The Portal Archive August 2012 | Page 16

THE P RTAL August 2012 Page 16 F a t h e r P e t e r ’s P a ge The next renewal... “Lex Orandi . . . Lex CredendI” (‘the word prayed is the word believed’) has long been a maxim of those involved in spreading and sustaining the Catholic faith. Within the Anglo-Catholic Movement of Anglicanism in the past, it was one, if not THE ONE aspect of Mission which was considered fundamental. The formularies of Prayer Books were open to (mis-)interpretation, and many phrases used in her Liturgy were treated ambiguously, often been open to contrasting understanding. To ensure that the true meaning of the Liturgy was conveyed, the way it was celebrated became fundamental. emphasis ruled the day: especially in Eucharistic Liturgy. With the clear teaching of The Catechism of the Catholic Faith, and the improved new translation of the Missal we have the equipment to emphasise truths that have often gone stale or been forgotten. “losses and absence” Pope Benedict XVI in a recent address, whilst recognising what had been gained by liturgical renewal in the last 40 years, spoke of the “losses and absence” that he sensed had occurred. Although the new rite had clearly created a deeper sense of ‘community’, and has increased the proper understanding of “the local church”, this has sometimes been at the cost of “a loss of the transcendence”, and a true understanding of the Catholic Church in terms of “the Universal Church”. Good Liturgy became a bye-word of many a Mission Parish since it was via this – rather than intellectual exposition – that the fundamental Catholic truths were proclaimed. “The Mass is Mission” is/was more than a slogan: it was a crucial factor in the conversion of souls. Those who ensured that ‘the best’ – be it in music, vestment or ceremonial – was the minimum that God & the Gospel required, were not obscurantist’s or “Consta Reformanda” is a ‘Catholic’ Term: not a perfectionists for false reasons, but because Salvation Protestant one! The Church – under the guidance of demanded it! the Holy Spirit – must be forever ‘renewing’ itself in faithfulness to Revelation and The Tradition. No more expose a paradox is this so, than in the celebration of its Liturgy. When historians come to reflect on the 20 th Century of Liturgical Renewal, I am sure they will expose Fr. Harry Entwistle a paradox: that just at the moment – after many an Fr. Harry Entwistle, the new Ordinary of The Personal historic battle – that Anglicans throughout the world Ordinariate of Our Lady of the Southern Cross in were achieving in Liturgy what their forefathers had Australia, in a recent talk in Melbourne [read it at: www. yearned for so much, was the very time that heterodoxy ordinariate.org.uk/document.doc?id=64] surely was became normative! Such developments can be seen making an important point, which all of us – whether clearly in both the United States and in England. The in The Ordinariate or not – should take to heart: “The Ordinariate is not an Anglican Preservation ‘70s & ‘80s were times of great achievements in the Liturgy: “getting the rite, right!”. But, only to see it Society, living in some imagined golden age. It is a non-geographical diocese within the Western Catholic evaporate within a generation. Church, committed to proclaim the gospel and be gains reversed evangelistic. We will have our liturgy that reflects Within a decade, the gains of liturgical renewal had our English tradition, but it is not an end in itself. It been reversed: Crucial wording was eliminated and/or reflects what we believe and pray, and its language will diluted; There were clear attempts to ‘remove’ specific be of our tradition.” references to the reality of the Eucharistic species with words of a ‘receptionist’ hue; The removal of patent Maybe, one of the prophetic roles of The Ordinariate Sacrificial language: All this was done by people, who in a is to fulfil Pope Benedict XVI hopes and be an exemplar contradictory way, understood the importance of liturgy – of what true renewal of the Liturgy is all about! something which had once been the preserve of Catholics - and ensured that ‘Protestantism’ and/or ‘Liberalism’ Father Peter