Pope's Anglican welcome could revolutionize the Church
THIS CATHOLIC'S VIEW
By Thomas J. Reese, S.J.
The new Vatican structures for dealing with Anglicans who want to join the
Catholic Church may have significant and unforeseen consequences. They may in
fact provide the Catholic Church with a steady supply of married priests.
Some critics see the new procedures as a blow to relations between Catholics and
Anglicans, but leaders from both churches deny this. Cardinal William Levada
said that the Catholic Church is still committed to ecumenical dialogue with the
Anglican Communion leading to unity in future, but the Vatican felt it could not
turn away the many Anglicans who want to be reunited with the church now.
Some would argue that if these Anglicans are going to leave the Anglican
Communion anyway, it would be better to have them join the Catholic Church than
be off on their own.
Archbishop Rowan Williams, the Anglican primate, accepted the Vatican
explanation and in a letter to Anglican leaders wrote, "In the light of recent
discussions with senior officials in the Vatican, I can say that this new
possibility is in no sense at all intended to undermine existing relations
between our two communions or to be an act of proselytism or aggression. It is
described as simply a response to specific inquiries from certain Anglican
groups and individuals wishing to find their future within the Roman Catholic
Church."
After the Catholic Church adopted numerous reforms following the Second Vatican
Council, many people hoped that Catholics and Anglicans would reunite as
ecumenical dialogue progressed. But Anglicanism continued to evolve in
directions that led it away from Catholic practices, especially in the
ordination of women and in its teaching about homosexuality.
These developments also divided the Anglican Communion, leading some Anglicans
who opposed the ordination of women and gays to approach the Catholic Church
about union.
The Catholic Church has always been willing to accept individual Anglicans who
want to join the church. For more than a decade, it has allowed married Anglican
priests to act as priests after they were ordained by a Catholic bishop.
What is new in these procedures is the possibility of admitting not just
individuals but groups and even whole dioceses. Cardinal Levada, prefect of the
Congregation for Doctrine of the Faith, said that 20 to 30 Anglican bishops have
enquired about union with the Vatican.
Also new are provisions for personal ordinariates, headed by a former Anglican
bishop or priest, where the new Catholics would be allowed to preserve their
Anglican spiritual and liturgical heritage. These ordinariates are similar to
ones that minister to the military in various countries and could even have
houses of formation to train future priests.
Married Anglican priests and seminarians joining the Catholic Church could be
ordained and function as priests, said Cardinal Levada. Married bishops could be
ordained priests but could not function as bishops since this is not the
practice in either the Catholic or Orthodox tradition.
The consequences of these new procedures are yet to be seen. How many Anglicans
will take advantage of them? Only a handful of Anglican parishes took advantage
of a much smaller program established for the U.S. in 1980. But this new
structure is both more generous and universal.
Catholic liberals, especially Catholic feminists, fear that an influx of
conservative Anglicans will further discourage reform in the Catholic Church. In
any case, someone should warn these Anglicans that two out of three U.S.
Catholics support the ordination of women. They will not find in Catholicism a
controversy-free zone.
But if the new procedures are used by large numbers of Anglicans, the result
will be a more liberal Anglican Church and a more conservative Catholic Church,
especially if liberal Catholics decide to go in the other direction. These
procedures may be an admission that leaders in all churches have lost control of
the ecumenical movement and people are simply voting with their feet.
The long-term impact of these procedures on the Catholic Church could be
significant. We will now have three approved versions of the Roman Catholic
liturgy: the pre-Vatican II Latin Mass, the reformed vernacular liturgy, and now
an Anglican liturgy. Some born Catholics may find the Anglican-Catholic liturgy
preferable to the other two and start attending Mass in Anglican ordinariate
parishes.
And while we have always had numerous Eastern Catholic liturgies, pluralism has
been discouraged in the Western (or Latin-rite) Catholic liturgy since the
Council of Trent. But once we have three versions, it is more difficult to argue
against more.
Despite all the Vatican attempts to downplay the acceptance of married Anglican
priests, many people will ask why not married priests for other Catholics?
Cardinal Levada said that not only married Anglican priests will be ordained but
also married Anglican seminarians who join the Catholic Church. The Vatican has
made clear that married Catholic priests will not be welcomed back to the
priesthood, but could a married Catholic man join the Anglicans, enter an
Anglican seminary and then return to the Catholic Church? If so, this could
become a rich source of priests for the Catholic Church.
The Vatican also says that the Anglican ordinariates would have their own
seminarians who could have houses of formation but would study with other
Catholic seminarians. I presume this means married seminarians, otherwise the
Vatican will deny these former Anglicans what they see as an essential part of
their spiritual and liturgical tradition. Married and celibate seminarians in
the same course of studies will certainly be an interesting experiment. It will
either strengthen a celibate's vocation or break it.
More importantly, could married Roman Catholic men from the traditional dioceses
join the Anglican ordinariate and become seminarians and priests? If so, we have
just solved the priest shortage problem and within a generation there will be
more priests in the Anglican ordinariates than in the traditional dioceses. The
rest of the people will soon follow and the Anglican ordinariate will hold a
majority of Roman Catholics.
Thomas J. Reese, S.J., is Senior Fellow at Woodstock Theological Center at
Georgetown University.