Monday, October 18, 2010

Why the Bishop of Fulham's departure for Rome isn't just about women bishops (Contribution)

It’s sad that the Bishop of Fulham, the Rt Rev John Broadhurst, should have decided to take advantage of the Pope Benedict XVI’s Ordinariate for those who cannot accept women bishops in the Church of England. 

It’s similarly sad that an Anglican congregation in Folkestone should be seeking the protection of Rome. 

And it’s sad not just because no adequate accommodation could be found in the Church of England for those who cannot in conscience accept women’s episcopacy, but because such departures to Rome represent an erosion, with the possibility of eventual eradication, of the catholic tradition within our established Church.

But there is an aspect of all this that receives little attention: These departures for the oversight of the Holy See have been reported throughout this weekend (by the BBC among others) entirely separately from the story of the prospective closure of Ushaw College in County Durham, which is the home of the historic St Cuthbert’s Seminary, which trains young men for the Roman Catholic priesthood. 

It is to close for lack of seminarians; there are 26 currently at St Cuthbert’s, where once year-groups could be counted in the hundreds. If it closes next June, as is expected, there will be no Roman Catholic seminary north of Birmingham.

We can expect a bounce in vocations to the catholic priesthood after Pope Benedict’s state visit, but there is no denying that there is now a severe crisis in the supply of young men for the Roman Catholic priesthood, in Britain as elsewhere. 

The Anglican boast can be heard that there are now more ordinands in a single diocese of the Church of England (and, for sure, we have our challenges in this regard) than there are seminarians in the entire country. 

I have even heard it said that there are fewer training for Roman Catholic priesthood in the whole of northern Europe than there are in the Church of England, though that’s harder to verify.

So it would be entirely wrong to suggest that the Ordinariate is only aimed at offering sanctuary to those Anglicans who are disaffected with plans for women bishops (in any case, the Ordinariate is a worldwide phenomenon, not a solely Church of England issue).

It also offers sanctuary for much needed priests and potential seminarians of catholic orthodoxy.

Furthermore, while we might and should mourn the weakening of the catholic tradition in the Church of England, we might take heart that the Roman Catholic Church in these shores is receiving some vital and welcome support to its ministry and mission at a very difficult time for it.

SIC: TC/UK