A "valuable resource" about the history and future of the Anglican Use
From the "Seward's Folly" blog, which offers "Reflections of an Episcopalian Reconciled to Rome", this note about a recently published Ignatius Press book:
With the publication of Anglicans and the Roman Catholic Church: Reflections on Recent Developments (Ignatius Press, 2011), a collection of essays on the subject, those of us who have been laboring to explain the origins of Anglicanorum
coetibus to whomever is willing to listen have a valuable resource at their fingertips. Many of the contributors are former Anglican priests who have been ordained into the Catholic priesthood through the Pastoral Provision. One of them, Bishop Peter Elliott, was not married and so was able to become a Catholic bishop. Another is a woman who relinquished holy orders in the Episcopal Church to enter the Catholic Church. The essays are grouped into four categories, explaining the historical, canonical, theological and liturgical aspects of the relationship between Anglicans and the Catholic Church. Most were written before the promulgation of Anglicanorum coetibus, and they provide a telling picture of just how precarious was the future of the Anglican Use before November 4, 2009.
Here is more about the book, which is available directly from Ignatius Press in paperback and electronic book formats:
The twelve essays in this book discuss the reasons Anglicans have sought reconciliation with the Holy See, while retaining elements of their own liturgy and traditions. They explore the history and scope of Pope John Paul II's Pastoral Provision and Pope Benedict XVI's Apostolic Constitution and examine the needs of the new ordinariates if they are to flourish. Also considered are the changes to the Roman liturgy since the Second Vatican Council and the specific patrimony that Anglicans bring to Catholic worship.
Many of these essays have been written by erstwhile Anglican clergymen who have been ordained into the Catholic priesthood (and one into the episcopate). A few are by Catholic experts on this topic. There is also a contribution from a woman who had been an ordained Episcopal priest before becoming a Catholic.
Here is a wealth of information for anyone interested in the Anglican communities within the Catholic Church, the "reform of the reform" of the Roman liturgy or the testimonies of Anglicans who have become Roman Catholics.
Read the Introduction on Ignatius Insight:
Carl E. Olson's Blog
- Carl E. Olson's profile
- 20 followers
