged us to value our Anglican heritage. One author has written movingly that the TAC seeks "to achieve communion (with the Holy See) while maintaining those revered traditions of spirituality, liturgy, discipline and theology that constitute the centuries old heritage of Anglican communities throughout the world".

We seek to be "Anglican Catholics". That is, to value our Anglicanism while being visibly united to the "whole church catholic" of which our formularies have always spoken.

What stage have we reached? There have been no secrets up until now, and there will be none in the future. The TAC is following a traditional Anglican method of wide consultation, synodical decision-making and deep involvement of clergy and laity.

At Easter this year, I published for the whole TAC a Pastoral Letter on Unity, which set out for publication the point we had reached and pathways for the future. As with all important documents of the TAC, the Messenger carried the full text. I am presuming, perhaps rashly in the case of some countries, that the Messenger goes into every TAC home in the world. Certainly, we print enough for that!

At the moment, there are two documents in the final stages of preparation. The first is a "Pastoral Plan", prepared by an eminent Roman Catholic layman, which performs the joint functions of "verifying the TAC as a worthy interlocutor with the Roman Catholic Church" and of setting out the "desired levels of recognition of the TAC by Rome both before and after full communion".

This document will be delivered to every bishop early in the new year, and will be debated by a full meeting of the College of Bishops, in the presence of clerical and lay representatives of each member church, hopefully in Rome in the first half of next year. The document will then go to the synods of the member churches (even if they must have an extraordinary meeting).

If the document wins the approval of the whole Communion, it will be formally presented to the Holy See, and a more formal process will be established. (At the moment, it would be fair to say that wide ranging, multi-level, international contacts between the TAC and Rome have been proceeding for some years, and have intensified in the past year, with a resultant increase in publicity. It is also true to say that a much greater awareness of the TAC still needs to be created.)

The second document is a formal proposal from the TAC to the Holy See for the TAC to become an "Anglican Rite Church "sui juris" in communion with the Holy See".

The first draft of this document was submitted to the Council for Christian Unity, and its response, with input from other Roman Catholic and Uniate Catholic sources, shaped the present document. It is not proposed to submit this document until the Pastoral Plan is approved by the TAC. The College as a whole has not yet approved the present draft.

A further letter is sometimes mentioned. On becoming Primate, I wrote personally to the Council for Christian Unity resuming the conversations that had been conducted by Archbishop Falk. I made the basic claim, sometimes wrongly reported, that "there are no doctrinal or moral matters of such significance that they would prevent unity between this Communion and the Holy See".

In all of these documents matters of historic difference are canvassed. But both our own bishops and those with whom we speak emphasise the fact that we seek to create a eucharistic community, in which we can join at the altar of God, and from which all else must flow. Questions of Orders, of Liturgy, of clergy discipline, of the way in which we would experience our relationship with the See of Peter, have all been the object of our, as yet, informal conversations. We have found deep rapport in our conversations, as well as much direct speaking, but nothing is, as yet, official. I close this summary with some words shared with me by a Cardinal who has followed this journey. "We must learn to practise the unity we already share from the action of the Holy Spirit. Only then can we ask for more. And the time will be God's time, if we are truly prepared to place this in God's hands."

+John Hepworth Primate

P.S. What Prayer Book will be used?

The Traditional Anglican Communion uses a number of national versions of the Book of Common Prayer, often incorporating the Usage of the English and Anglican Missals. These forms of Public Worship are authorised by the College of Bishops,and member churches do not act on liturgical forms without the authority of the College.

English is only the seventh most-used liturgical language in the TAC, so the various English Prayer Books are not the most significant issue in our Communion, albeit they have local importance.

There is no suggestion that we would adopt the Book of Divine Worship. I have personally indicated to the Holy See that we are deeply moved -- and reassured -- that Rome has authorised any Anglican Liturgy at all. A vital issue for us to discuss is whether we want to attempt a Prayer Book for the TAC at some stage in the future, and then translate it into each of our languages. Bishop Mercer has written with some authority on this proposal. Since it would take all of the annual budget of the TAC for a number of years, it is not on my immediate list of things to do."

Will says:

These statements are indeed most interesting, because for one thing, it appears that the TAC at least has a goal of not simply "intercommunion", but actually becoming a sui generis "Anglican Rite" in the Roman Catholic Church. There has apparently been much thought and prayer invested in this already--and much more is to come if I read this correctly. Note they are already thinking about the Prayer Book to be used it if this all comes about, and the foundation being laid for all of it in the "Pastoral Plan." Note that this also refers to a "Roman Catholic layman" being involved in the planning like other reports we have seen.

8 comments:

  1. Anonymous3:30 PM

    I was wondering: what effect do you see a TAC union with Rome having on the rest of the Continuum? I have been curious how this might affect the ACC and APCK.

    Will

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  2. I would rather defer to Fathers Hart and Kirby on this question, for obvious reasons.

    Purely from a personal standpoint, what I would first like to see is unity within the Continuum. A unified body would theoretically, at least, be in a better bargaining position with Rome. And if those discussions were to drag on for years or decades more, or even fail in some catastrophic way, we would be a stronger, healthier and more viable body.

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  3. At the moment the progress towards such an event seems to be less than had earlier been thought -- it wasn't that long ago there was public speculation that Rome was about to recognise TAC Orders, for example -- so one is tempted to simply say "We'll cross that bridge if and when we come to it."

    However, I think that if such a union occured, the effects on the ACC and APCK would depend largely on the doctrinal dialogue that had preceeded it. The problem I see with the present TAC-Rome process is that this work does not appear to have been really begun in any depth yet, or at least not in a way that is transparent. Abp Hepworth's statement that "there are no doctrinal or moral matters of such significance that they would prevent unity between this Communion and the Holy See" is a rather bald assertion that requires much undergirding with the detail of how specific differences of the past are to be resolved. I am not claiming in any way that the Anglican Catholicism of the TAC is or ought to be incompatible with Roman Catholicism at a dogmatic level, just that such compatibility can not simply be presumed without some hard theological work being done first.

    As for the institutional and organisational aspects, I do not believe Rome would take any of the Continuing Churches in their present state "as is". Rome would want to have a say in "rationalising" present structures and changing the ratio of bishops to "others". Or, to put it more bluntly, they would, inter alia, demand that a number of men resign from active episcopacy, though no doubt continuing to have the dignity of the title. These processes would be painful and might allow old tensions based on past events and personal animosities to become significant again. On the other hand, such processes could conceivably make some of these things irrelevant since many of those directly involved would effectively be -- again, if I may be permitted some bluntness -- sidelined.

    But I really think it is all to early to hypothesise.

    MK+

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  4. Anonymous12:22 AM

    The statement that there is no separartion about dogma between Anglo-Catholics and Rome seems too bold. The Roman teaching about the meaning and significance of the See of Peter (including Universal Primacy, Infallibility, etc.), constitutes dogma. Therefore, if this dogma is now believed by persons in the TAC, those persons must all immediately become converts strictly on terms set by Rome. I do not see that happening, therefore it seems very clear that division about at least one dogma, with very wide implications, is still being sorted out.

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  5. On doctrinal issues:
    It is certainly true that there are issues to be discussed, and most prominently the position of the papacy. I love my Archbishop's vision, but I do tend to feel that he is a bit overoptimistic. However, I do not believe there are unresolvable differnces.

    On the episcopate:
    Rome has such enormous dioceses that the bishop is a remote figure. This is surely not a good thing. The continum tends to have bishops overseeing fewer people than the typical RC parish. This is surely a bit topheavy. The historic Anglican genius has been to keep dioceses small enough that the bishop can be a paterfamilias, but large enough to be viable. There has already been talk among us of reducing the number of bishops-with-jurisdiction. Already, we have retermined to eliminate the American Archbishopric at the soon-coming retirement of Archbishop Falk, leaving TAC with but the one archbishop. Union, whether with Rome or among the Continuum will not happen unless some of the 'pointy hats' are willing to step aside.

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  6. Poetreader said at the end of his comment:

    Union, whether with Rome or among the Continuum will not happen unless some of the 'pointy hats' are willing to step aside.

    Toward the beginning, he said:

    The historic Anglican genius has been to keep dioceses small enough that the bishop can be a paterfamilias, but large enough to be viable.

    Would an eventual Continuum Consolidation (TM) really require shedding pointy hats? Could not the boundaries of dioceses be redrawn, actually bringing about the smaller, more user-friendly sees that you mention?

    I look at the ACA diocese with which I am affiliated, and it runs from Florida to Maryland! I would imagine that in Australia they might even be bigger.

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  7. The problem is that there are so many competing jurisdictions that an enormous area has very few people in it in that particular jurisdiction, while there will be more parishes of an entirely different jurisdiction in the same enormous area. If one adds all the continuing churches in the region together, omits 5 or so of the existing bishops to put them all under one, one still has an intimate diocese with an almost absurdly high ratio of chiefs to indians. Yes, one of the problems of the Continuum (and one of its main sources of disunity) is this multiplication of bishops. Depending on which jurisdictions are regarded as 'real' Continuing churches, there are up to six different bishops with jurisdiction in New England, and enough people to make up maybe 3 or 4 average parishes. Can we justify more than one?
    ed

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  8. Anonymous12:33 AM

    Since dialogue between the TAC and Rome is still at such an early stage (even though it has been going on for a long time already), I would prefer for the TAC to focus more on dialogue with other Anglicans. I was very pleased to notice that Apb. Hepworth is attending the AMiA Winter Conference this week.

    Also, since it is ultimately our desire to be part of a reunited Catholic Church including all the Orthodox churches, I would like to see continuing Anglicans develop more of a dialogue with Orthodoxy, particularly with the Antiochian Archdiocese and the OCA, since both of these have many former Anglicans in their midst.

    Finally, I would like to see "dialogue" between Anglican traditionalists and the world at large, i.e. evangelism. It is unfortunate, but a number of continuing clergy that I've met seem much more concerned with providing a home for like minded people who already share all their views on liturgy than in spreading the Gospel to those who've never believed in Christ at all. I understand why continuing Anglicans, coming from the deep pain of changes in their former church homes, are so concerned about these things, yet the primary calling of our churches must be to be Christian, not Anglican - and to offer people Christianity. (Orthodox Christianity, of course, and in its Anglican expression in our case - but Christianity first and foremost.) This is why ecumenical dialogue and evengelism are both so important, because both the unity of the Church, and its universality are both necessary for the Church to be truly Catholic, or indeed truly Christian.

    Unity and evangelism go hand in hand, and continuing Anglicans should begin by making a new commitment to the preaching of the Gospel, while at the same time repenting of any attitudes preventing unity among continuers, and between continuing Anglicans and the wider church.

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